John F Kennedy, Indonesia, CIA & Freeport Sulphur
by Lisa Pease
Source : HERE
Translation : HERE
What is Past is Prologue.
Inscribed on the National Archives, Washington, D.C.
In Part One of this article (Probe, March-April, 1996) we
talked about the early years of Freeport up through the Cuban takeover of their
potentially lucrative mine at Moa Bay, as well as their run-in with President
Kennedy over the issue of stockpiling.
But the biggest conflict that Freeport Sulphur would
face was over the country housing the world's single largest gold reserve and
third largest copper reserve: Indonesia.
To understand the recent (March, 1996) riots at the
Freeport plant, we need to go to the roots of this venture to show how things
might have been very different had Kennedy lived to implement his plans for
Indonesia.
Indonesia Backstory
Indonesia had been discovered by the Dutch at the end of
the 1500s.
During the early 1600s they were dominated by the
Dutch East Indies Company, a private concern, for nearly 200 years.
In 1798, authority over Indonesia was transferred to
the Netherlands, which retained dominion over this fifth largest country in the
world until 1941, at which time the Japanese moved in during the course of
World War II.
By 1945 Japan was defeated in Indonesia and Achmed
Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta rose to become President and Vice President of the
newly independent Indonesia.
But within a month of the Sukarno/Hatta proclamation of
independence, British army units began landing in Jakarta to help the Dutch
restore colonial rule. Four years of fighting ensued.
In 1949, the Dutch officially ceded sovereignty back to
Indonesia, with the exception of one key area - that of a hotspot which is now
known as Irian Jaya or, depending on who you talk to, West Papua.
Gerard Colby : HERE
Authors Gerard Colby and Charlotte Dennett,
in their book Thy Will Be Done, explain the situation in what was then
called Dutch New Guinea:
To Westerners, New Guinea was like a gifted child pulled in
opposite directions by covetous guardians. The Dutch clung to the western half
as the sole remnant of their once-vast East Indies empire. Their longtime
British allies, acting through Australia, controlled the eastern half.
Neighboring Indonesians, on the other hand, thought that all New Guinea was
part of their national territory, even if it was still colonized by Europeans.
Dutch New Guinea, or West Irian as the Indonesians called
it, was populated by native tribes not far removed from a stone age culture,
such as the Danis and the Amungme. When Indonesia fought to claim independence
from the Dutch, West Irian became a symbol for both sides that neither wanted
to relinquish. It would take the efforts of President Kennedy to eventually
pass control of this area to the newly independent Indonesians, removing the last
vestiges of Dutch colonialism.
Indonesia experienced various types of government. When
Sukarno first rose to power in 1945, foreignerspointed out that Sukarno's
rule appeared "fascistic," since he held sole control over so
much of the government. Bowing to foreign pressure to appear more democratic,
Indonesia instituted a parliamentary system of rule and opened the government
to a multiparty system. | CINDY
ADAMS
Sukarno related what followed to his biographer (now cable
gossip show host) Cindy Adams:
In a nation previously denied political activities, the
results were immediate. Over 40 dissimilar parties sprang up. So terrified were
we of being labeled "a Japanese-sponsored Fascistic dictatorship"
that single individuals forming splinter organizations were tolerated as "mouthpieces
of democracy." Political parties grew like weeds with shallow roots and
interests top-heavy with petty selfishness and vote-catching. Internal strife
grew. We faced disaster, endless conflicts, hair-raising confusion. Indonesians
previously pulling together now pulled apart. They were sectioned into
religious and geographical boxes, just what I'd sweated all my life to get them
out of.
Sukarno related that nearly every six months, a cabinet
fell, and a new government would start up, only to repeat the cycle.
On October 17, 1952 things came to a head.
Thousands of soldiers from the Indonesian army stormed the gates with signs
saying "Dissolve Parliament." | HERE
Sukarno faced the troops directly, firmly refusing to
dissolve parliament due to military pressure, and the soldiers backed down.
The result of this was a factionalized army. There were the
"pro-17 October 1952 military" and the "anti-17 October 1952
military."
In 1955, elections were held and parliamentary rule was
ended by vote. The Communists, who had done the most for the people suffering
the aftereffects of converting from colonial rule to independence, won many
victories in 1955 and 1956.
In 1955, Sukarno organized the Bandung Conference at
which the famous Chinese Communist Chou En Lai was a featured guest.
During the 1955 elections, the CIA had given a million dollars to the Masjumi
party-an opposition party to both Sukarno's Nationalist party and the Communist
party in Indonesia (called the PKI)-in an attempt to gain political control of
the country. But the Masjumi party failed to win the hearts and minds of the
people.
In 1957, an assassination attempt was made against
Sukarno. Although the actual perpetrators were unknown at the time, both
Sukarno and the CIA jumped to use this for propaganda purposes. The CIA was
quick to blame the PKI. Sukarno, however, blamed the Dutch, and used this as
the excuse to seize all former Dutch holdings, including shipping and flying
lines. Sukarno vowed to drive the Dutch out of West Irian. He had already tried
settling the long-standing dispute over that territory through the United
Nations, but the vote fell shy of the needed two-thirds majority to set up a
commission to force the Dutch to sit down with the Indonesians. The
assassination attempt provided a much needed excuse for action.
The victories of the Communists, infighting in the army, and
the 1957 nationalization of former Dutch holdings, led to a situation
of grave concern to American business interests, notably the oil and
rubber industries. The CIA eagerly pitched in, helping to foment rebellion
between the outer, resource rich, islands, and the central government based in
Jakarta, Java.
Rockefeller Interests in Indonesia
Two prominent American-based oil companies doing business in
Indonesia at this time were of the Rockefeller-controlled Standard Oil
family: Stanvac (jointly held by Standard Oil of New Jersey and
Socony Mobil-Socony being Standard Oil of New York), and Caltex, (jointly
held by Standard Oil of California and Texaco.) In Part I of this article we
showed how heavily loaded the Freeport Sulphur board was with Rockefeller
family and allies.
Recall that Augustus C. Long was a board member of
Freeport while serving as Chairman of Texaco for many years. Long becomes more
and more interesting as the story develops.
1958: CIA vs. Sukarno
"I think its time we held Sukarno's feet to the
fire," said Frank Wisner, then Deputy Director of Plans for the
CIA, in 1956. By 1958, having failed to buy the government through the election
process, the CIA was fomenting a full-fledged operation in Indonesia.
Operation Hike, as it was called, involved the arming and
training of tens of thousands of Indonesians as well as "mercenaries"
to launch attacks in the hope of bringing down Sukarno.
Joseph Burkholder Smith was a former CIA officer
involved with the Indonesian operations during this period. In his book, Portrait
of a Cold Warrior, he described how the CIA took it upon themselves to make,
not just to enact, policy in this area:
before any direct action against Sukarno's position could be
taken, we would have to have the approval of the Special Group-the small group
of top National Security Council officials who approved covert action plans.
Premature mention of such an idea might get it shot down ...
So we began to feed the State Department and Defense
departments intelligence ... When they had read enough alarming reports, we
planned to spring the suggestion we should support the colonels' plan to reduce
Sukarno's power. This was a method of operation which became the basis of many
of the political action adventures of the 1960s and 1970s. In other words, the
statement is false that CIA undertook to intervene in the affairs of countries
like Chile only after being ordered to do so ... In many instances, we made the
action programs up ourselves after we had collected enough intelligence to make
them appear required by the circumstance. Our activity in Indonesia in
1957-1958 was one such instance.
When the Ambassador to Indonesia wrote Washington of his
explicit disagreements with the CIA's handling of the situation, Allen
Dulles had his brother John Foster appoint a different
Ambassador to Indonesia, one more accepting of the CIA's activities.
In addition to the paramilitary activities, the CIA
tried psychological warfare tricks to discredit Sukarno, such as
passing rumors that he had been seduced by a Soviet stewardess. To that
end, Sheffield Edwards, head of the CIA's Office of Security, enlisted the
Chief of the Los Angeles Police Department to help with a porno movie
project the CIA was making to use against Sukarno, ostensibly showing
Sukarno in the act. Others involved in these efforts were Robert Maheu, and
Bing Crosby and his brother.
The Agency tried to keep its coup participation covert, but
one "mercenary" met misfortune early. Shot down and captured during a
bombing run, Allen Lawrence Pope was carrying all kinds of ID on his
person to indicate that he was an employee of the CIA.
The U.S. Government, right up to President Eisenhower,
tried to deny that the CIA was involved at all, but the Pope revelations made a
mockery of this. Not cowed by the foment, as Arbenz had been in Guatemala, Sukarno
marshalled those forces loyal to him and crushed the CIA-aided rebellion. Prior
to theBay of Pigs, this was the Agency's single largest failed operation.
1959: Copper Mountain
At this point, Freeport Sulphur entered the Indonesian
picture. In July, 1959, Charles Wight, then President of Freeport-and
reported to be fomenting anti-Castro plots and flying to Canada and/or Cuba
withClay Shaw (see Part I of this article)-was busy defending his company
against House Committee accusations of overcharging the Government for the
nickel ore processed at the Government-owned plant in Nicaro, Cuba.
The Committee recommended that the Justice Department pursue
an investigation. Freeport's Moa Bay Mining Company had only just opened, and
already the future in Cuba looked bleak.
In August, 1959, Freeport Director and top engineer Forbes
Wilson met with Jan van Gruisen, managing director of the East Borneo
Company, a mining concern. Gruisen had just stumbled upon a dusty report first
made
in 1936 regarding a mountain called the "Ertsberg"
("Copper Mountain") in Dutch New Guinea, by Jean Jacques Dozy.
Hidden away for years in a Netherlands library during Nazi attacks, the report
had only recently resurfaced. Dozy reported a mountain heavy with copper ore.
If true, this could justify a new Freeport diversification effort into copper.
Wilson cabled Freeport's New York headquarters asking for permission and money
to make a joint exploration effort with the East Borneo Company. The contract
was signed February 1, 1960.
With the aid of a native guide, Wilson spent the next
several months amidst the near-stone age natives as he forged through near
impassable places on his way to the Ertsberg. Wilson wrote a book about this
journey, called The Conquest of Copper Mountain. When he finally arrived,
he was excited at what he found:
an unusually high degree of mineralization ... The Ertsberg
turned out to be 40% to 50% iron ... and 3% copper ... Three percent is quite
rich for a deposit of copper ... The Ertsberg also contains certain amounts of
even more rare silver and gold.
He cabled back a message in prearranged code to the
soon-to-be President of Freeport, Bob Hills in New York:
... thirteen acres rock above ground additional 14 acres
each 100 meter depth sampling progressive color appears dark access egress
formidable all hands well advise Sextant regards.
"Thirteen acres" meant 13 million tons of ore
above ground. "Color appears dark" meant that the grade of ore was
good. "Sextant" was code for the East Borneo Company.
The expedition was over in July of 1960. Freeport's
board was not eager to go ahead with a new and predictably costly venture on
the heels of the expropriation of their mining facilities in Cuba. But the
board decided to at least press ahead with the next phase of exploration: a
more detailed investigation of the ore samples and commercial potential. Wilson
described the results of this effort:
[M]ining consultants confirmed our estimates of 13 million
tons of ore above ground and another 14 million below ground for each 100
meters of depth. Other consultants estimated that the cost of a plant to
process 5,000 tons of ore a day would be around $60 million and that the cost
of producing copper would be 16� a pound after credit for small amounts of
gold and silver associated with the copper. At the time, copper was selling in
world markets for around 35� a pound. From these data, Freeport's financial
department calculated that the company could recover its investment in three
years and then begin earning an attractive profit.
The operation proved technically difficult, involving newly
invented helicopters and diamond drills. Complicating the situation was the
outbreak of a near-war between the Dutch-who were still occupying West
Irian-and Sukarno's forces which landed there to reclaim the land as their own.
Fighting even broke out near the access road to Freeport's venture.
By mid-1961, Freeport's engineers strongly felt that the
project should be pursued. But by that time, John F. Kennedy had taken over the
office of President. And he was pursuing a far different course than the
previous administration.
Kennedy and Sukarno
"No wonder Sukarno doesn't like us very much. He has to
sit down with people who tried to overthrow him." - President
Kennedy, 1961
Up until Kennedy's time, the aid predominantly offered to
Indonesia from this country came mostly in the form of military support.
Kennedy had other ideas.
After a positive 1961 meeting with Sukarno in the
United States, Kennedy appointed a team of economists to study ways that
economic aid could help Indonesia develop in constructive ways. Kennedy
understood that Sukarno took aid and arms from the Soviets and the Chinese
because he needed the help, not because he was eager to fall under communist
rule.
American aid would prevent Sukarno from becoming dependent
on Communist supplies. And Sukarno had already put down a communist
rebellion in 1948. Even the State Department in the United States conceded
that Sukarno was more nationalist than Communist.
But the pressing problem during Kennedy's short term was the
issue of West Irian. The Dutch had taken an ever more aggressive stance, and
Sukarno was assuming a military posture. America, as allies to both, was caught
in the middle. Kennedy asked Ellsworth Bunker to attempt to mediate an
agreement between the Dutch and Indonesian governments. "The role of the
mediator," said Kennedy, "is not a happy one; we are prepared to have
everybody mad if it makes some progress."
It did make everybody mad. But it did make progress.
Ultimately, the U.S. pressured the Dutch behind the scenes to yield to
Indonesia. Bobby Kennedy was enlisted in this effort, visiting both Sukarno in
Indonesia and the Dutch at the Hague. Said Roger Hilsman in To
Move a Nation:
Sukarno came to recognize in Robert Kennedy the same tough
integrity and loyalty that he had seen in his brother, the President, combined
with a true understanding of what the new nationalisms were really all about.
So with preliminary overtures having been made to Sukarno
and the Hague, Bunker took over the nitty gritty of getting each side to talk
to each other.
The Dutch, unwilling to concede the last vestige of their
once-great empire to their foe, pressed instead for West Irian to become an
independent country. But Sukarno knew it was a symbol to his people of final
independence from the Dutch.
And all knew that the Papuan natives there had no hope of
forming any kind of functioning government, having only just recently been
pushed from a primitive existence into the modern world. The United Nations
voted to cede West Irian fully to Indonesia, with the provision that, by 1969,
the people of West Irian would be granted an opportunity to vote whether to
remain with or secede from Indonesia. Kennedy seized the moment, issuing National
Security Action Memorandum (NSAM) 179, dated August 16, 1962:
With the peaceful settlement of the West Irian dispute now
in prospect, I would like to see us capitalize on the U.S. role in promoting
this settlement to move toward a new and better relationship with Indonesia. I
gather that with this issue resolved the Indonesians too would like to move in
this direction and will be presenting us with numerous requests.
To seize this opportunity, will all agencies concerned
please review their programs for Indonesia and assess what further measures
might be useful. I have in mind the possibility of expanded civic action,
military aid, and economic stabilization and development programs as well as
diplomatic initiatives.
Roger Hilsman elaborated on what Kennedy meant by civic
action: "rehabilitating canals, draining swampland to create new rice
paddies, building bridges and roads, and so on."
Freeport and West Irian
Kennedy's aid in brokering Indonesian sovereignty over West
Irian could only have come as a blow to Freeport Sulphur's board. Freeport
already had a positive relationship with the Dutch, who had authorized the
initial exploratory missions there. During the negotiation period, Freeport
approached the U.N., but the U.N. said Freeport would have to discuss their
plans with the Indonesian officials. When Freeport went to the Indonesian
embassy in Washington, they received no response.
Lamented Forbes Wilson:
Not long after Indonesia obtained control over Western New
Guinea in 1963, then-President Sukarno, who had consolidated his executive
power, made a series of moves which would have discouraged even the most eager
prospective Western investor. He expropriated nearly all foreign investments in
Indonesia. He ordered American agencies, including the Agency for International
Development, to leave the country. He cultivated close ties with Communist
China and with Indonesia's Communist Party, known as the PKI.
1962 had been a difficult year for Freeport. They were
under attack on the stockpiling issue. Freeport was still reeling from having
their lucrative facilities expropriated in Cuba. And now they sat, staring at a
potential fortune in Indonesia. But with Kennedy giving tacit support to
Sukarno, their hopes looked bleak indeed.
Reversal of Fortunes
Kennedy stepped up the aid package to Indonesia, offering
$11 million. In addition, he planned a personal visit there in early 1964.
While Kennedy was trying to support Sukarno, other forces were countering their
efforts. Public dissent in the Senate brewed over continuing to aid Indonesia
while the Communist party there remained strong. Kennedy persisted. He approved
this particular aid package on November 19, 1963. Three days later, Sukarno
lost his best ally in the west. Shortly, he would lose the aid package too.
Sukarno was much shaken by the news of Kennedy's death.
Bobby made the trip the President had originally planned to take, in January,
1964. Cindy Adams asked Sukarno what he thought of Bobby, and got more than she
asked for:
Sukarno's face lit up. "Bob is very warm. He is like
his brother. I loved his brother. He understood me. I designed and built a
special guest house on the palace grounds for John F. Kennedy, who promised me
he'd come here and be the first American President ever to pay a state visit to
this country." He fell silent. "Now he'll never come."
Sukarno was perspiring freely. He repeatedly mopped his brow
and chest. "Tell me, why did they kill Kennedy?"
Sukarno noted with irony that the very day Kennedy was
assassinated, his Chief of Bodyguards was in Washington to study how to protect
a president. Looking to the future, he was not optimistic:
I know Johnson ... I met him when I was with President
Kennedy in Washington. But I wonder if he is as warm as John. I wonder if he
will like Sukarno as John Kennedy, my friend, did.
LBJ and Indonesia
As others have noted, foreign policy changed rapidly after
Kennedy's death. Donald Gibson says in his book Battling Wall
Street, "In foreign policy the changes came quickly, and they were
dramatic."
Gibson outlines five short term changes and several long
term changes that went into effect after Kennedy's death. One of the short term
changes was the instant reversal of the Indonesian aid package Kennedy had
already approved.
Hilsman makes this point as well:
One of the first pieces of paper to come across President
Johnson's desk was the presidential determination ... by which the President
had to certify that continuing even economic aid [to Indonesia] was essential
to the national interest. Since everyone down the line had known that President
Kennedy would have signed the determination routinely, we were all surprised
when President Johnson refused.
Someone at Freeport was so pleased with Johnson's behavior
that he supported his presidential run in 1964: Augustus C.
"Gus" Long.
Long had been Chairman at Texas Company (Texaco) for many
years. In 1964, he and a bunch of other conservative, largely Republican
business moguls, joined together to support Johnson over Goldwater. The group,
calling themselves the National Independent Committee for Johnson, included
such people as Thomas Lamont, Edgar Kaiser of Kaiser Aluminum, Robert Lehman of
Lehman Brothers, Thomas Cabot of Cabot Corporation of Boston, and many other
luminaries of the business world.
Long had two toes in the Indonesian fray-one for Freeport,
one for Texaco. In 1961, Caltex-jointly owned by Standard Oil of California
(Socal) and Texas Company (Texaco)-was one of the three major oil companies in
Indonesia forced to operate under a new contract with Sukarno's government.
Under the new terms, 60% of all profits had to be given to the Indonesian
government. So he had two reasons to be concerned by Kennedy's support of
Sukarno's brand of nationalism, which threatened the interests of both
companies in which he had a substantial stake.
In Part I, we mentioned that Long had done "prodigious
volunteer work" for Presbyterian Hospital in New York, said by a former
employee of their PR firm, the Mullen Company, to be a "hotbed of CIA
activity." Now we add that Long was elected President of Presbyterian
Hospital two years running-1961 and 1962. In 1964, Long retired his role as
Chairman of Texaco. He would be reinstated as Chairman in 1970. What did he do
in the interim?
In March of 1965, Long was elected a director of Chemical
Bank-another Rockefeller-controlled company.
In August of 1965, Long was appointed to the President's
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, where he would approve and suggest covert
activities.
In October of 1965, covert activities sealed Sukarno's fate.
1965: The Year of Living Dangerously
After Kennedy's death, Sukarno had grown ever more
belligerent towards the West. The British were busy forming a new country out
of Indonesia's former trading partners Malaya and Singapore, called
"Malaysia." Since the area included territory from which the CIA had
launched some of its 1958 activities, Sukarno was justifiably concerned by what
he felt was an ever tightening noose.
On January 1, 1965, Sukarno threatened to pull
Indonesia out of the United Nations if Malaysia was admitted. It was and he
did, making Indonesia the first nation ever to pull out of the U.N. In response
to U.S. pressure on Sukarno to support Malaysia, he cried, "to hell with
your aid." He built up his troops along the borders of Malaysia. Malaysia,
fearing invasion, appealed to the U.N. for support.
By February, Sukarno could see the writing on the wall:
JAKARTA, Indonesia, Feb. 23 (UPI)-President Sukarno declared
today that Indonesia could no longer afford freedom of the press. He ordered
the banning of anti-Communist newspapers. ...
"I have secret information that reveals that the C.I.A.
was using the Body for the Promotion of Sukarnoism to kill Sukarnoism and
Sukarno," he said. "That's why I banned it." (New York Times,
2/24/65)
The country was in disarray. Anti-American demonstrations
were frequent. Indonesia quit the International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank. The press reported that Sukarno was moving closer to the Chinese and
Soviets.
Sukarno threatened to nationalize remaining U.S. properties,
having already taken over, for example, one of the biggest American operations
in Indonesia, the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company. And then, in an unexpected
move, Singapore seceded from Malaysia, weakening the newly formed state
bordering Indonesia.
With American money interests threatened, all the usual
carrots of foreign aid shunted, no leverage via the IMF or World Bank, and
Freeport's Gus Long on the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, it
was only a matter of time, and not much, at that.
October 1, 1965: Coup or Counter-Coup?
INDONESIA SAYS PLOT TO DEPOSE SUKARNO IS FOILED BY ARMY
CHIEF; POWER FIGHT BELIEVED CONTINUING
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia. Oct. 1-An attempt to overthrow
President Sukarno was foiled tonight by army units loyal to Gen. Abdul Haris
Nasution, the Indonesian radio announced. ...
In Washington, a State Department spokesman said Friday the
situation in Indonesia was "extremely confused." Robert J. McCloskey
told a news conference the State Department was getting reports from the
American Embassy at Jakarta, but "it is not presently possible to attempt
any evaluation, explanation, or comment."
Late yesterday, a mysterious group calling itself the 30th
of September Movement seized control of Jakarta.
Colonel Untung, who had announced over the Indonesian radio
that he was the leader of the movement, said the group had seized control of
the Government to prevent a "counterrevolutionary" coup by the
Generals' Council. (New York Times, 10/2-3/65, International Edition)
In a strange, convoluted move, a group of young military
leaders killed a bunch of older, centrist leaders who, they claimed, were going
to-with the help of the CIA-stage a coup against Sukarno. But what happened in
the aftermath of this turned Indonesia into one of the bloodiest nightmares the
world has ever seen. This original counter-coup was branded a coup attempt
instead, and painted as brightly Red as possible. Then, in the disguise of
outrage that Sukarno's authority had been imperiled, Nasution joined with
General Suharto to overthrow the "rebels."
What started ostensibly to protect Sukarno's authority ended
up stripping him of it wholly. The aftermath is too horrible to describe in a
few words. The numbers vary, but the consensus lies in the range of 200,000 to
over 500,000 people killed in the wake of this "counter-coup." Anyone
who had ever had an association with the Communist PKI was targeted for
elimination. Even Time magazine gave one token accurate description
of what was happening:
According to accounts brought out of Indonesia by Western
diplomats and independent travelers, Communists, Red sympathizers and their
families are being massacred by the thousands. Backlands army units are
reported to have executed thousands of Communists after interrogation in remote
rural jails. ... Armed with wide-bladed knives called parangs, Moslem bands
crept at night into the homes of Communists, killing entire families and
burying the bodies in shallow graves. ... The murder campaign became so brazen
in parts of rural East Java that Moslem bands placed the heads of victims on poles
and paraded them through villages.
The killings have been on such a scale that the disposal of
the corpses has created a serious sanitation problem in East Java and northern
Sumatra, where the humid air bears the reek of decaying flesh. Travelers from
those areas tell of small rivers and streams that have been literally clogged
with bodies; river transportation has at places been impeded.
Latter day thumbnail histories frequently depict the actions
like this: "An abortive Communist coup in 1965 led to an anti-Communist
takeover by the military, under Gen. Suharto." (Source: The Concise
Columbia Encyclopedia.)
But the truth is far more complex. A persuasive indicator
for this lies in the following item, cited in a remarkable article by Peter
Dale Scott published in the British journal Lobster (Fall, 1990).
Scott quotes an author citing a researcher who, having been
given access to files of the foreign ministry in Pakistan, ran across a letter
from a former ambassador who reported a conversation with a Dutch intelligence
officer with NATO, which said, according to the researcher's notes,
"Indonesia was going to fall into the Western lap like
a rotten apple." Western intelligence agencies, he said, would organize a
"premature communist coup ... [which would be] foredoomed to fail,
providing a legitimate and welcome opportunity to the army to crush the
communists and make Soekarno a prisoner of the army's goodwill." The
ambassador's report was dated December 1964.
Later in this article, Scott quotes from the book The
CIA File:
"All I know," said one former intelligence officer
of the Indonesia events, "is that the Agency rolled in some of its top
people and that things broke big and very favorable, as far as we were
concerned."
Ralph McGehee, a 25-year veteran of the CIA, also implicated
the agency in an article, still partially censored by the CIA, published
in The Nation (April 11, 1981):
To conceal its role in the massacre of those innocent people
the C.I.A., in 1968, concocted a false account of what happened (later
published by the Agency as a book, Indonesia-1965: The Coup That Backfired).
That book is the only study of Indonesia politics ever released to the public
on the Agency's own initiative. At the same time that the Agency wrote the
book, it also composed a secret study of what really happened. [one sentence
deleted.] The Agency was extremely proud of its successful [one word deleted]
and recommended it as a model for future operations [one-half sentence
deleted].
Freeport After Sukarno
According to Forbes Wilson, Freeport had all but given up
hope of developing its fabulous find in West Irian. But while the rest of the
world's press was still trying to unravel the convoluted information as to who
was really in power, Freeport apparently had an inside track. In the essay
mentioned earlier, Scott cites a cable (U.S. delegation to the U.N.) which
stated that Freeport Sulphur had reached a preliminary "arrangement"
with Indonesian officials over the Ertsberg in April of 1965, before there
could legitimately have been any hope in sight.
Officially, Freeport had no such plans until after the October
1965 events. But even the official story seemed odd to Wilson. As early as
November, a mere month after the October events, longtime Chairman of Freeport,
Langbourne Williams, called Director Wilson at home, asking if the time had now
come to pursue their project in West Irian. Wilson's reaction to this call is
interesting:
I was so startled I didn't know what to say.
How did Williams know, so soon, that a new regime was coming
to power? Sukarno was still President, and would remain so formally until 1967.
Only deep insiders knew from the beginning that Sukarno's days were numbered,
and his power feeble. Wilson explains that Williams got some "encouraging
private information" from "two executives of Texaco." Long's
company had managed to maintain close ties to a high official of the Sukarno
regime, Julius Tahija. It was Tahija who brokered a meeting between Freeport
and Ibnu Sutowo, Minister of Mines and Petroleum. Fortunemagazine had
this to say about Sutowo (July 1973):
As president-director of Pertamina [the Government's
state-owned oil company], Lieutenant General Ibnu Sutowo receives a salary of
just $250 a month, but lives on a princely scale. He moves around Jakarta in
his personal Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud. He has built a family compound of
several mansions, which are so large that guests at his daughter's wedding
party could follow the whole show only on closed-circuit television.
... The line between Sutowo's public and private activities
will seem hazy to Western eyes. The Ramayan Restaurant in New York [in
Rockefeller Center-author's note], for example, was bankrolled by various U.S.
oil-company executives, who put up $500,000 to get into a notoriously risky
sort of business. Presumably its backers were motivated at least in part by a
desire to be on amiable terms with the general.
But beyond these dubious accolades, a hint of something
else, as well was revealed:
Sutowo's still small oil company played a key part in
bankrolling those crucial operations [during the October 1965 events.]
Given the wealth of evidence that the CIA was deeply
involved in this operation, it seems equally likely that Sutowo was acting as a
conduit for their funds.
After Sukarno's fall from power, Sutowo constructed a new
agreement that allowed oil companies to keep a substantially larger percent of
their profits. In an article entitled "Oil and Nationalism Mix Beautifully
in Indonesia" (July, 1973), Fortune labeled the post-Sukarno
deal "exceptionally favorable to the oil companies."
In 1967, when Indonesia's Foreign Investment Law was
passed, Freeport's contract was the first to be signed. With Kennedy, Sukarno,
and any viable support for Indonesian nationalism out of the way, Freeport
began operations.
In 1969, the vote mandated by the Kennedy brokered U.N.
agreement on the question of West Irian independence was due. Under heavy
intimidation and the visceral presence of the military, Irian "voted"
to remain part of Indonesia. Freeport was in the clear.
The Bechtel Connection
Gus Long was a frequent dinner partner of Steve
Bechtel, Sr., owner with CIA Director John McCone, of Bechtel-McCone in
Los Angeles in the thirties. McCone and Bechtel, Sr. made a bundle off of World
War II, split, and went their not so separate ways. Writes author Laton
McCartney inFriends in High Places: The Bechtel Story,
[I]n 1964 and 1965, CIA director John McCone and U.S.
ambassador to Indonesia Howard Jones briefed Steve Bechtel Sr. on the rapidly
deteriorating situation in Indonesia. Bechtel, Socal, Texaco ... had extensive
dealings in that part of the world and were concerned because Indonesia's
President Sukarno was nationalizing U.S. business interests there. ... In
October 1965, in what a number of CIA alumni have since charged was an
Agency-backed coup, Sukarno was ousted and replaced by President Suharto, who
proved far more receptive to U.S. business interests than his predecessor.
Bechtel was no stranger to the CIA. Bechtel Sr. had been a
charter member of the CIA conduit Asia Foundation from its inception as Allen
Dulles' brainchild. Former CIA Director Richard Helms himself joined Bechtel,
as an "international consultant" in 1978. Said a former executive,
Bechtel was:
loaded with the CIA ... The agency didn't have to ask them
to place its agents ... Bechtel was delighted to take them on and give them
whatever assistance they needed.
Bechtel Sr.'s "oldest and closest friend in the oil
industry," Gus Long, had a problem. Freeport's project was far more
difficult than they had foreseen, and they needed outside help. The mountainous
path to the "copper mountain" made extraction nearly impossible.
Freeport hired Bechtel to help them construct the appropriate infrastructure to
turn their dreams into reality.
Bechtel came with extras. Freeport needed additional
financing for their costly Indonesian project. Bechtel Sr. had gotten himself
appointed to the advisory committee of the Export-Import (Exim) bank after a
long period of cozying up to Exim bank president Henry Kearns.
Freeport was not happy with the lack of progress and costs
of Bechtel's operation. Forbes Wilson threatened to drop them from the project.
Bechtel Sr. jumped in, saying he would make the project Bechtel's top priority.
He also guaranteed them $20 million in loans from the Exim bank. When the Exim
bank's engineer didn't think that Freeport's project seemed commercially viable
and wouldn't approve their loan, Bechtel Sr. called Kearns, and the loan went
through over the objections of the bank's engineer.
Three years later, Kearns would resign from the bank when it
revealed the bank had made generous loans to several projects in which Kearns
was personally invested. Although Senator Proxmire called it "the worst
conflict of interest" he had ever seen in seventeen years in the Senate,
the Justice Department declined to prosecute. Said Proxmire:
It will appear to millions of American citizens that there
is a double standard in the law, one for the ordinary citizen and quite another
for those who hold high positions in government and make thousands of dollars
in personal profit as a result of official actions.
Bechtel denies allegations from former employees that it
spread over $3 million in cash around Indonesia in the early '70s.
Unhappily Ever After
The tragedy of the Kennedy assassination lies in the legacy
left in the wake of his absence. Without his support, Indonesia's baby steps
toward a real, economic independence were shattered.
Sukarno, hardly a saint and with plenty of problems,
nonetheless was trying to assure that business deals with foreigners left some
benefit for the Indonesians.
Suharto, in dire contrast, allowed foreigners to rape and
pillage Indonesia for private gain, at the price of lives and the precious,
irreplaceable resources of the Indonesians.
Cindy Adams wrote a book about her experiences with
Sukarno, called My Friend the Dictator. If Sukarno was a dictator,
what term exists for Suharto?
Freeport's Grasberg mine in Indonesia is one of the
largest copper and gold reserves in the world. But the American based company
owns 82% of the venture, while the Indonesian government and a privately held
concern in Indonesia split the remaining percent.
How much influence does Freeport carry in Indonesia? Can
they really say they have Indonesia's best interests at heart?
Kissinger and East Timor
In 1975, Freeport's mine was well into production and highly
profitable. Future Freeport Director and lobbyist Henry Kissinger and
President and ex-Warren Commission member Gerald Ford flew out of
Jakarta having given the Indonesian Government under Suharto what State
Department officials later described as "the big wink." Suharto used
the Indonesian military to take over the Portuguese territory of East Timor,
followed by a mass slaughter that rivaled the 1965 bloodbath.
Says a former CIA operations officer who was stationed there
at the time, C. Philip Liechty:
Suharto was given the green light [by the U.S.] to do what
he did. There was discussion in the embassy and in traffic with the State
Department about the problems that would be created for us if the public and
Congress became aware of the level and type of military assistance that was
going to Indonesia at that time. ... Without continued heavy U.S. logistical
military support the Indonesians might not have been able to pull if off.
In 1980, Freeport merged with McMoRan-an oil exploration and
development company headed by James "Jim Bob" Moffett. The two become
one, and Moffett (the "Mo" in McMoRan) eventually became President of
Freeport McMoRan.
Friends in High Places
In 1995, Freeport McMoRan managed to spin off it's Freeport
McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. subsidiary into a separate entity. The Overseas
Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) wrote Freeport McMoRan Copper and Gold
that they planned to cancel their investment insurance based on their poor
environmental record at their Irian project, stating Freeport has "posed
an unreasonable or major environmental, health, or safety hazard in Irian Jaya."
Freeport didn't sit still over this cancellation. Kissinger
executed a major lobbying effort (for which he is paid $400,000 a year),
meeting with officials at the State Department and working the halls of Capitol
Hill. Sources close to the matter, according to Robert Bryce in a
recent issue of the Texas Observer, say Freeport hired former CIA
director James Woolsey in the fight against OPIC.
Freeport, now headquartered in New Orleans, manages to keep
friends in high places.
In 1993, the head of the pro-Suharto congressional lobby was
the Senator from Louisiana, Bennett Johnson. Representative Robert Livingston,
of Louisiana, invested in Freeport Copper and Gold while the House debated and
voted on H.R. 322-the Mineral Exploration and Development Act.
And when Jeffery Shafer, one of the directors of OPIC,
recently was nominated for an appointment to Undersecretary of National
Affairs, it was another Louisiana pol, this time Senator John Breaux, who voted
to block the appointment until Shafer provided an explanation of OPIC's
cancellation of Freeport's insurance. Jim Bob Moffett, head of Freeport
McMoRan, is listed in Mother Jones' online "MoJo Wire Coin-Op
Congress" survey of the top 400 people who gave the most money in campaign
contributions.
Freeport's actions abroad are not the only one's worth
tracking. In Louisiana itself, Freeport and three other companies (two of which
Freeport later acquired) petitioned for a special exemption to the Clean Water
Act in order to legally dump 25 billion pounds of toxic waste into the
Mississippi river. Citizens protested, and Freeport's petition was denied.
Freeport then lobbied for the weakening of Clean Water Act restrictions.
The citizens of Austin, Texas, have fought to block a
Freeport plan for a real estate development that will foul Barton Springs, a
popular outdoor water park there.
According to a recent article in The Nation (July
31/August 7, 1995), Freeport is part of the National Wetlands Coalition, a
group which wrote much of the language of a bill designed to eliminate E.P.A.
oversight of wetlands areas, freeing them for exploitation. The same coalition
has also lobbied to weaken the Endangered Species Act. The Nation revealed
that Freeport's political action committee since 1983 has paid members of
congress over $730,000.
Scandal at UT
Freeport's record caused an uproar at the University of
Texas at Austin recently. The university's geology department, which has done
research under contract for Freeport, was recently given $2 million dollars byJim
Bob Moffett for a new building.
The school's Chancellor, William Cunningham, wanted to
name the building after his friend and co-worker (Cunningham is also a Freeport
Director) Moffett. Many on campus protested this development. Anthropology
professor Stephen Feld resigned his position with the university over
this issue, saying UT was "no longer a morally acceptable place of
employment." The protests about Cunningham's conflict of interest-serving
UT and Freeport-led to Cunningham's resignation last December. He resigned a
day after Freeport threatened to sue three professors at the University who had
been loudest in protest.
Poised on the Brink
While moral victories are lauded in Texas, the real terror
continues at Freeport's plant in Indonesia.
In March of 1996, just as our last issue went to press,
riots broke out at the Freeport plant in Irian Jaya (the current name for West
Irian). Thousands were marching in the streets around the Freeport plant, where
the military had as recently as December held and tortured in Freeport mining
containers the people who lived and protested in that region. The protests are
deeply rooted in the desire for the independence of the Papuans, the Amungme,
and the many native inhabitants of Irian Jaya who were never Dutch, and never
really Indonesian.
As we go to print, Indonesian sources report that the
military has taken over the numerous Freeport Security stations around the
mine. "Military Exercises" are intimidating the people who in March
rioted at Freeport, causing the plant to lose two days of work and millions of
dollars. Although no curfew has been called, people report a fear of being out
at night.
The native Amungme tribes, the Papuans, and others are still
hoping to retain independence from what they see as only a new form of
colonialism: subservience to Freeport's interests. According to a New York
Times article (4/4/96), Freeport is the largest single investor in
Indonesia.
With Kennedy's support, Indonesia had a chance for real
economic independence. The peoples of Irian were promised a real vote for
self-government. But when Kennedy was killed, a military dictatorship was
installed and paid off so that the interests of businesses like Freeport have
been given higher priority than any demands of the natives whose resources are
still being pillaged.
Sometimes, what we don't understand about today's news is
what we don't know about the Kennedy assassination.
1 komentar:
Hello Everybody,
My name is Mrs Sharon Sim. I live in Singapore and i am a happy woman today? and i told my self that any lender that rescue my family from our poor situation, i will refer any person that is looking for loan to him, he gave me happiness to me and my family, i was in need of a loan of $250,000.00 to start my life all over as i am a single mother with 3 kids I met this honest and GOD fearing man loan lender that help me with a loan of $250,000.00 SG. Dollar, he is a GOD fearing man, if you are in need of loan and you will pay back the loan please contact him tell him that is Mrs Sharon, that refer you to him. contact Dr Purva Pius, call/whats-App Contact Number +918929509036 via email:(urgentloan22@gmail.com) Thank you.
Posting Komentar