We hold the developing world to a different standard and then the war with the threat of communism was not a straw man. Worse, Communism made a practice of massive genocide. Why have we forgotten that?
If anything Vietnam was the exception more or less when they imposed reeducation camps intead which happens to be an acceptable choice. After all that is how we de Nazified Germany. Prior to that we had North Korea and Cuba and then there was Stalin. Thus the choice in the early sixties was pretty stark for Suharto when a large body of the population was at least sympathetic. Now we would never go there although it is obvious that ISIS would.
Yet it still needs to be recognized and redressed. Ethnic hatreds still exist here and this provides a way forward.
Suharto’s Purge, Indonesia’s Silence
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/30/opinion/suhartos-purge-indonesias-silence.html
This week marks the 50th anniversary of the beginning of a mass slaughter in Indonesia.
With American support, more than 500,000 people were murdered by the
Indonesian Army and its civilian death squads. At least 750,000 more
were tortured and sent to concentration camps, many for decades.
The
victims were accused of being “communists,” an umbrella that included
not only members of the legally registered Communist Party, but all
likely opponents of Suharto’s
new military regime — from union members and women’s rights activists
to teachers and the ethnic Chinese. Unlike in Germany, Rwanda or
Cambodia, there have been no trials, no truth-and-reconciliation
commissions, no memorials to the victims. Instead, many perpetrators
still hold power throughout the country.
Indonesia
is the world’s fourth most populous nation, and if it is to become the
democracy it claims to be, this impunity must end. The anniversary is a
moment for the United States to support Indonesia’s democratic
transition by acknowledging the 1965 genocide, and encouraging a process
of truth, reconciliation and justice.
On
Oct. 1, 1965, six army generals in Jakarta were killed by a group of
disaffected junior officers. Maj. Gen. Suharto assumed command of the
armed forces, blamed the killings on the leftists, and set in motion a
killing machine. Millions of people associated with left-leaning
organizations were targeted, and the nation dissolved into terror —
people even stopped eating fish for fear that fish were eating corpses.
Suharto usurped President Sukarno’s authority and established himself as
de facto president by March 1966. From the very beginning, he enjoyed
the full support of the United States.
I’ve
spent 12 years investigating the terrible legacy of the genocide,
creating two documentary films, “The Act of Killing” in 2013 and “The
Look of Silence,” released earlier this year. I began in 2003, working
with a family of survivors. We wanted to show what it is like to live
surrounded by still-powerful perpetrators who had murdered your loved
ones.
The
family gathered other survivors to tell their stories, but the army
warned them not to participate. Many survivors urged me not to give up
and suggested that I film perpetrators in hopes that they would reveal
details of the massacres.
I
did not know if it was safe to approach the killers, but when I did, I
found them open. They offered boastful accounts of the killings, often
with smiles on their faces and in front of their grandchildren. I felt I
had wandered into Germany 40 years after the Holocaust, only to find
the Nazis still in power.
Today,
former political prisoners from this era still face discrimination and
threats. Gatherings of elderly survivors are regularly attacked by
military-backed thugs. Schoolchildren are still taught that the
“extermination of the communists” was heroic, and that victims’ families
should be monitored for disloyalty. This official history, in effect,
legitimizes violence against a whole segment of society.
The
purpose of such intimidation is to create a climate of fear in which
corruption and plunder go unchallenged. Inevitably in such an
atmosphere, human rights violations have continued since 1965, including
the 1975-1999 occupation of East Timor, where enforced starvation
contributed to the killing of nearly a third of the population, as well
as torture and extrajudicial killing that go on in West Papua today.
Military
rule in Indonesia formally ended in 1998, but the army remains above
the law. If a general orders an entire village massacred, he cannot be
tried in civilian courts. The only way he could face justice is if the
army itself convenes a military tribunal, or if Parliament establishes a
special human rights court — something it has never done fairly and
effectively.
With
the military not subject to law, a shadow state of paramilitaries and
intelligence agencies has formed around it. This shadow state continues
to intimidate the public into silence while, together with its business
partners, it loots the national wealth.
Indonesia
can hold regular elections, but if the laws do not apply to the most
powerful elements in society, then there is no rule of law, and no
genuine democracy. The country will never become a true democracy until
it takes serious steps to end impunity. An essential start is a process
of truth, reconciliation and justice.
This
may still be possible. The Indonesian media, which used to shy from
discussing the genocide, now refers to the killings as crimes against
humanity, and grassroots activism has taken hold. The current president,
Joko Widodo, indicated he would address the 1965 massacre, but he has
not established a truth commission, issued a national apology, or taken
any other steps to end the military’s impunity.
We
need truth and accountability from the United States as well. U.S.
involvement dates at least to an April 1962 meeting between American and
British officials resulting in the decision to “liquidate” President
Sukarno, the populist — but not communist — founding father of
Indonesia. As a founder of the nonaligned movement, Sukarno favored
socialist policies; Washington wanted to replace him with someone more
deferential to Western strategic and commercial interests.
The
United States conducted covert operations to destabilize Sukarno and
strengthen the military. Then, when genocide broke out, America provided
equipment, weapons and money. The United States compiled lists
containing thousands of names of public figures likely to oppose the new
military regime, and handed them over to the Indonesian military,
presumably with the expectation that they would be killed. Western aid
to Suharto’s dictatorship, ultimately amounting to tens of billions of
dollars, began flowing while corpses still clogged Indonesia’s rivers.
The American media celebrated Suharto’s rise and his campaign of death.
Time magazine said it was the “best news for years in Asia.”
But
the extent of America’s role remains hidden behind a wall of secrecy:
C.I.A. documents and U.S. defense attaché papers remain classified.
Numerous Freedom of Information Act requests for these documents have
been denied. Senator Tom Udall, Democrat of New Mexico, will soon
reintroduce a resolution that, if passed, would acknowledge America’s
role in the atrocities, call for declassification of all relevant
documents, and urge the Indonesian government to acknowledge the
massacres and establish a truth commission. If the U.S. government
recognizes the genocide publicly, acknowledges its role in the crimes,
and releases all documents pertaining to the issue, it will encourage
the Indonesian government to do the same.
This
anniversary should be a reminder that although we want to move on,
although nothing will wake the dead or make whole what has been broken,
we must stop, honor the lives destroyed, acknowledge our role in the
destruction, and allow the healing process to begin.
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