The Bloodbath
Between October 1, 1965, and April or May of the following year, the right-wing 
military regime of Generals Nasution and Suharto seized power and consolidated 
its strength in Indonesia. In that scant seven months as many as a million 
people were slaughtered. The rising toll of victims appeared occasionally in 
the press here, recorded with little more passion than a sports score.

Some accounts of the appalling massacres did in time find their way into the 
papers of London and New York. Their tone was fatalistic, implying that the 
unbelievable carnage described was the product of a bloodlust and disregard for 
human life inconceivable to "civilized" Westerners. There was no sense of 
urgency about these reports, as though nothing could be done to stem the gory 
tide.

No member of Parliament or Congress rose to condemn the butchery. No relief or 
rescue agencies attempted to intervene on behalf of the political prisoners. 
Only a few isolated voices in the West tried to raise an outcry in the face of 
such awful silence.

Over four years later [in 1970], several hundred thousand political prisoners 
still rot in jail. There have been repeated purges of the armed forces and the 
civil service. The fascist military regime is debating whether or not to carry 
out mass executions, claiming it no longer can afford to feed the mass of 
prisoners.

American capital is moving into Indonesia once again to explore offshore areas 
for oil, reactivate existing wells, and mine copper in West Irian. Properties 
nationalized under President Sukarno have been returned to their U.S. and 
European former owners.

Indonesia seems to be right back where it was before World War II, before the 
rising nationalist movement swept out the Dutch and the 3,000 separate islands 
of the Netherlands East Indies united in the new and militant Republic of 
Indonesia. How did it happen? And what really happened?

There is a standard phrase that appears in all the Western news accounts. It is 
"the attempted Communist coup." The massacre of hundreds of thousands of 
civilians was justified, so this official account goes, as a reaction to an 
attempted coup by the Communists on September 30, when six right-wing army 
generals were killed.

THE STRANGE "ATTEMPTED COMMUNIST COUP"

The dictionary defines the words "coup d'etat" as the sudden, forceful 
overthrow of the government; literally it means a blow against the state. Since 
the events of September-October 1965, every person who was a member of the 
Cabinet on the night of September 30 has been accused of participating in the 
coup; three were sentenced to death and all arrested. Foreign Minister 
Subandrio is probably dead. Former President Sukarno himself has been placed 
under house arrest for interrogation about his part in the alleged coup 
attempt. 

These facts in and of themselves invalidate the "Communist coup" story, since a 
government can hardly be accused of plotting its own overthrow. 

To this it must be added that Indonesia had the largest Communist party outside 
of the socialist countries. Its membership was over three million, and there 
were estimated to be between 15 and 20 million active supporters. Yet there was 
no call to action, no strikes or massive popular demonstrations at the time of 
the coup, or even in the bloody months of massacre that followed. Only a person 
most gullible and ignorant of Indonesian politics could be made to believe that 
this mass party was preparing to seize power without using its popular 
resources.

No one denies the fact that individual members of the Indonesian Communist 
Party (PKI) did participate in the September 30th Movement, which was not a 
coup attempt but an effort to block the right-wing generals. However, the party 
itself seems if anything to have been unprepared for the task of taking state 
power, and had a history of leaning on President Sukarno in its bouts with the 
reactionaries.

The story of a Communist coup has persisted in the Western press up to the 
present time only because there is so much ignorance about Asia in general and 
because anti-Communism is used to justify and minimize mass murder.

However, it is not ignorance on the part of the mass media that dictates their 
handling of the events of October 1965. It can only be a deliberate policy to 
bury the truth. There was a coup d'etat that took place. It was organized and 
carried out by a clique of right-wing generals with the closest collaboration 
of high U.S. officials. And the American press had all this information readily 
available to it but did not choose to let the American people know what was 
taking place.

SEPTEMBER 30TH MOVEMENT VS. THE COUNCIL OF GENERALS

The September 30th Movement, which did indeed assassinate six right-wing 
generals before it was quickly crushed on the morning of October 1, 1965, was 
headed by Lieutenant Colonel Untung, a trusted member of Sukarno's palace 
guard. He had the support of Air Marshal Omar Dhani, Commandant of the 
Indonesian Air Force. But the Movement was not an attempt to overthrow the 
government, all of whose members were later accused of being part of the 
"attempted coup." It was an attempt to save that government.

The Indonesian military ever since independence has been composed of 
contradictory elements. Untung, Dhani and others like them were strongly 
nationalist and anti-imperialist. But there were many other officers who owed 
their existence to a feudal origin and collaboration with the foreign 
exploiters. General Haris Nasution, one of the Army chiefs who helped crush the 
September 30th Movement and is today a member of Indonesia's ruling 
triumvirate, has a long history of open treason against the Republic. In 1952, 
he attempted a coup d'etat but failed. This did not prevent him from becoming 
Army Chief of Staff in the years that followed and by the late 1950s he had 
created his own political party.

Nasution, Suharto and other officers, many of whom had been trained in the 
U.S., formed a secret "Council of Generals." On September 21, 1965, they met in 
Djakarta with the entire armed forces chiefs of staff. At this secret meeting, 
which was tape-recorded by agents of Foreign Minister Subandrio, a plan was 
drawn up to overthrow the government on October 5, Armed Forces Day, when all 
the crack regiments under their command would be assembled in the capital.

When Sukarno learned of this plot, he called in Untung. The September 30th 
Movement was hastily formed to preempt the move by the Council of Generals. It 
was hoped that by destroying the leaders of the Council, the coup would be 
thwarted.

The right-wing generals had intended to justify their takeover with Sukarno's 
"ill health," the pretext being that should anything happen to the President, 
the country would fall into the hands of the Communists. However, their 
intended move could only have had the sympathy of a small minority of the 
population, and they were no doubt anxious about what the response of the 
millions of progressive Inonesians would be.

The failure of Untung's movement gave the generals an excuse to openly begin a 
massive hunt of left-wingers, and they found the people and their organizations 
confused and unsure about what was happening.

Having crushed the September 30th Movement, the Council of Generals went on to 
implement their coup plan, setting up a new government controlled by the 
military and physically wiping out the opposition.

The Western press dwelt mournfully on the death of the six generals, but it was 
many months before the extent of the slaughter that followed was reported 
anywhere. It was even longer before the story of what happened on September 30 
finally made it into the New York Times, even if only by the back door.

THE TESTIMONY OF GENERAL SUPARDJO

On March 1, 1967, the Times reported on the trial of Brigadier General 
Supardjo, an officer charged with being in on the "coup attempt" of September 
30. In his testimony, Supardjo denied that he had participated in the Movement, 
remarking wryly that it was poorly organized. However, he made it clear that he 
was not playing along with his captors.

  According to the defendant's (former Army Brigadier General Supardjo) 
testimony, Indonesian political history since September 30, 1965, has been 
completely distorted. The attempted coup that night, he said, was not a 
Communist plot and it certainly was not aimed at ousting the legal government. 
Instead, he has repeatedly told his five uniformed judges that the "September 
30th Movement" came into being to forestall a coup by the "Council of 
Generals".... Mr. Supardjo noted with irony that in the aftermath of the coup 
the "Council of Generals got what it aimed for." After all, he added, "the 
ministers of the legal government are now in jail" -- three of them, including 
former Foreign Minister Subandrio, have already been sentenced to death -- and, 
he said, only Mr. Sukarno is left. (New York Times, March 1, 1967] 
General Supardjo could have had no selfish motive for this testimony. Indeed, 
it brought him a death sentence.

While the Council of Generals has not been mentioned elsewhere in the 
Establishment press other than in these direct quotes from General Supardjo's 
testimony, its existence was widely recognized. On July 4, 1966, the Indonesian 
Ambassador to Cuba, Mr. A.M. Hanafi, announced his resignation. In a statement 
explaining why he was leaving the post, he talked of the right-wing military 
group that had taken over in his country:

  Since the outbreak of this 30th of September Movement affair, the development 
of events has brought to light the existence of a "Council of Generals," a gang 
of the most reactionary high-ranking Army officers, whose ringleader is Gen. A. 
H. Nasution. Everything that is happening in Indonesia now was carefully 
plotted by this Council, working hand in glove with the CIA, and was what Col. 
Untung and the other patriotic officers tried to avert with their 30th of 
September Movement. Opposition to this Council has now become the order of the 
day for every Indonesian patriot.
THE SILENT SLAUGHTER

October, November, and half of December passed before any story of the mass 
slaughter taking place in Indonesia broke in the American press. That was in 
Time magazine. It was another month before the New York Times reported it.

Was this because the U.S. press didn't have the story earlier? That is 
inconceivable. An event of earth-shaking importance had taken place with the 
right-wing coup. Even a cub reporter would understand how significant such a 
political turn was for the fortunes of the U.S. in Asia. The Viet Nam War was 
going on just across the South China Sea. Hundreds of reporters were stationed 
there from every major news agency.

Did the new regime exclude foreign reporters? If so, there was never a word 
about it printed in any newspaper. It can only be assumed that the U.S. press, 
as well as Washington, were intimately aware of the reign of terror, but were 
keeping mum.

When, after three months, the awful toll was finally brought out, it was with 
an air of a fait accompli. Hundreds of thousands had already been killed. It 
was too late to stop it.

Time magazine, which usually judges the virtue of governments by the number of 
communist scalps dangling from their belts, nevertheless objectively reported 
on December 17, 1965, that:

  Communists, red sympathizers and their families are being massacred by the 
thousands. Backlands army units are reported to have executed thousands of 
Communists after interrogation in remote jails. Armed with wide-bladed knives 
called "parangs," Moslem bands crept at night into the homes of Communists, 
killing entire families and burying the bodies in shallow graves. The murder 
campaign became so brazen in parts of rural East Java, that Moslem bands placed 
the heads of victims on poles and paraded them through villages. The killings 
have been on such a scale that the disposal of the corpses has created a 
serious sanitation problem in East Java and Northern Sumatra where the humid 
air bears the reek of decaying flesh. Travelers from these areas tell of small 
rivers and streams that have been literally clogged with bodies. River 
transportation has at places been seriously impeded.
Spotty accounts appeared now and again in the months that followed. Again, 
their tone was fatalistic. There was no indignation or sense of urgency. 
Instead, the mounting dead were portrayed almost as victims of destiny, the 
doomed figures of a Greek tragedy.

The Guardian of Britain on April 7, 1966, carried this account from Djakarta by 
Nicholas Turner:

  Estimates of the total number of Indonesians killed in political massacres 
after the attempted coup of September 30 are being revised as fuller 
information comes in from outer regions. One Western ambassador considers 
300,000 to be a conservative estimate, and other compilations run far higher. 
  A traveller who knows the island of Bali well, and speaks the language . . . 
describes mass executions and the annihilation of village after village in some 
areas. A consular official in Surabaja accepts a figure of 200,000 for Bali, 
which has a population of two million.

  Estimates of the dead in Sumatra also range around 200,000, and a similar 
figure for Java is generally regarded as on the low side. When the death tolls 
for other islands such as Borneo and Sulawesi are added, the total may well be 
upwards of 600,000. Just how many of these are Communists is another question. 

  It appears certain that the great majority of the dead were innocent victims 
of political hysteria....

  In some areas, Communist suspects were shot or poisoned, but usually the 
Moslem youth beheaded its victims with the parang. . . . The heads were often 
impaled on fences and gateposts . . . .

  Rivers in many parts of the country were clogged with corpses for weeks. A 
European resident of Surabaja describes finding bodies washed up by the river 
on to his back garden.


Carnage on such a scale can scarcely be imagined, and the first effect after 
reading of such events is to feel stunned, incapable of comprehension. But 
after the first shock wears off and the awful truth sinks in, it is necessary 
to ask some questions. How was it possible? More people died in these few 
months than in the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. By the end of 1965, more 
Indonesians had been killed than the number of Vietnamese fallen after 15 years 
of war.

Were these merely the victims of some local vengeance, as the papers tried to 
imply? James Reston of the Times found it significant in one of his columns 
that the term "run amok" is of Malay origin. How convenient for Mr. Reston are 
the anti-Asian prejudices and chauvinism of Western society! How easy it is for 
the newspapers to explain away a million deaths in Indonesia, where, as every 
good American schoolchild knows, "life is cheap."

All the lies that allowed the comfortable Christians of Holland and England to 
believe they were morally right in robbing Indonesia for three centuries are 
now invoked by Mr. Reston and the editors of other great American newspapers to 
explain away the massacres.

Mr. Reston's "insights" into the Indonesian character notwithstanding, the real 
explanation of the massacres lies not in bloodlust or hysteria, or in people 
wildly "running amok." As in all cases of genocide throughout the world, there 
was organization, planning, efficiency and anarmed force responsible for the 
executions.

ARMY CARRIES OUT A "SPONTANEOUS" MASSACRE

In one of the few isolated instances of press coverage given the slaughter in 
Indonesia, the New York Times May 8, 1966, Sunday Magazine ran an article by 
Seth S. King, its Southeast Asia correspondent. King quotes a schoolteacher in 
a village near Jogjakarta:


  My students went right out with the army. They pointed out P.K.I. members. 
The army shot them on the spot along with their whole family: women, children. 
It was horrible.... 

Indonesia is made up of 3,000 separate islands, strung out for 3,000 miles 
along the equator. Yet the massacres were coordinated, and as the earlier quote 
from the Manchester Guardian showed, almost evenly spread across all the 
greater islands of the archipelago. 
No mass hysteria could leap hundreds of miles, across the intervening seas, to 
strike on island after island. Only a strong central power could have directed 
the executions.

It was Nasution and Suharto's army that systematically went from village to 
village, rooted out the peasant leaders, the communists and nationalists, the 
workers who had led seizures of Dutch and American property or feudal 
plantations. They hauled before the firing squad thousands of teachers, 
infected with ideas of "liberation." They didn't bother with trials, lawyers or 
laws them- selves. It was the ultimate pacification program that U.S. experts 
in Viet Nam had dreamed of and this time it worked.

How was it that a reactionary group of generals dared to embark on such a 
grisly course, one that could only earn them the undying hatred of millions? 
These corrupt military men, powerful as they may have been, based their 
internal support on a thin crust of Indonesian society composed of feudal 
reactionaries, merchants tied to Western commerce and a portion of the civil 
servants. But the great mass of the people were their enemies, struggling to 
end once and for all the landed aristocracy and to break the bonds to the West 
that had exploited them for over three hundred years

How then could the Council of Generals have expected to win against such a 
large and organized adversary? What gave them the courage to put aside their 
own personal deals and manipulations in order to launch a full-scale political 
offensive against the Sukarno government and the Indonesian people?

"WASHINGTON CAREFUL NOT TO CLAIM CREDIT FOR IT" 

We could easily venture a guess, but it is not necessary. The answer has 
already been given, and by no less an authority than the New York Times.

In a more scientific frame of mind than was evident in his previously quoted 
remarks, James Reston spoke quite candidly about the coup and the massacres on 
June 19, 1966:


  One of the most persistent complaints among officials in Washington is that 
our political troubles in Vietnam are not balanced adequately by reports in the 
press of the more hopeful political developments elsewhere in Asia. 
  The savage transformation of Indonesia from a pro-Chinese policy under 
Sukarno to a defiantly anti-Communist policy under General Suharto is, of 
course, the most important of these developments. Washington is careful not to 
claim any credit for this change in the sixth most populous and one of the 
richest nations in the world, but this does not mean that Washington had 
nothing to do with it.

  There was a great deal more contact between the anti-communist forces in that 
country and at least one very high official in Washington before and during the 
Indonesian massacre than is generally realized. General Suharto's forces, at 
times severely short of food and munitions, have been getting aid from here 
through various third countries, and it is doubtful if the coup would ever have 
been attempted without the American show of strength in Vietnam or been 
sustained without the clandestine aid it has received indirectly from here.


This column of Reston's was entitled "A Gleam of Light in Asia." In the low-key 
tone that has characterized similar admissions about the U.S. role in 
Indonesia's brutal return to a semi-colonial status, the massacres are brushed 
aside as a deplorable but necessary means to obtaining Washington's end. 
The air of glee about the right-wing victory is even less restrained in other 
reports. Max Frankel, long an observer of the Washington scene, captured the 
mood of exhilaration in the nation's capital in a Times article on March 12, 
1966, entitled "Elated U.S. Officials Looking to New Aid to Jakarta's Economy."


  The Johnson Administration found it difficult today to hide its delight with 
the news from Indonesia, pointing to the political demise of President Sukarno 
and the Communists. After a long period of patient diplomacy, designed to help 
the army triumph over the Communists, officials were elated to find their 
expectations being realized. 
Both Reston and Frankel are very cautious when it comes to spelling out the 
details of how the U.S. helped put Nasution and Suharto in power. Overthrowing 
governments is not anything that can be openly bragged of, especially when the 
result is a genocidal bloodbath of the opposition. Yet there should be enough 
in these reporters' remarks alone to bring the U.S. government up on charges 
before any reputable world body. (However, instead of launching an 
investigation of the coup and genocide carried out in Indonesia, the United 
Nations under U.S. pressure readmitted Indonesia to membership without debate.) 

One of the methods which the U.S. used to ensure the success of the coup was 
reported by Bertrand Russell in his introduction toThe Silent Slaughter.


  During October 1965 two representatives of the Bertrand Russell Peace 
Foundation, close associates of mine, were in Djakarta on my behalf attending a 
conference. In Djakarta few had any doubt about what was taking place around 
them. The United States Seventh Fleet was in Javanese waters. The largest base 
in the area, feverishly constructed by the United States but a few months 
earlier on the southernmost point of the southernmost island of the 
Philippines, was ordered "on alert." General Nasution had a mission in 
Washington. The United States was directly involved in the day to day events.


It is doubtful whether the full story of the CIA involvement in Indonesia will 
ever be told in even one-quarter the detail leaked about U.S.-backed coup 
d'etats in other countries. The crime was so horrible that even the 
half-hearted supporters of imperialism would be turned away if they knew the 
truth about U.S. complicity. William Worthy, one of the speakers at the Public 
Inquest on Indonesia, told how Sukarno himself indicted the CIA a few months 
before the bloody coup.


  One of the several, and I emphasize several, Achilles' heels of the CIA is 
its assumption that everyone, everywhere, especially if not Anglo-Saxon, is for 
sale. As Eric Norden told you, the United States in 1963 tried to bribe the 
Sukarno government with a huge offer of American economic aid if only he would 
abandon his policy of confrontation with Malaysia. In other words, the 
taxpayers of the United States were to pay out of their hides in order to save 
this obviously contrived new nation of Malaysia, which the Times of London 
itself admitted was first formulated in the British Colonial Office. Sukarno 
also told his people last spring that a direct offer to bribe him personally 
had been made by American agents. 

But the CIA did not stop at merely trying to bribe Sukarno, the President of 
the Indonesian Republic. They also approached the right-wing generals (where 
they had not alreadycreated them with U.S. training and support) and worked out 
their takeover plot with them.

According to Suara Pemuda Indonesia, in an early 1966 article, this had been 
going on for several years and was far advanced by 1965:


  The U.S. imperialists highly appreciate the right-wing military figure of 
Nasution and call him the "strongest" and a "courageous figure." To strengthen 
the position of the right-wing military clique, the U.S. imperialists had given 
"aid" which up to 1963 amounted to 60.9 million U.S. dollars. Before the end of 
1960, the United States had equipped 43 battalions of the army. Every year the 
United States trained officers of the right-wing military clique. Between 1956 
and 1959 more than 200 high-ranking officers were trained in the United States, 
while low-ranking officers are trained by the hundreds every year. Once the 
head of the Agency for International Development in America said that U.S. aid, 
of course, was not intended to support Sukarno and that the U.S. had trained a 
great number of officers and ordinary people who would form a unit to make 
Indonesia a free country. By a free country, he meant a country like Taiwan, 
the Philippines, Thailand and other American satellites. 
  The cooperation as well as the aid of the United States have greatly 
strengthened the position of the right-wing military clique in Indonesia. 
Finally in the middle of last year the U.S. imperialists suggested that the 
right-wing military clique take over state power. For this purpose the U.S. 
imperialists provided many facilities, among others a fund of 225 billion 
Indonesian rupiahs. Cooperation between the imperialists and the Council of 
Generals is channeled through the CIA....

  The Council of Generals is an organization of the right-wing military clique 
within the Indonesian Army, which was founded to seize power from the hands of 
the legal Indonesian government. The founding of this Council of Generals was 
directly supported and planned together with the U.S. intelligence service, the 
CIA. Its members consist of 40 right-wing generals, among whom the important 
figures are General Nasution, General A. Sukendro, General Suharto and the 
right-wing generals who were killed on October 1 last year. They were: General 
A. Yani, General Suparman, General M.T. Harjono, General Suprapto, General 
Sutojo and General Pandjaitan.

  Although the Council of Generals has just been founded, the right-wing 
military clique within the army has existed for a long time. The founding of 
the Council of Generals was merely an inauguration of the power of the 
right-wing clique within the Army.


This was hardly a mere piece of speculation on the part of Suara Pemuda. It was 
common knowledge in political circles in Indonesia as well, of course, as in 
the very highest circles in the United States. Max Frankel of the New York 
Times wrote on March 13, 1966, that "The United States continued to retain 
excellent contacts with the top military leaders, even after Mr. Sukarno had 
renounced American aid (in December 1964] and had begun to move against 
American information libraries, the Peace Corps, and news correspondents."

And on February 12, 1965, eight months before the counter-revolution began, the 
New York Times put its editorial finger on what it considered the turning point 
in U.S. determination to overthrow Sukarno. It said at that time:


  When President Sukarno threatened the Federation of Malaysia, he placed 
himself firmly in the path of U.S. and British efforts to contain Communist 
China. Washington has left active defense of Malaysia to the British 
Commonwealth nations and seeks to retain some influence in Indonesia primarily 
in the hope of some day helping her army against the expected Communist bid for 
power. 

The plan could hardly have been spelled out more clearly, although of course 
the news of it was played down and other newspapers in the United States didn't 
make even back-page stories of this sensational item. The story not only 
revealed the plan for "helping her army" but coolly revealed that the U.S. used 
Britain as a mere pawn for its campaign to "contain Communist China"!

The importance of Malaysia should be kept in mind, too, when reading in later 
parts of this pamphlet how intensely both nationalists and Communists felt 
about defeating the puppet state of Malaysia, which was the external threat to 
the independence of Indonesia, just as the right-wing generals were the 
internal threat.

Finally, with reference to the CIA, it should be even more clearly understood 
now than in 1965-66 just how universal its activities are and how axiomatic it 
must have been for it to concern itself so deeply with Indonesia. The 
revelations a year and a half ago about the CIA's penetration into the U.S. 
student movement, about whole "foundations" being conduits for CIA money and 
whole book publishing companies being started by the agency should have 
convinced any skeptic that the well-based charges against the CIA in the case 
of Indonesia were absolutely true and that the U.S. did not merely "aid" the 
fascist generals, but used them to reintroduce U.S. big business and U.S. 
imperialism, generally, into Indonesia.

CHAPTERS Index


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