Alex De Jong | 15 Juni 2018
From 1965 to 1966, the Indonesian military and its allies massacred hundreds of thousands of Communists — often with the active aid of Western, democratic governments.
PKI members and sympathizers rounded up in Bali, date unknown. Tempo / The Act of Killing
Review of Geoffrey B. Robinson, The Killing Season. A History of the Indonesian Massacres, 1965–66 (Princeton University Press, 2018).
Before its
destruction in 1965, the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI, in its Indonesian
abbreviation) was the world’s third-largest communist party. But that year,
hundreds of thousands of its members and supporters were murdered in
one of the great crimes of the twentieth century.
In one of the most notorious
cases, the Brantas River apparently became clogged with dead bodies; “Usually
the corpses were no longer recognizable as human. Headless. Stomachs torn open.
To make sure they didn’t sink, the carcasses were deliberately tied to, or
impaled on, bamboo stakes.” Bodies “were stacked together on rafts over which
the PKI banner proudly flew.”
The
Killing Season: A History of the Indonesian Massacres, 1965–66 by Geoffrey
B. Robinson is a crucial book about the destruction of the Indonesian left and
the formation of a new, authoritarian regime. This was a turning point not only
for Indonesia, but for the whole Southeast Asian region. The book gives as
complete a picture of this period as is possible with the current state of
research, adding to the possibility of a deeper reckoning with Indonesia’s
history of anticommunist slaughter than the country has engaged in thus far.
The Massacre
The situation in
Southeast Asia in mid-1965 must have caused headaches in the US State
Department and Pentagon. Despite pouring more and more resources into its war
in Vietnam, the United States was unable to stop the Communists from advancing.
To the north of
Vietnam, there was the People’s Republic of China, calling for global
revolution. To the South, there was Sukarno’s Indonesia. President Sukarno was
allied with the Indonesian Communists and talked about forming a new
Peking–Jakarta axis in international politics to oppose imperialism and
neocolonialism.
What would happen
if Indonesia “went Communist,” as seemed likely to many US observers? Aside
from Vietnam, between Indonesia and China, there were Thailand and Malaysia,
both facing their own Communist rebels. If Indonesia would join the Communist
ranks, these countries would probably follow. The Strait of Malacca, one of the
most important sea-lanes in the world, would be blocked, isolating the
Philippines, Japan, and Australia from their Western allies.
But one night,
the whole setting started to shift. From September 30 to October 1, 1965, as
most of the country slept, the top brass of the Indonesian army was wiped out
by lower-ranking officers. Among the surviving top commanders were General
Suharto and General Nasution, who was wounded. In confusing and contradictory
radio broadcasts, a group called the Gerakan September Tiga Puluh (September
30th Movement, G30S) took responsibility, declaring that it had acted to
prevent a right-wing military coup against Sukarno.
Some hours later,
it also declared the formation of a new, “revolutionary” cabinet – but under
the incumbent president. A number of members of the youth movement of the
Communist Party cooperated with several units of the army in an attempt to
occupy strategic locations in Jakarta.
The putsch was
short lived. The following days, troops under the command of Generals Suharto
and Nasution moved against the G30S, quickly defeating them.
At the funeral of
the murdered officers, Suharto accused the influential PKI of their deaths and
of preparing a coup to seize power. Soon, fantastic stories spread: the
army-controlled media claimed the Communists had compiled death-lists; the
names were written in a special ink on seemingly blank sheets of paper found in
PKI offices; the Communists had throughout the country prepared holes with
pointed bamboo sticks on the bottom in which to throw their victims.
Particularly singled out were
women supporters of the PKI. Stories about them grew even more bizarre: members
of the PKI-aligned women’s organization Gerwani supposedly
performed a seductive dance in front of the captured generals before castrating
them, gouging their eyes out with razors, and joining an orgy with other
PKI-members.
In the following
months, the PKI and its allied mass organizations were destroyed. Between
October 1965 and March 1966, hundred of thousands of supposed PKI-supporters
were killed. The PKI and its associated organizations were banned, their
offices burned down, and thousands imprisoned. Prominent leaders were sentenced
to death. Others, like PKI-chair D.N. Aidit, had already been “killed while
trying to escape.”
The events of
1965 have been obscured by time — and by the efforts of the new regime and the
Indonesian army to cover up the murder of hundreds of thousands of people. The
destruction of the once powerful Indonesian left was celebrated in
the West; it was “the West’s best news for years in Asia” according to Time. New York Times reporter
Arnold C.
Brackman spoke of
a “new dawn.” His two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning colleague James Reston titled
his article on the power shift “A gleam of light in Asia.”
In the weeks
after September 30, Suharto emerged as the strong man of Indonesia. He
drastically shifted Indonesia’s international alignment, breaking off relations
with China, welcoming back Western investors, and cooperating with the IMF and
World Bank to restructure the economy.
The 1965
massacres have long remained understudied. Initially, this seemed to change
with the fall of Suharto in 1998 and the opening up of Reformasi, the period of reform. As part of the
democratization of the country, the military’s grip on the writing of history
was weakened and survivors of the massacres, for decades repressed, began to
speak out. Human rights associations were formed, and attempts to investigate
the killings and give victims a dignified burial begun.
Many of the hopes
of Reformasi, however, were disappointed in the
following years. The army remains an important political force, elements of
Suharto’s New Order regime persist, and the anticommunism it instilled in
Indonesian society continues to motivate attacks on progressive movements.
But the cracks in
the official myths were not completely closed. Indonesian and international
scholars and activists persist in attempts to uncover what happened in 1965,
producing new books of history and memoirs. In 2012 and 2014, The Act
of Killing and The Look of Silence,
two films by Joshua
Oppenheimer, drew international attention. Robinson’s The Killing Season is not only a synthesis of
such recent research on these events, but also adds extensive original research
essential to a full understanding of the continuing impact of the massacres.
Cold War in
Indonesia
The first chapters
of the book set the context, describing the landscape of Indonesian politics in
early 1965. By this time, Indonesian president Sukarno had, under the system of
“Guided Democracy,” concentrated power in his own hands. Indonesia’s first
national elections had taken place ten years earlier. In those elections, the
PKI had done surprisingly well, coming in fourth place with over 16 percent of
the vote — 6 percent less than the largest party, the nationalist, pro-Sukarno
Partai Nasional Indonesia (PNI).
In the years
after the 1955 elections, the PKI pursued a strategy of building up its mass
organizations while allying closely with the popular president. The PKI tried
to push Sukarno to give it more institutional posts, but the party was mostly
kept out of power.
Aside from the
president and the PKI, there was a third major source of power in Indonesia:
the army. Since the war of liberation against Dutch colonialism, the army was a
powerful factor in Indonesian politics and resisted attempts to keep its role
restricted to defense of the country. Its influence grew further after it took
control of Dutch enterprises that were seized during protests in 1956–8.
That same decade,
Sukarno faced armed revolts in the outer provinces of the Indonesian
archipelago. The army’s prestige and political influence grew further thanks to
its defeat of the rebels, who had been covertly
supported by the US in an attempt to weaken or even overthrow the president.
The attempt backfired. The rebels were defeated, and Sukarno moved closer to
opponents of the US, especially China.
But US
involvement in Indonesian politics did not end there. The US government now had
even more reason to worry about Sukarno. The kind of populist nationalism he
represented was seen as a serious threat to Western hegemony in the region.
Robinson
describes how the US changed its approach to trying to win support among the
army brass through providing training and military aid. The brass, a privileged
social layer allied with landlords, businessmen, and conservative religious
leaders, was seen by the US as the most reliable anticommunist force in the
country. For the US, this new strategy would prove a success some years later.
The Year of
Living Dangerously
In early 1965,
Indonesian politics was entering a crisis. The army and the PKI were
increasingly in conflict. Rumors about the president’s ill health circulated,
raising speculations about what would happen if the only figure able to unite
the country’s contradictory political forces under him would disappear.
In such a moment,
a contest for power between the PKI and the army would be unavoidable.
Robinson
describes how Western governments drew up contingency plans to prevent the PKI
from translating its growing social weight into political power. The Killing Season includes a photo of an
infamous British Foreign Office memo of December 1964 that read; “A premature
PKI coup may be the most helpful solution for the West — provided the coup
fails.” A few months later, a very similar scenario took place with the putsch
of the G30S.
The G30S is key
to the events of 1965. It is around this movement that some of the most
important questions revolve.
One question is
what the goals of the movement actually were; another is what its relationship
to the PKI was. Robinson largely agrees with the view of the movement described
in John Roosa’s Pretext for Mass Murder: The September 30th Movement
and Suharto’s Coup d’État in Indonesia.
Roosa argues that
the G30S was an attempt to strike a preventive blow against right-wing generals
in a context of continuing rumors of a coming right-wing, military coup. The
movement consisted of pro-Sukarno military officers as well as PKI chair Aidit
and the mysterious Sjam, a PKI member who was responsible for its Biro Khusus, a clandestine PKI organization that
tried to organize support for the party inside the army.
Roosa concluded
that “the chairman of the PKI and a select handful of
Politburo members
— not even the full Politburo — were the leaders of the movement. They
believed, however, that their allies in the military would be able to organize
a military action on their own; they saw themselves as merely the political
advisors to ‘progressive revolutionary’ officers. The dual structure of the
movement’s leadership, the split between the PKI leaders and the military
officers, combined with the lack of clear communication between the two sides,
resulted in a strange action on October 1, 1965, that was highly vulnerable to
counterattack.”
The plan was to
abduct generals that were known to be right wing and force them to resign. For
this, the G30S counted on support from Sukarno: the movement would abduct the
generals, and in name of the Indonesian nation demand that they be sacked.
Sukarno would then use this opportunity to get rid of some of his most powerful
rivals by acceding to the demand of the movement. For unknown reasons, the G30S
ended up not abducting the suspected generals, but killing them. Roosa makes a
strong case that the killings were unplanned, and the result of
miscommunication and incompetence.
After the
killings, Sukarno made clear he would have nothing to do with the movement.
Panicked, the movement tried to declare a new government. In Max Lane’s words,
“the conspiracy this swiftly escalated from a mutiny hoping to win Sukarno’s
support to a coup against Sukarno himself.” Contrary to army propaganda, the
PKI as such was not involved in the group — not even its central committee was
informed by Aidit.
There never was a
Communist conspiracy to seize power.
This explanation
has the benefit of explaining the chaotic, strangely incompetent nature of the
movement. It answers the question of why, if there had been a plan to seize
power, the PKI failed to mobilize its millions-strong base in support of the
G30S.
What happened
instead was that the army successfully exploited a botched action of a small
group of pro-PKI officers and leaders to tar the whole leftist movement. The
army had almost complete control over the press and used it to whip up fear and
anger against the Communists. Next, it organized the murder of hundreds of
thousands. The Indonesian army went on the offensive to annihilate the PKI, its
mass organizations, and even the left-wing of the PNI — in short, the entire
Indonesian left.
The Killing
Season
Robinson
describes how, according to a very conservative estimate, in 1965–66, half a
million of people were killed.
Supposed leftists
were usually rounded up and imprisoned in makeshift camps before being executed
in groups. In some cases, whole villages that were supposed to be pro-PKI were
slaughtered. Often, the killing was done by soldiers. More frequently, the
murders were committed by right-wing militia composed of members of religious
and nationalist groups, who were organized, trained, and equipped by the army.
This means that
tens, maybe hundreds, of thousands, were involved in the killings. This
diffusion of guilt across society proved very effective in blocking later
attempts to find justice.
Robinson shows
the crucial role of the army in organizing the massacre. The killings did not
follow the same pattern all over the country nor did they start at the same
time. Killings were worse in the central island of Java and on Bali. In some
regions, including Bali, large-scale killings were late to start, beginning
only weeks after the G30S. Robinson discusses different explanations for this
variation, such as preceding local histories of social conflicts, especially
over land.
Once again,
crucial element in explaining this variation is the army. In Bali, it took
weeks before Sukarno-loyalists were forced out of power — only after their
removal did the army have a free hand to organize the systematic killing.
Elsewhere, army commanders organized the mass detention of people accused of
supporting the PKI. Sometimes this meant fewer people were killed; other times,
it was only a delay of their death as the commanders decided that killing
prisoners was more convenient than keeping them alive.
Robinson
concludes in the crucial sixth chapter of the book that “the mass killings of
1965–66 were set in motion by the army itself … It was the army leadership,
under Major General Suharto, that introduced the idea that the political crisis
of October should and could be resolved through violence, and provided the
means through which that intention was achieved.”
Inside Indonesia,
the history of the months-long massacre that enabled Suharto to seize power was
manipulated. Decades of propaganda spread a still-influential myth: the
violence against “Communists” had been an eruption of popular anger against the
treacherous PKI after it had tried to seize power. It was perhaps regrettable
that it had gone so far, but the violence was essentially self-defense.
The Indonesian
army, so the story continues, had tried its best to contain it while acting
decisively to save the nation from the Communist conspiracy. In Western accounts
of the violence, pontifications about “Indonesian culture” served as an
additional explanation for the massive bloodletting. The normally “peaceful”
and “placid” Indonesians had “run amok.” But now, under the rule of Suharto,
the country was peaceful and advancing.
As Robinson
shows, this falsification of history was facilitated by Western officials and
journalists who repeated the army line. A particular egregious example is Indonesia: Crisis and Transformation 1965–1968, a book from 1990 by the US ambassador to
Indonesia at the time, Marshall Green — someone who, Robinson shows, was in a
good position to know much more about what actually happened. The book repeats
all the myths; the PKI and the army had been engaged in “a prolonged armed
struggle,” a “life-and-death struggle” even, during which Suharto emerged “as
the man who could save Indonesia from communism and chaos.”
But even those
eager to prove the myth of a “life-and-death” struggle cannot point to any
significant armed clashes between the army and the PKI. Apart from Jakarta, it
was only in Central Java, the heart of the PKI, that there were significant
attempts by lower-ranking officers to support the G30S. Only in one city,
Yogyakarta, did this rebellion lead to killing; two officers were killed.
The violence
following the G30S was a not a two-sided civil war — it was a one-sided,
bloody, class war. As Dutch Indonesia expert W.F. Wertheim already wrote in
1966, it was “class struggle by machete.” It was not only the PKI that was
destroyed — a whole stream of progressive thought and culture, one that had
been a central part of Indonesian society, was ripped out.
The victims were
labor organizers, teachers, writers, women’s rights activists, painters, poets,
peasant leaders, traditional puppeteers. Independent unions and parties were
banned, as was the propagation of “Marxism-Leninism.” Women’s organizations
were among the prime targets of the New Order in its attempt to reassert
patriarchal authority.
Robinson does not
enter deeply into this aspect of the aftermath, but Suharto’s ”New Order”
regime was a remarkably successful attempt at social engineering. The New Order
regime worked consistently to depoliticize society and isolate the popular
masses from any kind of political activity. The goal was to turn them into what
New Order ideologue Ali Moertopo called a “floating mass”; a formless mass of
atomized individuals that would dedicate themselves to working for the
“development” of the country instead of engaging in politics and shaping their
society.
The fate of the
famous novelist Pramoedya
Ananta Toer shows something of the immense loss the country suffered.
Several of his manuscripts were destroyed, and he was imprisoned under terrible
conditions for fourteen years. He spent years in the infamous prison camp on Buru
Island. There, he wrote his masterful Buru
Quartet. These books were subsequently banned by the Suharto
regime under the pretext that they contained “communist propaganda.”
Even though Toer
was a supporter of the pro-PKI association of cultural workers LEKRA, he could
hardly be called a Communist. He was an anti-colonialist nationalist and
humanist who believed history is made by the people. His books convey that
worldview. For the Suharto regime, that was reason enough to ban them.
International
Accomplices
Indonesia’s “New
Order” came to power through massive bloodshed. This crime was aided by Western
states who were eager to see a change in Indonesia’s political trajectory. For
decades there has been speculation of direct involvement of Western
intelligence services in the G30S.
Suharto’s own
precise role also remains unclear. One of the leaders of G30S, Colonel Abdul
Latief, was a friend of Suharto. He met Suharto on September 29 and again just
a few hours before the botched abductions. Latief was tried in court only
thirteen years later, where he declared that he had in fact mentioned the
coming action to Suharto. Latief stated, “Having reported to him, I obtained
moral support because there wasn’t any reaction from him.”
Robinson also
points out how, immediately after the coup and before the systematic crackdown
on the Left, the PKI newspaper Harian Rakyat(People’s Daily) was
allowed to publish an editorial praising the G30S — although merely as an
internal affair of progressive officers. This article of course provided useful
ammunition for the army’s propaganda offensive.
Some observers of
Indonesian politics drew the conclusion that the whole affair had been a trap,
organized by Suharto himself, possibly with help from foreign intelligence
services. Considering the long history of Western intelligence services
attempting to subvert Sukarno’s government, and the pro-Western shift of
Suharto’s New Order, some form of foreign involvement seemed likely.
Robinson refrains
from such conclusions, only pointing out open questions. Direct involvement of
either Suharto, Nasution, or foreign intelligence services in the G30S itself
has never been proven. It is likely that Suharto was the shrewd opportunist
already that he showed himself to be the following decades. He was probably
aware a clash was coming, and instead of committing himself to one side, he
waited for the moment he could seize the opportunity.
Similarly,
foreign intelligence services, not only from the US, but also from Western
Europe, did seize the opportunity provided by the botched G30S operation to
spread propaganda against the PKI and stimulate the generals to destroy the
Left.
As Western
governments, especially the US and Australia, became more aware of the scale of
the mass murder, they increased their support to the army. What worried them
was that the Indonesian army would not make the most of this opportunity to get
rid of the PKI and of president Sukarno — in other words, that not enough
people would be killed. It is clear that Western powers did much to stabilize the
new Suharto regime by giving it support and economic aid that was withheld from
Sukarno.
Recent work by
scholars like Brad
Simpson and Jess
Melvin has shown that not only were Western intelligence services and
governments aware
of the mass murder, they also provided support to
the army’s bloody campaign. Robinson describes how the Indonesian army generals
were assured of the political support of foreign powers and discreetly supplied
with resources, such as equipment and cash, and probably ammunition and small
arms as well. The CIA provided lists with names of PKI members to the army,
probably signing their death warrant by doing so.
Sukarno was
unable to stop the annihilation of his allies. Political power increasingly
shifted to the military. Pressured by the army, on March 11, 1966, Sukarno
effectively transferred power to general Suharto, who then ruled the country
for the following three decades.
By this time,
there were thousands of prisoners. The prisons were hell; overcrowded with
people who received too little food and barely any medical attention. Torture
and sexual assault were common. Prisoners were exploited by the authorities,
forced to work for free. Many of the prisoners were released in the late
seventies but others remained imprisoned even until the collapse of Suharto’s regime
in 1998. Most were never even formally charged with any crimes.
Catastrophe
for the Left
Robinson devotes
several chapters to the fate of political prisoners in the years after the
coup. He describes how the Indonesian authorities classified them differently
based on their supposed level of involvement with the Communist movement. In
the prisons and camps, they were forced to attend religious sermons and
lectures on the virtues of Pancasila, the
ideology of the Indonesian state.
Even when they
were released, their suffering did not end. Their passports were stamped with
the letters “ET,” indicating they were former political prisoners. They were
excluded from many jobs and remained social pariahs, often required to
regularly report to the police.
Robinson, a
former researcher for Amnesty International, describes how an international
campaign by human rights groups played an important role in securing the
research of many political prisoners. One story he shares illustrates the
depths of anticommunist paranoia of the New Order regime.
In 1993, Robinson
met Indonesia’s former foreign minister Mochtar Kusumaatmadja, who told him
“that Amnesty International’s head of research for Indonesia was a
card-carrying member of the PKI.” Writes Robinson, “As it happened, I held that
post at the time, and so I took the opportunity to tell him that he was
mistaken. The minister insisted that he was right, declaring that the person in
question was someone much more important than me.” Robinson rightfully gives
human rights groups credit for their work on behalf of the prisoners, but of
course one important reason the regime eventually released many of them was
their movement had been so thoroughly defeated.
For socialists
looking back at the destruction of the PKI, it is striking how little
resistance there was to the anticommunist campaigns, considering the large
support for the party. Remnants of the party did call for armed resistance.
Inside Indonesia, there were attempts to salvage what was left of the movement
and reorganize underground. As Vannessa Hearman has
shown, even the most significant of those attempts, in South Blitar, East Java,
was hardly a military threat to Indonesia’s new rulers. The destruction of the
PKI base there in 1968 ”closed
an important chapter in the history of Indonesia’s left movement’.’ Some years
after 1965, leftists outside Indonesian were still writing about the people’s
war supposedly growing there — basing themselves on not much more than their
own wishes and Indonesian army propaganda that still had an interest in
pretending the PKI was a threat.
Suharto’s seizure
of power had revealed the PKI to be in many aspects a giant with feet of clay.
A history of the destruction of what had been the world’s largest nonruling
Communist party remains to be written. Part of the explanation must be sought
in its approach to the Indonesian state. In the words of PKI leader Aidit, this
state had two contradictory aspects, and it was the PKI’s task to strengthen
its “pro-people aspect” — which included the president himself. The party went
as far as to adopts Sukarno’s ideological statements as their own. Although it
sometimes criticized authoritarian measures taken by the Indonesian government,
measures that often ended up strengthening the position of the army, the PKI
avoided criticism of Sukarno himself.
Instead, the PKI
tried to profit from his popularity by presenting itself as the most dedicated
supporter of Sukarno. But in the socioeconomic field, the PKI had already run
up against limits. In early 1965, PKI leader Njoto complained that the only
real accomplishments of the party were the eight-hour working day and May 1
being a national holiday. The PKI tried gain more power through increasing its
positions in the institutions of the state. But in the Guided Democracy system,
the few government posts given to PKI leaders meant little anyway.
In 1965, the PKI
attempted a new tactic by mobilizing its peasant base in order to implement
land-reform laws that were being resisted by landlords: the so-called aksi sepihak or “unilateral actions.” But
the party was defeated by the landlords, right-wing militia, and their military
allies.
In conflicts with
the army before September 1965, the PKI had relied on Sukarno’s support. If necessary,
the party retreated in the face of army attacks until the president would feel
the need to intervene and restrain the army in order to maintain a balance
between the two. The failure of theaksi sepihak made
clear that without the president’s support, the PKI was no match for the army
and the conservative bloc that it led. When Sukarno fell, the party fell with
him.
After the G30S,
Sukarno was unable to save his leftist supporters. The army prevented Sukarno’s
calls not to attack the PKI from spreading through the media; Sukarno, “the
tongue of the Indonesian people,” was silenced. His remaining support was being
eroded by student protests that were facilitated by the army. In late 1966,
Sukarno refused to cooperate with loyal police and military officers that
wanted to him to rally his remaining support and confront Suharto. Sukarno, who
had dedicated his life to the unity of Indonesia, refused to support such a
desperate plan that would probably have meant civil war.
Sukarno was
essentially put under house arrest in a remote village and isolated from the
outside world. To one of his several wives, he bitterly complained that even
the Dutch colonists “had left him the means to communicate and discuss in my
place of exile”; his own countrymen did not. He died at sixty-nine years old,
on June 21, 1970.
The destruction
of the Indonesian left, meanwhile, was not lost on the international right: in
the early seventies, the phrase “Jakarta is coming” started to appear
graffitied on walls in Santiago, Chile.
Many of the
worrying trends in Indonesia today — an increase in chauvinist religious
fundamentalism, anti-Chinese racism, a violent and arrogant elite and political
caste — can only be understood by looking back at 1965. The horror stories
about the supposed crimes of the PKI and the taboo on leftist ideas persist,
continuously reinforced by the Indonesian ruling class and their thugs who
attack gatherings of survivors and human rights activists. Robinson ends his
book with the conclusion that it is unlikely that we will see justice. The last
survivors of the 1965–66 massacres are dying without having seen the guilty
parties being punished, or even judged.
For leftists
outside Indonesia, the 1965–66 slaughter should be a warning. To maintain their
power, the Indonesian military and its allies organized the massacre of
thousands. But they did this with the at least silent support, but often also
the active aid, of Western, democratic governments. They cooperated with
Indonesia’s new rulers in committing this crime. In turn, they were aided by
respected journalists who, in return for good relationships with government
officials and access to sources, repeated and gave credibility to New Order
propaganda.
The Killing Season is clearly and elegantly written, the prose often driven by a
controlled anger. A historical awareness of the period it covers is
indispensable to the current attempts to rebuild, from
scratch, a left in Indonesia — and in this way, achieve a measure of
redemption for the lives that were crushed in 1965.
Sumber: JacobinMag
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