In Indonesia, the ‘fake news’ that fueled a Cold War massacre is still potent 
five decades later
    
 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/09/30/in-indonesia-the-fake-news-that-fueled-a-cold-war-massacre-is-still-potent-five-decades-later/?utm_term=.24a039953ce4
September 30   
Members of the youth wing of the Indonesian Communist Party are taken to prison 
in Jakarta on Oct. 30, 1965. Historians estimate that beginning in 1965, 
between 500,000 and 1 million Indonesians were killed in Gen. Suharto's bloody 
rise to power, the worst mass slaughter in Southeast Asia's modern history 
after the Khmer Rouge killing fields in Cambodia. (AP Photo) 
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Early on the morning of Oct. 1, 1965, members of 
Indonesia's armed forces kidnapped and killed six high-ranking generals in 
Jakarta. To this day, it's not entirely clear who was involved in planning the 
operation or what the “30th September Movement” hoped to achieve.

But the military's swift reaction and the mass killings that followed have 
entered history as one of the Cold War's darkest chapters. Gen. Suharto, then 
the head of the army's strategic reserve command and relying on support from 
the CIA, accused the powerful Communist Party of orchestrating a coup attempt 
and took over as the military's de facto leader. Over the next few months, his 
forces oversaw the systematic execution of at least 500,000 Indonesians, and 
historians say they may have killed up to 1 million. The massacre decimated the 
world's third-largest Communist Party (behind those of the Soviet Union and 
China), and untold numbers were tortured and killed simply for allegedly 
associating with communists.

The military dictatorship that formed afterward, led by Suharto, made wildly 
inaccurate anti-communist propaganda a cornerstone of its legitimacy and ruled 
Indonesia with U.S.  support until 1998.

More than 50 years after the events of 1965 — and as documents continue to 
emerge pointing to Washington's support for the killings — the topic is still 
an inflammatory one in the world's largest Muslim-majority country. Recently, 
conservative and Islamist activists, armed with Suharto's version of events, 
have sought to suppress investigations into the events of 1965 and have used 
the communist boogeyman to attack moderate President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo.

“There are two tools that cynical operators can use for political gain in 
Indonesia — religion and communism,” said Baskara T. Wardaya, a professor at 
Sanata Dharma University in Yogyakarta who studies the role of the Cold War in 
Indonesian history. “And the myth of an ever-present, dangerous communist 
threat was created by Suharto in October 1965. It was ingrained into the minds 
of the people.”

 [An Islamist militant group says Indonesia’s new bills have secret communist 
symbols]  

In 1965, the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) was a legal party of unarmed 
civilians operating in the open, not a rebel or clandestine organization. Even 
if the party's high command did know about or helped form the 30th September 
Movement, there is no evidence that any rank-and-file members had knowledge of 
its plans.

But simply for their political beliefs, they were subjected to mass slaughter. 
Across the country, one by one, Indonesians were shot, stabbed, decapitated or 
thrown off cliffs into rivers to be washed into the ocean. The carnage was 
mostly over by the end of 1965, but violence and discrimination continued for 
decades. Relatives of victims or accused communists were banned from 
participating in many facets of public life.

A member of the U.S. Embassy staff in Jakarta later admitted that he had handed 
over a list of communists — compiled by U.S. officials — to Indonesian 
authorities as the massacre was underway.

“It really was a big help to the army,” Robert J. Martens, a former member of 
the embassy's political section, told The Washington Post in 1990. “They 
probably killed a lot of people, and I probably have a lot of blood on my 
hands, but that's not all bad.”

The National Declassification Center recently processed thousands of the 
Jakarta embassy's files from this period and is working with Brad Simpson, a 
historian at the University of Connecticut, and the National Security Archive 
to digitize them and make them public.

In an email Friday, Simpson said preliminary work indicated that the documents 
should “confirm in additional detail that US officials were aware of the 
Army-led mass-killings of alleged PKI supporters and members and actively 
encouraged them” and could be released later this year. He added of the 
officials, “They knew the Army was carrying out a campaign of extermination 
against overwhelmingly unarmed civilians who were unaware of and had no 
involvement in the September 30th Movement.”

But Indonesia still suffers from “dangerous anti-communist paranoia,” in the 
words of a recent Human Rights Watch publication. The organization was 
condemning an attack on the offices of the Legal Aid Institute in Jakarta 
earlier in September.

The institute had planned to host a small conference about the events of 1965, 
but conservatives circulated social-media messages falsely alleging that the 
event was actually a meeting to revive the PKI, which is still illegal. 
Demonstrations on Sept. 16 forced the cancellation of the planned talk. When 
supporters of the groups involved returned to the building the next day for a 
cultural event, they were trapped inside by an “anti-communist” mob until early 
the next morning.

Participants, including students and young human rights activists, told stories 
of their panic that night as they heard the group outside shout repeatedly 
“Kill PKI!” and “Allahu akbar!” Witnesses said many of the demonstrators 
belonged to the same Islamist groups that led a successful campaign for the 
imprisonment of a former governor of Jakarta, a Christian of Chinese descent, 
on charges of committing blasphemy against Islam.

 

Kirim email ke