Clear Day "...in four months, five times as many people died in Indonesia as in 
Vietnam in twelve years."

-- Bertrand Russell, 1966


The following article appeared in the Spartanburg, South Carolina 
Herald-Journal on May 19, 1990, then in the San Francisco Examiner on May 20, 
1990, the Washington Post on May 21, 1990, and the Boston Globe on May 23, 
1990. The version below is from the Examiner. 

Ex-agents say CIA compiled death lists for Indonesians
After 25 years, Americans speak of their
role in exterminating Communist Party
by Kathy Kadane, States News Service, 1990 

WASHINGTON -- The U.S. government played a significant role in one of the worst 
massacres of the century by supplying the names of thousands of Communist Party 
leaders to the Indonesian army, which hunted down the leftists and killed them, 
former U.S. diplomats say. 
For the first time, U.S. officials acknowledge that in 1965 they systematically 
compiled comprehensive lists of Communist operatives, from top echelons down to 
village cadres. As many as 5,000 names were furnished to the Indonesian army, 
and the Americans later checked off the names of those who had been killed or 
captured, according to the U.S. officials. 

The killings were part of a massive bloodletting that took an estimated 250,000 
lives. 

The purge of the Partai Komunis Indonesia (PKI) was part of a U.S. drive to 
ensure that Communists did not come to power in the largest country in 
Southeast Asia, where the United States was already fighting an undeclared war 
in Vietnam. Indonesia is the fifth most-populous country in the world. 

Silent for a quarter-century, former senior U.S. diplomats and CIA officers 
described in lengthy interviews how they aided Indonesian President Suharto, 
then army leader, in his attack on the PKI. 

"It really was a big help to the army," said Robert J. Martens, a former member 
of the U.S. Embassy's political section who is now a consultant to the State 
Department. "They probably killed a lot of people, and I probably have a lot of 
blood on my hands, but that's not all bad. There's a time when you have to 
strike hard at a decisive moment." 

White House and State Department spokesmen declined comment on the disclosures. 

Although former deputy CIA station chief Joseph Lazarsky and former diplomat 
Edward Masters, who was Martens' boss, said CIA agents contributed in drawing 
up the death lists, CIA spokesman Mark Mansfield said, "There is no substance 
to the allegation that the CIA was involved in the preparation and/or 
distribution of a list that was used to track down and kill PKI members. It is 
simply not true." 

Indonesian Embassy spokesman Makarim Wibisono said he had no personal knowledge 
of events described by former U.S. officials. "In terms of fighting the 
Communists, as far as I'm concerned, the Indonesian people fought by themselves 
to eradicate the Communists," he said. 

Martens, an experienced analyst of communist affairs, headed an embassy group 
of State Department and CIA officers that spent two years compiling the lists. 
He later delivered them to an army intermediary. 

People named on the lists were captured in overwhelming numbers, Martens said, 
adding, "It's a big part of the reason the PKI has never come back." 

The PKI was the third-largest Communist Party in the world, with an estimated 3 
million members. Through affiliated organizations such as labor and youth 
groups it claimed the loyalties of another 17 million. 

In 1966 the Washington Post published an estimate that 500,000 were killed in 
the purge and the brief civil war it triggered. In a 1968 report, the CIA 
estimated there had been 250,000 deaths, and called the carnage "one of the 
worst mass murders of the 20th century." 


U.S. Embassy approval
Approval for the release of the names came from the top U.S. Embassy officials, 
including former Ambassador Marshall Green, deputy chief of mission Jack Lydman 
and political section chief Edward Masters, the three acknowledged in 
interviews. 
Declassified embassy cables and State Department reports from early October 
1965, before the names were turned over, show that U.S. officials knew Suharto 
had begun roundups of PKI cadres, and that the embassy had unconfirmed reports 
that firing squads were being formed to kill PKI prisoners. 

Former CIA Director William Colby, in an interview, compared the embassy's 
campaign to identify the PKI leadership to the CIA's Phoenix Program in 
Vietnam. In 1965, Colby was the director of the CIA's Far East division and was 
responsible for directing U.S. covert strategy in Asia. 

"That's what I set up in the Phoenix Program in Vietnam -- that I've been 
kicked around for a lot," he said. "That's exactly what it was. It was an 
attempt to identify the structure" of the Communist Party. 

Phoenix was a joint U.S.-South Vietnamese program set up by the CIA in December 
1967 that aimed at neutralizing members of the National Liberation Front, the 
Vietcong political cadres. It was widely criticized for alleged human rights 
abuses. 


"You shoot them"
"The idea of identifying the local apparatus was designed to -- well, you go 
out and get them to surrender, or you capture or you shoot them," Colby said of 
the Phoenix Program. "I mean, it was a war, and they were fighting. So it was 
really aimed at providing intelligence for operations rather than a big picture 
of the thing." 
In 1962, when he took over as chief of the CIA's Far East division, Colby said 
he discovered the United States did not have comprehensive lists of PKI 
activists. Not having the lists "could have been criticized as a gap in the 
intelligence system," he said, adding they were useful for "operation planning" 
and provided a picture of how the party was organized. Without such lists, he 
said, "you're fighting blind." 

Asked if the CIA had been responsible for sending Martens, a foreign service 
officer, to Jakarta in 1963 to compile the lists, Colby said, "Maybe, I don't 
know. Maybe we did it. I've forgotten." 

The lists were a detailed who's-who of the leadership of the party of 3 million 
members, Martens said. They included names of provincial, city and other local 
PKI committee members, and leaders of the "mass organizations," such as the PKI 
national labor federation, women's and youth groups. 


Better information
"I know we had a lot more information" about the PKI "than the Indonesians 
themselves," Green said. Martens "told me on a number of occasions that ... the 
government did not have very good information on the Communist setup, and he 
gave me the impression that this information was superior to anything they 
had." 
Masters, the embassy's political section chief, said he believed the army had 
lists of its own, but they were not as comprehensive as the American lists. He 
said he could not remember whether the decision to release the names had been 
cleared with Washington. 

The lists were turned over piecemeal, Martens said, beginning at the top of the 
communist organization. Martens supplied thousands of names to an Indonesian 
emissary over a number of months, he said. The emissary was an aide to Adam 
Malik, an Indonesian minister who was an ally of Suharto in the attack on the 
Communists. 

Interviewed in Jakarta, the aide, Tirta Kentjana ("Kim") Adhyatman, confirmed 
he had met with Martens and received lists of thousands of names, which he in 
turn gave to Malik. Malik passed them on to Suharto's headquarters, he said. 


"Shooting list"
Embassy officials carefully recorded the subsequent destruction of the PKI 
organization. Using Martens' lists as a guide, they checked off names of 
captured and assassinated PKI leaders, tracking the steady dismantling of the 
party apparatus, former U.S. officials said. 
Information about who had been captured and killed came from Suharto's 
headquarters, according to Joseph Lazarsky, deputy CIA station chief in Jakarta 
in 1965. Suharto's Jakarta headquarters was the central collection point for 
military reports from around the country detailing the capture and killing of 
PKI leaders, Lazarsky said. 

"We were getting a good account in Jakarta of who was being picked up," 
Lazarsky said. "The army had a 'shooting list' of about 4,000 or 5,000 people." 

Detention centers were set up to hold those who were not killed immediately. 

"They didn't have enough goon squads to zap them all, and some individuals were 
valuable for interrogation," Lazarsky said. "The infrastructure was zapped 
almost immediately. We knew what they were doing. We knew they would keep a few 
and save them for the kangaroo courts, but Suharto and his advisers said, if 
you keep them alive, you have to feed them." 

Masters, the chief of the political section, said, "We had these lists" 
constructed by Martens, "and we were using them to check off what was happening 
to the party, what the effect" of the killings "was on it." 

Lazarsky said the checkoff work was also carried out at the CIA's intelligence 
directorate in Washington. 


Leadership destroyed
By the end of January 1966, Lazarsky said, the checked-off names were so 
numerous the CIA analysts in Washington concluded the PKI leadership had been 
destroyed. 
"No one cared, as long as they were Communists, that they were being 
butchered," said Howard Federspiel, who in 1965 was the Indonesia expert at the 
State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research. "No one was getting 
very worked up about it." 

Asked about the checkoffs, Colby said, "We came to the conclusion that with the 
sort of Draconian way it was carried out, it really set them" -- the communists 
-- "back for years." 

Asked if he meant the checkoffs were proof that the PKI leadership had been 
caught or killed, he said, "Yeah, yeah, that's right, ... the leading elements, 
yeah." 





--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




More from Kathy Kadane...
A Letter to the Editor, New York Review of Books, April 10, 1997
To the Editors: 

I very much admired Ms. Laber's piece on Indonesian politics and the origins of 
the Soeharto regime. In connection with her assertion that little is known 
about a CIA (or US) role in the 1965 coup and the army massacre that followed, 
I would like to make your readers aware of a compelling body of evidence about 
this that is publicly available, but the public access to it is little known. 

It consists of a series of on-the-record, taped interviews with the men who 
headed the US embassy in Jakarta or were at high levels in Washington agencies 
in 1965. I published a news story based on the interviews in The Washington 
Post ("U.S. Officials' Lists Aided Indonesian Bloodbath in '60s," May 21, 
1990), and have since transferred the tapes, my notes, and a small collection 
of documents, including a few declassified cables on which the story was based, 
to the National Security Archive in Washington, D.C. The Archive is a 
nongovernmental research institute and library, located at the George 
Washington University. 

The former officials interviewed included Ambassador Marshall Green, Deputy 
Chief of Mission Jack Lydman, Political Counsellor (later Ambassador) Edward E. 
Masters, Robert Martens (an analyst of the Indonesian left working under 
Masters' supervision), and (then) director of the Central Intelligence Agency's 
Far East division, William Colby. 

The tapes, along with notes of conversations, show that the United States 
furnished critical intelligence -- the names of thousands of leftist activists, 
both Communist and non-Communist -- to the Indonesian Army that were then used 
in the bloody manhunt. 

There were other details that illustrate the depth of US involvement and 
culpability in the killings which I learned from former top-level embassy 
officials, but have not previously published. For example, the US provided key 
logistical equipment, hastily shipped in at the last minute as Soeharto weighed 
the risky decision to attack. Jeeps were supplied by the Pentagon to speed 
troops over Indonesia's notoriously bad roads, along with "dozens and dozens" 
of field radios that the Army lacked. As Ms. Laber noted, the US (namely, the 
Pentagon) also supplied "arms." Cables show these were small arms, used for 
killing at close range. 

The supply of radios is perhaps the most telling detail. They served not only 
as field communications but also became an element of a broad, US 
intelligence-gathering operation constructed as the manhunt went forward. 
According to a former embassy official, the Central Intelligence Agency hastily 
provided the radios -- state-of-the-art Collins KWM-2s, high-frequency 
single-sideband transceivers, the highest-powered mobile unit available at that 
time to the civilian and commercial market. The radios, stored at Clark Field 
in the Philippines, were secretly flown by the US Air Force into Indonesia. 
They were then distributed directly to Soeharto's headquarters -- called by its 
acronym KOSTRAD -- by Pentagon representatives. The radios plugged a major hole 
in Army communications: at that critical moment, there were no means for troops 
on Java and the out-islands to talk directly with Jakarta. 

While the embassy told reporters the US had no information about the operation, 
the opposite was true. There were at least two direct sources of information. 
During the weeks in which the American lists were being turned over to the 
Army, embassy officials met secretly with men from Soeharto's intelligence unit 
at regular intervals concerning who had been arrested or killed. In addition, 
the US more generally had information from its systematic monitoring of Army 
radios. According to a former US official, the US listened in to the broadcasts 
on the US-supplied radios for weeks as the manhunt went forward, overhearing, 
among other things, commands from Soeharto's intelligence unit to kill 
particular persons at given locations. 

The method by which the intercepts were accomplished was also described. The 
mobile radios transmitted to a large, portable antenna in front of KOSTRAD 
(also hastily supplied by the US -- I was told it was flown in in a C-130 
aircraft). The CIA made sure the frequencies the Army would use were known in 
advance to the National Security Agency. NSA intercepted the broadcasts at a 
site in Southeast Asia, where its analysts subsequently translated them. The 
intercepts were then sent on to Washington, where analysts merged them with 
reports from the embassy. The combined reporting, intercepts plus "human" 
intelligence, was the primary basis for Washington's assessment of the 
effectiveness of the manhunt as it destroyed the organizations of the left, 
including, inter alia, the Indonesian Communist Party, the PKI. 

A word about the relative importance of the American lists. It appears the CIA 
had some access prior to 1965 to intelligence files on the PKI housed at the 
G-2 section of the Indonesian Army, then headed by Major-General S. Parman. CIA 
officials had been dealing with Parman about intelligence concerning the PKI, 
among other matters, in the years prior to the coup, according to a former US 
official who was involved (Parman was killed in the coup). The former official, 
whose account was corroborated by others whom I interviewed, said that the 
Indonesian lists, or files, were considered inadequate by US analysts because 
they identified PKI officials at the "national" level, but failed to identify 
thousands who ran the party at the regional and municipal levels, or who were 
secret operatives, or had some other standing, such as financier. 

When asked about the possible reason for this apparent inadequacy, former US 
Ambassador Marshall Green, in a December 1989 interview, characterized his 
understanding this way: 

  I know that we had a lot more information than the Indonesians themselves.... 
For one thing, it would have been rather dangerous [for the Indonesian military 
to construct such a list] because the Communist Party was so pervasive and [the 
intelligence gatherers] would be fingered...because of the people up the line 
[the higher-ups, some of whom sympathized with the PKI]. In the [Indonesian] 
Air Force, it would have been lethal to do that. And probably that would be 
true for the police, the Marines, the Navy -- in the Army, it depended. My 
guess is that once this thing broke, the Army was desperate for information as 
to who was who [in the PKI]. 
By the end of January 1966, US intelligence assessments comparing the American 
lists with the reports of those arrested or killed showed the Army had 
destroyed the PKI. The general attitude was one of great relief: "Nobody cared" 
about the butchery and mass arrests because the victims were Communists, one 
Washington official told me. 
                    -- Kathy Kadane 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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