Declassification
of Indonesia Files in Progress
Posted on Mar.06, 2017 in Declassification by Steven
Aftergood
https://fas.org/blogs/secrecy/2017/03/indonesia-declass/
The National Declassification Center has completed
declassification review of more than half of the classified files from the U.S.
Embassy in Djakarta, Indonesia from the turbulent years of 1963-1966. The
remainder of the task is expected to be completed by this summer.
So far, 21 of 37 boxes of classified Djakarta Embassy
files have undergone declassification review, said Sheryl Shenberger, director
of the National Declassification Center. Remarkably, the declassification of
the Indonesia records was prioritized in response to public comments.
What new light will they shed on the past?
“As to the discovery of anything new, I leave that to you
and the researcher community,” said Alex Daverede of the National
Declassification Center, who is performing the declassification review.
“I think you will gain some insight about US perspectives
on the 30 September Movement [military personnel who assassinated six
Indonesian generals, triggering a campaign of mass killings]. You will also get
some close observations about Sukarno and the cast of characters around him.
You will also see the Embassy’s perspective on the awkward transition from
Sukarno to Suharto. There is a lot of information on Indonesia’s economic woes
in 1965-1966 and of the efforts to get food to what was a bankrupt country,”
Mr. Daverede said.
In a 2014 draft resolution, Sen. Tom Udall (D-NM) pressed
for declassification of U.S. records from this period.
“It is a painful history to recall. On October 1, 1965,
six Indonesian Army generals were killed. According to scholars, these generals
were killed by military personnel, but their deaths were blamed on Indonesia’s
Communist Party, which was used to justify mass murders.”
“The next few months were horrific for the Indonesian
people. The CIA has called it one of the worst periods of mass murder in the
20th century. Hundreds of thousands were killed. Many others were imprisoned,
tortured, raped, starved, and disappeared across the country. These individuals
were targeted for their alleged association with communism, but they came from
all walks of life, including women’s groups, teachers, intellectuals, and
others. Most were unarmed, and none had due process of law.”
“The United States provided financial and military
assistance during this time and later, according to documents released by the
State Department, and General Suharto consolidated his power, ruling from 1967
to 1998,” Senator Udall noted. CIA also conducted covert operations in
Indonesia during this time, though records of that activity may not be included
in the Embassy files.
“Unfortunately, while Indonesia has made important
economic and political strides since the systemic repression of the Suharto
years, impunity for the horrific crimes of the 1960s and during the final years
of the independence struggle in East Timor remain glaring examples of
unfinished business that are inconsistent with a democratic society based on
the principle that no one is above the law,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) in
2015.
“We need to recognize the role of our own government in
this history, declassify relevant documents, and urge the Indonesian Government
to acknowledge the massacres and establish a credible truth and justice
mechanism,” he said.
Now some of those relevant records are being declassified
and they should soon be released. Last month, Mr. Daverede wrote about an
episode involving the detention of an American missionary in Indonesia in 1965
that was discussed in the files being declassified. See The Curious Case of
Harold Lovestrand, NDC Blog, February 10.
The National Declassification Center was established by
President Obama’s 2009 executive order 13526 to help coordinate and expedite
declassification of historically valuable U.S. government records.
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