U.S. Embassy Tracked Indonesia Mass Murder 1965
Published: Oct 17, 2017
Briefing Book #607
Edited by Brad Simpson,
Founder and Director of the Indonesia and East Timor Documentation
Project, Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies, University of
Connecticut
For further information, contact: 609-751-8206
For further information, contact: 609-751-8206
Newly Declassified U.S. Embassy Jakarta Files Detail Army Killings, U.S. support for Quashing Leftist Labor Movement
The 39 documents made available today come from a collection of
nearly 30,000 pages of files constituting much of the daily record of
the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, from 1964-1968. The collection,
much of it formerly classified, was processed by the National
Declassification Center in response to growing public interest in the
remaining U.S. documents concerning the mass killings of 1965-1966.
American and Indonesian human rights and freedom of information
activists, filmmakers, as well as a group of U.S. Senators led by Tom
Udall (D-NM), had called for the materials to be made public.
The documents concern one of the most important and turbulent
chapters in Indonesian history and U.S.-Indonesian relations, which
witnessed the gradual collapse of ties between Jakarta and Washington, a
low-level war with Britain over the formation of Malaysia, rising
tension between the Indonesian Army and the Indonesian Communist Party,
the growing radicalization of Indonesian President Sukarno, and the
expansion of U.S. covert operations aimed at provoking a clash between
the Army and PKI. These tensions erupted in the aftermath of an
attempted purge of the Army by the September 30th Movement – a group of
military officers with the collaboration of a handful of PKI leaders.
After crushing the Movement, which had kidnapped and killed six
high-ranking Army generals, the Indonesian Army and its paramilitary
allies launched a campaign of annihilation against the PKI and its
affiliated organizations, killing up to 500,000 alleged PKI supporters
between October 1965 and March 1966, imprisoning up to a million more,
and eventually ousting Sukarno and replacing him with General Suharto,
who ruled Indonesia for the next 32 years before he himself was
overthrown in May 1998.
In an unprecedented collaboration, the National Security Archive
worked with the National Declassification Center (NDC) to make the
entirety of this collection available to the public by scanning and
digitizing the collection, which will be incorporated into the National
Archives and Records Administration’s (NARA) digital finding aids. When
completed, scholars, journalists, and researchers will be able to search
the documents by date, keyword, or name, providing unparalleled access,
in particular for the Indonesian public, to a unique collection of
records concerning one of the most important periods of Indonesian
history.
Of the 30,000 pages processed by the NDC, several hundred documents
remain classified and are undergoing further review before their
scheduled release in early 2018. While some of the documents in this
collection were declassified and deposited at NARA or the Lyndon Johnson
Presidential Library in the late 1990s, many thousands of pages are
being made available for the first time in more than 50 years.
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