A Preliminary Analysis of the October 1, 1965 Coup in Indonesia

Sampul Depan
Equinox Publishing, 2009 - 220 halaman

Although numerous accounts have been published of the genesis and character of the attempted October 1965 coup in Indonesia, many important aspects of that affair still remain very unclear. The fact that in most accounts so much of the picture has been painted in black and white, and in language of categorical certainty, has served only to paper over the enormous gaps in established knowledge of the event.

In his present introduction to the paper here published, Professor Anderson describes the circumstances surrounding its preparation and the reasons why it was not previously published. Indeed, because of the avowedly tentative and provisional character of this early effort, there would normally be no reason to publish it any more than there would have been to publish the scores of other preliminary drafts prepared over the years by scholars working in the Cornell Modern Indonesia Project. However, this draft has been given a unique prominence. For it has been singled out by a number of those who have subsequently written accounts of the attempted coup, among whom all too many have misrepresented the authors' ideas and cited words or phrases of theirs out of context. Thus there are special reasons now for publishing this draft in its entirety - in fairness both to the authors and to all those interested in the events of 1965 - so that readers can make their own assessments rather than having to rely upon doctored extracts and tendentious interpretations by writers hostile to the hypotheses advanced by its authors.

I have found myself in disagreement with some of the views presented in this paper; however, I believe that despite the limited materials available to the authors over the few months that they collected and analyzed their data, this draft, which they wrote at the end of 1965, contains a number of important insights and a considerable amount of significant data which other writers have not taken into account. Thus, those interested in understanding the attempted coup of 1965, particularly if they bear in mind the caveats of Professor Anderson's present introduction, should find this paper useful. - George McT. Kahin

 

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PARTI
31
THE DUPES ARRIVE AT HALIM 41
MURDERS AND DISCUSSIONS THE STRATEGY
ALARUMS AND EXCURSIONS 57
THE COUNTERCOUP 67
SOEKARNO ABANDONS HALIM 83
89
THE RECKONING WITH THE PKI 113
THE PKI ACTING INDEPENDENTLY TO SEIZE POWER 125
A PLANNED MOVE BY THE PRESIDENT AGAINST
THE UNTUNG GROUP ACTING INDEPENDENTLY
APPENDICES
DECISION NO 2 CONCERNING DEMOTION
THE HARIAN RAKJAT EDITORIAL AND PARTY
THE NJONO CONFESSION 211

THE COLLAPSE OF THE COUP 103

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Tentang pengarang (2009)

Benedict Richard O'Gorman Anderson was born in Kunming, China on August 26, 1936. He received a degree in classics from Cambridge University in 1957 and a Ph.D. in government from Cornell University in 1967. He taught at Cornell University until his retirement, as an emeritus professor of international studies, in 2002. His best-known book, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism, was first published in 1983. He died of heart failure on December 12, 2015 at the age of 79.

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