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The Jakarta Method

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2020 book by Vincent Bevins

The Jakarta Method
AuthorVincent Bevins
LanguageEnglish
PublisherPublicAffairs
Publication date
2020
Media typePrint (Hardback)
Pages320
ISBN978-1541742406

The Jakarta Method: Washington's Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World is a 2020 political history book by American journalist and authorVincent Bevins. It concernsU.S. government support for and complicity inanti-communist mass killings around the world and their aggregate consequences from theCold War until the present era. The title is a reference toIndonesian mass killings of 1965–66, during which an estimated one million people were killed in an effort to destroy thepolitical left and movements for government reform in the country.

The book goes on to describe subsequent replications of the strategy of mass murder, against government reform and economic reform movements in Latin America, Asia, and elsewhere.[1][2] The killings in Indonesia by the American-backed Indonesian forces were so successful in culling the left and economic reform movements that the term "Jakarta" was later used to refer to the genocidal aspects of similar later plans implemented by other authoritarian capitalist regimes with the assistance of the United States.[3][4]

Reception

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In theLSE Review of Books, Thomas Kingston praisesThe Jakarta Method as an excellent book, well researched and tightly written, which "manages to piece together events that have often been relatively unknown outside of academic or activist circles." He says while he is familiar with the Indonesian mass killings of 1965–66, he did not consider "their echoes and influence around the world" until reading this book, meaning that it would likely be informative and enlightening to most readers, and cannot be dismissed by possible critics as simply "an anti-American diatribe." Kingston remarks that towards the end of the book, Bevins offers a good example of how it would be nearly impossible to write a truly balanced account of these terrible events when he asks one of the Indonesian survivors "How did we win [the Cold War]?", who responds: "You killed us."[5]

Writing forThe American Conservative, Daniel Larison laudsThe Jakarta Method as "exceptional" in its "dispassionate, matter-of-fact" reading of history that reveals aspects of American history lost in its current memory of the Cold War. Larison commends how Bevins links the accounts of individual survivors with the events that affected tens of millions and killed over a million, making solid these large, society-level events. Larison further commends Bevins for effectively "trac[ing] the use of the tactics" beyond Indonesia itself, exploring how these historical events arose from the context of international relations, influenced lateranticommunist dictatorships in Latin America, and continue to affect the social and political landscape today.[6]

Grace Blakeley and Jacob Sugarman both reviewedThe Jakarta Method for the socialist magazineJacobin. Blakeley says thatThe Jakarta Method explains the United States' involvement with the Indonesian genocide better than almost any other document regarding the events. She writes that the book excels at tracing how the patterns from the genocide in Indonesia reverberated through future anticommunist actions in other countries in subsequent years.[7] Sugarman says: "As a polemic,The Jakarta Method is never anything less than conscientious and persuasive, but Bevins’s book truly takes flight as a work of narrative journalism, tracing the history of America’s violent meddling in Southeast Asia and Latin America through the stories of those it brutalized".[8]

Glenn Greenwald ofThe Intercept saidThe Jakarta Method documents not only how CIA-sponsored mass killings in Indonesia served as a model for "clandestine CIA interference campaigns" in myriad other countries throughout Asia and Latin America to destroy theNon-Aligned Movement, but also how "the chilling success of that morally grotesque campaign led to its being barely discussed in U.S. discourse." He adds that the book "provides one of the best, most informative and most illuminating histories yet of this agency and the way it has shaped the actual, rather than the propagandistic, U.S. role in the world."[9]

The Jakarta Method was praised as "trenchant" and "powerful" in theBoston Review by Stuart Schrader, Assistant Research Professor in Sociology atJohns Hopkins University, who says that it "documents the U.S. government’s role in fostering systematic mass murder across the globe—from Southeast Asia to South America—in the name of fighting communism." He notes that Bevins is "particularly well suited to investigate these legacies" as a journalist who is fluent in both Indonesian and Portuguese, writing:

In addition to interviewing survivors and chronicling their struggles, Bevins draws on the latest historical scholarship on the "global Cold War", which, contrary to its name, entailed hot, violent conflicts in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. He translates the findings of complex scholarly accounts into smooth and readable, if often heartbreaking, prose.[10]

Writing forLos Angeles Review of Books, Leo Schwartz saysThe Jakarta Method is a "devastating critique of US hypocrisy during the Cold War, and a mournful hypothetical of what the world might have looked like if Third World movements had succeeded."[11]

Tenny Kristiana ofWaseda University writes that "by giving voice to the victims, Bevins writes in opposition to a "history written by the victors," and seeks to correct a long-standing imbalance in historiography on the Cold War."[12]

Kirkus Reviews praised the book, describing it as "a well-delineated excavation of yet another dark corner of American history."[13]

Gideon Rachman of theFinancial Times included the book in his list of the best politics books of 2020.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Bevins, Vincent (29 May 2020)."Opinion | The 'Liberal World Order' Was Built With Blood".The New York Times.
  2. ^Pagliarini, Andre (5 June 2020)."Where America Developed a Taste for State Violence".The New Republic. Retrieved25 July 2020.
  3. ^"Lifting the veil on 1965 mass murder of Indonesian communists".South China Morning Post. 28 June 2020.
  4. ^"Vincent Bevins: The 'Mass Murder Program' Behind America's Rise to Power".Scheerpost. 2 June 2020. Retrieved15 February 2021.
  5. ^Kingston, Thomas (29 July 2020)."Book Review: The Jakarta Method: Washington's Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program That Shaped Our World by Vincent Bevins".LSE Review of Books. Retrieved16 February 2021.
  6. ^Larison, Daniel (5 August 2020)."The Jakarta Method: How the U.S. Used Mass Murder To Beat Communism".The American Conservative.
  7. ^Blakeley, Grace (10 June 2020)."Remembering Capitalism's Crimes".Jacobin Magazine.
  8. ^Sugarman, Jacob (19 May 2020)."America's Cold War Crimes Abroad Are Still Shaping Our World".Jacobin Magazine.
  9. ^Greenwald, Glenn (21 May 2020)."The CIA's Murderous Practices, Disinformation Campaigns, and Interference in Other Countries Still Shape the World Order and U.S. Politics".The Intercept. Retrieved23 February 2021.
  10. ^Schrader, Stuart (19 May 2020)."The Murderous Legacy of Cold War Anticommunism".Boston Review. Retrieved13 September 2021.
  11. ^Schwartz, Leo (25 July 2020)."Enduring Cold War Imperialism: On Vincent Bevins's "The Jakarta Method"".Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved7 November 2021.
  12. ^Kristiana, Tenny."Review: The Jakarta Method: Washington's Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World"(PDF).
  13. ^"The Jakarta Method: Washington's Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World".Kirkus Reviews. 15 March 2020. Retrieved4 May 2021.
  14. ^Rachman, Gideon (18 November 2020)."Best books of 2020: Politics".Financial Times. London. Retrieved6 November 2021.

Further reading

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External links

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External videos
video iconThe Chilling Story of the CIA-Sponsored ‘Jakarta Method’ onYouTube
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata
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