The Democratic Party
and the Third World 1961-68
excerpted from the book
Confronting the Third World
United States Foreign Policy 1945-1980
by Gabriel Kolko
Pantheon Books,1988
The Democratic Administration Confronts
World Change
p127
The Eisenhower Administration greatly advanced the belief that
the United States had both the right and the obligation to intervene
in any region or nation whose domestic affairs it thought had
international significance... the basic assumption that it could
arrogate to itself the authority to approve or disapprove the
politics of any nation was by the end of the 1950s a firmly implanted
conviction ...
p129
By the early 1960s most officials in Washington were convinced
that the consequences of their passivity in some nation whose
internal affairs displeased them were potentially more dangerous
than the unpredictable risks of action. The symbolic importance
of the credibility of power inherited from its less articulate
predecessors, and of the interrelated nature of changes in one
nation to events all around it and in the world, had become fixations
transcending a reasoned assessment of the sources of internal
tension and change. Indeed, given the economic considerations
operating in tandem with the essentially symbolic, the combination
invariably reduced opposition within the ranks of American leaders
to a more active U.S. role in some nation when the choice presented
itself. In a context where everything became potentially important,
for whatever the reason, and past successes removed inhibiting
concerns about the repercussions of failures in the future, it
was highly likely in 1961 that something like the Vietnam conflict
would soon occur somewhere, and only chance fixed on that poor
nation rather than another. No less inevitable, also, was that
such increasingly adventurous thinking would cause regional issues
to threaten to overwhelm the United States' priorities and broad
international goals and produce uncontrollable new dynamics in
its foreign policy and power.
By August 1962, when the NSC approved
national policy on a grand strategy toward the Third World, virtually
everyone of importance agreed that confronting internal disorder
and insurgency in the Third World-or Sino-Soviet "conquest
from within," as opposed to conventional warfare-was essential.
The NSC favored a greater readiness to act even when there was
no direct Russian or Chinese involvement but where they might
gain objectively from "other types of subversion" inimical
to U.S. interests. The minute issues of the internal affairs of
various nations became more than ever the legitimate concern of
the United States, including, if need be, a warrant for action.
It was, even more than under earlier administrations, the U.S.
purpose to make certain "that developing nations evolve in
a way that affords a congenial world environment"; naturally,
this required "that strategic areas and the manpower and
natural resources of developing nations do not fall under communist
control...." But in the even larger sense it meant that the
United States had "an economic interest that the resources
and markets of the less developed world remain available to us
and to other Free World countries."
Here was the basis for a far greater activism
in the Third World. It embodied Washington's fears and stereotypes
regarding Soviet culpability for the poor nations, problems as
well as its residual right, even obligation, to manipulate autonomous
trends for which Communists were not responsible and recast them
into an integrated world order under U.S. hegemony.
The new Administration believed that its
fresh will and far greater wisdom, combined with a superior organizational
structure for implementing policy, would allow it to master the
elusive threads and contradictions that had plagued its predecessors.
All the involved agencies-the State and Defense departments, the
CIA, the Agency for International Development, and others-met
frequently to analyze in seminars and papers the "problems
of development and internal defense" for which they needed
common solutions. As Cambridge professors were invited to Washington
to supplement local talent in analyzing the vast panoply of social,
cultural, and political changes in the Third World, the United
States confidently prepared to confront it energetically.
One of its first and most important initiatives
was in "counterinsurgency," a rubric that was more a
vague philosophy of action than a concrete set of techniques and
goals, a typically "can do" vision whose optimism was
to carry the Administration along until Vietnam raised profound
doubts as to its efficacy. The debacle of the Bay of Pigs invasion
of Cuba in April 1961, rather than puncture such sublime self-confidence
and produce caution, actually became a goad to further activity.
It had revealed its CIA organizers as incompetent and the U.S.
confidence in its Cuban exile proxies as naive, but instead of
learning from this failure, the unanimous consensus in Washington
favored renewing the effort, in Kennedy's words the day after
the invasion failed, to fight subversion with "the new concepts,
the new tools, the new sense of urgency" that were still
in the process of being articulated.
Frequent references to "Vietnam and
Thailand as counterinsurgency laboratories," of Vietnam "as
a test case" of U.S. ability to fight wars of national liberation
successfully, revealed how experimental counterinsurgency doctrine
was from the inception, and it was based mainly on the assumption
that American brains and money together would quickly find ways
to translate desires into realities. Precisely because of this,
Vietnam after 1961 was principally a conjunctural problem for
Washington, set in a regional and global context, its symbolism
being as much a stimulus to action as the domino theory. The mere
fact that the conflict in Vietnam was initially intended to be
fought primarily "by those on the spot" rather than
with U.S. forces revealed that those who led the world's most
powerful nation, and who were also still naive learners, were
also extremely ignorant concerning the huge void they were about
to plunge into. The Administration quickly created a special interagency
group to coordinate counterinsurgency, broken down into country
sections. A Vietnam task force was organized in April 1961 as
the first response to the Bay of Pigs disaster, on the mistaken
assumption that Vietnamese might prove easier than Cubans to overcome.
Because counterinsurgency was at the beginning
a strategy employing surrogates, above all to avoid drawing in
American manpower, its first and quickest application was in the
form of aid to the police in various nations. The ClA's police
training program, which operated under an AID cover, had functioned
until that time at a modest level. It doubled its activities in
fiscal 1962, beginning in July 1961, over the previous year. Police
training schools were opened in both Panama and Washington as
well as in Liberia. By 1968, in addition, it had 458 U.S. police
experts operating in 34 countries, and by 1973 it had trained
over 7,300 foreign police in the United States alone.
This police program was overwhelmingly
political in its functions from its inception. In virtually all
of the nations it operated in, the police, as in Guatemala in
1956, were, as one American official wrote, "acutely geared
to security against subversive activity and communist attack,
with the primary police function taking a secondary role."
In Indonesia, a U.S. police adviser could report in late 1960,
he had left a "pro-Western influence" among a vital
force in a disturbingly anti-American nation. Reports the AlD's
overseas advisers sent back described countless examples of the
police's role in the "control [of] social unrest," to
"maintain internal security," "investigating and
controlling subversives," and the like. All advisers were
given systematic political indoctrination to equip them for this
function. That the AlD's police program provided the status quo
in dozens of authoritarian regimes help to retain their power
was the explicit goal of the effort, not so much for the sake
of various dictators and juntas but primarily to immobilize leftists
and other undesirable elements as part of a global assault against
national liberation movements.
The police's function, as the liberal
luminary Chester Bowles explained to Kennedy in 1961 and as everyone
acknowledged from this time onward, was largely to eliminate the
role of the military in coping with violence, especially in the
cities. Were guerrilla warfare to break out, the military could
then use its much larger and more destructive firepower, but that
was to be avoided- as indeed it was in most places. Since use
of the military against strikers or demonstrations was counterproductive,
by 1965 some Pentagon officials argued it was more essential in
Latin America to equip the police adequately rather than the military
since the police were much more likely to utilize what they received.
What the police did in numerous nations was to serve as the basic
instrument of violence, allowing the military, with whom it was
invariably allied ideologically, the time to assume a much larger
role in the Third World's politics during the 1960s than ever
before. This, too, was understood and desired in Washington.
p132
Just as the Kennedy Administration's action academics came to
power animated by notions of counterinsurgency they justified
with social science jargon, so, too, did they possess a much more
articulate vision of the role of the military in Third World societies
than their predecessors. True, the Eisenhower Administration preferred
military regimes, but its rationale for doing so-that they kept
order-was clumsy even if honest.
The Pentagon itself by 1959 had qualms
about such a crude defense of the official NSC policy, and so
it commissioned various think tanks, the Rand Corporation being
the most important, to develop a more sophisticated rationale.
Rand's 1959 conference of experts on the military in the Third
World argued, despite a few skeptics gathered there, that in addition
to providing a stable alternative to democracy when it failed,
the military alone possessed the technical and administrative
proficiency essential for more rapid modernization and were in
fact the leading carriers of industrial and secular values. Given
the semiliterate nature of most of these nations, the officers
transmitted vital skills to their largely peasant soldiery and
were prone even to be solicitous of the needs of society's poor.
Rather than being a menace, the officer class was an integral
aspect of solutions for Third World problems congenial to American
interests. Similar views came from other analysts, and the articulate
minority of consultants who disputed such notions was ignored.
"Military modernization" theory was to become a major
social science fashion for the next decade and beyond, especially
among Washington's large stable of subsidized professors.
In later versions, modernization theorists
added that civilian institutions could not direct or control civilian
demands but that the military's "efficiency, honesty, and
nationalism," as Harvard's Samuel P. Huntington described
them, caused it to become true defenders of middle-class order
against the impatient masses, and that they were the best friends
of U.S. ambitions and needs in most of the Third World. Walt Rostow
by early 1962 was employing such analyses in an aggressive campaign
to win Administration support for targeting the officer classes
as its main allies. He did not deny that in some nations they
might not conform to the desired model, but their role in the
modernization process was potentially decisive-extending well
beyond their task of maintaining internal security. The NSC's
official policy on "internal defense" in August 1962
reflected Rostow's influence: "A change brought about through
force by non-communist elements may be preferable to prolonged
deterioration of governmental effectiveness," it stated,
giving approval to those alone who had access to sufficient power
to mount coups. "It is U.S. policy, when it is in the U.S.
interest," it continued, "to make the local military
and police advocates of democracy and agents for carrying forward
the developmental process."
From this point onward, with leading Rand
advocates of this position incorporated to help define the rationale
for the strategy, U.S. dependence on officers and the military
for "nation-building" became a standard aspect of the
indoctrination of all Americans working on "internal defense"
and counterinsurgency. This vision was to shape Washington's political
policies decisively ... in every major area of the Third World
... The era of the generals was inaugurated not just in the realm
of policy, as under Eisenhower, but in theory as well.
Still unresolved in the early 1960s was
whether this use of ideas to influence policy was merely an attempt
to justify an existing brutal one and make it appear more respectable
in order to intensify it. Did the United States want officers
who were truly modernizes conforming to their abstract technocratic
model or simply pliable anti-Communists who would also sacrifice
their national interests if they clashed with American needs?
In a word, what would be Washington's response to officers who
were genuine nationalists rather than merely anti-Communist, especially
when true nationalism also conflicted with the United States'
integrative requirements and ambitions?
This issue was not to arise in many places,
much less quickly, and so the theory's impact caused U.S. officials
increasingly to regard military aid to many Third World nations
as political in purpose, because to varying degrees it strengthened
the officers' actual and potential power in the political structure
of every state receiving aid, thereby shaping its political evolution.
Few needed arms for external defense, in any case, and most had
no insurgency to confront. U.S. military missions working in foreign
nations were integral to the effort, as a Pentagon official was
later to phrase it, "to maintain our relations with the people
who are in a position of influence in those countries so we can
help to influence the course of events in those countries."
Officers are "the coming leaders of their nations,"
Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara argued: "It is of
inestimable value to the United States to have the friendship
of such men." Between 1950 and 1969, as a consequence, about
128,000 Third World officers and enlistees were given training
in the United States, while U.S. missions trained 76,000 abroad.
The political potential of this enormous,
costly effort was obvious to all in Washington, including those
who dismissed Rostow's attribution of efficiency and virtue to
the military as either false or irrelevant-or both. When an aid
review committee under retired General Lucius Clay in early 1963
argued for reducing economic and military assistance to inefficient
or corrupt regimes in order to save taxpayers' money, the circle
of key policymakers around Kennedy thought it excessively naive.
"I daresay if we confined our aid to those countries who
would use it effectively ...," Robert W. Komer told the president,
"we could reduce the list of our clients considerably....
But in applying such criteria we would be opting ourselves out
of shoring up, or otherwise influencing, a whole series of client
states which, whatever their own internal weaknesses, it is in
our strategic interest to help." Regardless of their character
or form, the United States was more firmly committed than ever
to working politically with the military in the Third World.
The Challenge of Latin America
p139
Cuba Shakes Up the Hemisphere
Cuba, more than any place in Latin America,
had been virtually a de facto U.S. colony. Economically, preferential
tariff arrangements since 1901 transformed it into a vast dependent
sugar plantation tied wholly to the U.S. market while importing
three-quarters of its needs from the north. During the 1950s the
stagnant sugar industry still accounted for 80 percent of Cuba's
export earnings and a quarter of its national income, requiring
a country with vast uncultivated estates reserved for sugar to
import a quarter of its food needs. Cuba's trade deficit with
the United States in the decade up to 1959 amounted to one billion
dollars. U.S. investors owned fully 40 percent of Cuba's sugar
production, 90 percent of its utilities, half of its railroads,
and much else-while naturalized citizens controlled a significant
part of the remainder. The main economic function of the highly
Americanized Cuban middle and upper classes was to service this
United States-owned system as well as the immensely profitable
industry that catered to Yankee tourism with hotels, prostitution,
and gambling. Marginalized and with precious little national identity,
this comprador bourgeoisie preferred to make and spend money and
left politics, and the army that controlled it under Fulgencio
Batista for most of the time since 1933, to déclassé,
highly corrupt soldiers with few ties to the established local
economic elites. Perhaps more than for any other nation in the
hemisphere, the United States' domination had created in Cuba
a centrifugal, highly unstable society.
It was the very nature of this ruling
class, combined with the economic and social consequences of a
dependent export economy with large unemployment and growing land
tenure problems, that made the July 26 Movement under Fidel Castro
capable of winning power so quickly and with relatively few forces,
for the Cuban status quo had few defenders ready to stand and
fight for it. The proximity to Florida and the elite's strong
personal and economic links elsewhere in the area, where it had
diversified a large part of its money, also allowed it to be highly
mobile. Cuba was a nation with a society the United States had
made over for its own needs and desires, and m 1959 it was to
become a challenge to it without precedent.
p144
Social and economic conditions in Latin America gave the deeply
agitated Kennedy Administration no cause for complacency. Statistical
indicators, whatever their methodological deficiencies, revealed
a troubled region in the process of a structural crisis and with
a vast mass of humanity in profound distress.
Latin America has been the most rapidly
urbanizing Third World region in this century, in large part due
to the failure of the existing land system to provide the minimum
livelihood for survival. From 1930 to 1960 the percentage of the
population (201 million people in 1960) living in urban areas
had doubled, to reach 33 percent. East Asia, by contrast, had
only 18 percent urbanized, and the other Third World continents
even less. This pattern of growth continued in much the same fashion
for the next twenty years. Put another way, in 1960 two-thirds
of the Latin population lived in rural areas, while agriculture
and mining, the basic economic activities to which they related,
generated only 17 percent of the gross domestic product.
The social causes of the misery the masses
lived in were diverse, but the inequitable structure of land tenure
was by far the most important. In Peru, with the highest rate
of urbanization, those owning more than 1,000 hectares of land
in 1960, or 0.2 percent of all landholders, accounted for 69 percent
of the land. Over nine-tenths of those engaged in agriculture
owned no land whatsoever, working as tenants or laborers. In Argentina
the 5.8 percent of the holders with 1,000 or more hectares had
74 percent of the land. In Brazil, 0.9 percent of the owners held
44 percent of the land, while in Chile 1.3 percent owned 73 percent.
In Colombia, 0.3 percent owned 30 percent of the land, while in
Venezuela 1.3 percent held 82 percent.
This basic pattern in land ownership showed
up in income distribution statistics. In 1960, the richest 5 percent
of the population earned 33.4 percent of the income in Latin America
taken as a whole, with 29.2 percent for the next richest 15 percent-or
62.6 percent for the wealthiest fifth. Peru and Colombia had the
most inequitable distribution in the hemisphere and among the
worst in the entire Third World. Latin America's poorest half
of the population received 13.4 percent of the income in 1960.
The per capita annual income of those in the poorest fifth in
1960 was $60, while those in the wealthiest 5 percent received
$2,600. Latin America was, above all, a class society with a vast
gulf-economic, social, and political-between the rich and the
poor. Indeed, the statistical gap between them was significantly
greater in Latin America than in any other Third World region.
p145
Politics in Latin America both reflected and reinforced the highly
inequitable economic structure, and even those civilian parties
that disturbed the United States, with the exception of the relatively
unimportant Marxist groups, never challenged a system of distribution
that favored them. As complex as civilian politics in the region
was-and the distinctions among the many countries in this regard
discourage excessive generalizations-beliefs in egalitarianism
never influenced it. The general rhetoric of reform, on the other
hand, was far more important because the huge congregations of
displaced peasants in the cities, most without appropriate skills
and living precariously, made labor-absorbing economic development
a key issue for them, reinforcing the political strength of those
sectors of the middle and upper classes who for their own reasons
and interests wanted economic, and particularly industrial, growth.
Elite-dominated populism created a distinctive political dialogue
in many Latin states, but it scarcely shaped economic policy beyond
the creation of employment-a goal for which most of the masses
were grateful. Nor was political democracy in the formal, institutional
sense an important issue in civilian politics in Brazil, Argentina,
and elsewhere. Civilian elites were ready to manipulate the masses
for their own purposes, but not to give them power, for the continuation
of their own privileges precluded that.
p161
The Dominican Republic: Dictatorship and Intervention
U.S. Marines installed Rafael Trujillo
to run the Dominican Republic in the 1920s while they occupied
it, and he ruled one of the hemisphere's poorest countries as
America's loyal servant. His corruption was legendary and his
repression comparable. Not until the advent of Castro did Washington
begin to doubt the wisdom of relying upon him, and an OAS condemnation
of his regime on June 8, 1960, goaded it further when several
weeks later there was a Trujillo-sponsored assassination attempt
against President Romulo Betancourt of Venezuela, who had led
the criticism against Trujillo's incarceration of many thousands
of political prisoners, murder, and torture. The Eisenhower Administration
then reduced its purchases of Dominican sugar, essential for the
island's economy, and later attempted to cut it entirely. In response,
on August 25 Trujillo's radio began to defend Castro and announced
it would broadcast Soviet news agency reports. By that time the
CIA had established contact with various opposition groups and
begun to provide them with guns fitted for assassinations.
On May 30, 1961, one of them killed Trujillo.
With his vice president and the dead dictator's longtime ally,
Joaquin Balaguer, nominally in control, Trujillo's eldest son
assumed power with the backing of the army. Yet the United States
remained undecided what to do as the military, a conservative
middle-class party, and a democratic Left party, the Dominican
Revolutionary Party (PRD), under Juan Bosch, emerged as the main
contenders. Finally, despite Balaguer's reimposition of repressive
measures, the Kennedy Administration resolved to try to liberalize
the existing regime and proposed that the OAS lift its economic
sanctions. It demanded, however, that the Trujillo clan, which
was seeking to hold on to power, leave the island, and threatened
an invasion should they refuse. On November 17,1961, the Trujillos
departed, taking an estimated two-hundred-million-dollar fortune
with them and leaving behind four times that in property. Balaguer
and the army took over, and at the beginning of 1962 U.S.-Dominican
relations were normalized, the sugar quota restored, and large
amounts of economic aid given the impoverished country.
Meanwhile, riots and aborted coups forced
Balaguer to leave office, and the island remained in suspense
pending the outcome of elections in December 1962. A new U.S.
ambassador, John Bartlow Martin, arrived to keep all the contending
factions in order until then, while a council of former Trujillo
officers provided a transitional government, but he quickly resolved
that the Left should be suppressed, and he assiduously cultivated
the military. The four deeply disunited and small radical parties
disturbed him greatly, but he later conceded that "None of
the Castro/Communist parties seemed to me prepared to try to overthrow
the government by force," but instead would try to infiltrate
larger groups-though how they could do so while divided remained
unclear. When Bosch, however, won the December 20 election by
a two-to-one majority, what Martin feared most appeared to him
about to come to pass.
Martin was hostile toward Bosch from the
inception, and especially resented the freedom he gave to the
smaller leftist parties to function, suspecting he had secret
ties with them himself if he was not actually a "deep-cover
Communist"-a claim that found echoes in Washington.' Almost
as ominous, Bosch pressed his social and economic reforms, canceled
an Esso contract and then stopped delivery of sugar under the
U.S. quota because world prices were far higher and the Dominicans
had already lost six million dollars in potential income thereby.
On September 20, 1963, seven months after he came to office, a
rightist-led strike against Bosch caused the State Department
to wash their hands of him just as an inevitable coup seemed days
away. Martin himself opposed Bosch but feared abandoning the constitutional
process even more, making a feeble gesture to keep the Right from
taking over, but five days later a military coup installed a pro-American
civilian junta while generals remained in the background, supervising
it. After several months of feigned distress, the State Department
recognized it.
The new junta took office with no concessions
to the modest U.S. demands that it return to constitutional processes
while also excluding Bosch and the Left, and it refused to broaden
its membership because it realized that in the existing hemispheric
context Washington would not challenge it. Until April 1965 it
ran the Dominican Republic in a way that alienated virtually everyone:
the masses, who suffered as much as they had under Trujillo; the
middle class parties, who disliked the return of rampant corruption;
reformers within the military itself; and even some officers who
had served Trujillo and wanted to see Balaguer's reinstatement.
By that date Bosch had managed to wield together an alliance that
demanded a restoration of the 1963 constitution, and when it initiated
an uprising on April 24 a large part of the army rallied to its
side, as well, of course, as the masses. The junta fell the next
day, and on April 26 the army distributed guns to from three thousand
to ten thousand people in the capital, Santo Domingo, where the
combat was confined. Within three days it was virtually in the
constitutionalists' hands, and only a few pockets of resistance
remained.
Following the crisis, State Department
officials convinced themselves immediately that guns passed out
to the population might end up in the hands of the deeply divided
leftist groups, who could then take leadership away from the pro-Bosch
officers. But they did not believe it was certain to occur if
they did not act, for the CIA estimated that there were about
fifty-five disunited Castroists and Communists among the rebels,
and from three hundred to three thousand in the entire country.
American officials urged the remnants of the military to continue
resisting, but on April 28, when their local allies' defeat appeared
imminent, they made a unanimous decision to recommend the use
of U.S. forces. Their immediate concern was that proCastro nationalists
would take power, but to reach this conclusion they had to number
Bosch and his party among them; and while risk of a leftist takeover
appeared dangerous enough, even more persuasive was the credibility
of American power in the world-since at least that, Washington
believed, seemed certain to be at stake. President Johnson made
it plain that he did not propose "to sit here with my hands
tied and let Castro take that island. What can we do in Vietnam
if we can't clean up the Dominican Republic?"
On April 28 U.S. troops began landing
in the Dominican Republic, reaching twenty-three thousand on May
9. Ostensibly to protect the lives of American citizens and arrange
a cease-fire, their obvious objective was to keep Bosch and the
Left out of power. They complied with none of the ostensible OAS
procedures for actions such as this, and indeed the Dominican
invasion was, and still remains, the most massive U.S. direct
hemispheric intervention in this century. Press opinion in Latin
America ran ten to one against it, and Mexico, Chile, Venezuela,
and others protested formally. The sham pretensions of inter-Americanism
were laid to rest, but the message that the United States had
both the will and the capacity to act decisively was unmistakably
clear to the entire world.
The rest was foredoomed, since foreign
troops were there to fight against real or alleged Communists,
and this meant restoring the pro-American military to complete
control of the army. U.S. forces were reduced, but enough remained
to make it possible for Washington to dictate settlement terms,
which culminated in June 1966 in an election between Balaguer
and Bosch that, not surprisingly, brought Trujillo's intimate
back to power. While the United States' defenders insisted that
the election was genuinely free, the point would be irrelevant
even if true. With all the arms in the hands of Balaguer's allies,
and U.S. soldiers still present and Washington's position on Bosch
unmistakably known, the population's option of a resumption of
the war or a vote for the U.S. candidate alone would have been
sufficient to determine the outcome.
Balaguer restored many former Trujillo
officers to military service and brought back the old regime.
"The terrorism, corruption and misery that marked Rafael
Trujillo's 31-year dictatorship . . . are even more widespread
today under constitutionally elected President Joaquin Balaguer,"
a Wall Street Journal reporter said in summing up his reign in
late 1971; "So say some friends as well as most foes of the
U.S.-backed Balaguer government, and evidence is mounting to support
their view."
In the end, Washington far preferred to
save the dictators of its own choice to tolerating the array of
democrats, demagogues, nationalists, and reformers that the people
of Latin America chose to lead them.
The Other Southeast Asian Challenges
p173
The United States' consistent policy after the Indonesians won
their independence was to aid the police and military with equipment
to maintain order against the Communist Party (PKI). In late 1948
Sukarno and his army ruthlessly suppressed a PKI-supported land
reform movement in the Madiun region, virtually destroying the
PKI leadership, jailing thirty-six thousand, and greatly increasing
Washington's respect for him and particularly his officers. Strategically,
by 1953 the NSC resolved to encourage those nationalist forces
the army especially personified, as well as the very large Islamic
parties, to prevent Indonesia from moving toward the Left. The
security of Japan, whose access to the islands' vast resources
it believed crucial to keep it safely in the U.S. camp, was unquestionably
its primary concern, and for practical purposes it assigned Indonesia
to Japan's economic sphere of interest. Indonesia was a major
link in its expanded geopolitical domino theory for East Asia.
No later than December 1954, the NSC decided that the United States
would use "all feasible covert means" as well as overt,
including "the use of armed force if necessary," to
prevent the richest parts of Indonesia from falling into Communist
hands.
p177
By mid-1964 Sukarno had become seriously ill, leaving the country
often for medical treatment, and it was clear that the entire
precariously balanced power structure over which he presided would
not last much longer. At stake for many officers were careers
and fortunes, so the tensions within the military intensified.
The U.S. embassy received constant coup rumors from January 1965
onward. That month, those in charge of the army organized a secret
committee, which others dubbed the "Generals' Council,"
to deal with purely political issues relating to Sukarno, and
it definitely considered what to do should he become incapacitated
or die. Sukarno fell seriously ill again in early August, and
the CIA learned that the Generals' Council convened a meeting
in Djakarta on September 30. With rumors of threatened coups from
both sides circulating throughout September, any gesture by one
side was certain to evoke a response, including a preemptive one,
by the other. It was a time, as the second-in-charge of the U.S.
embassy later recalled, when "there was a power play going
on, everybody was maneuvering to get to the top." Regardless
of its truth or falsity, a pro-Sukarno faction of the military
was convinced that the Generals' Council was planning a coup against
Sukarno on Armed Forces Day, October 5, when many of their troops
could be brought unnoticed into the city, ostensibly to parade.
Since the army leadership had contingency plans should Sukamo
leave the scene, their fear may have been wrong, but it was not
implausible. The September 30 Movement was the pro-Sukamo officers'
response to this alleged or real danger, and it was not a coup
but principally an effort to keep him in command, as well as a
struggle between factions of the military.
p179
Indonesia by late 1965 presented U.S. strategy in Southeast Asia
with a danger at least as great as Vietnam at a time when its
preoccupation there made large-scale intervention in Indonesia
impossible. The logic of the domino theory applied to it as much
as to Vietnam, but its economic and strategic value was far greater.
Relying on peaceful means, the PKI had grown consistently, and
could be expected to continue to do so. The United States had
depended on the military since 1949 to create a barrier to the
Communists, and it understood well that Sukarno's skilled balancing
of contending forces to maintain his control would end in the
near future with his death. The events of September 30 created
a small challenge but also an enormous opportunity to resolve
America's dilemmas by directing the military's wrath against the
Communists.
181
... the Indonesian generals in early November approached the United
States for equipment "to arm Moslem and nationalist youths
in central Java for use against the PKI...." Most were using
knives and primitive means, and communications gear and small
arms would expedite the killing. Since "elimination of these
elements" was a precondition of better relations, the United
States quickly promised covert aid-dubbed "medicines"
to prevent embarrassing revelations. At stake in the army's effort
was the "destruction," as the CIA called the undertaking,
of the PKI, and "carefully placed assistance which will help
Army cope with PKI" continued, as Green described it, despite
the many other problems in Indonesian-U.S. relations that remained
to be solved.
The "final solution" to the
Communist problem in Indonesia was certainly one of the most barbaric
acts of inhumanity in a century that has seen a great deal of
it; it surely ranks as a war crime of the same type as those the
Nazis perpetrated. No single American action in the period after
1945 was as bloodthirsty as its role in Indonesia, for it tried
to initiate the massacre, and it did everything in its power to
encourage Suharto, including equipping his killers, to see that
the physical liquidation of the PKI was carried through to its
culmination. Not a single one of its officials in Washington or
Djakarta questioned the policy on either ethical or political
grounds; quite the contrary. "The reversal of the Communist
tide in the great country of Indonesia" was publicly celebrated,
in the words of Deputy Undersecretary of State U. Alexis Johnson
in October 1966, as "an event that will probably rank along
with the Vietnamese war as perhaps the most historic turning point
of Asia in this decade."
No one counts the dead in a massacre,
and those able to make a reliable estimate afterward had no incentive
to do so in this case. On December 4, as they both were clamoring
for yet more killing, Green wrote to Rusk that over 100,000 but
not more than 200,000 had been murdered in northern Sumatra and
central and eastern Java alone, and the destruction was still
going on. At the beginning of the following April the CIA estimated
roughly 250,000 deaths in a party of 3 million and 12 million
front group members. By the end of the month it dismissed the
government's claim of 78,000 dead and thought 250,000 to 500,000
closer to reality. But "An accurate figure is impossible
to obtain," the CIA concluded. A State Department estimate
that year placed the figure at roughly 300,000, a number former
ambassador Jones employed when he published his memoirs five years
later-though he, too, did not exclude 500,000. Other estimates
range up to I million dead, and official Indonesian data released
a decade later gave 450,000 to 500,000 as the number killed. As
stunning as these figures are, not a single official U.S. document
dealing with them has ever expressed dismay or regret!
p184
The system that emerged in Indonesia after 1967 was even more
centralized around one man than it had been under Sukamo, who
at least had allowed a modicum of civil liberties and permitted
parties to function far more freely as long as he could control
them. Sukamo co-opted many of his potential opponents, but Suharto
put them in prison, or worse. He also concentrated all power over
the army in the hands of a monolithic clique, which had never
existed under Sukamo, and used it as both a mechanism for political
control of the state apparatus at all levels and economic aggrandizement
via a level of corruption that ranks among the highest in the
world after 1945. Politically it created an unstable administrative
order subject to arbitrary changes, predictable only in that its
primary function was to reinforce the Suharto clique's power.
Economically it is far more complex save in one regard: what Suharto
and his circle have done for themselves.
Suharto never truly committed himself
to an economy patterned along United States- or IMF-endorsed classical
lines but rather acted as the State Department's experts in March
1966 predicted he would: He became richer. After 1972 and the
massive entry of Japanese capital into Indonesia, Suharto found
he had leverage in dealing with the rest of the world and his
debtors- which he used repeatedly to borrow immense amounts for
the state oil company, Pertamina, and other huge ventures. Local
banks loaned massive sums to his political friends or their generally
Chinese business associates, who still run most of the state as
well as most of the private sector, and the magnitude of the corruption
and waste nearly led to Pertamina's bankruptcy in 1977 and a serious
weakening of the internal banking system. By astutely playing
off foreign interests and milking them all, the political structure
Suharto controlled worked with allied national business interests
to operate a debt-ridden economy whose stability was as much dependent
on a world economy that encouraged and funded such high-risk economic
strategies as on Suharto's wisdom or folly. Indonesia's external
public debt was $2.4 billion in 1970 but $14.9 billion a decade
later, much of which had funded patronage projects. By 1986 Suharto
and his family controlled thirty companies dealing in transport,
electronics, chemicals, and much else. He had become a fabulously
wealthy man.
Less problematical were the conditions
of life for the masses, which in Indonesia meant largely the rural
areas. During 1963-67, a depressed period, and 1970-74 the nation's
ability to supply its own cereals declined, and in 1969-71 per
capita calorie consumption was only 83 percent of minimum requirements-making
Indonesia the poorest nation in Southeast Asia. In 1969, a total
of 47 percent of the rural population lived in the starkest poverty.
While data on such trends are uneven, all point to a decline in
the rural living standards during Suharto's "New Order."
The introduction of capital-intensive agriculture among wealthier
peasants reduced employment for the poorer without reversing the
national food deficit. Peasants after 1965 were afraid to organize,
so landlessness increased and ownership became more concentrated.
In eastern and western Java, by the late 1970s the real wages
of rural workers was declining sharply, while land ownership also
dropped. The percentage of farmers owning less than half a hectare
grew from 46 percent in 1973 to 63 percent in 1980. In the end
it was the peasantry, as everywhere, who paid the costs of the
regime the United States supported ...
p186
It remained the United States' desire, in the 1960s as in previous
decades, to use the Philippines to show the world what it alone
could do to create democracy and an ideal society in the Third
World. At the same time, it regarded the country as a key market
and investment outlet as well as a major supplier, and it insisted
that Filipino politics adjust to its needs rather than pursue
the nationalist economic policies to which the Garcia regime,
despite its traditional corruption, had surprisingly given momentum.
Yet the fact that a truly indigenous national bourgeoisie emerged
during these years had political implications that greatly exceeded
the still relatively marginal economic resources such a class
could mobilize. As long as economic development was linked to
the control of political power, the main threat to the United
States after 1960 came not from the dormant Left but from middle
and upper-class entrepreneurs who by necessity had to expound
a nationalism that was synonymous with anti-Americanism.
The United States supported the victorious
Macapagal in the November 1961 elections not because the Liberal
was less corrupt than Garcia, and honesty was the main campaign
issue, but because he favored a restoration of the U.S.-Philippines
bilateral trade system to its original form-notwithstanding a
formidable nationalist contingent in Congress. His first major
act upon taking office was to implement IMF and U.S. Treasury
recommendations and lift all exchange controls, in return for
which the Philippines, which had earlier been denied IMF and World
Bank loans, received $300 million in U.S. and IMF aid. With the
peso devalued by about half, the Philippine economy once again
became an open hunting ground for U.S. businessmen, most of whom
still preferred sending previously blocked profits out of the
country rather than investing further-to the extent, in fact,
that in no year after 1945 had new foreign investment equaled
profits repatriated to the United States. Macapagal's economic
program, the price of continued IMF aid was consciously antinationalist,
and the major damage it inflicted on local business interests
led to an end of the rapid growth of the manufacturing sector
that had occurred during the 1950s. Export interests, in conformity
with the standard U.S. and IMF formula, were ascendant once more.
Economically, the results showed up quickly
in inflation, which drove down the real income of labor and forced
thousands of businesses to the brink of failure or over it. By
1964 a tenth of the labor force was unemployed, while almost a
third of the remainder was underemployed-farm labor that worked
the smaller part of the year, or the innumerable urban poor who
had been forced off the land to live a lumpen existence in slums.
The larger structural trends in the economy during this decade
were testimony to the ability of the U.S.-IMF program to impose
countless otherwise avoidable difficulties on national economic
development strategies. By 1965 almost a third of the nation's
capital stock was foreign-owned, mainly American-owned, and two-thirds
of the hundred largest corporations, dominant in manufacturing,
utilities, and commerce, were foreign. By the mid-1960s the repatriation
of profits and the amortization of its loans were costing close
to $400 million annually, forcing Manila to continue borrowing.
The national public external debt rose from $174 million in 1960
to $480 million in 1965, then doubled by 1970.
p187
The war defined the U.S. response to the November 1965 election,
in which Macapagal and Ferdinand Marcos, who switched over to
the Nacionalistas to obtain their nomination, were the two major
contestants. By that time economic problems had become acute with
rising inflation, and informed Manila experts estimated that corruption
was consuming about a third of all government revenues. The CIA
believed that all the candidates were pro-American and that neither
would do much to bring reforms to the nation, making a stronger
Left in the future likely. Both would send forces to Vietnam,
despite the fact that Marcos had earlier opposed Macapagal's bill
to dispatch engineering troops, and Marcos was deemed a "ruthless
politician" while Macapagal was flabby. Washington always
considered Marcos a cynical opportunist...
Given the fact that it could not lose,
the United States remained neutral in the election. Marcos won
and immediately assumed the role of the typical Philippine politician,
in the United States' estimate, and in July 1966 he helped push
through a measure that authorized two thousand engineer troops
to Vietnam. Even more important to the United States, which still
hoped to get combat forces from Marcos, was a carte blanche from
him to use American bases in the Philippines as logistics centers
and even, possibly, for combat launches in the Vietnam War. In
September 1966, to "Keep Marcos on our side and help him
silence his critics," whom the war had made far more numerous,
Marcos fulfilled his desire to visit Washington. The Administration
knew that it would have to reward him with significant aid and
that it would be channeled into Marcos's political coffers-perhaps
even his pocket. In addition to eighty million dollars in grants,
Marcos received thirty-nine million dollars for the expenses of
his Vietnam contingent-part of which was paid in cash and deposited
in banks he controlled. It was in this context that the United
States also pressed Marcos to "improve general trade and
investment climate in the Philippines and find ways to protect
American acquired rights after 1974," when the Laurel-Langley
Agreement was to expire. However much Vietnam dominated relations
between Washington and Manila after 1964, economics was still
very alive in everyone's calculations.
Marcos' visit proved to the Johnson Administration
that he could be bought and that he would remain a loyal ally
in protecting American interests just in his own country but in
Southeast Asia as well.
p189
By 1969 and the beginning of the Nixon Administration, politics
within the Philippine ruling class had long since reached an impasse,
and the existing political institutions and forces no longer had
the capacity to resolve the profound contradictions and needs
of the contending sections of the elite, much less the larger
society. The nation's economic malaise, which threatened to deepen
into a crisis with untold implications, was not only making a
travesty of the U.S. desire to use its former colony as an example
of what it was capable of accomplishing for the world but also
reflected the continuing role of the United States in the economy.
The election of November 1969 was the turning point, pitting Marcos
against Serging Osmena, a former collaborator with the Japanese.
Osmena had switched parties constantly since 1945 and was a classic
Philippine oligarch who knew everything about patronage, corruption,
and violence. He stood only for himself, leaving no one to represent
the nationalist businessmen. He was also ardently pro-American,
and while neither he nor Marcos threatened Washington, Nixon as
much as endorsed the president. Marcos took no chances and simply
raided the national treasury, spending from fifty million to two
hundred million dollars, depending on the source, on his campaign-more
than the cost of all postwar elections combined. The violence
and ballot-box manipulation that went with it were also unprecedented.
The election's impact on the economy and society, its morale and
cohesion, ushered in a new era that I at the same time reflected
the inevitable logic of politics in the nation the United States
had created after 1946.
p198
The Probem of Sub-Saharan Africa
Africa frustrated the United States consistently
throughout the 1960s, and as its problems in Vietnam and elsewhere
increased monumentally, it sought to relegate the continent to
the very bottom of its concerns. AU this only reinforced the Administration's
natural inclination to employ the ideas on the crucial role of
the military in modernizing new nations that it was applying elsewhere,
if only to locate sympathetic anti-Communist elements in the hope
that they might create stability where none existed. At the inception
of the decade its Rand consultants on Africa argued that the military
alone might modernize tribal societies and impose skills and a
common language on them. In a region where most Africanists influential
in establishment circles believed the state had preceded formation
of the nation, officials in Washington dealing with Africa were
instinctively drawn to supporting the military. There were sixty-four
military mutinies and failed or successful coups in Africa in
196348 alone, and many American specialists thought that military
coups were a healthy response to foreign "alien ideologies"
that such civilians as Nkrumah, Lumumba, or African socialists
were advocating. These more "realistic" officers, their
reasoning went, would be "more receptive to the free world
economic doctrine and technology." CIA experts tried to amend
this optimistic analysis by pointing out that while officers were
becoming the decisive power group in Africa, they shared none
of the military's capacity elsewhere to administer nations. They
were primarily ambitious and interested in power, but rather than
noting the risks in this reality Washington simply accepted the
military as a dominant, unavoidable, and desirable fact of life.
But in its quest for stability, which by 1966 caused even the
small group of reformers among U.S. decisionmakers to regard the
African political climate after so many military takeovers as
"the best it has ever been," the United States opted
for relying on the armies in Africa also.
Confronting
the Third World
Foreign Policy watch
US and Third World
Home Page