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With Us or Against Us

Page 36

by Tony Judt


  against terror.

  The Singaporean government set the tone for the region’s response

  to 9/11 by arresting a number of Singaporean Muslims who were

  alleged to be members of the shadowy Jama’ah Islamiyyah move-

  ment, which was supposed to have ties to the KMM of Malaysia and

  radical Muslim militants in Indonesia. The Sri-Lankan-born ‘terror-

  ism expert,’ Rohan Gunaratna—author of the book on Al Qaeda4—

  was soon to be found in Singapore, based at the Institute for Defence

  and Strategic Studies (IDSS) of Nanyang University and feeding the

  Singaporean press with stories about the alleged activities of Al Qaeda

  in the region (though it should be noted that much of Gunaratna’s

  “information” was fed to him by Singaporean and Filipino intelligence

  services as well).

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  Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

  213

  Gunaratna’s alarming prognosis—played to the hilt by the

  Singaporean government-controlled press—soon earned him the ire

  and scorn of the Malaysian and Indonesian governments, as well as

  Malaysian and Indonesian Islamist movements and parties. His allega-

  tion that Al Qaeda had transferred its operations to Southeast Asia

  and had established contact with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front

  (MILF) cast the net of association so widely that it ultimately covered

  not only the main Islamist party (PAS) and biggest Muslim civil society

  NGO (ABIM) of Malaysia, but also the ruling UMNO party under

  the leadership of Dr. Mahathir Mohamad.5 In time, the Malaysian and

  Indonesian governments were chastising the Singaporean authorities,

  whom they accused of using the fear of terrorism as a means to ruin the

  image of their neighboring countries and to drive away much needed

  foreign investment and tourist dollars.

  Thus, it became clear that the discourse of the war against terror

  was being used by the governments of ASEAN to score points against

  each other while also driving investment and tourism away from

  neighboring countries. Faced with such apparent lack of cohesion and

  unity of purpose, the door was opened for the reentry of the United

  States—and its military and intelligence operatives in particular—

  in the confused politics of the region. Uncle Sam was returning to

  ASEAN, though his presence in the not-too-distant past was far from

  forgotten.

  Living under Uncle Sam’s Long

  Shadow: American Involvement in

  ASEAN in the Not-Too-Distant Past

  Southeast Asia, it has to be remembered, is a highly complex and

  multifaceted region with a plethora of different, sometimes compet-

  ing, sometimes contradictory, histories. Though historically of the same

  sociocultural mould (up to the twelfth century, the entire region was

  a patchwork of kingdoms and empires that shared a common Hindu–

  Buddhist heritage rooted in Sanskrit scripturalism and Brahminical

  culture, which originated from India), the territory of ASEAN today

  is made up of nation-states of different ethnic, religious, racial, and

  ideological hues.

  The arrival of Islam from India and Singhalese Buddhism from

  Ceylon from the twelfth century onward effectively divided the region

  into two: the Malay-Muslim archipelago to the South and the Buddhist

  mainland to the North. From the eighteenth to nineteenth centuries

  onward, the entire region (save for Thailand) was carved up by Western

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  F arish A. Noor

  imperial powers whose enduring legacy can still be seen in the different

  governmental, economic, military, and educational institutions and

  structures that exist till today. These institutional structures were

  destined to remain well into the twentieth century, when the world of

  Southeast Asia was once again divided according to the oppositional

  dialectic of the Cold War. As a result, the region today is a hotchpotch

  of different economic, political, and sociocultural systems, ranging

  from the nominal democracies and capitalist economies of Malaysia

  and Singapore, the centralized states of Thailand, Indonesia, and

  Philippines with the record of numerous military interventions in

  politics, and the top-heavy militarized bureaucracies of Myanmar

  (Burma), Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam.

  Not to be forgotten is the fact that Southeast Asia, from the post-

  war period onward, has been one of the most violent parts of the

  world and that the soil of ASEAN has been sated with the blood of

  millions of civilians killed in conflicts in Vietnam, Cambodia, Philippines,

  Indonesia, and Timor. With the end of Western European coloniza-

  tion in the post-war years, a power vacuum had been created in the

  ASEAN region, which opened the way for the arrival (and subsequent

  consolidation) of American hegemony.

  Indonesia: Indirect U.S. Intervention by Supporting

  the Pro-American Military Elite

  One of the first countries to openly resist the assertion of American

  power was Indonesia, then under the leadership of the staunch nation-

  alist leader Sukarno. The Indonesian government under Sukarno was

  unwilling to accept any form of aid or military assistance from the

  United States for the simple reason that such a move would jeopardize

  Indonesia’s neutral stance. In October 1950, Sukarno announced that

  Indonesia would no longer accept any form of aid from the United

  States on the grounds that such assistance often meant have to accept

  political conditionalities imposed by the powerful donor country as

  well. A few months earlier (in May 1950), the Burmese government

  had also announced that it would no longer accept any American

  military assistance.6

  This setback did not dampen the ambitions of the Americans though:

  American efforts to woo Indonesia and bring it into the fold of the

  Western bloc intensified between 1951 and 1952, as the Korean War

  began to intensify. But these moves backfired for the simple reason

  that the communist opposition in Indonesia had grown progressively

  stronger and was unwilling to allow Indonesia to fall under America’s

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  Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

  215

  shadow. The behind-the-scenes battle to win the hearts of the

  Indonesian leadership continued right up to the Bandung Conference

  that Sukarno organized in 1955.

  In April 1955, Indonesia hosted the Bandung Conference that

  brought together the leaders of the newly independent countries of

  Asia and Africa. Both the United States and Soviet Russia were appre-

  hensive about the move (while China was more inclined to support

  the idea since it could identify itself with the newly emerging forces in

  Asia). The Russians were keen to ensure that they would not be side-

  lined from the discussions of the conference. On the eve of the con-

  ference, the Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily Kusnetsov declared

  that “the Soviet Union understands fully the struggle of the nations of

  Africa and Asia against any form of colonial domination and economic

  dependence.”7

 
The United States was more openly critical of the whole idea

  behind the conference, and many of the key strategists in Washington

  were certain that the Bandung Conference was nothing more than a

  leftist–nationalist plot to bring together the countries of Asia and

  Africa in an instrumental coalition against the West. The American

  establishment was particularly worried about how some Asian and

  African nations seemed eager and willing to accept Russia’s (and China’s)

  aid and military assistance packages with fewer questions asked. At

  that stage, however, Washington’s fears of a communist takeover in

  Indonesia were vastly exaggerated. A few months after the conference

  (in August 1955) the left-leaning government of Prime Minister Ali

  Sastroamidjojo was toppled. Despite these developments during

  the 1955 elections, the Indonesian communist party (PKI) won only

  16 percent of the vote (21 percent on the island of Java).

  In May 1956, President Sukarno of Indonesia was invited to

  America by the Eisenhower administration. Sukarno’s visit was hailed

  as a success by Eisenhower, who was particularly impressed by his will-

  ingness to be taken on a tour of Disneyland by none other than Walt

  Disney himself. (Sukarno was also given the opportunity to make the

  acquaintance of a number of Hollywood actresses during the evenings

  when he was free.) McMahon (1999) notes that “So impressed were

  US officials with the results of the Sukarno trip that in the summer of

  1956 the Eisenhower administration quietly approved $US 25 million in

  developmental assistance for Indonesia’s struggling economy.”8 This

  optimism was off the mark once again, as McMahon notes. If the U.S.

  administration really believed that by giving the president of

  Indonesia a private tour of Disneyland and the casting couches of

  Hollywood he would tilt in favor of the United States, they would be

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  F arish A. Noor

  proven wrong. Soon after he returned to Indonesia, Sukarno reached

  a tentative agreement with Soviet Russia that would allow the transfer

  of $100 million worth of aid for a number of unspecified develop-

  mental projects. To make things worse, the elections that were held in

  Indonesia had allowed the leftist Ali Sastroamidjojo to come back to

  power with the backing of the PKI that was stronger than ever.

  By 1958, Sukarno’s attempts to build a working democracy in

  Indonesia had clearly failed. The regional revolts in Sumatra and

  Sulawesi between 1957 and 1958 had broken the back of the Ali

  Sastroamidjojo government and on March 13, 1958, he and his cabinet

  resigned. The worsening political situation in Indonesia gave Sukarno the

  pretext he needed for suspending the democratic process altogether

  and declaring martial law throughout the country.

  The American government felt that this was the best time to inter-

  vene in Indonesia’s domestic affairs, with the hope that by doing so

  they could tip the balance of power in the country and foreclose the

  possibility of a communist takeover once and for all. By September

  1958, President Eisenhower and the American National Security

  Council (NSC) prepared the way for what McMahon (1999) later

  described as “one of the most misguided, ill-conceived and ultimately

  counterproductive covert operations of the entire Cold war era.”9 In

  an effort to strengthen the anticommunist forces within Indonesia,

  the Americans began to actively support the antigovernment forces that

  were waging a war against the central government of Sukarno. Arms

  and aid were soon sent to the PRRI forces that were based in Sumatra

  and Sulawesi. But the American efforts came to naught in the end.

  The Indonesian army under the command of Gen. Abdul Haris

  Nasution managed to defeat the rebel forces in the interior, and, in

  time, were able to reveal the extent of U.S. involvement in the whole

  debacle. After defeating the rebels, Indonesian troops found numerous

  caches of U.S.-supplied weapons. They even managed to shoot down

  a U.S. pilot (Allen Pope) who was a CIA agent and was flying supply

  missions on behalf of the insurgents.10 Sukarno cited this as proof that

  the United States was bent on recolonizing Indonesia by whatever

  means necessary, going as far as supporting antigovernment rebels

  who had declared war on the state. In the wake of the failed rebellions,

  Indonesia–American relations plummeted to an all-time low.

  Indonesian–American relations would only recover after the 1965

  failed coup, which brought the Pro-Western General Soeharto to

  power. With the rise of Soeharto and the military elite, Indonesia

  embarked on a ferocious purge against the leftists and communists

  that destroyed the PKI, forcibly annexed Irian Jaya (in 1968) and

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  Uncle Sam to the Rescue?

  217

  East Timor (in 1974), and moved closer to the West in its political

  orientation.

  The pro-American elite of Indonesia worked to improve economic,

  strategic, and military links with the United States, and the Americans

  (and British), in turn, propped up the corrupt and brutal Soeharto

  regime with gifts of arms, investment, and military training. From the

  mid-1960s to the late 1990s, Indonesia’s President Soeharto rose to

  become the longest serving leader of ASEAN and was soon regarded

  as one of the most brutal dictators in the world. Soeharto’s govern-

  ment was also dominated by pro-Western generals and military officers

  like Benny Moerdani, whose fear and loathing for Islamism bordered

  on the pathological. Needless to say, this hostility soon spilled over

  into open violence and confrontation between the government and

  the Islamists in Sumatra and Java, and only began to recede in the

  1990s when it became clear that the Islamist opposition was not about

  to surrender.

  American intervention in Indonesia, therefore, dates back to the

  post-war era and it should not come as a surprise if the U.S. govern-

  ment is still regarded with suspicion and contempt by many Islamists

  and pro-democracy activists in the country. But the machinations of

  the United States in Indonesia pale in comparison to what was done

  by the American government and its armed forces in Vietnam and the

  Philippines.

  Vietnam: From Indirect American Intervention to

  Coups, Agent Orange and “Search and Destroy”

  The solution to Vietnam is more bombs, more shells, more napalm.

  General William Depuy,

  U.S. Commander during the Vietnam War

  In the wake of the French withdrawal from Vietnam, the pro-Western

  emperor, Bao Dai attempted to recover his losses and rally public sup-

  port behind him. In 1954, he appointed the unpopular Vietnamese

  Christian aristocrat Ngo Dinh Diem as his Prime Minister.11 But what

  made matters worse for Diem was the fact that his government had

  grown even more dependent on American military and economic aid

  by then. (The Americans had begun to send thousands of troops to

  Vietnam to act as “combat advisers” to the Sout
h Vietnamese army.)

  In 1956, Vietnam was scheduled to hold its first free elections follow-

  ing the conditions laid out by the Geneva Accords. But the Western

  powers were certain that should a free election take place, the party of

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  F arish A. Noor

  the pro-Western Emperor Bao Dai was certain to lose and communists,

  under the leadership of Ho Chi Minh, were sure to win. Diem, there-

  fore, decided to cancel the elections altogether and impose direct rule.

  This immediately led to an escalation of violence and a new campaign

  by the Viet Minh. Between 1956 and 1960, the Viet Minh forces man-

  aged to kill more than 2500 government officials and launched hun-

  dreds of hit-and-run attacks on government and military installations

  all over the country. They were also supported by the local students,

  workers, peasants, and Buddhist associations, which were sick of the

  excesses of the Bao Dai–Ngo Dinh Diem regime. The state of crisis

  served as a pretext for American intervention into Vietnamese political

  affairs.

  After coming to power in November 1960, President John F.

  Kennedy increased the level of U.S. commitment in the Vietnam War.

  He increased the level of American combat advisers in Vietnam from

  600 to 16,000 within 3 years. Kennedy also authorized American troops

  to participate in combat operations, sanctioned the use of U.S. army

  helicopters, napalm, and defoliant chemicals like Agent Orange in an

  effort to flush the Viet Minh out of their jungle hideouts. McMahon

  (1999) notes that “after he grew disillusioned with Prime Minister

  Ngo Dinh Diem, (Kennedy) even encouraged the South Vietnamese

  military to assume power by extra-legal means.”12 The first coup attempt

  was foiled, but a second attempt on November 1, 1963 led to the

  killing of Ngo Dinh Diem and his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu.

  Following the death of Diem, Vietnam was thrown into turmoil.

  Within the space of one year, nine different governments tried to take

  control of South Vietnam, all of them proving incapable in one way or

  another. Kennedy’s own inept meddling in Vietnam was brought to

  an end by his own untimely death on November 22, 1963. But the

 

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