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734 lines
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Article: 582 of sgi.talk.ratical
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From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
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Subject: Indonesia 1958: Nixon, the CIA, and the Secret War
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Keywords: Nixon chaired the 5412 committee that ran the Indonesian "rebellion"
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Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
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Date: Fri, 17 Apr 1992 13:54:33 GMT
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Lines: 733
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This was important administratively because by that time Frank
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Wisner, the CIA Deputy Director of Plans, had set up his forward
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headquarters in Singapore and at the direction of the 5412
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Committee of the National Security Council, headed by Nixon, Wisner
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occupied that faraway headquarters himself. (It should be noted
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that in 1958 Allen Dulles was the head of the CIA, his brother John
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Foster Dulles was the Secretary of State, Eisenhower was President,
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and Nixon, as Vice President, chaired the clandestine affairs
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committee, then known as the "Special Group 5412/2." In other
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words nothing was done in Indonesia that was not directed by Nixon.
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If an action had not been directed by the NSC, then it was done
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unlawfully by the CIA.)
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In 1958 Allen Dulles would have brought such a major operation
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to the attention of the Special Group and he would operate with its
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approval. This was an essential step in national policy because it
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then empowered the Department of Defense to provide the necessary
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support requested by the CIA. Much of this fell within the area of
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my responsibility at Air Force Headquarters, and I was kept
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informed on a regular basis of approved action and of Nixon's keen
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interest in this project.
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the following appeared in the August, 1976 issue of "Gallery" magazine:
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___________________________________________________________________________
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Indonesia 1958: Nixon, the CIA, and the Secret War
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By L. Fletcher Prouty
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reprinted here with the permission of the author
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Blood ran in the streets. Villages were wiped out
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and a million people massacred in a battle for the
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riches and political control of Indonesia. Nixon
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and the CIA wanted Sukarno overthrown. But the
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creator of Indonesia knew how to fight.
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A letter from one of the most beautiful women in the world lies
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buried in a stack of mail on President Ford's desk. Written in
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Paris on July 24, 1975, by Dewi Sukarno, the former First Lady of
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Indonesia and widow of Dr. Achmed Sukarno, the charismatic Father
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of Indonesia, the letter is an appeal to President Ford for a
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complete explanation of the CIA-led and supported rebellions that
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took place in Indonesia in 1958 and 1965.
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It is not well known in the United States that the 1958
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rebellion led to a major Indonesian civil war. The CIA-inspired
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uprising in Indonesia, unlike the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, was
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a full-scale military operation. The Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961
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was made by a thin brigade of about 1,500 Cuban exiles trained by
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the CIA in Guatemala. But the 1958 Indonesian action involved no
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less than 42,000 CIA-armed rebels supported by a fleet of bombers
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and vast numbers of four-engine transport aircraft as well as
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submarine assistance from the U.S. Navy. It also involved a major
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training and logistical supporting effort on the part of the
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Philippines, Okinawa, Taiwan, and Singapore. But despite this
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massive armed force, the 1958 rebellion, like the Bay of Pigs
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invasion, was a total failure. Sukarno's army drove the rebels on
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Sumatra and Celebes into the sea.
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There are some who might call the 1965 uprising a success. At
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least the rebels were not driven into the sea. However, for the
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United States it was a fantastically costly endeavor. The
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rebellion ended in the most massive and ruthless bloodbath since
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World War II. While the headlines in the United States dealt with
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the slaughter in Vietnam, the press of the rest of the world heaped
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blame on the United States for the barbaric massacre in Indonesia.
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The victorious new government of General Suharto proceeded to
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assassinate nearly one million people. This terrible slaughter and
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the ensuing imprisonment of tens of thousands of Indonesians
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stirred Dewi Sukarno to seek President Ford's assistance in gaining
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the release of her countrymen from prison.
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Dewi Sukarno has received no answer. But even without a reply
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she knows. The silence from Washington speaks for itself. A
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denial, if true, would have come without hesitation. The
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Indonesians know. The Latins had a phrase for it, "Is fecit cui
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prodest"--the perpetrator of a crime is he who profits by it.
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Today, major U.S. enterprises are plundering the raw material
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wealth of Indonesia--rubber, tin, and oil--in a manner that is more
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vile than what is happening in Chile. And there is no one to stop
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them.
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Achmed Sukarno was one of those rare men who rose during the
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hours of crisis to unite one hundred million people and lead them
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out of the ashes of World War II. Sukarno came to liberate his
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country from the Japanese, the Dutch, the Portuguese, and from all
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others who were ready to enslave his country once again. He
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established his government on the "Five Pillars": (l) belief in
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one supreme God (2) just and civilized humanity (3) unity of
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Indonesia (4) democracy (5) social justice.
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Sukarno was forced to thread his way between communism and
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capitalism. His independence made him both friends and enemies.
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His worst enemies came from his polyglot people who are scattered
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over more than 3,000 islands. These islands make up the world's
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largest archipelago; they stretch along the equator for over 3,400
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miles and are located in Southeast Asia between the Philippines and
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Australia. From one of these islands came Lt. Col. Alex
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Kawilarang, the military attache serving in Washington who was to
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defect to the rebel forces and lead the rebel contingent on
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Sumatra, the Indonesian island richest in natural resources.
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_______________________________________________________________________
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| His Excellency President Gerald Ford The White House |
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| Washington, D.C. |
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| Dear Mr. President, |
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| As the widow of the late President Sukarno and being the |
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| only member of the family living overseas, I address myself |
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| to you, being deeply alarmed and disturbed by numerous and |
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| persistent reports in the international press. For instance, |
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| the CIA is said to have spied on my husband: manufactured a |
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| fake film in order to slander the good name and honor of |
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| Sukarno: prepared an assassination attempt against him and |
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| conspired to oust him from power to estrange him from the |
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| Indonesian people by accusing him of collaborating with |
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| international communism in betrayal of Indonesian |
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| independence, which of course was totally absurd. |
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| My husband has repeatedly informed me that he was fully |
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| aware of these immoral, illegal, subversive, anti-Indonesian |
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| activities against his beloved Indonesia, his people, and |
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| against him personally. |
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| I would like to request from you, as well as from the |
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| responsible Congressional Committees in the United States a |
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| full explanation about these reports and reprehensible |
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| practices as carried out by an official United States |
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| Government Agency in the name of several American Presidents |
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| and Governments. |
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| Both in 1958 and in 1965, the CIA directly interfered in |
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| the internal affairs of Indonesia. In 1958, this monstrous |
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| action led to civil war. In 1965, it led to the ultimate |
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| takeover by a pro-Amencan military regime, while hundreds of |
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| thousands of innocent peasants and loyal citizens were |
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| massacred in the name of this insane crusade against |
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| international communism. Still today, ten years later, many |
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| tens of thousands of true patriots and Sukarnoists are locked |
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| up in jails and concentration camps being denied the simplest |
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| and most elementary human rights. American companies and |
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| aggressive foreign interests are indiscriminately plundering |
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| the natural riches of Indonesia to the advantage of the few |
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| and the disadvantage of the millions of unemployed and |
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| impoverished masses. |
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| I must now ask you, Mr. President, in the name of freedom |
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| and justice, in the name of decency in relations between |
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| states and statesmen, between powerful nations and developing |
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| lands, in the name of the Indonesian people and the Sukarno |
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| family: did the United States of America commit these |
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| hideous crimes against Indonesia and against the founder of |
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| the nation? Will your Government be prepared to accept |
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| responsibility for these evil practices? Over one hundred |
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| million Indonesians have been brainwashed, as was the rest of |
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| the world by the present regime's propaganda to believe that |
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| the communists carried out the insurrection. My countrymen, |
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| as well as everyone else, have the right to know the truth of |
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| the historic facts. It will be the painful duty for America |
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| now to reveal the CIA involvement in Indonesia and release |
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| all information and documents relevant to who really |
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| initiated the terrifying bloodbath that led to the overthrow |
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| of the legal Government and to the inhuman treatment in house |
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| arrest lasting three years until my husband's death. |
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| In closing, I would like to strongly appeal to you, Mr. |
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| President, to use your influence with the military regime in |
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| Jakarta, to immediately free those many thousands of |
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| political prisoners, men and women, former cabinet ministers, |
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| writers and journalists, who I know are entirely innocent of |
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| the crime of treason they have been accused of. If the |
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| United States were to be instrumental in helping to improve |
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| the fate of so many thousands of courageous compatriots, I |
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| think the entire Indonesian nation would be grateful and |
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| Indonesians would regain their confidence in America's |
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| intentions towards the Third World. |
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| Respectfully, |
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| R. S. Dewi Sukarno |
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| July 24, 1975 |
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|_____________________________________________________________________|
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What is not generally known about the complex Indonesian
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struggle is the role that was played by the then Vice President of
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the United States, Richard M. Nixon, and the bitter aftermath that
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involved the sudden ouster of Allen Dulles' protege, Frank Wisner,
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who at that time was the head of the clandestine arm of the CIA.
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After Watergate, when Anthony Lukas wrote in his book "Nightmare,"
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about the growing mistrust between Nixon and the Director of
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Central Intelligence, Richard Helms, he could have added that
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since the 1958 Indonesian rebellion there were many in the CIA who
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made a career of hating Nixon because of what he had done to Frank
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Wisner, among others.
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The Indonesian campaign began rather casually as so many CIA
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ventures do. Few if any ever originate at the top.
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During an unguarded conversation in Washington the Indonesian
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military attache mentioned earlier made it known to certain U.S.
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military acquaintances that there were many prominent and strong
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people in Indonesia who would be ready to rise against Sukarno if
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they were given a little support and encouragement from the United
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States. It happened that one of those U.S. military friends he
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talked to was not a military man at all, but a member of the CIA.
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The provocative words got back to Frank Wisner, then the Deputy
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Director of Plans. He was in charge of the CIA's clandestine
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activity and he authorized agents to follow up on that first
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conversation.
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The Indonesian attache was wined and dined and encouraged to
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talk more. Reasons for the attache's return to Indonesia on
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official business were successfully arranged. He was accompanied
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by CIA agents traveling under the cover of "U.S. military"
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personnel. During this visit they spoke with rebel leaders. They
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learned enough about the potential strength of this opposition to
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encourage the CIA to set in motion its biggest operation up to that
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date.
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In the Philippines there was a strong nucleus of military men,
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chief among them a Colonel Valeriano, who had been President
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Magsaysay's military assistant. He had also worked on paramilitary
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exercises with the CIA during the Magsaysay campaign against the
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leftist rebel Huk movement. This military group had gained
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considerable power during the Magsaysay tenure. Many of these
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special warfare experts from the Philippines had volunteered for
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duty in South Vietnam in 1955 when the CIA was deeply involved in
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providing undercover support for the new and uncertain regime of
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President Ngo Dinh Diem.
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By early 1958 these Filipinos and their CIA counterparts were
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prepared to involve the Philippines in the rebellion against
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Sukarno by setting up special warfare "Green Beret" training bases
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and by providing the Indonesian revolutionary council with
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clandestine air bases. One of those bases was on Palawan, the most
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western island of the Philippine archipelago, in the vicinity of
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the airfield at Puerto Princessa on Honda Bay. The other base was
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on the big southern island of Mindanao, near Davao Gulf.
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Concurrently, in Washington, operations were being organized.
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Frank Wisner took over direct command of the everyday operations of
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the Indonesian project. A large staff under Desmond Fitzgerald of
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the Far East Division was set up. The most active element of this
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special staff came from the CIA's clandestine Air Division which at
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that time was under the control of Dick Helms. As the plans
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expanded for this major undertaking, requirements for military
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equipment, people, aircraft, weapons, bases, submarines, and
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communications skyrocketed.
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In the Pentagon there are thousands of nondescript offices in
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which all sorts of tasks are done. One of these unobtrusive
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offices was an Air Force Plans Division office. One day in 1958
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two men from the CIA entered that office. After being identified
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they were permitted entrance to an interior office that was the
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"Focal Point" office for all U.S. Air Force Support of the
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clandestine operations of the CIA. I had established that office
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in 1955 on orders from Gen. Thomas D. White, then Chief of Staff of
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the Air Force. This came about after several meetings with Allen
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W. Dulles, the Director of Central Intelligence, and others. When
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the CIA men entered that office in 1958, I was still in charge.
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The agents outlined the Indonesian Plan, the Philippine support
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and training program, and told me about their own special
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operations staff that had been put together specifically for this
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vast project. Then they urgently requested light bombardment
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aircraft and long-range transport aircraft. We decided to take a
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number of twin engine B-26 aircraft out of mothball storage, put
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them through a retrofit line, and modify them so that they could be
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armed with a special 50-caliber machine gun package of eight guns,
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in the nose of the plane. This would give the B-26 more firepower
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than it ever had during the Korean War or World War II. The
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project was given top priority and covered in deep secrecy.
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Programs for pilot training and the recruitment of "mercenaries"
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were established.
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Concurrent with our work the CIA was putting together a
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"wartime" operational staff. Lt. Gen. Earl Barnes, who had been a
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senior air commander during World War II under Gen. Douglas
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MacArthur, was brought in to run all clandestine air activities.
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At that time Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer was Commander in Chief of
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the Ryukyu Command on Okinawa. One day he received a call from
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General David M. Shoup, the U.S. Marine Commander on Okinawa,
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asking if the Army could spare 14,000 rifles for a Marine
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requirement. Surprised at the Marine request for such a large
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order of guns, Lemnitzer acquiesced nonetheless and ordered the
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transfer of these weapons on the condition that they would be
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quickly replaced.[1]
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High on the ridge line of central Okinawa overlooking the city
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of Naha there was a modest size "Army" installation that hustled
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with considerable activity. This was the main CIA operational base
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in the Far East. It was under the direction of Ted Shannon, one of
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the Agency's most powerful agents. It was Shannon's office that
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had actually requested 42,000 rifles from General Shoup and since
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the order was so large Shoup had been unable to supply them, and
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had therefore borrowed 14,000 from the Army.
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On nearby Taiwan, the CIA had another large facility--a "Navy"
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base known as the Naval Auxiliary Communication Center (NACC).
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This "Comm Center" controlled a large and very active air base a
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few miles south of Taiwan's capital, Taipei, and the huge Air
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America facilities near Taipei and the city of Tainan.
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The B-26 bombers were ready to fly and a special ferrying
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arrangement was made with the Air Force to fly them across the
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Pacific to the Philippines and Menado.
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Rebel Indonesians, trained and equipped in the Philippines, were
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returned to Sumatra. Some were air-dropped and others landed on
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the beach from submarines that the U.S. Navy was operating, in
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support of the CIA, in the oceans south of Indonesia near the
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Christmas Islands.
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The war was on.
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On Feb. 9, 1958, rebel Colonel Maluddin Simbolon issued an
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ultimatum in the name of a provincial government, the Central
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Sumatran Revolutionary Council, calling for the formation of a new
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central government. Sukarno refused and called upon his loyal army
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commander, General Abdul Haris Nasution, to destroy the rebel
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forces. By Feb. 21 loyal forces had been airlifted to Sumatra and
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had begun the attack. The rebel headquarters was in the southern
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coastal city of Padang. Rebel strongholds stretched all the way to
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Medan, near the northern end of the island and not far from
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Malaysia.
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This was important administratively because by that time Frank
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Wisner, the CIA Deputy Director of Plans, had set up his forward
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headquarters in Singapore and at the direction of the 5412
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|
Committee of the National Security Council, headed by Nixon, Wisner
|
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|
occupied that faraway headquarters himself. (It should be noted
|
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|
that in 1958 Allen Dulles was the head of the CIA, his brother John
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|
Foster Dulles was the Secretary of State, Eisenhower was President,
|
||
|
and Nixon, as Vice President, chaired the clandestine affairs
|
||
|
committee, then known as the "Special Group 5412/2." In other
|
||
|
words nothing was done in Indonesia that was not directed by Nixon.
|
||
|
If an action had not been directed by the NSC, then it was done
|
||
|
unlawfully by the CIA.)
|
||
|
In 1958 Allen Dulles would have brought such a major operation
|
||
|
to the attention of the Special Group and he would operate with its
|
||
|
approval. This was an essential step in national policy because it
|
||
|
then empowered the Department of Defense to provide the necessary
|
||
|
support requested by the CIA. Much of this fell within the area of
|
||
|
my responsibility at Air Force Headquarters, and I was kept
|
||
|
informed on a regular basis of approved action and of Nixon's keen
|
||
|
interest in this project.
|
||
|
The rebellion flared sporadically from one end of Indonesia to
|
||
|
the other.
|
||
|
While the CIA was supporting up to 100,000 rebels, the State
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||
|
Department professed innocence. The U.S. ambassador, Howard P.
|
||
|
Jones, maintained that the United States had nothing to do with the
|
||
|
rebellion and he protested the capture of the American oil
|
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|
properties. On the other hand, Sukarno had asked for more arms aid
|
||
|
from the United States. He must have had strong suspicions about
|
||
|
the source of rebel support. The vast number of guns, the bombers
|
||
|
and heavy air transport aircraft dropping hundreds of tons of arms
|
||
|
and equipment, as well as submarines supporting beach operations
|
||
|
were just too sophisticated to be anything but major power ploys.
|
||
|
Thus, his appeal for U.S. arms aid had the ring of gamesmanship.
|
||
|
Playing along with the game, John Foster Dulles issued a
|
||
|
statement saying that the United States would not provide arms to
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||
|
either side. And while he was publishing that falsehood, the
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|
United States furnished and piloted B-26 bombers, and these were
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||
|
bombing shipping in the Makassar Straits. Some had even flown as
|
||
|
far south as the Java Sea. Almost immediately all insurance rates
|
||
|
on shipping to and from Indonesia went on a wartime scale and costs
|
||
|
became so prohibitive that most shipping actually ceased. The
|
||
|
bombing attacks, kept so quiet in the United States that they
|
||
|
hardly made the news, were being viewed with great alarm by the
|
||
|
rest of the world. What was "Top Secret" in Washington was barroom
|
||
|
gossip in the capitals of the world.
|
||
|
While Wisner communicated with Washington clandestinely, anyone
|
||
|
in the bar at the Raffles Hotel in Singapore, in the Peninsula
|
||
|
Hotel in Kowloon, or even on the streets of Istanbul, could learn
|
||
|
all about the "American CIA attack" on Sukarno.
|
||
|
The CIA was demanding so much support for its far-flung
|
||
|
operations that a top-level committee was established in the
|
||
|
Pentagon. Its purpose was to keep track of how much war equipment
|
||
|
was being requested and sent to Indonesia. Not unlike the
|
||
|
Lemnitzer-Shoup rifle problem, there were problems in the Pentagon
|
||
|
because of the way the CIA requested equipment through phony
|
||
|
"military" cover channels.
|
||
|
Early in this operation I had put some men from my office into
|
||
|
the air-combat section in the Philippines, and the Air Force was
|
||
|
reasonably well aware of what was going on. But that was not so
|
||
|
for the other services. At the time, Admiral Arleigh Burke was the
|
||
|
Chief of Naval Operations. He went one step further than we did.
|
||
|
At the height of the rebel operations, Burke sent his Chief of
|
||
|
Naval Intelligence, Admiral Luther Frost, to Jakarta, Indonesia's
|
||
|
capital, where he stayed for several months carrying on a delicate
|
||
|
relationship with the American ambassador and with the Indonesian
|
||
|
naval chiefs. This, while U.S. Navy submarines were aiding the
|
||
|
rebels south of Sumatra. It turned out to have been a masterful
|
||
|
gambit because later, when the rebellion collapsed, the U.S. Navy
|
||
|
was able to declare innocence. The Air Force was not so fortunate.
|
||
|
The pretense that the U.S. Government was in no way involved in
|
||
|
this massive civil war against Sukarno was wearing thin. It was a
|
||
|
reasonable cover as long as the United States could plausibly deny
|
||
|
its role in the action. But one day, a lone B-26 out of the rebel
|
||
|
CIA base at Menado, flying low over the Straits of Makassar, came
|
||
|
upon an Indonesian ship--an ideal target. The pilot banked to take
|
||
|
a good run at the ship and began strafing it with those eight
|
||
|
lethal .50-caliber machine guns. He was committed to the attack
|
||
|
before he found out that the freighter was armed. The B-26 was hit
|
||
|
and it ditched near the ship. The pilot, an American named Allan
|
||
|
Lawrence Pope, was picked up. Pope was identified as a former U.S.
|
||
|
Air Force pilot. The cork was out of the bottle. Sukarno had his
|
||
|
proof of U.S. involvement and he played his ace card for an
|
||
|
international audience. That one plane and that one pilot cost the
|
||
|
U.S. Government tens of millions of dollars in ransom and tribute
|
||
|
during the next several years.
|
||
|
After the capture of Pope the rebellion rapidly fell apart.
|
||
|
Loyal forces captured Donggala in central Celebes. And on far away
|
||
|
Halmahera, government forces captured Jailolo. That ended all
|
||
|
opposition except for the CIA-rebel air base at Menado. With the
|
||
|
rebellion all but crushed, except for the continued existence of
|
||
|
the main CIA force, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles ended the
|
||
|
embargo of arms to Sukarno and agreed to send aid to the government
|
||
|
of Indonesia! What wondrous duplicity! And Sukarno was not
|
||
|
fooled. His forces had been fighting a major civil war inspired
|
||
|
and clandestinely supported by the United States, while
|
||
|
concurrently the overt branches of the U.S. Government acted as
|
||
|
though nothing at all had happened.
|
||
|
By the end of June 1958 it was all over. Then a very strange
|
||
|
and rare (rare in terms of normal bureaucracy) thing happened.
|
||
|
During the months of this operation it had been my custom to visit
|
||
|
the CIA special operations center.
|
||
|
One morning I caught the unmarked, dull-green CIA shuttle bus at
|
||
|
the Pentagon and rode to the operations center. I went in. Not a
|
||
|
soul was there. The place had been cleaned out. Office after
|
||
|
office was absolutely bare. Finally I found one secretary. She
|
||
|
was sitting in a straight-back chair and her telephone was on the
|
||
|
floor. There were tears in her eyes. She took a call from time to
|
||
|
time and gave guarded answers about the former members of that huge
|
||
|
staff. The entire section had been scattered to the four corners
|
||
|
of the world. A large number of top-level, experienced,
|
||
|
clandestine agents and operators had vanished. It took our Air
|
||
|
Force office, skilled as we were in the ways of the CIA, months to
|
||
|
find some of them again.
|
||
|
Then we began to piece together what had happened. With the
|
||
|
collapse of such a major effort and with the inability of the
|
||
|
Government to deny plausibly before the world its role in the whole
|
||
|
sordid affair, blame had to be placed somewhere. In an
|
||
|
unprecedented action, Nixon had summarily fired Frank Wisner, along
|
||
|
with some others. But Frank Wisner, a longtime OSS and CIA man,
|
||
|
was a key intelligence officer. Few knew enough about his career
|
||
|
to realize that he was senior, by far, to Helms and Colby.
|
||
|
Clearly, he was Allen Dulles' heir apparent. When the OSS had been
|
||
|
deactivated after World War II by President Truman, it was Wisner
|
||
|
who had kept a tight-knit band of professionals together. This
|
||
|
small cadre kept valuable OSS records and, more importantly, they
|
||
|
had maintained the delicate lines of communication with agents,
|
||
|
spies, and underground personnel in Eastern Europe, Russia, and
|
||
|
Germany. They held this fragile web together. Without them
|
||
|
hundreds of people might have been killed and priceless assets
|
||
|
destroyed. And Frank Wisner suddenly, almost whimsically, had been
|
||
|
fired.
|
||
|
To a man, the Agency was aroused by this action. Rightly or
|
||
|
wrongly, they hated Nixon for this. I remember being at meetings
|
||
|
during which the name of Nixon would be mentioned and I have seen
|
||
|
CIA men bristle and redden as though someone had let a poisonous
|
||
|
snake loose in the room. Some vowed he would never become
|
||
|
President.
|
||
|
Meanwhile the Agency moved to pull itself together. That one
|
||
|
deft bloodbath appeared to end things. There was no Board of
|
||
|
Inquiry as there was after the Bay of Pigs. And, remarkably, there
|
||
|
was no public outcry as there would be a few years later after the
|
||
|
U-2 scandal. The agency was busy sweeping things under the rug.
|
||
|
Meanwhile those special B-26s were all flown back to the States
|
||
|
and based at Elgin Air Force Base in Flonda. That was late in
|
||
|
1958. By 1959 they began to stir again. A man named Castro had
|
||
|
come to power in Cuba. During those fateful days in April 1961 it
|
||
|
was those same B-26s that the CIA used to attack Cuba.
|
||
|
This is the story that Dewi Sukarno is asking President Ford to
|
||
|
explain to her and to the Indonesian people. Actually, the 1958
|
||
|
civil war was child's play compared to the brutal bloodbath of
|
||
|
1965. Sukarno was in control after the 1958 disaster and he wrung
|
||
|
a heavy tribute from the U.S. Government for its indiscretions.
|
||
|
But in 1965 his game ended, like Allende's in Chile, with defeat.
|
||
|
An attempted communist coup d'etat was defeated by General Suharto.
|
||
|
Sukarno never made the great public statement that was to assure
|
||
|
the success of the coup, and after its defeat and the ensuing
|
||
|
bloodbath, he was stripped of his power. After a few years of
|
||
|
ignominious house arrest the hero of all Indonesia died in 1970.
|
||
|
What was the story behind Nixon's harsh action against Wisner?
|
||
|
Was that the deep-rooted reason why CIA top-echelon insiders such
|
||
|
as Dick Helms really hated and distrusted Nixon? In later years
|
||
|
did they take out their grudge against him with a piece of tape on
|
||
|
a Watergate doorway? There may never be answers to these
|
||
|
questions, or perhaps they have been answered already. It is said
|
||
|
that when the great volcanic mountain of Krakatoa in Indonesia blew
|
||
|
up causing the greatest explosion the world had ever known, the
|
||
|
dust of Indonesia was spread all over the world. The holocausts of
|
||
|
1958 and 1965 may have done the same thing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * * * * * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
[1] the following is an excerpt from an interview conducted with
|
||
|
L. Fletcher Prouty on May 6, 1989, regarding his book "The Secret
|
||
|
Team, The CIA and Its Allies in Control of the United States and
|
||
|
the World," Prentice Hall, (c) 1973. This segment recounts Prouty's
|
||
|
experience when he found out that some things he had been doing for
|
||
|
years in support of the CIA had not been known by the senior military
|
||
|
officer in the armed forces--the chairman of the JCS--and that they
|
||
|
had been done, most likely, in response to other authority.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
. . . Millions and millions of dollars were poured into that
|
||
|
exercise--a lot of people were involved in it--and it never went
|
||
|
through any Air Force procurement. Now, the cleared individual--
|
||
|
the man in the team--in the procurement offices, made papers that
|
||
|
covered up this gap. There were papers in the files but they had
|
||
|
never been worked on--they were simple dummy papers in the files.
|
||
|
Now, we could do things like that with no trouble at all. The U2
|
||
|
was started like that. That's how the U2 got off the ground.
|
||
|
Ostensibly, purchased by the Air Force, but not paid for by the Air
|
||
|
Force, and so on.
|
||
|
So, when I say that this team was quite effective, it was very
|
||
|
effective, very strong, handled a lot of money, worked all over the
|
||
|
world, thousands of people were involved. I know, one time, when I
|
||
|
was speaking to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at that
|
||
|
time General Lemnitzer, he said, "You know, I've known of two or
|
||
|
three units in the Army that were supporting CIA. But you're
|
||
|
talking about quite a few. How many were there?" Well, at that
|
||
|
time, there were 605. Well General Lemnitzer had no idea. It's
|
||
|
amazing--heres the top man in the military and he had no idea that
|
||
|
we were supporting that many CIA units. Not military units--they
|
||
|
were phony military units. They were operating with military
|
||
|
people but they were controlled entirely, they were financed by the
|
||
|
CIA. Six hundred and five of them. And I'm sure that from my day
|
||
|
it increased; I know it didn't decrease.
|
||
|
So, people don't understand the size and the nature of this
|
||
|
clandestine activity that is designed for clandestine operations
|
||
|
all over the world. And it goes back, again, to things we've
|
||
|
spoken of earlier, that that activity must be under somebody's
|
||
|
control. There is no law for the control of covert operations
|
||
|
other than at the National Security Council level. And if the
|
||
|
National Security Council does not sign the directives, issue the
|
||
|
directives, for covert operations, then nobody does. And that's
|
||
|
when it becomes a shambles as we saw in the Contra affair and in
|
||
|
other things. But when the National Security Council steps in and
|
||
|
directs it and holds that control, then things are run properly.
|
||
|
And we've seen that during the last decade theres been quite a few
|
||
|
aberrations where they were talking about Iran or Latin America or
|
||
|
even part of the Vietnam War itself. In fact, it was in the
|
||
|
Vietnam War where the thing really began to come apart--it just
|
||
|
outgrew itself and the leadership role disintegrated. And we see
|
||
|
the worst of it in the Iran-Contra affair.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ratcliffe: Following on that you write about Dulles being able to
|
||
|
"move them up and deeper into their cover jobs"--would this be a
|
||
|
function of them being there longer than the people who would be
|
||
|
promoted to something else in time?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Prouty: Yes. When we put them in, they might be somebody's
|
||
|
assistant. And they've been there for three years and the man that
|
||
|
was above them, who was probably a political appointee, leaves and
|
||
|
they might move this man up there. Or when a newer political
|
||
|
appointee comes, he has no knowledge that this man is really from
|
||
|
CIA. He's just a strong person in his office and he gives him a
|
||
|
broader role. Sometimes these people (chuckling) were working--
|
||
|
well, one man I know was in FAA and we needed his work to help us
|
||
|
with FAA as a focal point there. He'd been there so long the FEA
|
||
|
had him in a very big, very responsible job, and you might say 90%
|
||
|
of his work was regular FAA work. A very strong individual. Well,
|
||
|
that meant that when we needed him to help us with some of our
|
||
|
activities on the covert side of things, he was in a much better
|
||
|
position to handle this than he had been originally.
|
||
|
This happened with quite a few of them. That's why I say in the
|
||
|
case of Frank Hand, he had been in the Defense Department so long
|
||
|
that he was able to handle really major operations that weren't
|
||
|
even visualized at the time he was assigned. All this carries over
|
||
|
into many other things. I pointed out that the Office of Special
|
||
|
Operations under General Erskine had the responsibility for the
|
||
|
National Security Agency as well as CIA contacts and the State
|
||
|
Department, and so on. Well, as we filled up these positions, some
|
||
|
of them became dominant in some those organizations, such as NSA.
|
||
|
Early people in this program have created quite a career for
|
||
|
themselves in other work. For instance, a young man in this system
|
||
|
was Major Haig. Major Al Haig. He went up through the system. He
|
||
|
was working as a deputy to the Army's cleared Focal Point Officer
|
||
|
for Agency support matters who was the General Counsel in the Army,
|
||
|
a man named Joe Califano--a very prominent lawyer today. When the
|
||
|
General Counsel of the Army was moved up into the office of
|
||
|
Secretary of Defense later--in McNamara's office--he carried with
|
||
|
him this then-Lieutenant Colonel Al Haig up to the office of
|
||
|
Secretary of Defense. And during the Johnson Administration when
|
||
|
they moved to the White House, Califano and Haig moved to the White
|
||
|
House. Then during the Nixon time, Haig with all his experience in
|
||
|
the White House worked with Kissinger. And you can see that it was
|
||
|
this attachment through the covert side which gave Haig his ability
|
||
|
to do an awful lot of things that people didn't understand, because
|
||
|
he had this whole team behind him. To be even more up-to-date,
|
||
|
there was a Major Secord in our system. And Major Secord is the
|
||
|
same General Secord you've been reading about in the Iran-Contra
|
||
|
business.
|
||
|
A lot of these people worked right up into the White House. And
|
||
|
there were these same assigned people even at the White House level
|
||
|
that really were working on this CIA covert work rather than the
|
||
|
jobs that they seemed to hold, that the public understood was the
|
||
|
job that they were working for. It's a much more effective system
|
||
|
than people have thought it was. . . .
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ratcliffe: You describe what seems to be a very enlightening day
|
||
|
--an event in 1960 or 1961 when you briefed "the Chairman of the
|
||
|
JCS on a matter that had come up involving the CIA and the
|
||
|
military." [p.257] As you described it:
|
||
|
|
||
|
The chairman was General Lyman L. Lemnitzer, and his
|
||
|
commandant was General David M. Shoup. They were close
|
||
|
friends and had known each other for years.
|
||
|
When the primary subject of the briefing had ended
|
||
|
General Lemnitzer asked me about the Army cover unit
|
||
|
that was involved in the operation. I explained what
|
||
|
its role was and more or less added that this was a
|
||
|
rather routine matter. Then he said, "Prouty, if this
|
||
|
is routine, yet General Shoup and I have never heard of
|
||
|
it before, can you tell me in round numbers how many
|
||
|
Army units there are that exist as `cover` for the
|
||
|
CIA?" I replied that to my knowledge at that time
|
||
|
there were about 605 such units, some real, some mixed,
|
||
|
and some that were simply telephone drops. When he
|
||
|
heard that he turned to General Shoup and said, "You
|
||
|
know, I realized that we provided cover for the Agency
|
||
|
from time to time; but I never knew that we had
|
||
|
anywhere near so many permanent cover units and that
|
||
|
they existed all over the world."
|
||
|
|
||
|
I then asked General Lemnitzer if I might ask him a
|
||
|
question. He said I could. "General", I said, "during
|
||
|
all of my military career I have done one thing or
|
||
|
another at the direction of a senior officer. In all
|
||
|
those years and in all of those circumstances I have
|
||
|
always believed that someone, either at the level of
|
||
|
the officer who told me to do what I was doing or
|
||
|
further up the chain of command, knew why I was doing
|
||
|
what I had been directed to do and that he knew what
|
||
|
the reason for doing it was. Now I am speaking to the
|
||
|
senior military officer in the armed forces and I have
|
||
|
just found out that some things I have been doing for
|
||
|
years in support of the CIA have not been known and
|
||
|
that they have been done, most likely, in response to
|
||
|
other authority. Is this correct?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
This started a friendly, informal, and most
|
||
|
enlightening conversation, more or less to the effect
|
||
|
that where the CIA was concerned there were a lot of
|
||
|
things no one seemed to know. [p.258]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Can you recount more of the details of this enlightening
|
||
|
conversation for us?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Prouty: Well, you know I referred to it earlier. It astounded me,
|
||
|
that day. I assumed that there were a lot things that the Chairman
|
||
|
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was not aware of every day in the Air
|
||
|
Force, in the Navy, and in the CIA. But I had never expected such
|
||
|
a blanket answer, that he didn't know, and that General Shoup
|
||
|
didn't. Now, what we were talking about was rather specific.
|
||
|
At the time of the rebellion in Indonesia when the CIA supported
|
||
|
tens of thousands of troops with aircraft, and ships, submarines,
|
||
|
and everything else, in an attempt to overthrow the government of
|
||
|
Sukarno, we needed rifles pretty quick to support these rebels and
|
||
|
I called out to Okinawa and found out that the Army didn't have
|
||
|
enough rifles for what we wanted. We wanted about 42,000 rifles
|
||
|
and they had about 28,000. But that he said he thought he could
|
||
|
get--General Lemnitzer was a Commander at that time in Okinawa. So
|
||
|
he was right up close to this thing. He said that he'd have
|
||
|
somebody call the Marine Corps and see what he could get from them.
|
||
|
Well, it just happened that General Shoup was the head of the
|
||
|
Marine unit at Okinawa and he said, sure, he could provide the
|
||
|
extra 14,000. So without delay, we had 4-engine aircraft--C-54's-
|
||
|
-flown by Air America crews but under military cover--appeared to
|
||
|
be military aircraft--come into Okinawa, pick up these 42,000
|
||
|
rifles, prepared for air drop in Indonesia. They'd fly down to the
|
||
|
Philippines and then down to another base we had and then over into
|
||
|
Indonesia and drop these rifles.
|
||
|
Well of course, we replaced those rifles. The General didn't
|
||
|
know where they were going, we just borrowed them, and the unit
|
||
|
that borrowed them was military and the call had come from the
|
||
|
Pentagon. There was no problem with supplying the rifles. So
|
||
|
years later, we replaced them. Well then when I told him about
|
||
|
that in the Pentagon, he said he never knew where those rifles went
|
||
|
and General Shoup said, "you know, Lem, when you asked me for
|
||
|
14,000 rifles, I thought you wanted them and, of course, being a
|
||
|
good Marine, I gave you 14,000 rifles." He said, "you owe me
|
||
|
14,000." They were sitting there kidding but they never knew they
|
||
|
went to Indonesia. You see, they never knew they were part of a
|
||
|
covert operation going into Indonesia.
|
||
|
Well, this is true of a lot of things that go on. We kept the
|
||
|
books in the Pentagon. We covered that. We got reimbursement for
|
||
|
it. That part of it was all right. And that's what kept it from
|
||
|
being a problem because as long as General Lemnitzer's forces got
|
||
|
the 28,000 rifles back and Shoup got the 14,000 back for the total
|
||
|
of 42,000, they didn't complain to anybody. They had their full
|
||
|
strength of rifles. That's the magic of reimbursement.
|
||
|
Well, his kind of thing, on an established basis--the units are
|
||
|
there--when I said there are 605 units, those are operating units-
|
||
|
-now, some of them may only be telephone drops, because that's
|
||
|
their function, they don't need a whole lot of people, they're just
|
||
|
handling supplies, or something like that. But put this in present
|
||
|
terms. When Colonel North believed that he had been ordered to
|
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|
take 2,008 Toe missiles and deliver them to Iran--see?--there has
|
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|
to be some way that the supply system can let those go. You can't
|
||
|
just drive down there with a truck to San Antonio at the warehouse,
|
||
|
and say, "I want 2,008 missiles." You have to have authority. And
|
||
|
2,008 Toe missiles--I don't know what one of them costs, but it's
|
||
|
an awful lot of money, and somebody had to prepare the paperwork
|
||
|
for the authorization to let the supply officer release those. And
|
||
|
I'm sure they went to a cover unit that North was using for that
|
||
|
purpose. But it appears from what we've heard from this that,
|
||
|
unlike the way we used to run the cover operations, when these
|
||
|
things got to Iran, these characters sold them them for money. In
|
||
|
fact, they sold them for almost four times the listed value of
|
||
|
these things.
|
||
|
And this is the problem Congress has been having--is what
|
||
|
happened to the money after they got there. And you can see how
|
||
|
the system developed. You see, originally, we developed it on this
|
||
|
one-for-one basis. Another thing is we never used this kind of
|
||
|
supply, to deliver grenades to the Contras and charge them $9.00 a
|
||
|
grenade or whatever it was. We just delivered the grenades. It was
|
||
|
part of a Government program. And the CIA would reimburse the
|
||
|
Defense Department. Everything came out even. We didn't "sell"
|
||
|
anything.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
--
|
||
|
daveus rattus
|
||
|
|
||
|
yer friendly neighborhood ratman
|
||
|
|
||
|
KOYAANISQATSI
|
||
|
|
||
|
ko.yan.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life
|
||
|
in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating.
|
||
|
5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
|