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Indonesia-Malaysia confrontation
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{{History of Indonesia}}
The '''Indonesia-Malaysia confrontation''' was an intermittent war over the future of the island of
Borneo, between British-backed
Malaysia and
Indonesia in
1962-
1966. It is called '''Konfrontasi''' in the
Indonesian language Indonesian and
Malay languages.
Background
In
1961, the island of Borneo was divided into four separate
states:
Kalimantan, an Indonesian
Provinces of Indonesia province, was located in the south of the island. In the north were the
monarchy kingdom of
Brunei and two
United Kingdom British colony colonies —
Sarawak and
British North Borneo (which was later renamed
Sabah). As a part of its withdrawal from its
Southeast Asian colonies, the UK moved to combine its colonies on Borneo with those on peninsular Malaya, to form
Malaysia.
This move was opposed by the government of
Indonesia; President
Sukarno argued that
Malaysia was a puppet of the British, and that the consolidation of
Malaysia would increase British control over the region, threatening Indonesia's independence. Similarly, the
Philippines made a claim for
Sabah, arguing that it had historic links with the Philippines through the
Sulu Archipelago Sulu archipelago.
In
Brunei, the Indonesian-backed North
Kalimantan National Army (TKNU) revolted on
December 8 1962. They tried to capture the
Sultan of Brunei, seize the oil fields and take European hostages. The Sultan escaped and asked for British help. He received British and
Gurkha troops from
Singapore. On December 16, British Far Eastern Command claimed that all major rebel centers had been occupied, and on
April 17 1963, the rebel commander was captured and the rebellion ended.
The Philippines and Indonesia formally agreed to accept the formation of Malaysia if a majority in the disputed region voted for it in a referendum organized by the
United Nations. However, on
September 16, before the results of the vote were reported, the Malaysian government announced that the federation would be created, depicting the decision as an internal matter, with no need for consultation. The Indonesian government saw this as a broken promise and as evidence of British imperialism.
Contrary to popular belief, mainly shaped by British propaganda during the 1960s, no firm evidence has ever been unearthed to support claims that Sukarno had territorial ambitions over North Kalimantan (he always held firmly to the
1945 decision which delineated Indonesia's boundaries to territories inherited from the former Dutch-Indies, and this might explain why he eagerly pursued Papua's - but not East Timor's - annexation). More likely was that Sukarno invested hopes for the establishment of a North Kalimantan state aligned to Jakarta's anti-colonial/imperialist geopolitics, in which he found suitable allies. Sukarno had made it repeatedly clear in at least four public speeches throughout 1963-64 that Indonesia had no territorial ambitions over North Kalimantan, and that Indonesia's territorial pursuit was completed with the 'return' of West Irian in January 1963.
{{History of Malaysia}}
Local opposition and sentiments against the Malaysian Federation plan has often been under-represented in historical writings on the Brunei Revolt and the subsequent Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation. In fact, political forces in Sarawak had long anticipated their own national independence as promised (but later aborted) by the last White Rajah of Sarawak, Charles Vyner Brooke, back in
1941.
The predominantly Malay anti-cession movement, which rejected the British takeover of Sarawak in 1946 and even managed to assassinate Duncan Stewart, the first British High-Commissioner of Sarawak, may have been the forerunner of the subsequent anti-Malaysia movement in Sarawak, headed by Ahmad Zaidi.
Left-wing and communist cell groups, which grew rapidly among Sarawak's urban Chinese communities since the
1950s (which later became the nucleus of the anti-Malaysia PARAKU and PGRS guerrilla forces), supported and propagated the unification of all British Borneo territories to form an independent leftist North Kalimantan state, an idea originally proposed by Dr. Azhari, leader of the Parti Rakyat Brunei, who had forged links with Sukarno's nationalist movement, together with Ahmad Zaidi, in Java since the
1940s. The North Kalimantan (or Kalimantan Utara) proposal was seen as a post-decolonization alternative by local opposition against the Malaysian Federation plan. Local opposition throughout the Borneo territories was primarily based on economic, political, historical and cultural differences between the Borneo states and the Malayan peninsula, and the refusal to be subjected under peninsular political domination.
Both Dr. Azhari and Ahmad Zaidi went into exile in Indonesia during the Confrontation. While the latter managed to return to Sarawak and managed to have his political status rehabilitated, Dr. Azhari remained in Indonesia until his death in 2001.
The War
On
January 20 1963, Indonesian Foreign Minister
Subandrio announced that Indonesia would pursue a policy of ''Konfrontasi'' with Malaysia. On April 12, Indonesian volunteers — allegedly
Military of Indonesia Indonesian Army personnel — began to infiltrate Sarawak and Sabah, to engage in raids and sabotage, and spread propaganda. On July 27, Sukarno declared that he was going to "crush Malaysia" or in Indonesian Malay ''"Ganyang Malaysia"''. On August 16, troopers of the
Brigade of Gurkhas clashed with fifty Indonesian guerillas.
While the Philippines did not engage in warfare, they did break off diplomatic relations with Malaysia.
The
Federation of Malaysia was formally formed on
September 16 1963.
Brunei decided against joining, and
Singapore separated later.
Tensions rose on both sides of the
Strait of Malacca Straits of Malacca. Two days later rioters burned the British embassy in
Jakarta. Several hundred rioters ransacked the Singapore embassy in Jakarta and the homes of Singaporean diplomats. In Malaysia, Indonesian agents were captured and crowds attacked the Indonesian embassy in
Kuala Lumpur.
Along the remote jungle border in Borneo, there was an ongoing border war; Indonesian troops and irregulars tried to occupy Sarawak and Sabah, with little success. On 28 September 1963 a small successful, though strategically irrelevant, raid was waged by the Indonesians on the village of Long Jawe, almost wiping out the entire Gurkha Rifles garrison. In early 1964, Indonesian attacks managed to deem the strategic Tebedu - Serian - Kuching road unsafe for months, and additional small scale air raids were waged in the Kelabit highlands on civilian settlements. One Indonesian raiding party enroute to the small town of Song were captured by locals and handed over to the Malaysian authorities in April 1964.
In
1964, Indonesian troops began to raid areas in the Malaysian peninsula. In August, 16 armed Indonesian agents were captured in
Johore. Activity by regular Indonesian Army over the border also increased. The British
Royal Navy deployed a number of warships, including
aircraft carriers, to the area to defend Malaysia and the
Royal Air Force also deployed many
squadrons of aircraft.
Commonwealth of Nations Commonwealth ground forces — 18
battalions, including elements of the Brigade of Gurkhas — and three Malaysian battalions, were also committed to the conflict. The Commonwealth troops were thinly deployed and had to rely on border posts and reconnaissance by
light infantry and/or the two
commando units of the
Royal Marines. Their main mission was to prevent further Indonesian incursions into Malaysia.
On August 17, Indonesian
paratroopers landed on the southwest coast of Johore and attempted to establish guerilla groups. On September 2, more paratroopers landed in
Labis, Johore. On October 29, 52 soldiers landed in
Pontian on the Johore-Malacca border and were captured by
New Zealand Army personnel.
When the United Nations accepted Malaysia as a nonpermanent member at the Security Council, Sukarno withdrew Indonesia from the UN and attempted to form the
Conference of New Emerging Forces ('''Conefo''') as an alternative.
In January
1965, after many Malaysian requests,
Australia agreed to send troops to Borneo.
Australian Army contingent included the
3rd Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment 3rd Battalion of the
Royal Australian Regiment and the
Special Air Service (Australia) Australian Special Air Service Regiment. There were fourteen thousand British and Commonwealth forces in Borneo by this time. According to official policy, Commonwealth troops could not follow attackers over the Indonesian border. However, units like the British
Special Air Service and the
Australian Special Air Service did so in secret (see
Operation Claret). (The Australian government officially admitted these incursions in
1996.)
On
March 10 1965, Indonesian saboteurs carried out the
MacDonald House bombing in Singapore killing 3 people and injuring 33.
In mid-1965, the Indonesian government began to openly use Indonesian army forces. On June 28, they crossed the border into eastern
Sebatik Island near
Tawau, Sabah, and clashed with defenders.
It was later revealed that the lack of success of Indonesian raids could also be attributed by the covert consensus among the Indonesian army leaders, still receiving U.S. military funding as late as 1965, to deliberately play down the military situation in the field. The best Indonesian army battalions were not even sent to Borneo - and it is largely speculated that the Army, with U.S. and British backing, were covertly held back on Java in preparing the right-wing coup of October 1 1965, which consequently ended the Confrontation and ousted Sukarno from power in 1966. Of special note is the fact that even during the course of Confrontation, a number of Indonesian army officers were still undergoing military training in Australia.
British psyops
The role of the
United Kingdom's
Foreign Office and
MI6 intelligence service has also come to light, in a series of exposés by Paul Lashmar and Oliver James in ''
The Independent'' newspaper beginning in
1997. These revelations have also come to light in journals on military and intelligence history.
The revelations included an anonymous Foreign Office source stating that the decision to unseat Pres. Sukarno was made by Prime Minister
Harold MacMillan then executed under Prime Minister
Harold Wilson. According to the exposés, the United Kingdom had already become alarmed with the announcement of the Konfrontasi policy. A CIA memorandum of
1962 indicated that Prime Minister Macmillan and President
John F. Kennedy were increasingly alarmed by the possibility of the Confrontation with Malaysia spreading, and agreed to "liquidate President Sukarno, depending on the situation and available opportunities."
To weaken the regime, the
Foreign Office's Information Research Department (IRD) coordinated
psychological operations in concert with the British military, to spread
black propaganda casting the
Communist Party of Indonesia PKI,
Indonesian Chinese, and
Sukarno in a bad light. These efforts were to duplicate the successes of British Psyop campaign in the
Malayan Emergency.
Of note, these efforts were coordinated from a British embassy in
Singapore where the British Broadcasting Service (
BBC),
Associated Press (AP), and
New York Times filed their reports on the Indonesian Civil War. According to Roland Challis, the BBC correspondent who was in Singapore at the time, journalists were open to manipulation by IRD due to Sukarno's stubborn refusal to allow them into the country: "In a curious way, by keeping correspondents out of the country Sukarno made them the victims of official channels, because almost the only information you could get was from the British ambassador in Jakarta."
These manipulations included the BBC reporting that Communists were planning to slaughter the citizens of Jakarta. The accusation was based solely on a forgery planted by Norman Reddaway, a propaganda expert with the IRD. He later who bragged in a letter to the British ambassador in Jakarta, Sir
Andrew Gilchrist that it "went all over the world and back again," and was "put almost instantly back into Indonesia via the BBC." Sir Andrew Gilchrist himself informed the Foreign Office on 5 October 1965: "I have never concealed from you my belief that a little shooting in Indonesia would be an essential preliminary to effective change."
In the
April 16,
2000 ''Independent'', Sir
Denis Healey,
Secretary of State for Defence at the time of the war, confirmed that the IRD was active during this time. He officially denied any role by MI6, and denied "personal knowledge" of the British arming the right-wing faction of the Army, though he did comment that if there were such a plan, he "would certainly have supported it."
Although the British
MI6 is strongly implicated in this scheme by the use of the Information Research Department (seen as an MI6 office), any role by MI6 itself is officially denied by the UK government, and papers relating to it have yet to be declassified by the
Cabinet Office. (''The Independent'', December 6, 2000)
The end of confrontation
Towards the end of 1965, General
Suharto came to power in Indonesia, following a
coup d'état. Due to this domestic conflict, Indonesian interest in pursuing the war with Malaysia declined, and combat eased.
On
May 28 1966 at a conference in
Bangkok, the Malaysian and Indonesian governments declared the conflict was over. Violence ended in June, and a peace treaty was signed on
August 11 and ratified two days later.
References and Further Reading
Scholarly Articles
* Mackie, J.A.C. 1974. ''Konfrontasi: The Indonesia-Malaysia Dispute 1963-1966''. Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press.
* Poulgrain, G. 1998. ''The Genesis of Konfrontasi: Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia 1945-1965''. London: C. Hurst & Co. ISBN 1-85065-510-3
* Jones, M. 2002. ''Conflict and Confrontation in South East Asia, 1961-1965: Britain, the United States and the Creation of Malaysia''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-80111-7
* Porritt, V.L. 2004. ''The Rise and Fall of Communism in Sarawak 1940-1990''. Victoria: Monash Asia Institute. ISBN 1-87692-427-6
Other Sources
* Anonymous. 1964. ''Gelora Konfrontasi Mengganjang Malaysia''. Djakarta: Departemen Penerangan. (Contains Joint Statements of the Manila Agreements, Indonesian presidential decrees and all transcripts of Sukarno's public speeches from July 1963 to May 1964 pertaining the Konfrontasi)
See also
*
British military history
*
Brunei Revolt
*
History of Brunei
*
History of Indonesia
*
History of Malaysia
id:Konfrontasi Indonesia-Malaysia
Category:Wars
Category:History of Brunei
Category:History of Indonesia
Category:History of Malaysia
Category:History of Singapore
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