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Ahmed
Sukarno
INTRODUCTION
Sukarno (1901-1970), dominant figure of Indonesia’s nationalist
movement against the Dutch and the country’s first president (1945-1968). He was
toppled following an attempted coup and held under house arrest until his death.
BACKGROUND AND PERSONAL LIFE
Sukarno was born in the city
of Surabaya in
eastern Java. At the time, Java and the rest of Indonesia
were under Dutch colonial control. Although brought up in the traditional
Javanese cultural world, Sukarno was educated in modern Dutch colonial schools.
In 1921 he entered the Bandung Institute of Technology to study architecture,
graduating in 1926. Sukarno had been increasingly involved in nationalist
politics since his teens, when he had boarded in the house of H. O. S.
Tjokroaminoto, a leading nationalist politician. It was in Bandung
that he decided his future lay in politics, not architecture.
By 1926 Sukarno had been
married twice, first to Sitti Utari, daughter of Tjokroaminoto, and then, after
divorcing her, to Inggit Garnasih. He subsequently married at least four more
times, having as many as four wives simultaneously. Though permitted under
Islamic law, polygamy was not a common practice in Indonesia, and in the 1950s
and 1960s attracted considerable criticism, particularly from women’s
organizations.
EARLY CAREER
In 1927 Sukarno cofounded
the Indonesian Nationalist Party (Partai Nasional Indonesia, or
PNI) and became its first leader. The goal of the party was to achieve
independence for
Indonesia through popular struggle against the Dutch. A skilled public speaker,
Sukarno quickly drew a mass following for the PNI. In 1929 the Dutch jailed him
for being a threat to public order, and the PNI collapsed in his absence.
Released in 1931, Sukarno resumed his political activity, but he was arrested
again in 1933 and exiled, first to the island of Flores and then to Sumatra. By
the time of his exile, he was Indonesia’s leading nationalist politician.
When Japan invaded and
occupied Indonesia in 1942, during World War II, Sukarno returned to Jakarta
and worked with the Japanese regime. He argued later that his collaboration with
the Japanese enabled him to advance the cause of Indonesian independence and
protect the Indonesian people from the worst excesses of the occupation.
In 1944 a committee was
established to prepare for Indonesian independence, and Sukarno was a leading
member of the committee. On July 1, 1945, Sukarno
delivered an important speech to the committee urging the adoption of the
Panca Sila (Five Principles) as the ideological basis of the new state. The
five principles were nationalism, internationalism (or humanitarianism),
democracy, social justice, and belief in God.
RISE TO PRESIDENCY
On August 17, 1945, immediately
following Japan’s surrender to the Allies, Sukarno and fellow nationalist
Muhammad Hatta declared Indonesia’s independence. The next day the provisional
parliament adopted a constitution and elected Sukarno president. The
constitution included the Panca Sila in its preamble and gave the president a
great deal of authority. The Dutch refused to accept the independence
proclamation. For the next five years Indonesia and The Netherlands negotiated
and fought with one another. Finally, in December 1949 the Dutch acknowledged
Indonesia’s independence, but the status of the western half of New Guinea (now
the province of Papua) remained in dispute.
Although Sukarno was an
important symbol of the national struggle against the Dutch, he soon lost
political ground to domestic rivals. By 1949 he was little more than a
figurehead, while real political power lay with the prime minister. This
arrangement was made official in new constitutions adopted in 1949 and 1950,
which established a parliamentary, rather than presidential, political system
for Indonesia.
DOMESTIC POLICIES
In the early and mid-1950s
Sukarno remained a figurehead president. However, beginning in 1957, as Indonesia’s political system
began to disintegrate and military rebellions broke out in Sumatra
and Sulawesi,
he asserted a more powerful political role. In 1959 Sukarno decreed the
reintroduction of
Indonesia’s 1945 constitution, which gave the president wider authority. Arguing
that Western-style parliamentary democracy was unsuited to Indonesian needs, he
introduced in its place a system called “Guided Democracy,” that emphasized
traditional Indonesian values, such as decision making by deliberation and
consensus rather than majority vote. Sukarno promoted national unity through
NASAKOM, an acronym for the three major ideological streams in Indonesian
politics: nasionalisme (nationalism), agama (religion), and
komunisme (communism).
In practice, such unity was
never achieved. Under Sukarno Indonesian politics became more divided than ever
before. Parties refusing to accept Guided Democracy were banned, and Sukarno’s
political opponents were jailed. The system was accepted most enthusiastically
by the Indonesian Communist Party (Partai Komunis Indonesia, or PKI),
with which Sukarno was increasingly aligned by the early 1960s. The army also
increased its power under Sukarno, and became the only meaningful rival of the
Communists.
Sukarno had little interest
in conventional economic management, and as a result the economy declined
rapidly under Guided Democracy. This decline was due to the burdens of mounting
overseas debt (much of it resulting from the purchase of Soviet-bloc armaments),
an overstaffed government bureaucracy, and the grossly inefficient state-owned
companies in the agriculture, mining, transportation, and banking sectors. By
1965 inflation in
Indonesia was more
than 650 percent a year, and the economy was on the verge of total
collapse.Despite this, Sukarno retained enormous popularity among ordinary
Indonesians, awakening in them a great sense of pride in being Indonesian. He
received particular support from poor farmers and factory workers, a class he
termed the Marhaen, named after a poor peasant farmer Sukarno met in West
Java. Sukarno also supported the right of equal citizenship for Indonesia’s
ethnic Chinese residents.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
The Dutch had retained
possession of the western half of New Guinea
(then known as Dutch New Guinea) following their acknowledgment of Indonesian
independence in 1949. Although Indonesia continued to claim sovereignty over the
territory, the Indonesian governments that held power in the early and mid-1950s
did not press the issue very hard. Sukarno, however, saw The Netherlands’
possession of the territory as an unacceptable reminder of colonialism, and by
the late 1950s he was mounting an increasingly strident campaign to have the
territory returned to Indonesia. In the early 1960s Indonesia launched military
raids on Dutch New Guinea, but it was chiefly American diplomatic pressure that
finally persuaded the Dutch to hand the territory over to Indonesia in 1963,
when it was renamed West Irian (later renamed Irian Jaya; now Papua).
American support for the
Indonesian position on West Irian had been, in
part, an attempt to prevent Indonesia from moving closer to the Communist bloc
of nations. The United States was unsuccessful in this goal. In the later years
of Guided Democracy, Sukarno’s foreign policy took on an increasingly
anti-Western and pro-Communist orientation. He vigorously opposed the formation
of Malaysia
in 1963, arguing that the British-supported state would function as a base from
which “neocolonial” forces could exert influence in the region. He criticized
the United Nations for being under Western control, and withdrew Indonesia from
the organization in January 1965. Later that year he announced the formation of
an alliance between Indonesia and the Communist and pro-Communist governments of Cambodia,
North Vietnam, China, and North Korea.
DOWNFALL
Political tensions within Indonesia boiled over
on the night of September 30, 1965, when army troops and left-wing civilians
staged a coup attempt, murdering six army generals and announcing the formation
of a new revolutionary government. General Suharto, head of the army’s strategic
command, rallied loyalist troops to suppress the coup. Although the identity and
motives of the coup’s instigators remains controversial, the army alleged that
the Communist PKI was responsible. Thus, in late 1965 army units and Muslim
groups began to purge Communists (both real and suspected) from national life.
Hundreds of thousands of people were killed or imprisoned in the crackdown.
Sukarno’s role in these
events remains in dispute. He never publicly supported the coup attempt, but
neither did he criticize it. This ambiguity, along with the elimination of the
Communists, substantially weakened his political standing. By 1966 General
Suharto had eased Sukarno out of effective power, and the following year Suharto
became acting president. Sukarno was formally deposed in favor of Suharto in
1968. Wary of the implications of either putting him on trial for involvement in
the attempted coup or allowing him complete freedom of action, Suharto kept
Sukarno under house arrest in Jakarta
until his death.
Despite government attempts
to downplay his role in Indonesian politics, Sukarno’s image underwent a revival
beginning in the 1980s among young people and others critical of the Suharto
regime. Sukarno’s eldest daughter Megawati Sukarnoputri became a symbol of
popular resistance in the pro-democracy movement that ultimately led to
Suharto’s resignation in 1998. Megawati became vice president of Indonesia in
1999 and president in 2001.
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