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Origins of the 1965 Coup in Indonesia: Probabilities and Alternatives
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 April 2011
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On the night of September 30 to October 1, 1965, a coup d'etat was attempted in Djakarta and parts of Central Java, by some leaders of the Indonesian Communist Party (Partai Komunis Indonesia — PKI) and members of its youth and women's front organizations, and by units of the Indonesian Army and Airforce, including a general as well as several staff and field grade officers. Virtually crushed within 48 hours, the abortive coup — usually referred to as Gestapu by Indonesians (from Gerakan Tiga Pulu September or “Thirty September Movement) — was to inaugurate drastic changes in Indonesia's domestic power structure and foreign relations. These changes included the accelerating fall from power of President Sukarno and a rapid deterioration in Djakarta's erstwhile exceptionally cordial rapprochement with Peking. Although in the years since 1965 much of the background and the events of the Gestapu affair have remained controversial, there has also emerged a certain consensus among students as to the major “trigger” factors in the coup. Some of these factors as well as principal alternative explanations will be considered briefly in the following pages.
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References
1 The literature on the 30 September 1965 coup is growing rapidly. For evaluations of published and unpublished materials on the coup see, e.g., Bass, Jerome R., “The PKI and the Attempted Coup,” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, March 1970, pp. 96–105Google Scholar; Weatherbee, Donald E., “Interpretations of Gestapu, the 1965 Indonesian Coup,” World Affairs, March 1970, pp. 305–317Google Scholar; and van der Kroef, Justus M., “Interpretations of the 1965 Indonesian Coup. A Review of the Literature,” Pacific Affairs, Winter 1970–1971, pp. 557–577.Google Scholar
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