THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1966 eportSays ndonesian Coup Communist-Ba cked (EDITOR'S NOTE: Washingtoni Yost far eastern correspondent Stanley Karnow is the first Amer- ican reporter to tour Indonesia in' the wake of the Sept. 30 rebellion and the resultingtbloodshed. Kar- now and an interpreter traveled through Java and Bali in the first two weeks of April to obtain this on-the-scene account of the nas- sacres. The following is a con- densed version of his report.) By STANLEY KARNOW (c), 1966, The Washington Post Co. DJAKARTA-For years, Presi- dent Sukarno's Indonesia posed as the divinely endowed guide of the world's underdeveloped coun- tries, the beacon for "new emerg- ing forces" everywhere. Simul- taneously, Sukarno promoted him-j self as the great unifier of his sprawling archipelago republic, boasting that he had amalgamated more than 100 million people of different cultures under the motto, bhinneka tunggal ika-"unity in diversity." Within the past six months, however, events have proved the emptiness of Sukarno's charisma- tic orgy of slogans and exhorta- tions. In several ways, Indonesia has revealed itself to be as primi- tive and savage as any place on earth. Far from cementing a nation, Sukarno's past antics aggravated tensions among his country's rival political, military, religious and regional factions. In the aftermath of an abortive Communist bid for power last fall, these tensions erupted in a bloodbath that, by human measure, makes even the Viet Nam war seem mild. Figures Unclear The unadulterated truth is im- possible to snare in Indonesia,' where facts and figures are as elusive as the fleeting shadows of a wayang play. What emerged from my research was, among other things, a fairly plausible pattern of the cataclysm that has shaken this land. I found that the attempted coup d'etat in Djakarta last Sept. 30 was more than a palace maneuver. It was part of a broader Com- munist plan of insurrection, linked to a revolt by pro-Communist military elements in central Java and moves by Communist groups elsewhere. Reliable evidence indicates, too, that Red China had bulwarked paramilitary Indonesian Commun- ist groups with weapons and training. When their initial coup fizzled, by the barest margin, the Com- munists in central Java tried again, this time with a "people's uprising" of the kind described in Leninist mythology. It was a spas- modic, uncoordinated, clumsy at- tempt that failed as well, exposing thousands of Communists, fellow- travelers, and totally innocent folk to a most ferocious repression. Repression Begins The repression began in last October and spread eastward. In central Java, where it started,l the slaughter was mainly carried out by the army .under the guise of "legal" executions. A few weeks afterwards in east Java, military units delivered captives to Moslem youths, who butchered them in frenzies of religious fanaticism. By December, the homicidal fever reached Bali, where massive kill- ings by both mobs and soldiers lowing last September's attempted consin. A Moslem leader in the took on a mystical, almost sac- revolt. Diplomats here in Djakarta central Java town of Bojolali rificial significance. put the figure closer to 300,000. praised his Communist associates, Almost - everywhere, Indonesia's From my own observation, I would now dead, for their honesty on the Chinese residents, most of them calculate that the post-coup holo- Municipal Council. merchants, were ready targets. caust took at least a half million Everywhere, though, people Blamed for high prices, they had lives, sought to justify the destruction their shops and schools wrecked Match those statistics with of the Communists with the same and looted. Java's demography. Roughly the phrase: "If we hadn't done it to And as recently as ten days ago, size of New York State, Java is a them, they would have done it to in parts of central Java I visited, swollen megalopolis of nearly 70 us." the killing continued. million people crammed into what That attitude was largely found- Salatiga Killings can best be described as a vast ed on the brutal fashion in which One night, in the town of Sala- rural slum. There are hundreds of the Communists murdered six tiga, two army trucks rumbled Kediris, Pasuruans and Banjuwan- army generals as their coup un- through the streets, stopping brief- gis in Java, each with its thou- folded on Sept. 30. It also stemmed ly at four shabby buildings com- sands of victims. from conduct before the revolt. mandeered to hold the thousand What I found more difficult to Encouraged by Sukarno, who call- Communist suspects still under assess than the quantity of kill- ed them "my brothers," the Com- arrest. ings was the qualitative mood this munists had been arrogant, intimi- The sequence, as related to tne slaughter had engendered. dating and provocative. next morning by a local, recalled Here and there I encountered a the French Revolution's reign of residue of fear. A schoolteacher in Peasant Movements terror. At each building, an army Surakarta confessed to me that he Feeling their strength, Commun- captain read names from a list, still hesitated to console the fami- ist peasant movements in several advising them of their guilt "in lies of his slain Communist friends. regions took over private farm- the name of law," though no trial "I don't have the courage," he lands, claiming that they were was ever held. Eventually filled said, "I might be judged guilty by instituting "agrarian reform." In with 60 prisoners and piloted by association." other places, Communist bullies a platoon of troops, the trucks In contrast, a jovial newspaper attacked mosques and Moslem drove six miles through a dark editor in Semarang treated the schools, desecrating the Koran landscape of rice fields and rub- slaughter as a huge joke. "We publicly. At a village near Sema- ber estates to a barren spot near sent the Reds to Sukabumi," he rang, the Communist cultural the village of Djelok. said, explaining to me that Suka- group, Lekra, taunted local Mos- The neighborhood peasants had bumi, a town south of Djakarta, lems by performing a play entitled been ordered by their headman to means "good earth." "The Death of Allah." # dig a large pit the day before. More often, however, Inview the Most significantly, the army was The prisoners, lined up at the edge massacre with quiet, remorseless irritated by persistent Commun- of the pit, were shot down in a equanimity.- ist efforts to pervade its ranks matter of minutes. Some may have Many Lose Friends with political commissars, an idea been buried alive, my informant Many had close Communist originally introduced by Peking's believed. friends who were killed. An Il- Premier Chou En-Lai. The army 500,000 Dead linois-trained professor of eco- also resisted Communist attempts A few months ago, Sukarno an- nomics at the University of Djog- to create a "fifth force" of armed ,nounced that 87,000 people had jakarta lost two colleagues, both youths and peasants, though. such been killed in the massacres fol- educated at the University of Wis- groups were surreptitiously forti- fied with Chinese weapons way. any- See Dangers To some extent, the top Com- munist leaders seem to have re- alized the danger of challenging their enemies. But they were un- able to discipline some of their own auxiliaries. In particular, their peasant front went on agitating. violently to dispossess landowners. The rising Communist pressure so alarmed the Moslems that in March, 1965, five major Islamic organizations banded together in a joint pledge to maintain unity, Indonesian Moslems are a far more tolerant species than their coreligionists of the Middle East. But as one of them told me: "In the face of a Communist threat, we were prepared for a jihad-a holy war.'' It is not quite clear, however, why the Communist bid for power last September should have failed so dismally. Perhaps their project misfired mainly because, in Indonesia's chronic confusion, nothing ever works smoothly. The Communists, after all, were as Indonesian as their enemies. Plan Good On paper at least, the Com-, munists coup plan seemed good. In Djakarta, Lt. Col. Untung's Palace Guard Battalion combined with two visiting battalions, air force elements, and armed Com- munist youths were scheduled to kidnap and kill Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution, the Defense Minister, and the entire general staff. With these officers removed, Sukarno would have had no choice but to rely on the Communists to manage the country. In a parallel move in central Java, five battalions of the Di- ponegoro Division were primed to seize key positions in that region. Their leader was Col. Sahirman, the division's intelligence chief, who had returned just three months earlier from training at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. They were connected with high- er officers elsewhere such as the air force chief Vice Marshal Omar Dhani and Brig. Gen. Supardjo, a commander in Kalimantan who played politics in Djakarta. Varied Motives These military insurgents pre- Passport Pictures Application Pictures Group Pictures Wedding Pictures Available at any time Ready Quickly CALL NO 3-6966 sumably had varied motives. Many' were central Javanese, with roots in a strongly Communist region. Others were disgruntled oppor- tunists who saw in a Communist takeover the chance for rapid pro- motion. Some were sincerely convinced that communism, with its dis- ciplined organization, was the only salvation from Indonesia's creep- ing chaos. Indeed, many Western experts have agreed that Indonesian Com- munists were among the country's most dedicated, selfless people. The objectives of these military rebels on central Java, it now appears, was to secure a hard Communist base in their area should the operation in the capital go awry. At the same time, Communist plantation, factory and dock workers elsewhere throughout the country were instructed to grab control of their enterprises in pre- paration for the establishment of a peoples democracy. Sukarno Cautious Sukarno was undoubtedly aware of the impending Communist ac- tion. He may have even welcomed the prospect of the Communists liquidating the generals he in- tensely disliked. But with chara- teristic caution, Sukarno probably remained uncommitted, waiting to see how the coup would turn. It turned badly. The Commun- ists murdered six generals but fail- ed to eliminate Nasution and Lt. Gen. Suharto, who rallied troops and put down the uprising quickly. At this stage, the Communists shifted to their contingency plan. Communist leader Dipa Nusan- tara Aidit reportedly urged Su- karno to join him in retreating to central Java. With Sukarno beside them, the Communists would have had legitimacy and Suharto could have been branded the rebel. But- Sukarno, who understands power, certainly recognized the folly of siding with civilians against- soldiers in a potential civil war. He chose to stay in Djakarta. Aidit flew to central Java alone. The situation in central Java was a hopeless blur. In Djogjakar- ta, a pro-Communist staff officer named Maj. Muljono had strangled the garrison commander and as- sumed control of the city, expect- ing the population to rally to his colors.' But the people mostly ignored him. Finally, learning of the coup's collapse in Djakarta, Muljono fled. He was later captured and execut- ed. In the weeks that followed, the situation seemed to simmer down. But in late October, in scattered areas of central Java, the Com- munists attempted a strange sort of comeback. With nothing more deadly than knives. and bamboo staves, they tried to take control of towns. Many Rumors These alarums and excursions were fueled by a heady assortment of rumors and purposeful propa- ganda. In some places it was said that Sukarno. had died and Aidit was president. Elsewhere people believed that Sukarno had in fact withdrawn to central Java calling on the masses to rise against his rebellious army. With no way of sorting out al- legiances in the confusion, many Communists regarded themselves as loyal defenders of the republic. Their uprising at Bojolali, for example, began on the afternoon of Oct. 21. A reported 10,000 Com- munist youths, peasants, and wom- en withdrew from the town, re- grouped in the nearby countryside and prepared an assault for that evening. Two Rifles in Arsenal Besides clubs and knives, their arsenal consisted of two rifles. They felled trees to block roads, cut telephone wires and burned a few houses. Beyond those gestures, they did nothing significant for nearly three days. Finally, in a last fling, they rushed at a police barracks, they rushed at a police barracks, shouting defiantly. The police killed five of them, and the rest fled. By then, however, paratroop commandos from Djakarata had entered the region. A- company of them was dispatched" to Bojolali, and the roundup began. Day after day, soldiers aided by local vigi- lantes combed the surrounding villages, dragging out known or suspected Communists. According to several sources in the area, Aidit himself was be- trayed by a Communist subordi- nate. He was reportedly captured on Nov. 22 near Surakarta, held for a week, then taken to the bank of a nearby river and shot. When I asked whyhe was not taken to Djakarta to stand trial, an army officer replied: he might have been protected or pardoned by people inhigh place. Crude Justice In central Java, with the army in sway, there was a modicum of crude justice. A good many prison- ers were at least interrogated and classified. Thousands were released on parole after "indoctrination." Thousands more were sent to Nusakambangan, a Devils Island in the Indian Ocean south of Java. And thousands were shot, to be buried in unmarked graves. Near the town of Prambanan, the site of ancient Hindu temples, the district officer guided me to See COMMUNISTS, Page 8 - Yesterday, you may have had a reason for missing a good, nourishing breakfast. Today, you don't. II~~~_ ,--"----______________ __-il] HOWl TO BE This COOL Summer i (in three easy lessons): that's too good to miss. 1. Subscribe to The Daily (Call 764-0558) 2. Join The Daily Staff (Call 764-0560 or 764-0562) 3. Read The Daily Classifieds to find an air-conditioned apartment t *