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Indonesia 1957-1958 War and pornography by Williams Blum
About Williams Blum
"I think it's time we held Sukarno's feet to the fire," said Frank Wisner,
the CIA's Deputy Director of Plans (covert operations), one day in autumn
1956.{1} Wisner was speaking of the man who had led Indonesia since its struggle
for independence from the Dutch following the war. A few months earlier,
in May, Sukarno had made an impassioned speech before the US Congress asking
for more understanding of the problems and needs of developing nations like
his own.{2}
The ensuing American campaign to unseat the flamboyant
leader of the fifth most populous nation in the world was to run the gamut
from large-scale military maneuvers to seedy sexual intrigue.
The previous year, Sukarno had organized the Bandung
Conference as an answer to the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO),
the US-created political-military alliance of area states to "contain communism".
In the Indonesian city of Bandung, the doctrine of neutralism had been proclaimed
as the faith of the underdeveloped world. To the men of the CIA station in
Indonesia the conference was heresy, so much so that their thoughts turned
toward assassination as a means of sabotaging it.
In 1975, the Senate committee which was investigating
the CIA heard testimony that Agency officers stationed in an East Asian country
had suggested that an East Asian leader be assassinated "to disrupt an impending
Communist [sic] Conference in 1955".{3} (In all likelihood, the leader referred
to was either Sukarno or Chou En-lai of China.) But, said the committee,
cooler heads prevailed at CIA headquarters in Washington and the suggestion
was firmly rejected.
Nevertheless, a plane carrying eight members of the Chinese
delegation, a Vietnamese, and two European journalists to the Bandung Conference
crashed under mysterious circumstances. The Chinese government claimed that
it was an act of sabotage carried out by the US and Taiwan, a misfired effort
to murder Chou En-lai. The chartered Air India plane had taken off from Hong
Kong on 11 April 1955 and crashed in the South China Sea. Chou En-lai was
scheduled to be on another chartered Air India flight a day or two later.
The Chinese government, citing what it said were press reports from the
Times of India, stated that the crash was caused by two time bombs
apparently placed aboard the plane in Hong Kong. A clockwork mechanism was
later recovered from the wrecked airliner and the Hong Kong police called
it a case of "carefully planned mass murder". Months later, British police
in Hong Kong announced that they were seeking a Chinese Nationalist for
conspiracy to cause the crash, but that he had fled to Taiwan.{4}
In 1967 a curious little book appeared in India, entitled
I Was a CIA Agent in India, by John Discoe Smith, an American. Published
by the Communist Party of India, it was based on articles written by Smith
for Literaturnaya Gazeta in Moscow after he had defected to the Soviet
Union around 1960. Smith, born in Quincy, Mass. in 1926, wrote that he had
been a communications technician and code clerk at the US Embassy in New
Delhi in 1955, performing tasks for the CIA as well. One of these tasks was
to deliver a package to a Chinese Nationalist which Smith later learned,
he claimed, contained the two time bombs used to blow up the Air India plane.
The veracity of Smith's account cannot be determined, although his employment
at the US Embassy in New Delhi from 1954 to 1959 is confirmed by the State
Department Biographic Register.{5}
Elsewhere the Senate committee reported that it had "received
some evidence of CIA involvement in plans to assassinate President Sukarno
of Indonesia", and that the planning had proceeded to the point of identifying
an agent whom it was believed might be recruited for the job.{6} (The committee
noted that at one time, those at the CIA who were concerned with possible
assassinations and appropriate methods were known internally as the "Health
Alteration Committee".)
To add to the concern of American leaders, Sukarno had
made trips to the Soviet Union and China (though to the White House as well),
he had purchased arms from Eastern European countries (but only after being
turned down by the United States),{7} he had nationalized many private holdings
of the Dutch, and, perhaps most disturbing of all, the Indonesian Communist
Party (PKI) had made impressive gains electorally and in union-organizing,
thus earning an important role in the coalition government.
It was a familiar Third World scenario, and the reaction
of Washington policy-makers was equally familiar. Once again, they were unable,
or unwilling, to distinguish nationalism from pro-communism, neutralism from
wickedness. By any definition of the word, Sukarno was no communist. He was
an Indonesian nationalist and a "Sukarnoist" who had crushed the PKI forces
in 1948 after the independence struggle had been won.{8} He ran what was
largely his own show by granting concessions to both the PKI and the Army,
balancing one against the other. As to excluding the PKI, with its more than
one million members, from the government, Sukarno declared: "I can't and
won't ride a three-legged horse."{9}
To the United States, however, Sukarno's balancing act
was too precarious to be left to the vagaries of the Indonesian political
process. It mattered not to Washington that the Communist Party was walking
the legal, peaceful road, or that there was no particular "crisis" or "chaos"
in Indonesia, so favored as an excuse for intervention. Intervention there
would be.
It would not be the first. In 1955, during the national
election campaign in Indonesia, the CIA had given a million dollars to the
Masjumi party, a centrist coalition of Muslim organizations, in a losing
bid to thwart Sukarno's Nationalist Party as well as the PKI. According to
former CIA officer Joseph Burkholder Smith, the project "provided for complete
write-off of the funds, that is, no demand for a detailed accounting of how
the funds were spent was required. I could find no clue as to what the Masjumi
did with the million dollars."{10}
In 1957, the CIA decided that the situation called for
more direct action. It was not difficult to find Indonesian colleagues-in-arms
for there already existed a clique of army officers and others who, for personal
ambitions and because they disliked the influential position of the PKI,
wanted Sukarno out, or at least out of their particular islands. (Indonesia
is the world's largest archipelago, consisting of some 3,000 islands.)
The military operation the CIA was opting for was of
a scale that necessitated significant assistance from the Pentagon, which
could be secured for a political action mission only if approved by the National
Security Council's "Special Group" (the small group of top NSC officials
who acted in the president's name, to protect him and the country by evaluating
proposed covert actions and making certain that the CIA did not go off the
deep end; known at other times as the 5412 Committee, the 303 Committee,
the 40 Committee, or the Operations Advisory Group).
The manner in which the Agency went about obtaining this
approval is a textbook example of how the CIA sometimes determines American
foreign policy. Joseph Burkholder Smith, who was in charge of the Agency's
Indonesian desk in Washington from mid-1956 to early 1958, has described
the process in his memoirs: Instead of first proposing the plan to Washington
for approval, where "premature mention ... might get it shot down" ...
we began to feed the State and Defense departments intelligence that no
one could deny was a useful contribution to understanding Indonesia. When
they had read enough alarming reports, we planned to spring the suggestion
we should support the colonels' plans to reduce Sukarno's power. This was
a method of operation which became the basis of many of the political action
adventures of the 1960s and 1970s. In other words, the statement is false
that CIA undertook to intervene in the affairs of countries like Chile only
after being ordered to do so by ... the Special Group. ... In many instances,
we made the action programs up ourselves after we had collected enough
intelligence to make them appear required by the circumstances. Our activity
in Indonesia in 1957-1958 was one such instance.{11}
When the Communist Party did well again in local elections
held in July, the CIA viewed it as "a great help to us in convincing Washington
authorities how serious the Indonesian situation was. The only person who
did not seem terribly alarmed at the PKI victories was Ambassador Allison.
This was all we needed to convince John Foster Dulles finally that he had
the wrong man in Indonesia. The wheels began to turn to remove this last
stumbling block in the way of our operation."{12} John Allison, wrote Smith,
was not a great admirer of the CIA to begin with. And in early 1958, after
less than a year in the post, he was replaced as ambassador by Howard Jones,
whose selection "pleased" the CIA Indonesia staff.{13}
On 30 November 1957, several hand grenades were tossed
at Sukarno as he was leaving a school. He escaped injury, but 10 people were
killed and 48 children injured. The CIA in Indonesia had no idea who was
responsible, but it quickly put out the story that the PKI was behind it
"at the suggestion of their Soviet contacts in order to make it appear that
Sukarno's opponents were wild and desperate men". As it turned out, the culprits
were a Muslim group not associated with the PKI or with the Agency's military
plotters.{14}
The issue of Sukarno's supposed hand-in-glove relationship
with Communists was pushed at every opportunity. The CIA decided to make
capital of reports that a good-looking blonde stewardess had been aboard
Sukarno's aircraft everywhere he went during his trip in the Soviet Union
and that the same woman had come to Indonesia with Soviet President Kliment
Voroshilov and had been seen several times in the company of Sukarno. The
idea was that Sukarno's well-known womanizing had trapped him in the spell
of a Soviet female agent. He had succumbed to Soviet control, CIA reports
implied, as a result of her influence or blackmail, or both. "
This formed the foundation of our flights of fancy,"
wrote Smith. "We had as a matter of fact, considerable success with this
theme. It appeared in the press around the world, and when Round Table,
the serious British quarterly of international affairs, came to analyze the
Indonesian revolt in its March 1958 issue, it listed Sukarno's being blackmailed
by a Soviet female spy as one of the reasons that caused the uprising."
Seemingly, the success of this operation inspired CIA
officers in Washington to carry the theme one step further. A substantial
effort was made to come up with a pornographic film or at least some still
photographs that could pass for Sukarno and his Russian girl friend engaged
in "his favorite activity". When scrutiny of available porno films (supplied
by the Chief of Police of Los Angeles) failed to turn up a couple who could
pass for Sukarno (dark and bald) and a beautiful blonde Russian woman, the
CIA undertook to produce its own films, "the very films with which the Soviets
were blackmailing Sukarno". The Agency developed a full-face mask of the
Indonesian leader which was to be sent to Los Angeles where the police were
to pay some porno-film actor to wear it during his big scene. This project
resulted in at least some photographs, although they apparently were never
used.{15}
Another outcome of the blackmail effort was a film produced
for the CIA by Robert Maheu, former FBI agent and intimate of Howard Hughes.
Maheu's film starred an actor who resembled Sukarno. The ultimate fate of
the film, which was entitled "Happy Days", has not been reported.{16}
In other parts of the world, at other times, the
CIA has done better in this line of work, having produced sex films of target
subjects caught in flagrante delicto who had been lured to Agency
safe-houses by female agents.
In 1960, Col. Truman Smith, US Army Ret., writing in
Reader's Digest about the KGB, declared: "It is difficult for most of
us to appreciate its menace, as its methods are so debased as to be all but
beyond the comprehension of any normal person with a sense of right and wrong."
One of the KGB methods the good colonel found so debased was the making of
sex films to be used as blackmail. "People depraved enough to employ such
methods," he wrote, "find nothing distasteful in more violent methods."{17}
Sex could be used at home as well to further the goals of American
foreign policy. Under the cover of the US foreign aid program, at that time
called the Economic Cooperation Administration, Indonesian policemen were
trained and then recruited to provide information on Soviet, Chinese and
PKI activities in their country. Some of the men singled out as good prospects
for this work were sent to Washington for special training and to be softened
up for recruitment. Like Sukarno, reportedly, these police officers invariably
had an obsessive desire to sleep with a white woman. Accordingly, during
their stay they were taken to Baltimore's shabby sex district to indulge
themselves.{18}
The Special Group's approval of the political action mission was forthcoming
in November 1957{19}, and the CIA's paramilitary machine was put into gear.
In this undertaking, as in others, the Agency enjoyed the advantage of the
United States' far-flung military empire. Headquarters for the operation
were established in neighboring Singapore, courtesy of the British; training
bases set up in the Philippines; airstrips laid out in various parts of the
Pacific to prepare for bomber and transport missions; Indonesians, along
with Filipinos, Taiwanese, Americans, and other "soldiers of fortune" were
assembled in Okinawa and the Philippines along with vast quantities of arms
and equipment.
For this, the CIA's most ambitious military operation
to date, tens of thousands of rebels were armed, equipped and trained by
the US Army. US Navy submarines, patrolling off the coast of Sumatra, the
main island, put over-the-beach parties ashore along with supplies and
communications equipment. The US Air Force set up a considerable Air Transport
force which air-dropped many thousands of weapons deep into Indonesian territory.
And a fleet of 15 B-26 bombers was made available for the conflict after
being "sanitized" to ensure that they were "non-attributable" and that all
airborne equipment was "deniable".
In the early months of 1958, rebellion began to break
out in one part of the Indonesian island chain, then another. CIA pilots
took to the air to carry out bombing and strafing missions in support of
the rebels. In Washington, Col. Alex Kawilarung, the Indonesian military
attachÆ, was persuaded by the Agency to "defect". He soon showed up
in Indonesia to take charge of the rebel forces. Yet, as the fighting dragged
on into spring, the insurgents proved unable to win decisive victories or
take the offensive, although the CIA bombing raids were taking their toll.
Sukarno later claimed that on a Sunday morning in April, a plane bombed a
ship in the harbor of the island of Ambon -- all those aboard losing their
lives -- as well as hitting a church, which demolished the building and killed
everyone inside. He stated that 700 casualties had resulted from this single
run.
On 15 May, a CIA plane bombed the Ambon marketplace,
killing a large number of civilians on their way to church on Ascension Thursday.
The Indonesian government had to act to suppress public demonstrations.
Three days later, during another bombing run over Ambon,
a CIA pilot, Allen Lawrence Pope, was shot down and captured. Thirty years
old, from Perrine, Florida, Pope had flown 55 night missions over Communist
lines in Korea for the Air Force. Later he spent two months flying through
Communist flak for the CIA to drop supplies to the French at Dien Bien Phu.
Now his luck had run out. He was to spend four years as a prisoner in Indonesia
before Sukarno acceded to a request from Robert Kennedy for his release.
Pope was captured carrying a set of incriminating documents,
including those which established him as a pilot for the US Air Force and
the CIA airline CAT. Like all men flying clandestine missions, Pope had gone
through an elaborate procedure before taking off to "sanitize" him, as well
as his aircraft. But he had apparently smuggled the papers aboard the plane,
for he knew that to be captured as an "anonymous, stateless civilian" meant
having virtually no legal rights and running the risk of being shot as a
spy in accordance with custom. A captured US military man, however, becomes
a commodity of value for his captors while he remains alive.
The lndonesian government derived immediate material
concessions from the United States as a result of the incident. Whether the
Indonesians thereby agreed to keep silent about Pope is not known, but on
27 May the pilot and his documents were presented to the world at a news
conference, thus contradicting several recent statements by high American
officials.{20} Notable amongst these was President Eisenhower's declaration
on 30 April concerning Indonesia: "Our policy is one of careful neutrality
and proper deportment all the way through so as not to be taking sides where
it is none of our business."{21}
And on 9 May, an editorial in the New York Times had
stated:
It is unfortunate that high officials of the Indonesian Government have
given further circulation to the false report that the United States Government
was sanctioning aid to Indonesia's rebels. The position of the United States
Government has been made plain, again and again. Our Secretary of State was
emphatic in his declaration that this country would not deviate from a correct
neutrality ... the United States is not ready ... to step in to help overthrow
a constituted government. Those are the hard facts. Jakarta does not help
its case, here, by ignoring them.
With the exposure of Pope and the lack of rebel success
in the field, the CIA decided that the light was no longer worth the candle,
and began to curtail its support. By the end of June, Indonesian army troops
loyal to Sukarno had effectively crushed the dissident military revolt.
The Indonesian leader continued his adroit balancing
act between the Communists and the army until 1965, when the latter, likely
with the help of the CIA, finally overthrew his regime.
NOTES:
1. Joseph Burkholder Smith, Portrait of a Cold Warrior
(G.P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1976) p. 205.
2. New York Times, 18 May 1956.
3. Supplementary Detailed Staff Reports on Foreign
and Military Intelligence, Book 4, Final Report of The Select Committee
to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities
(U.S. Senate), April 1976, p. 133.
4. New York Times, 12, 30 April 1955; 3, 4 August
1955; 3 September 1955; 22 November 1967, p. 23.
5. John Discoe Smith, I Was a CIA Agent in India
(India, 1967) passim; New York Times, 25
October 1967, p. 17; 22 November, p. 23; 5 December, p. 12; Harry Rositzke,
The KGB: The Eyes of Russia (New York, 1981), p.
164.
6. lnterim Report: Alleged Assassination Plots Involving
Foreign Leaders, The Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations
with Respect to Intelligence Activities (U.S. Senate), 20 November 1975,
p. 4, note.
7. David Wise and Thomas Ross, The Invisible
Government (New York, 1965, paperback edition) pp. 149-50.
8. Julie Southwood and Patrick Flanagan, Indonesia:
Law, Propaganda and Terror (London, 1983) pp. 26-7.
9. Wise and Ross, p. 148.
10. J.B. Smith, pp. 210-11.
11. Ibid., pp. 228-9.
12. Ibid., p. 240.
13. Ibid., pp. 229, 246.
14. Ibid., p. 243.
15. Sex-blackmail operations: ibid., pp. 238-40, 248. Smith errs somewhat
in his comment about Round Table. The article's only (apparent) reference
to the Soviet woman is in the comment on p. 133: "Other and more scandalous
reasons have been put forward for the President's leaning towards the Communist
Party."
16. New York Times, 26 January 1976.
17. Truman Smith, "The Infamous Record of Soviet Espionage",
Reader's Digest, August 1960.
18. J.B. Smith, pp. 220-1.
19. Referred to in a memorandum from Allen Dulles to the White House,
7 April 1961; the memo briefly summarizes the main points of the US intervention:
Declassified Documents Reference System (Arlington,
Va.) released 18 December 1974.
20. The military operation and the Pope affair:
a) Wise and Ross, pp. 145-56.
b) Christopher Robbins, Air America (US, 1979),
pp. 88-94.
c) Col. L. Fletcher Prouty, US Air Force, Ret., The Secret
Team: The CIA and its Allies in Control of the World (New York, 1974)
pp. 155, 308, 363-6.
d) New York Times, 23 March 1958, p. 2; 19 April;
28 May, p. 9.
e) Sukarno, An Autobiography, as told to Cindy
Adams (Hong Kong, 1966) pp. 267-71; first printed in the US in 1965; although
a poor piece of writing, the book is worth reading for Sukarno's views on
why it is foolish to call him a Communist; how he, as a Third-Worlder who
didn't toe the line, was repeatedly snubbed and humiliated by the Eisenhower
administration, apart from the intervention; and how American sex magazines
contrived to make him look ridiculous.
f) J. B. Smith, pp. 246-7. There appears to be some confusion about the bombing
of the church. Smith states that it was Pope who did it on 18 May before
being shot down. Either he or other chroniclers have mixed up the events
of April and May.
21. Wise and Ross, p. 145.
This is a chapter from: Killing Hope: US Military
and CIA Interventions Since World War II by
William Blum
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