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INDONESIA 1960–January 1963 Internal Affairs and Foreign Affairs A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of Confidential U.S. State Department Central Files A UPA Collection from

INDONESIA 1960–January 1963 · INDONESIA 1960–January 1963 INTERNAL AFFAIRS Decimal Numbers 798, 898, and 998 and FOREIGN AFFAIRS Decimal Numbers 698 and 611.98 Project Coordinator

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Page 1: INDONESIA 1960–January 1963 · INDONESIA 1960–January 1963 INTERNAL AFFAIRS Decimal Numbers 798, 898, and 998 and FOREIGN AFFAIRS Decimal Numbers 698 and 611.98 Project Coordinator

INDONESIA1960–January 1963

Internal Affairs and Foreign Affairs

A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of

ConfidentialU.S. State Department

Central Files

A UPA Collectionfrom

Page 2: INDONESIA 1960–January 1963 · INDONESIA 1960–January 1963 INTERNAL AFFAIRS Decimal Numbers 798, 898, and 998 and FOREIGN AFFAIRS Decimal Numbers 698 and 611.98 Project Coordinator

INDONESIA1960–January 1963

INTERNAL AFFAIRSDecimal Numbers 798, 898, and 998

andFOREIGN AFFAIRS

Decimal Numbers 698 and 611.98

Project CoordinatorRobert E. Lester

Guide Compiled byBlair D. Hydrick

ConfidentialU.S. State Department

Central Files

4520 East-West Highway • Bethesda, MD 20814-3389

A UPA Collection from

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i i

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Confidential U.S. State Department Central Files. Indonesia, 1960–January 1963[microform] : internal affairs and foreign affairs / [project corrdinator, Robert E. Lester].

microfilm reels ; 35 mm.Accompanied by a printed guide, compiled by Blair Hydrick with title: A guide to the

microfilm edition of Confidential U.S. State Department central files. Indonesia,1960–January 1963.

ISBN 1-55655-836-81. Indonesia—History—1950–1966—Sources. 2. Indonesia—Politics and

government—1950–1966—Sources. 3. Indonesia—Foreignrelations—Netherlands—Sources. 4. Indonesia—Foreign relations—Malaysia—Sources.5. United States. Dept. of State. I. Lester, Robert. II. Hydrick, Blair. III. United States.Dept. of State. IV. United States. National Archives and Records Andministration.V. University Publications of America (Firm) VI. Title: Guide to the microfilm edition ofConfidential U.S. State Department central files. Indonesia, 1960–January 1963.

DS644959.803’6—dc21

2001046939 CIP

The documents reproduced in this publication are among the records of the U.S.Department of State in the custody of the National Archives of the United States. No copyright

is claimed in these official records.

Copyright © 2003 by Congressional Information Service, Inc.All rights reserved.

ISBN 1-55655-836-8.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction .............................................................................................................. vScope and Content Note ......................................................................................... xiSource Note .............................................................................................................. xiiiOrganization of the U.S. Department of State Decimal Filing System ............... xvNumerical List of Country Numbers ...................................................................... xixAcronym List ............................................................................................................ xxviiReel Index

Reels 1–4

Internal Political and National Defense Affairs

798.00 Political Affairs .................................................................................. 1

Reel 5798.00 Political Affairs cont. ......................................................................... 6798.01 Political Affairs: Communism............................................................ 7798.02 Political Affairs: Government ............................................................ 8798.03 Political Affairs: Constitution ............................................................. 8798.04 Political Affairs: Flag ......................................................................... 8798.08 Political Affairs: Citizenship .............................................................. 8798.1 Political Affairs: Executive Branch of Government .......................... 8

Reel 6798.1 Political Affairs: Executive Branch of Government cont. ................. 9

Reel 7798.1 Political Affairs: Executive Branch of Government cont. ................. 9798.2 Political Affairs: Legislative Branch of Government ......................... 12798.3 Political Affairs: Judicial Branch of Government .............................. 13798.5 National Defense Affairs .................................................................. 13

Reels 8–9798.5 National Defense Affairs cont. .......................................................... 15

Reel 10798.5 National Defense Affairs cont. .......................................................... 22

Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs

898.00 Economic Matters ............................................................................ 25

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Reels 11–12898.00 Economic Matters cont. ................................................................... 26

Reel 13898.00 Economic Matters cont. ................................................................... 34898.10 Financial Matters .............................................................................. 36

Reel 14898.10 Financial Matters cont. ..................................................................... 38

Reel 15898.10 Financial Matters cont. ..................................................................... 44898.20 Agriculture ........................................................................................ 45

Reel 16898.20 Agriculture cont. ............................................................................... 48

Reel 17898.30 Manufacturers; Manufacturing .......................................................... 53898.40 Social Matters .................................................................................. 55

Reel 18898.40 Social Matters cont. .......................................................................... 56898.50 Public Order, Safety, and Health ...................................................... 58

Communications; Transportation; Science

998.00 Communications............................................................................... 59998.10 Postal ................................................................................................ 59998.30 Telephone ......................................................................................... 59998.40 Radio; Radiobroadcasting ................................................................ 59998.50 Television ......................................................................................... 59998.60 Public Press ..................................................................................... 59

Reel 19998.60 Public Press cont. ............................................................................ 60998.70 Transportation .................................................................................. 62998.80 Science............................................................................................. 63

International Political Relations; Bilateral Treaties—Indonesia

698.00 Political Relations between Indonesia and Other Countries ............ 63698.93 Political Relations between Indonesia and China ............................. 64

Reel 20

International Political Relations; Bilateral Treaties—U.S.–Indonesia

611.98 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia ......................... 64

Subject Index ............................................................................................................ 69

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INTRODUCTION

Internal AffairsAlthough Indonesia was finally independent, the society remained deeply divided

by ethnic, regional, class, and religious differences. Its unitary political system, asdefined by a provisional constitution adopted by the legislature on August 14, 1950,was a parliamentary democracy: governments were responsible to a unicameralHouse of Representatives elected directly by the people. Achmed Sukarno becamepresident under the new system.

There was little in the diverse cultures of Indonesia or their historical experience toprepare Indonesians for democracy. The Dutch had done practically nothing toprepare the colony for self-government. The Japanese had espoused anauthoritarian state, based on collectivist and ethnic nationalist ideas, and these ideasfound a ready reception in leaders like Sukarno. Outside of a small number of urbanareas, the people still lived in a cultural milieu that stressed status hierarchies andobedience to authority, a pattern that was most widespread in Java but not limited toit. Powerful Islamic and leftist currents were also far from democratic. Conditionswere exacerbated by economic disruption, the wartime and postwar devastation ofvital industries, unabated population growth, and resultant food shortages. By themid-1950s, the country’s prospects for democratization were indeed grim.

Given its central role in the National Revolution, the military became deeplyinvolved in politics. This emphasis was, after all, in line with what was laterenunciated as its dwifungsi, or dual function, role of national defense and nationaldevelopment. The military was not, however, a unified force, reflecting instead thefractures of the society as a whole and its own historical experiences. In the early1950s, the highest-ranking military officers, the so-called “technocratic” faction,planned to demobilize many of the military’s 200,000 men in order to promote betterdiscipline and modernization. Most affected were less-educated veteran officers ofPeta and other military units organized during the Japanese and revolutionaryperiods. The veterans sought, and gained, the support of parliamentary politicians.This support prompted senior military officers to organize demonstrations in Jakartaand to pressure Sukarno to dissolve parliament on October 17, 1952. Sukarnorefused. Instead, he began encouraging war veterans to oppose their militarysuperiors, and the army chief of staff, Sumatran Colonel Abdul Haris Nasution, wasobliged to resign in a Sukarno-induced shake-up of military commands.

Independent Indonesia’s first general election took place on September 29, 1955. Itinvolved a universal adult franchise, and almost 38 million people participated.Sukarno’s PNI won a slim plurality with the largest number of votes, 22.3 percent,and fifty-seven seats in the House of Representatives. Masyumi, which operated asa political party during the parliamentary era, won 20.9 percent of the vote and fifty-seven seats; the Nahdatul Ulama, which had split off from Masyumi in 1952, won18.4 percent of the vote and forty-five seats. The Communist PKI made an

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impressive showing, obtaining 16.4 percent of the vote and thirty-nine seats, a resultthat apparently reflected its appeal among the poorest people; the IndonesianSocialist Party (PSI) won 2 percent of the vote and five seats. The followingDecember, the long-awaited Constituent Assembly was elected to draft a constitutionto replace the provisional constitution of 1950. The membership was largely thesame as the DPR. The assembly convened in November 1956 but becamedeadlocked over issues such as the Pancasila as the state ideology and wasdissolved in 1959.

The PNI, PKI, and Nahdatul Ulama were strongest among Javanese voters,whereas Masyumi gained its major support from voters outside Java. No singlegroup, or stable coalition of groups, was strong enough to provide nationalleadership, however. The result was chronic instability, reflected in six cabinetchanges between 1950 and 1957, that eroded the foundations of the parliamentarysystem.

In the eastern archipelago and Sumatra, military officers established their ownsatrapies, often reaping large profits from smuggling. Nasution, reappointed andworking in cooperation with Sukarno, issued an order in 1955 transferring theseofficers out of their localities. The result was an attempted coup d’état launchedduring October–November 1956. Although the coup failed, the instigators wentunderground, and military officers in some parts of Sumatra seized control of civiliangovernments in defiance of Jakarta. In March 1957, Lieutenant Colonel H. N. V.Sumual, commander of the East Indonesia Military Region based in Ujungpandang,issued a Universal Struggle Charter (Permesta) calling for “completion of theIndonesian revolution.” Moreover, the Darul Islam movement, originally based inWest Java, had spread to Aceh and southern Sulawesi. The Republic of Indonesiawas falling apart, testimony in the eyes of Sukarno and Nasution that theparliamentary system was unworkable.

Sukarno had long been impatient with party politics and suggested in a speech onOctober 28, 1956, that they be discarded. Soon after, he introduced the concept of“Guided Democracy.” Although the concept was new in name, its various themeshad been part of the president’s thinking since before the war. In the first years ofindependence, his freedom of action had been limited by parliamentary institutions.But on March 14, 1957, the liberal phase of Indonesian history was brought to an endwith Sukarno’s proclamation of martial law. In an unstable and ultimately catastrophiccoalition with the army and the PKI, he sought to rescue the fragile unity of thearchipelago.

The year witnessed the move of the PKI to the center of the political stage. Inprovincial elections held in July 1957 in Jawa Barat and Jawa Tengah Provinces, thePKI won 34 percent of the vote, ahead of the other major parties—the PNI, NahdatulUlama, and Masyumi—although Masyumi defeated the PKI narrowly in Jawa TimurProvince. The PKI’s success was attributable to superior grassroots organization,the popular appeal of its demand for land reform, and its support for Sukarno’sGuided Democracy idea. As tensions between the republic and the Netherlands overWest New Guinea grew, PKI–controlled unions led a movement to nationalize Dutch-owned firms: on December 3, 1957, the Royal Packetship Company (KPM), whichcontrolled most of the archipelago’s shipping, was seized and, two days later, sowas Royal Dutch Shell. Some 46,000 Dutch nationals were expelled from Indonesia,and Nasution ordered officers of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Indonesia(ABRI), which had been involved in economic affairs since the late 1940s, to take a

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role in managing nationalized firms. This action marked the beginning of the armedforces’ role in the economy, a role that grew substantially in later years. Control ofthe oil industry was seized by ABRI, and Colonel Ibnu Sutowo, Nasution’s deputy,was placed in charge of a new national oil company, Permina.

On December 1, 1956, Mohammad Hatta had resigned as vice president in protestagainst Sukarno’s growing authoritarianism. Hatta’s exit from the political scene didnot improve the relations among the central government, Sumatra, and the easternarchipelago, where Hatta was very popular. On February 10, 1958, when Sukarnowas out of the country, a group of Sumatran military officers, Masyumi politicians,and others sent an ultimatum to Jakarta demanding Sukarno’s return to a figureheadrole as president and the formation of a new government under Hatta andYogyakarta sultan Hamengkubuwona IX. Five days later, the group proclaimed theRevolutionary Government of the Indonesian Republic (PRRI). On February 17,Permesta rebels in Sulawesi made common cause with them. Although the rebellionwas not completely suppressed until 1961, decisive action by the military hadneutralized it by mid-1958. There were several important consequences: the forcedretirement of many officers from Sumatra and the eastern archipelago, making theofficer corps proportionately more Javanese (and presumably more loyal toSukarno); the firm implantation of central authority in the Outer Islands; and theemergence of Nasution, promoted to lieutenant general, as the most powerful militaryleader. But the army’s victory in suppressing regional rebellion caused Sukarnodismay. To offset the military’s power, Sukarno’s ties with the PKI grew closer.

The PRRI revolt also soured Sukarno’s relations with the United States. Heaccused Washington of supplying the rebels with arms and angrily rejected a U.S.proposal that marines be landed in the Sumatra oil-producing region to protectAmerican lives and property. The United States was providing clandestine aid to therebels and Allen Pope, an American B-25 pilot, was shot down over Ambon on May18, 1958, creating an international incident. Deteriorating relations prompted Sukarnoto develop closer relations with the Soviet Union and, especially, the People’sRepublic of China.

In July 1958, Nasution suggested that the best way to achieve Guided Democracywas through reinstatement of the 1945 constitution with its strong “middle way,”presidential system. On July 5, 1959, Sukarno issued a decree to this effect,dissolving the old House of Representatives. This marked the formal establishmentof the period of Guided Democracy, which lasted six years. In March 1960, a newlegislature, the House of People’s Representatives–Mutual Self-help (DPR–GR;later, simply DPR) was established. One hundred fifty-four of its 238 seats weregiven to representatives of “functional groups,” including the military. All wereappointed rather than elected. As many as 25 percent of the seats were allocated forthe PKI. Another body, the 616-member Provisional People’s Consultative Assembly(MPRS; later, simply MPR), was established with Communist leader Dipa NusantaraAidit as deputy chairman. In August 1960, Masyumi and the PSI were declaredillegal, a reflection of their role in the PRRI insurrection, the MPRS’s enmity towardSukarno, and its refusal to recognize Guided Democracy.

During the Guided Democracy years, Sukarno played a delicate balancing act,drawing the armed forces and PKI into an uneasy coalition and playing them offagainst each other while largely excluding Islamic forces (especially modernists asrepresented by the prohibited Masyumi) from the central political arena. Two otherfeatures of his political strategy were an aggressive foreign policy, first against the

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Dutch over West New Guinea and then against the newly created state of Malaysia,and demagogic appeals to the masses. A flamboyant speaker, Sukarno spun outslogans and catchwords that became the nebulous basis of a national ideology. Oneof the most important formulas was Manipol–USDEK, introduced in 1960. Manipolwas the Political Manifesto set forth in Sukarno’s August 17, 1959, independenceday speech, and USDEK was an acronym for a collection of symbols: the 1945constitution, Indonesian Socialism, Guided Democracy, Guided Economy, andIndonesian Identity. Another important slogan was Nasakom, the synthesis ofnationalism, religion, and communism—symbolizing Sukarno’s attempt to secure acoalition of the PNI, the Nahdatul Ulama (but not Masyumi), and the PKI. In a mannerthat often bewildered foreign observers, Sukarno claimed to resolve the contradictionbetween religion and communism by pointing out that a commitment to “historicalmaterialism” did not necessarily entail belief in atheistic “philosophical materialism.”

Indonesia’s ailing economy grew worse as Sukarno ignored the recommendationsof technocrats and foreign aid donors, eyed overseas expansion, and built expensivepublic monuments and government buildings at home. In late 1960, an eight-yeareconomic plan was published, but with its eight volumes, seventeen parts, and 1,945clauses (representing the date independence was proclaimed: August 17, 1945), theplan seems to have been more an exercise in numerology than economic planning.Ordinary people suffered from hyperinflation and food shortages. Motivated by rivalrywith the pro-Beijing PKI and popular resentment of ethnic Chinese, the army backeda decree in November 1959 that prohibited Chinese from trading in rural areas. Some119,000 Chinese were subsequently repatriated, a policy that caused considerableeconomic disruption. Although Washington and the International Monetary Fund(IMF) sought to encourage rational economic policies, Sukarno resisted. A majorreason was that IMF recommendations would have alienated his millions of popularsupporters, especially those in the PKI.

PKI power in Java’s villages expanded through the early 1960s. In late 1963,following Sukarno’s call for implementation of land reform measures that had beenmade law in 1960, the PKI announced a policy of direct action and begandispossessing landlords and distributing the land to poor Javanese, northernSumatrans, and Balinese peasants. Reforms were not accomplished withoutviolence. Old rivalries between nominal Muslims, many of whom were PKIsupporters, and orthodox Muslims were exacerbated. The PKI membership rollstotaled 2 million, making it the world’s largest communist party in a noncommunistcountry. Affiliated union and peasant organizations had together as many as 9 millionmembers. PKI leader Aidit pursued his own foreign policy, aligning Indonesia withBeijing in the post-1960 Sino-Soviet conflict and gaining Chinese support for PKIdomestic policies, such as unilateral and reform actions. Some observers concludedthat by 1964 it appeared that a total Communist takeover was imminent.

Foreign AffairsThe international scene was, for Sukarno, a gigantic stage upon which a dramatic

confrontation between (as he termed them) the New Emerging Forces and OldEstablished Forces was played out in the manner of the wayang contest between thevirtuous Pandawas and the evil Kurawas. With the assistance and support of thePKI, Sukarno attempted to forge a “Jakarta–Phnom Penh–Beijing–Hanoi–Py’ngyangaxis” in order to combat Neocolonialism, Colonialism, and Imperialism (Nekolim).

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Although the Soviet Union was a major supplier of arms and economic aid, relationswith China through official and PKI channels were growing close.

Continued Dutch occupation of West New Guinea (West Irian) led to a break indiplomatic relations between Jakarta and The Hague in 1960. In December of thatyear, Sukarno established a special military unit, the Army Strategic ReserveCommand (Kostrad), also known as the Mandala Command, based inUjungpandang, to “recover” the territory. Full-scale war, however, was averted whena compromise was worked out under U.S. auspices in which West New Guinea wasfirst turned over to United Nations (UN) and then to Indonesian administration. TheUN replaced the Dutch on October 1, 1962, and in May 1963, Indonesian authoritywas established. The so-called Act of Free Choice, an unsanctioned andunmonitored referendum to discover whether the population, mostly Papuans living intribal communities, wanted to join the republic, was held in 1969. Community leadersrepresenting the various sectors of society were chosen by consensus at local levelmeetings and then met among themselves at the village, district, and provinciallevels to discuss affiliation. Only these community leaders could vote, and theyapproved incorporation unanimously. Criticism of the process by foreign observersand suspicions of pressure on the voting leaders threw its legitimacy into question.

Hostility to Malaysia, which was established on September 16, 1963, as a union ofstates of the Malay Peninsula, Singapore, and the North Borneo states of Sabah andSarawak, sprang from Sukarno’s belief that it would function as a base from whichNekolim forces could subvert the Indonesian revolution. Malaysia’s conservativeprime minister, Tengku Abdul Rahman, had agreed to the continued basing of Britisharmed forces in the country, and Sukarno could not forget that the government ofindependent Malaya had given assistance to the PRRI rebels in 1958. In the wake ofMalaysia’s creation, a wave of anti-Malaysian and anti-British demonstrations brokeout, resulting in the burning of the British embassy. PKI union workers seized Britishplantations and other enterprises, which were then turned over to the government.

On September 23, 1963, Sukarno, who had proclaimed himself president-for-life,declared that Indonesia must “gobble Malaysia raw.” Military units infiltratedMalaysian territory but were intercepted before they could establish contact withlocal dissidents. This action—known as Confrontation—soon involved Britain, theUnited States, the Soviet Union, and China.

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SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTEConfidential U.S. State Department Central Files, 1960–January 1963

The U.S. State Department Central Files are the definitive source of Americandiplomatic reporting on political, military, social, and economic developmentsthroughout the world in the twentieth century. Surpassing the scope of the StateDepartment’s Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS) series, the Central Filesprovide extensive coverage of all political, military, social, and economic mattersrelating to a particular country and/or world event.

The State Department Central Files for 1960–January 1963 cover a crucial periodin U.S. and world history. Each part of the 1960–January 1963 series contains awide range of primary materials: special reports and observations on political andmilitary affairs; studies and statistics on socioeconomic matters; interviews andminutes of meetings with U.S. and foreign government officials and leaders; legal andclaims documentation; full texts of important letters and cables sent and received byU.S. diplomats and embassy personnel; reports, news clippings, and translationsfrom journals and newspapers; and countless high-level/head of state governmentdocuments, including speeches, memoranda, official reports, aide-mémoire, andtranscripts of political meetings and assemblies.

In addition, these records offer new insights into the evolution of American foreignpolicy toward both allies and adversaries and into the shaping of the policies of thesecountries toward the United States. Of even greater importance for the study ofindividual countries is the comprehensive manner in which the Central Filesilluminate the internal affairs of foreign countries. There are thousands of pagesarranged topically and chronologically on crucial subjects: political parties, unrestand revolution, human rights, government administration, fiscal and monetary issues,labor, housing, police and crime, public health and works, national defense, militaryequipment and supplies, foreign policy making, wars and alliances, education,religion, culture, trade, industry, and natural resources. On these subjects and more,the Central Files offer authoritative, in-depth, and timely documentation and analysis.

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SOURCE NOTE

Microfilmed from the holdings of the National Archives, College Park, MD, RecordGroup 59: Records of the Department of State, Central Decimal Files, decimalnumbers 798, 898, and 998 (Indonesia internal affairs) and decimal numbers 698 and611.98 (Indonesia foreign affairs) for the period 1960–January 1963. All availableoriginal documents have been microfilmed.

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ORGANIZATION OF THEU.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE

DECIMAL FILING SYSTEM

From 1910 to 1963 the Department of State used a decimal classification systemto organize its Central Files. This system assembled and arranged individualdocuments according to their subject, with each subject having a specific decimalcode. The decimal system from 1950 to January 1963 consists of ten primaryclassifications numbered 0 through 9, each covering a broad subject area.

CLASS 0: Miscellaneous.

CLASS 1: Administration of the United States Government.

CLASS 2: Protection of Interests (Persons and Property).

CLASS 3: International Conferences, Congresses, Meetings, and Organizations.

CLASS 4: International Trade and Commerce. Trade Relations, Customs Administration.

CLASS 5: International Informational and Educational Relations. Cultural Affairs. Psychological Warfare.

CLASS 6: International Political Relations. Bilateral Treaties.

CLASS 7: Internal Political and National Defense Affairs.

CLASS 8: Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs.

CLASS 9: Other Internal Affairs. Communications. Transportation. Science.

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Internal AffairsFor this section of the U.S. State Department Central Files, University Publications

of America (UPA) has microfilmed the documents contained in Classes 7, 8, and 9.Within these classes each subject is defined by a decimal file number. The decimalfile number is followed by a slant mark (/). The number after the slant mark (/) refersto the date on which the document was generated. Documents within each decimalfile number are arranged in chronological order. The entire decimal file number isstamped on the right side of the first page of every document.

These classes are concerned almost exclusively with the internal matters ofindividual countries. The class number (7, 8, or 9) is followed by the country number.The number following the decimal point indicates subtopics within the majorclassifications. The date after the slant mark (/) identifies the individual document.

In a small number of instances, documents were assigned erroneous orincomplete decimal numbers. UPA has included, in brackets, corrected decimalentries. In addition, misfiled decimal number documents have also been included inbrackets.

798.13/6-162 indicates a document dated June 1, 1962, relating to the cabinet ofthe executive branch of government (13) in Indonesia (98).

CLASS 7. Example, 798.13/6-162

798.13/6-162 Document Date—June 1, 1962

Country Number—Indonesia

Class of Records—Internal Political and

National Defense Affairs

Subject—Executive Branch ofGovernment—Cabinet; Ministry

898.411/1-460 indicates a document dated January 4, 1960, relating to raceproblems (411) in Indonesia (98).

CLASS 8. Example, 898.411/1-460

898.411/1-460 Document Date—January 4, 1960

Country Number—Indonesia

Class of Records—Internal Economic, Industrial,and Social Affairs

Subject—Social Matters:People—Race Problems

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Note: For the convenience of the researcher, wherever a specific classificationnumber totals more than one hundred pages, a breakdown of the material by monthand year is provided. Where applicable, major subjects have been included with themonth and year breakdown.

Foreign AffairsFor this section of the U.S. State Department Central Files, UPA has microfilmed

the documents contained in Class 6. Within this class, each subject is defined by adecimal file number. The decimal file number is followed by a slant mark (/). Thenumber after the slant mark(/) refers to the date on which the document wasgenerated. Documents within each decimal file number are arranged in chronologicalorder. The entire decimal file number is stamped on the right side of the first page ofevery document.

In this publication, records classified 698 deal with the foreign policy of Indonesiaand its political relations with other nations. Due to the State Department’sarrangement of these records, countries assigned numbers below 98 will not befound in this file. UPA, however, has included files dealing with the political relationsbetween the United States (country number 11) and Indonesia (98) in thispublication. In order to find the political relations between Indonesia and countriesother than the United States that have a number lower than 98, the researchershould check the Class 6 records for that country. These records can be foundeither at the National Archives, College Park, Maryland, or, for many countries, inmicroform publications that UPA has made available for libraries.

In a small number of instances, documents were assigned erroneous orincomplete decimal numbers. UPA has included, in brackets, corrected decimalentries. In addition, misfiled decimal number documents have also been included inbrackets.

998.40/4-1161 indicates a document dated April 11, 1961, relating to radio (40) inIndonesia (98).

CLASS 9. Example, 998.40/4-1161

998.40/4-1161 Document Date—April 11, 1961

Country Number—Indonesia

Class of Records—Communications;Transportation; Science

Subject—Radio; Radiobroadcasting [General]

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698.00/11-2061 indicates a document dated November 20, 1961, relating to thebilateral relations between Indonesia (98) and other countries (general) (00).

CLASS 6. Example, 698.00/11-2062

698.00/11-2061 Document Date—November20, 1961

Country Number—Indonesia

Class of Records—International PoliticalRelations; Bilateral Treaties

Subject—Other countries

611.98/10-260 indicates a document dated October 2, 1960, relating to the bilateralrelations between the United States of America (11) and Indonesia (98).

Note: For the convenience of the researcher, wherever a specific classificationnumber totals more than one hundred pages, a breakdown of the material by monthand year is provided. Where applicable, major subjects have been included with themonth and year breakdown.

CLASS 6. Example, 611.98/10-260

611.98/10-260 Document Date—October 2, 1960

Country Number—United States

Class of Records—International PoliticalRelations; Bilateral Treaties

Subject—Indonesia

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NUMERICAL LIST OFCOUNTRY NUMBERS

00 THE WORLD (Universe)01 Outer Space (Aerosphere)01a Moon02 Antarctic03 Arctic10 THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE11 United States11a Hawaii (Ocean or Kuré Islands and Palmyra Island)11b U.S. Possessions in the Pacific Ocean11c Puerto Rico11d Guam11e American Samoa (Tutuila, Manua Islands, etc.)11f Canal Zone (Panama Canal Zone), Perido, Naos, Culebra, and

Flamenco Islands11g Virgin Islands of the U.S. (St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas)11h Wake Island12 Mexico13 CENTRAL AMERICA14 Guatemala15 Honduras16 El Salvador17 Nicaragua18 Costa Rica19 Panama20 SOUTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA (South of the Rio Grande River)21 Colombia22 Ecuador (Galapagos Islands)23 Peru24 Bolivia25 Chile31 Venezuela32 Brazil33 Uruguay34 Paraguay

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35 Argentina36 WEST INDIAN REPUBLICS37 Cuba, including Isle of Pines38 Haiti39 Dominican Republic40 EUROPE40a Ireland (Eire) (Irish Free State)40b Iceland41 Great Britain, United Kingdom41a Northern Ireland41b British possessions in the Western Hemisphere (except Canada)41c British Honduras41d British Guiana41e British West Indies (includes 41f–41j)41f The West Indies (Federation of British Colonies in the Caribbean)41g Bahamas41h Bermuda41j Virgin Islands41r Falkland Islands41s South Orkney Islands (South Georgia, South Orkneys, and South

Sandwich Islands)41t South Shetland Islands42 Canada (including Newfoundland and Labrador)43 Australia44 New Zealand (Cook Islands, Kermad Islands, and Union Islands

[Tokela])45 British Territories in Africa45a Union of South Africa (Cape of Good Hope, Transvaal, Orange Free

State, Natal)45b British South Africa (45c–45f)45c Rhodesia (Mashonaland, Matabeleland, and Nyasaland Federation)45d Basutoland45e Bechuanaland45f Swaziland45g British West Africa45h Nigeria (including that portion of the Cameroons under British

Protectorate)45j Ghana (see 79)45m Sierra Leone45n Gambia45p British East Africa45r Kenya Colony45s Uganda45t Zanzibar45u Somaliland (protectorate)45w Sudan45x British Southwest Africa (formerly German Southwest Africa)46 British territories in Asia46a Andaman and Nicobar Islands

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46b Laccadive Islands46c Aden Colony and Protectorate (Hadhramaut, Kamaran, Perim,

Socotra, Abdul Quiri, and Kuria Muria Islands)46d Bahrein Islands46e Ceylon46f Singapore (Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean)46g Hong Kong46h British Borneo (North Borneo, Brunei, and Sarawak)46j Republic of the Maldive Islands46k Fiji46m Papua (formerly British New Guinea)46n Pacific Islands, including Tonga (Friendly), Cocos (Isla de Cocos),

Labuan, Solomon, Pitcairn, Gilbert Islands, Ellice Islands, and Britishinterest in Christmas Island, Phoenix, and Keeling Islands

47 British territories in Mediterranean47a Gibraltar47b Malta47c Cyprus47d St. Helena and dependencies (Diego Alvarez, Gough,

Inaccessible, and Nightingale Islands)47e Tristan da Cunha47f Ascension Island47g Seychelles47h Mauritius48 Poland (including Danzig)49 Czechoslovakia50 WESTERN CONTINENTAL EUROPE50a Luxembourg50b Monaco50c Andorra50d San Marino50f Liechtenstein50g Free Territory of Trieste (FTT)51 France (including Corsica)51a St. Pierre and Miquelon51b Martinique51c Guadeloupe and dependencies (Marie Galante, Les Saintes,

Desirade, St. Barthelemy and St. Martin) (French West Indies,collectively)

51d French Guiana (Cayenne) Inini51e French colonies in America51f French India51g Indochina51h Cambodia51j Laos51k Vietnam51m New Caledonia and dependencies (Isle of Pines, Loyalty Islands,

Huon Islands, Chesterfield Islands, Wallis Archipelago)51n Society Islands (Tahiti, Moorea-Morea; Leeward Island-Iles Sous-le-

Vent)

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51p Lesser groups (Tuamotu-Tumotu or Low Archipelago; GambierArchipelago; Marquesas; Tubuai Archipelago-Austral Islands)

51r New Hebrides51s Algeria51t French West Africa and the Sahara (Senegal, French Guinea, Ivory

Coast, Dahomey, French Sudan, Upper Senegal, and the Niger;Mauritania and Dakar), Togo

51u French Equatorial Africa (French Congo) (Gabun-Gabon; MiddleCongo-Moyen Congo; Ubanga Shari-Oubangui Chari; and Chad-Tchad; Brazzaville); Cameroun

51v French Somali Coast and dependencies (Somali Coast); Djibouti,Issa-Somalis; Dankali, Adaels, Ouemas, and Debenehs

51w Madagascar51x Other African Islands (Mayotte, Comoro, Reunion, Amsterdam, St.

Paul Marion, Crozet, and Kerguelen)51y French possessions and protectorates in Oceania and Eastern

Pacific (Australasia and Oceania)52 Spain52a Canary Islands52b Spanish possessions in Africa52c Rio de Oro and Adrar (Western Sahara)52d Rio Muni and Cape San Juan (Spanish Guinea)52e Fernando Po, Annobon, Corisco, and Elobey Islands52f Tetuan and Ceuta; Gomera, Alhucemas, Melilla52g Balearic Islands53 Portugal53a Madeira53b Azores53c Mozambique53d Portuguese India (Goa, Damao, Diu)53e Macao (Macau)53f Timor53g Cape Verde Islands (Santo Antão, São Nicolau, São Vicente, Fogo,

Santiago, Boa Vista, Sal Santa, Luzia, Branco, Raso, Maio, Brava,Rei, and Rombo)

53h Portuguese Guinea (Guinea Coast), Bijagoz Islands, and BolamaIsland

53k São Thomé (São Tomé) and Principe53m Ladana and Cabinda53n Angola (Portuguese West Africa), Congo, Loanda, Benguella,

Mossamedes, Huilla, and Lunda53p Portuguese East Africa54 Switzerland55 Belgium55a Belgian Congo (Belgian Kongo)56 Netherlands56a Surinam (Netherlands Guiana)56b Netherlands Antilles (formerly Netherlands West Indies) (Curaçao,

Bonaire, Aruba, St. Martin, St. Eustatius, Saba)

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56c Miscellaneous Islands (Riau-Lingga Archipelago, Bangka-Banca;Billiton, Molucca, Timor Archipelago, Bai and Lombok, NetherlandsNew Guinea, or Western New Guinea)

56d Indonesia56f Sumatra57 Norway57a Scandinavia (57, 58, 59, 60e)57b Spitsbergen (Spitzbergen)57c Lapland (Parts of 57, 58, 60e, 61)58 Sweden59 Denmark59a Greenland59b Faeroe (Faroe) or Sheep Islands60 EASTERN CONTINENTAL EUROPE (including Balkans, 67, 68, 69,

81, and European part of 82)60a Baltic States60b Esthonia60c Latvia60d Lithuania60e Finland (Aland Islands)61 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics61a Bessarabia61b Ukraine61c Sakhalin Island (Russian portion)62 Germany62a Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) (Saar)62b Russian Zone (East Germany)62c Polish Administration63 Austria64 Hungary65 Italy65a Vatican City66 Rumania (Roumania)67 Albania68 Yugoslavia69 Bulgaria70 AFRICA (For Belgian possessions, see 55a) (For British

possessions, see 45) (For French possessions, see 51s, etc.)70a Mediterranean countries (General)70b Republic of Guinea (see 79)70g Congo Republic70x Republic of South Africa71 Morocco72 Tunisia73 Tripoli (Libya or Libia), Barca, Misurata, Benghazi, Derna, Cyrenaica74 Egypt (see 86b)75 Ethiopia (Hamara, Galla, and Harar)75a Eritrea76 Liberia

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77 Trust Territory of Somaliland78 Tanganyika Territory (Ruanda-Urundi), formerly German East Africa79 West African states (includes 45j and 70b)80 NEAR EAST81 Greece81a Crete81b Samos82 Turkey83 Syria (see 86b)83a Lebanon (Levant States)84 Palestine84a Israel85 Jordan (Hashemite Jordan Kingdom) (formerly Trans-Jordan)86 Arabia (Arab League) (United Arab states, includes 86b and 86h)86a Saudia Arabia (Kingdom of Hejas and Nejd)86b United Arab Republic (includes 74 and 83)86d Kuwait86e Muscat and Oman86f Qatar86g Trucial Sheikhs86h Yemen87 Iraq (Mesopotamia)88 Iran (Persia)89 Afghanistan90 FAR EAST (including all of Asia)90a Bhutan90b Burma90c Nepal90d Pakistan (Baluchistan)91 India92 Thailand (Siam)93 China93a Manchuria93b Tibet94 Japan94a Formosa (Taiwan)94b Sakhalin Island (Japanese portion)94c Ryukyu Islands (Okinawa), Nampo Islands (Bonin, Volcano, and

Marcus)95 Korea95a North Korea95b South Korea96 Philippine Republic97 Malaya (Federation of Malaya comprises the states Pahang, Perak,

Negri Sembilan, Selangor, Johore, Kedah, Perlis, Kelantan,Trengganu, and the settlements Malacca and Penang) (includesProvince of Wellesley)

98 Republic of Indonesia (Java, Sumatra, Borneo, Celebes)

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99 Pacific Islands (Mandated), New Guinea, Bismarck Archipelago,Solomon Islands (Bougainville, Baku), Marshall Islands, Nauru,Caroline Islands, Pelew (Palau) Islands, Marianna Islands (LadroneIslands), Samoa (Samoan Islands, Western Samoa), Savaii, Upolu

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CALTEX California Texas Oil CompanyGASBIINDO Gabungan Serikat Buruh Islam Indonesia

(Indonesian Federation of Moslem Trade Unions)ICFTU International Confederation of Free Trade UnionsIFPAAW International Federation of Plantation, Agricultural,

and Allied WorkersKBKI Konsentrasi Buruh Inspeksi Pendidikan

(Concentration of Democratic Indonesian Workers)KMT KuomintangNATO North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationOPPI (Indonesian Organization of Workers’ Unions)PERBUM Persatuan Buruh Minjak (Oil Workers’ Trade

Union)PERTAMIN Indonesian State Oil Mining CompanyPIA Persbiro Indonesia (Indonesian Press Bureau)PKI Partai Komunis Indonesia (Indonesian Communist

Party)PRC People’s Republic of ChinaSEATO Southeast Asia Treaty OrganizationSOBSI Sentral Organisasi Buruh Seluruh Indonesia (All-

Indonesia Federation of Labour Unions)SOKSI Sentral Organisasi Karyawan Socialist Indonesia

(Central Organization of Indonesian SocialistWorkers)

STANVAC Standard Oil Vacuum CompanyUSIS United States Information ServiceUSSR Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

ACRONYM LIST

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1

REEL INDEX

Reel 1 Internal Political and National Defense Affairs

Frame No. File Subject 798.00 Political Affairs [General] 0001 January 1960

Military role in government; Kalimantan transmigration program; political manifesto; creation of People’s Consultative Congress; presidential powers; political party activities; State of Emergency laws.

0136 February 1960

Political situation in West and South Kalimantan; kidnappings of rubber company employees and raids on U.S.–owned rubber plantations; cabinet reorganization; proclamation of United Indonesian Republic; political party activities; arrests of military officers; report on leadership patterns.

0257 March 1960

West Irian dispute; political party activities; cabinet reorganization; Nikita Khrushchev visit; Sukarno dissolves parliament; Indonesian Air Force plane attacks presidential palace; raids on U.S.– owned rubber plantations; All Indonesian Youth Congress.

0447 April 1960

Subversive activities by rebel military units; National Front program and organization; establishment and objectives of Federal Republic of Indonesia; speeches by Sukarno; political party activities; government regulations on presidential succession; Democratic League; overseas Chinese issue.

0616 May 1960

Political party activities; Democratic League; trials of rebels; report entitled “Observations and Reflections of Indonesia in Transition”; article by Mohammad Hatta.

0796 June 1960

Trials of rebels; Democratic League; political party activities; Communist activities.

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0919 July 1960

West Irian dispute; SEATO cooperation with rebels; political party activities; Dutch exodus from Indonesia; PRC propaganda campaign against government.

Reel 2 Internal Political and National Defense Affairs cont.

798.00 Political Affairs [General] cont. 0001 July 1960 cont.

Trials of rebels; political forces in Timor; political party activities; Communist propaganda.

0026 August 1960

Democratic League propaganda; confrontation between PKI Party and government; Communist activities; political party activities; West Irian dispute; proposed ban of dissident political parties; National Front activities.

0158 September 1960

Army-Sukarno confrontation; proposed ban on dissident political parties; political party activities; National Front Central Board membership; rebel attacks on U.S.–owned rubber plantations.

0280 October 1960

Temporary ban on political activities; composition of Provisional People’s Consultative Congress; strengthening of protection for U.S.–owned rubber plantations; army’s role in Indonesian politics; ban on dissident political parties; Communist activities; West Irian dispute.

0356 November 1960

Provisional People’s Consultative Congress members; relationship between army and noncommunist political groups; political party activities; confrontation between PKI Party and the army.

0423 December 1960

Rebel activities; political party activities; politics and education at University of North Sumatra; status of Chinese in Timor; Communist activities; establishment of enterprise councils; possible inclusion of PKI Party members in cabinet; eight year plan.

0536 January 1961

Political party activities; Communist activities; opposition to Sukarno; National Front; West Irian dispute; Provisional People’s Consultative Congress operations and members.

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0678 February 1961 Political party activities; Provisional People’s Consultative Congress; Communist activities; National Front; West Irian dispute; anti-American demonstrations; Indonesian Women’s Congress.

0798 March 1961

Overseas Chinese issue; political party activities; ban on Democratic League; rebel activities; political forces in Bali; National Front; army cooperation with noncommunist political parties.

0886 April 1961

Rebel activities; West Irian dispute; National Front; political party activities; Communist activities.

Reel 3 Internal Political and National Defense Affairs cont.

798.00 Political Affairs [General] cont. 0001 May 1961

Surrender of rebel forces; West Irian dispute; National Front regional board members and operations; Body for Development of Working Potential activities; political party activities; Association of Southeast Asian States.

0093 June 1961

Communist activities; West Irian dispute; corruption in Sumatra; overseas Chinese issue; rebel activities in Celebes and Sumatra; political activities on Lombok; political party activities.

0189 July 1961

Surrender of rebels in Sumatra; Communist activities; corruption in the military; political party activities; role of women in developing Asian nations; First Minister Djuanda’s report to parliament; changes in election law; West Irian dispute; political forces on Sumbawa.

0305 August 1961

Sukarno calls for cooperation with PKI Party; Communist activities; surrender of rebels in Sumatra; political party activities; West Irian dispute.

0363 September 1961

Surrender of rebel forces; overseas Chinese issue; U.S. aid to Indonesia; Communist activities; amnesty for rebels; political party activities; cabinet reorganization.

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0443 October 1961 Amnesty for rebels; West Irian dispute; election law; collapse of rebellion in Sumatra; Communist activities.

0500 November 1961

Community development program; Indonesian Peace Committee appeal; political party activities; Communist activities; economic problems.

0560 December 1961

Communist activities; possible cabinet changes; political party activities; political conditions on Atjeh and Madura; West Irian dispute.

0611 January 1962

Communist activities; National Front organization; West Irian dispute; possible cabinet changes.

0672 February 1962

Overseas Chinese issue; Communist activities; West Irian dispute. 0717 March 1962

Communist activities; arrests of antigovernment leaders; cabinet reorganization; West Irian dispute; political party activities.

0815 April 1962

Communist activities; West Irian dispute; Indonesia Party disunity; election law.

0871 May 1962

Communist activities; political party activities; corruption in the military; election law; West Irian dispute; arrests of antigovernment leaders; cabinet reorganization.

0949 June 1962

Composition of Election Commission; Communist activities; West Irian dispute.

Reel 4 Internal Political and National Defense Affairs cont.

798.00 Political Affairs [General] cont. 0001 July 1962

Communist activities; election law; political party activities; West Irian dispute.

0062 August 1962

Communist activities; regulations on political activities; West Irian dispute; speech by Sukarno.

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0200 September 1962

Demonstrations at Indian consulate; Communist activities; U.S. action program; propaganda attacks on Peace Corps; Soviet and U.S. military aid.

0253 October 1962

Communist activities; corruption; National Front; West Irian dispute; rebel activities.

0335 November 1962

U-2 flights over Indonesia; political party activities; attack on U.S. consulate in Surabaya; Communist activities.

0414 December 1962

Political party activities; election law; Communist activities; West Irian dispute.

0502 January 1963

Political party activities; regulation of friendship associations; cabinet changes; demonstrations in Djakarta; U.S.–British–Australian–New Zealand security talks regarding Indonesia; political conditions in Sulawesi; election law.

0701 798.00 May Day Political Affairs: May Day 798.00(W) Political Affairs: Weeka Reports

[Weekly reports on Indonesian political, military, and economic affairs.]

0717 January 1960 0769 February 1960 0794 March 1960 0824 April 1960 0864 May 1960 0898 June 1960 0935 July 1960 0974 August 1960 0984 September 1960

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Reel 5 Internal Political and National Defense Affairs cont.

798.00(W) Political Affairs: Weeka Reports cont.

[Weekly reports on Indonesian political, military, and economic affairs.]

0001 October 1960 0024 November 1960 0034 December 1960 0064 January 1961 0085 February 1961 0113 March 1961 0134 April 1961 0153 May 1961 0171 June 1961 0196 July 1961 0217 August 1961 0232 September 1961 0260 October 1961 0271 November 1961 0275 December 1961 0291 January 1962 0308 February 1962 0321 March 1962 0346 April 1962 0358 May 1962 0374 June 1962 0394 July 1962

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0412 August 1962 0433 September 1962 0455 October 1962 0465 November 1962 0477 December 1962 0489 January 1963 798.001 Political Affairs: Communism

[PKI Party operations.] 0504 February 1960

Publications; PKI Sixth National Congress. 0605 March 1960

Islam as anticommunist force; Indonesian Peace Committee. 0612 April 1960

Communist “shadow cabinet.” 0619 May 1960 0630 June 1960

Trial of Communist terrorists. 0632 July 1960

Demand for seizure of U.S.–owned enterprises. 0637 August 1960 0645 October 1960 0646 December 1960 0648 January 1961

Factors for growth of Communist influence. 0667 February 1961 0668 March 1961

Demonstrations in Medan. 0672 April 1961 0673 May 1961 0677 June 1961

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0684 October 1961 0687 November 1961 0688 December 1961 0710 January 1963 0714 798.003 Political Affairs: Socialism 0717 798.0111 Political Affairs: Agents—in the U.S. 0718 798.0111 Political Affairs: Agents—Immunities; Privileges: in the U.S. 0728 798.02 Political Affairs: Government 0729 798.022 Political Affairs: Government—Territory 0813 798.03 Political Affairs: Constitution 0821 798.04 Political Affairs: Flag 0822 798.06 [898.06 Economic Matters: Labor] 0824 798.062 [898.062 Economic Matters: Labor—Unions] 0829 798.08 Political Affairs: Citizenship 0837 798.081 Political Affairs: Citizenship—Passports 0840 798.1 Political Affairs: Executive Branch of Government 798.11 Political Affairs: Executive Branch of Government—Chief Executive

[Sukarno travel schedule; speeches.] 0843 January 1960 0865 February 1960 0885 March 1960 0915 April 1960

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Reel 6 Internal Political and National Defense Affairs cont.

798.11 Political Affairs: Executive Branch of Government—Chief Executive

cont. [Sukarno travel schedule; speeches.] 0001 May 1960 0060 June 1960 0086 July 1960 0130 August 1960 0232 September 1960 0288 October 1960 0331 November 1960 0339 December 1960 0340 January 1961 0343 February 1961 0389 March 1961 0446 April 1961 0618 May 1961 0805 June 1961 0867 July 1961 0897 August 1961 0976 September 1961

Reel 7 Internal Political and National Defense Affairs cont.

798.11 Political Affairs: Executive Branch of Government—Chief Executive

cont. [Sukarno travel schedule; speeches.] 0001 September 1961 cont. 0023 October 1961

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0041 November 1961 0046 December 1961 0067 January 1962 0102 February 1962 0112 March 1962 0124 April 1962 0137 May 1962 0161 June 1962 0176 July 1962 0198 August 1962 0207 September 1962 0232 October 1962 0247 November 1962 0277 December 1962 0290 January 1963 0301 798.111 Political Affairs: Executive Branch of Government—Chief Executive:

Governors of Districts 798.13 Political Affairs: Executive Branch of Government—Cabinet; Ministry

[Cabinet changes.] 0321 January 1960

Parliamentary committees; Indonesian Atomic Energy Council; Attorney General’s Office reorganization; Department of Information organizational framework.

0334 February 1960

Formation of Department of National Guidance. 0338 April 1960 0343 May 1960

Lists of cabinet ministers. 0373 July 1960

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0378 August 1960 Ministry of Religion organizational structure.

0383 September 1960 0384 October 1960 0385 November 1960 0387 December 1960 0389 March 1961

Establishment of Institute of International Affairs; probability of Communist control of Film Censorship Board; establishment of Department for Institutes of Higher Learning and Science.

0395 April 1961

Communist control of Film Censorship Board; list of Department of Foreign Affairs officials.

0405 May 1961 0407 June 1961 0414 July 1961 0421 August 1961 0426 September 1961

Anti-Western bias of Ministers of Education. 0439 October 1961 0451 November 1961

Disposal of surplus rubber from national stockpile; Djuanda resumes duties as first minister; parliamentary criticism of cabinet ministers.

0462 December 1961 0465 January 1962

List of Department of Foreign Affairs officials. 0471 February 1962 0472 March 1962 0493 April 1962

Indonesian Council for Sciences.

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0502 May 1962 Changes in Department of Foreign Affairs organization; dissolution of the Body for Supervising Activity of the State Apparatus.

0514 June 1962

Unification of Departments of Agriculture and Agrarian Affairs. 0525 August 1962

Economic development plans. 0532 September 1962

Department of National Research; waste and corruption in armed forces.

0540 October 1962 0548 November 1962 0558 January 1963

Proposed inclusion of PKI Party in cabinet. 0580 798.14 Political Affairs: Executive Branch of Government—Civil Service 0585 798.1614 [898.2614 Agriculture: Engineering—Public Works: Utilities] 0586 798.191DJ [898.191DJ Financial Matters: Industrial Matters—Expositions; Exhibitions:

Djakarta] 798.2 Political Affairs: Legislative Branch of Government 0586 February 1960 0594 March 1960

Democratic League activities; list of members of parliament. 0621 April 1960 0628 May 1960

Party voting strength in parliament. 0631 June 1960 0635 July 1960

Procedural rules. 0636 August 1960

Chairmen and deputy chairmen of parliamentary committees.

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0642 October 1960 Abolition of existing regional legislatures.

0644 January 1961

Membership in new North Sumatra regional legislature; appointment of parliamentary committees and commissions.

0652 March 1961

Membership in new East Java regional legislatures. 0691 May 1961 0692 September 1961

PKI Party Chairman Aidit resigns from parliament. 0693 October 1961 0694 November 1961

Reorganization of parliament secretariat. 0697 December 1962

Election law. 0699 January 1963

Provisional People’s Consultative Council recommends cabinet change.

0703 798.21 Political Affairs: Legislative Branch of Government—Proceedings 0740 798.2614 [898.2613 Agriculture: Engineering—Public Works: Utilities.] 0741 798.332 Political Affairs: Judicial Branch of Government—Jurisdiction: Rights

of Aliens to Sue in National Courts 0743 798.34 Political Affairs: Judicial Branch of Government—Laws; Statutes 0840 798.343 Political Affairs: Judicial Branch of Government—Laws; Statutes:

Commercial 798.5 National Defense Affairs [General]

[U.S. military aid.] 0898 January 1960 0901 February 1960 0909 March 1960

Security in North Sumatra.

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0915 April 1960 Army contacts with Chinese KMT; chiefs of armed services given ministerial rank in cabinet; security conditions in Central and South Sumatra; Indonesian Air Force made independent department.

0930 May 1960 0935 June 1960

Military situation on Samosir Island. 0944 July 1960

Showdown between General Abdul Haris Nasution and President Sukarno; new security regulations.

0961 August 1960 0963 September 1960

Indonesian War Plan; military situation and leadership in North and Central Sumatra; Soviet military aid.

0978 October 1960 0984 November 1960

Views and plans of army leadership. 0989 December 1960 0990 January 1961

Army dissatisfaction with Sukarno. 0994 February 1961

Army commandeering of oil tank trucks. 0997 March 1961

Possibility of military coup. 0999 May 1961

Break between Sukarno and air force leaders. 1001 July 1961 1003 August 1961

Plans for reduction in army strength; proposed army role in civic action programs.

1012 September 1961

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Reel 8 Internal Political and National Defense Affairs cont.

798.5 National Defense Affairs [General] cont.

[U.S. military aid.] 0001 November 1961

Indonesian merchant marine. 0017 December 1961

West Irian dispute. 0031 January 1962

West Irian dispute. 0038 February 1962

Standardization program. 0047 March 1962

West Irian dispute; riot by military personnel in Medan; army control of plantation hospitals.

0065 April 1962 0072 May 1962

West Irian dispute; Soviet military aid. 0093 June 1962

Countersubversion program; civic action program; economic stabilization program; air force leadership; Soviet military aid.

0111 July 1962

Soviet military aid; General Abdul Haris Nasution appointed chief of staff; West Irian dispute; civic action program.

0133 August 1962

Civic action program; proposed army reduction in strength; West Irian dispute.

0170 September 1962

Civic action program; Soviet military aid; civil-military relations in South Sumatra; waste and corruption in armed forces; control agency for defense/security finances.

0219 October 1962

Civic action program; West Irian dispute; police assistance programs; Soviet military aid.

0264 November 1962

Troop buildup in Timor; civic action program; Soviet military aid.

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0289 December 1962 Economic stabilization plan; civic action program.

0302 January 1963

Strategic implications of Soviet military aid; civic action program. 798.5MSP National Defense Affairs: Mutual Security Program

[U.S. military aid.] 0457 January 1960 0464 February 1960 0486 March 1960

Military construction program. 0509 April 1960 0512 May 1960 0521 June 1960 0539 July 1960 0547 August 1960 0559 September 1960 0578 October 1960 0607 November 1960 0619 December 1960

Soviet military aid. 0671 January 1961 0678 February 1961 0690 March 1961 0704 April 1961 0730 May 1961 0747 June 1961 0768 July 1961

Soviet military aid.

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0792 August 1961 Economic development objectives; civic action program.

0864 September 1961

Djakarta highway bypass project. 0914 October 1961

U.S. aid for Indonesian police. 0946 December 1961 0951 January 1962 0952 September 1962 798.521 National Defense Affairs: Intelligence Activities—Biographical Data

[Biographical profiles of Indonesian military and political leaders.] 0954 January 1960 0959 February 1960 0960 April 1960 0961 May 1960 0975 April 1960 1032 May 1960

Reel 9 Internal Political and National Defense Affairs cont.

798.521 National Defense Affairs: Intelligence Activities—Biographical Data

cont. [Biographical profiles of Indonesian military and political leaders.]

0001 June 1960 0004 July 1960 0132 August 1960 0235 September 1960 0237 October 1960 0242 November 1960 0243 February 1961

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0244 July 1961 0251 August 1961 0255 September 1961 0258 October 1961 0260 December 1961 0264 April 1962 0266 May 1962 0274 June 1962 0277 July 1962 0279 August 1962 0281 September 1962 0290 October 1962 0293 November 1962 0295 January 1963 0299 798.5261 National Defense Affairs: Intelligence Activities—USSR 0302 798.54 National Defense Affairs: Maneuvers; Troop Movements 0319 798.5400 National Defense Affairs: Overflights—by Other Countries 0331 798.5411 National Defense Affairs: Overflights—by the U.S. 0339 798.5441 National Defense Affairs: Movements of Naval Vessels of Great

Britain Within the Territorial Jurisdiction of Indonesia 0341 798.55 National Defense Affairs: Organization 798.551 National Defense Affairs: Organization—Personnel

[Promotions, assignments, and transfers of military officers.] 0342 January 1960 0343 February 1960 0349 March 1960 0351 May 1960

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0355 July 1960 0358 August 1960 0364 December 1960 0366 January 1961 0376 February 1961 0378 March 1961 0379 April 1961 0380 May 1961

General Abdul Haris Nasution’s visit to USSR. 0389 July 1961 0392 August 1961 0400 September 1961 0405 October 1961 0406 November 1961 0408 December 1961 0409 January 1962 0414 February 1962 0417 March 1962 0418 April 1962 0420 May 1962

Report on corruption and communism among troops stationed in West Sumatra.

0424 June 1962

General Jani appointed chief of staff. 0432 July 1962 0434 August 1962 0439 October 1962

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0444 January 1963

Army officers’ opposition to Communist inclusion in cabinet. 0446 798.5511 National Defense Affairs: Organization—Personnel: Conscription 0449 798.553 National Defense Affairs: Organization—Academies 0451 798.55343 National Defense Affairs: Organization—Academies: Admission of

Indonesian Nationals for Visit or Study in Australia 798.56 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies

[U.S. military aid; Indonesian arms purchases.] 0452 January 1960 0459 February 1960 0460 March 1960 0466 June 1960 0470 July 1960 0473 August 1960 0476 September 1960 0481 October 1960

Soviet military aid. 0486 November 1960

British military aid. 0491 December 1960

Soviet military aid. 0492 January 1961

Indonesian arms purchases from West Germany; Soviet military aid.

0513 February 1961 0523 March 1961 0544 April 1961 0549 May 1961 0556 June 1961

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0560 July 1961 0561 August 1961 0562 September 1961 0565 October 1961 0568 November 1961 0570 December 1961 0573 January 1962 0591 February 1962 0622 March 1962 0630 April 1962 0631 May 1962

Soviet military aid. 0646 June 1962

0665 July 1962 0667 August 1962

West Irian dispute. 0674 September 1962

West Irain dispute. 0685 November 1962 0688 December 1962

Soviet military aid. 0692 January 1963

Strategic implications of Soviet military aid. 0813 798.561 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Armaments;

Ordnance 0817 798.5611 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Armaments;

Ordnance: Atomic Weapons 0829 798.5612 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Armaments;

Ordnance: Guided Missiles; Rockets

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0841 798.562 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Ships; Aircraft 0843 798.5621 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Ships; Aircraft:

Naval Vessels 798.5622 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Ships; Aircraft:

Military Aircraft [U.S. sales of military aircraft to Indonesia.] 0886 January 1960 0897 February 1960 0920 March 1960 0940 June 1960 0945 July 1960 0950 September 1960 0954 October 1960 0979 December 1960 0983 January 1961 0985 February 1961 0987 March 1961 0988 April 1961 0989 May 1961 0996 June 1961 1003 July 1961 1008 August 1961

Reel 10 Internal Political and National Defense Affairs cont.

798.5622 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Ships; Aircraft:

Military Aircraft cont. [U.S. sales of military aircraft to Indonesia.]

0001 August 1961 cont. 0006 September 1961

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0013 October 1961 0019 December 1961 0025 January 1962 0041 February 1962 0048 March 1962 0051 June 1962 0057 July 1962 0061 August 1962 0062 September 1962 0063 October 1962 0064 November 1962 0065 December 1962 0069 January 1963 0073 798.563 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Bases 0081 798.56311 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Bases: U.S. 0097 798.56361 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Bases: USSR 0102 798.56397 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Bases: Malaya 0104 798.57 National Defense Affairs: Hospitals; Commissaries; Post Exchanges 0140 798.58 National Defense Affairs: Missions 798.5811 National Defense Affairs: Missions—U.S.

[Visits of U.S. naval vessels to Indonesia.] 0144 January 1960 0159 February 1960 0166 March 1960 0174 April 1960 0185 May 1960

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0191 August 1960 0193 September 1960 0197 October 1960 0200 December 1960 0201 January 1961 0207 March 1961 0210 April 1961 0212 May 1961 0218 July 1961 0220 September 1961 0223 October 1961 0227 November 1961 0228 March 1962 0230 April 1962 0232 August 1962 0235 September 1962 0236 October 1962 0241 December 1962 0245 798.5841 National Defense Affairs: Missions—Great Britain 0247 798.5843 National Defense Affairs: Missions—Australia 0248 798.5856 National Defense Affairs: Missions—Netherlands 0251 798.5856C National Defense Affairs: Missions—Timor 0252 798.5861 National Defense Affairs: Missions—USSR 0258 798.5868 National Defense Affairs: Missions—Yugoslavia 0261 798.5890B National Defense Affairs: Missions—Burma

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0262 798.5896 National Defense Affairs: Missions—Philippines 0263 798.59 National Defense Affairs: Civil Defenses 0264 798.61 [998.61 Public Press: Newspapers] 0265 798.735 [998.735 Transportation: Water Transportation—Taxes on Navigation] 0266 798.739 [998.739 Transportation: Water Transportation—Charter]

Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs.

898.00 Economic Matters [General] [Economic reviews and assessments]

0268 January 1960 0326 February 1960

Former Vice President Mohammad Hatta’s views on guided economy.

0417 March 1960 0488 April 1960 0516 May 1960 0600 June 1960 0616 July 1960 0634 August 1960

Economic conditions in West Kalimantan; All Indonesian Economic Congress; Soviet economic aid.

0709 September 1960 0728 October 1960 0767 November 1960

Economic development plan. 0785 December 1960

Economic development plan. 0817 January 1961

North Sumatra economic development; economic development plan.

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0883 February 1961 0900 March 1961 0932 April 1961

Economic development plan. 0972 May 1961 0994 June 1961

Reel 11 Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs cont.

898.00 Economic Matters [General] cont.

[Economic reviews and assessments.] 0001 June 1961 cont. 0004 July 1961 0044 August 1961 0058 September 1961 0084 October 1961

Development projects. 0134 November 1961 0171 December 1961

Sumatra regional development plan. 0212 January 1962 0249 February 1962

Administrative problems. 0265 March 1962

PKI Party exploitation of economic problems. 0287 April 1962 0335 May 1962

Rice purchase program. 0365 June 1962 0401 July 1962

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0469 August 1962

Economic stabilization program. 0501 September 1962

Economic stabilization program; production sharing; economic regulations.

0537 October 1962

Economic planning; production sharing. 0581 November 1962

Economic stabilization program. 0610 December 1962 0629 January 1963

Economic stabilization program. 898.00Eight Year Plan Economic Matters: Eight Year Plan

[Economic development plan.] 0672 August 1960 0674 September 1960 0675 November 1960 0678 December 1960 0696 January 1961 0697 February 1961 0727 March 1961 0735 April 1961 0756 May 1961

Development projects. 0838 August 1961

U.S. Economic Study Group recommendations. 0845 December 1961

U.S. Economic Study Group recommendations. 0847 February 1962 0849 October 1962

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0850 898.00Five Year Plan Economic Matters: Five Year Plan 898.00PC Economic Matters: Peace Corps 0855 March 1961 0858 April 1961 0862 May 1961

Comments and summaries of bids received from ministries for Peace Corps personnel.

0868 October 1961 0869 November 1961 0880 December 1961 0887 January 1962 0888 February 1962 0889 August 1962 0893 September 1962 0916 October 1962 0935 November 1962 0941 December 1962

Peace Corps program for Indonesia. 0970 January 1963 0980 898.00Seven Year Economic Matters: Seven Year Plan

Reel 12 Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs cont.

0001 898.00TA Economic Matters: Technical Assistance 0002 898.0000 Economic Matters: Economic Relations with Other Countries 0025 898.001 Economic Matters: Statistics 0026 898.0093 Economic Matters: Economic Relations with China

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0027 898.01 Economic Matters: Retail Prices 0068 898.02 Economic Matters: Housing 0108 898.03 Economic Matters: Food Conditions 0129 898.051 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments 0135 898.05100 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: by Other Countries 898.05111 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: U.S. 0186 January 1960

Foreign investment laws. 0193 February 1960 0195 April 1960 0197 May 1960 0202 June 1960

Drug manufacturing facilities. 0204 August 1960 0210 September 1960

Drug manufacturing facilities. 0219 November 1960

Drug manufacturing facilities. 0221 February 1961 0223 March 1961

Financing for equipment purchases; Export-Import Bank financing of development projects.

0226 May 1961

Refusal to extend expiring foreign plantation concessions. 0232 June 1961 0234 July 1961

Conversion of foreign estate concession titles. 0245 August 1961 0249 October 1961

Negotiations regarding estate concessions.

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0256 November 1961 0258 January 1962 0263 March 1962

Position of U.S.–owned rubber companies. 0272 April 1962

Negotiations regarding estate concessions; Shell disposes of principal oil field and refinery on Java.

0285 May 1962

Negotiations regarding estate concessions; production sharing arrangements.

0293 June 1962

Request for assistance in development of mineral resources in South Sulawesi; negotiations regarding estate concessions; investment guaranties in connection with production sharing arrangements.

0303 July 1962

Production sharing arrangements. 0312 August 1962

Production sharing arrangements. 0317 September 1962

Production sharing arrangements; negotiations regarding estate concessions.

0330 October 1962

Negotiations regarding estate concessions. 0334 November 1962

Production sharing arrangements. 0337 December 1962

Production sharing arrangements; U.S. Steel concession in West Irian.

0342 January 1963

Production sharing arrangements. 0345 898.05140 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: Europe 0349 898.05141 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: Great Britain 0352 898.05142 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: Canada

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0354 898.05151 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: France 0366 898.05155 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: Belgium 0465 898.05160 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: Eastern

Europe 0501 898.05161 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: USSR 0502 898.05162A Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: West Germany 0513 898.05194 Economic Matters: Capital—Investments: Japan 0515 898.052 Economic Matters: Capital—Cooperative Systems 0529 898.053 Economic Matters: Capital—Corporations 0590 898.055 Economic Matters: Capital—Domestic Trade Conditions 898.06 Economic Matters: Labor 0601 January 1960

Indirect Hungarian subsidy of SOBSI trade unions. 0603 February 1960

Exodus of Chinese skilled workers. 0604 April 1960

Alien work permits; quarterly labor reports. 0619 May 1960

Productivity campaign. 0621 August 1960 0622 September 1960

SOBSI Third National Congress. 0630 October 1960

Labor developments in South Sumatra; employment of Dutch nationals.

0635 November 1960

Employment of Dutch nationals. 0641 December 1960

Labor education project; Labor Safety Service; Department of Labor instructions regarding dismissals of workers.

0656 January 1961

Labor statistical information.

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0699 February 1961 0704 March 1961

Dismissals of Indonesian workers in Netherlands New Guinea. 0709 April 1961

Labor force sample survey in Java and Madura; annual labor report.

0731 May 1961

Government ratifies International Labor Organization Convention Number 106; quarterly labor report.

0744 June 1961

Salary increase for civil servants. 0745 July 1961

Labor conditions in North Sumatra. 0758 August 1961

Nadhatul Ulama labor union holds national congress; labor conditions in East Java.

0773 September 1961

Labor conditions in North Sumatra. 0779 October 1961

Manpower Placement Law. 0781 December 1961

Communist infiltration of Provincial Arbitration Board. 0787 January 1962

Report on labor on American rubber estates in North Sumatra. 0796 February 1962 0797 March 1962

Demonstrations against Shell; organization of Department of Labor; organization and capacity of Indonesian Employment Service; labor conditions in East Java.

0812 April 1962

Labor legislation. 0815 June 1962 0822 July 1962

Status of Labor Education Center.

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0832 August 1962

Betjak problem; manpower planning; Department of Labor organization.

0840 September 1962

Labor legislation. 0843 October 1962 0844 December 1962

Creation of Labor Advisory Council; labor legislation. 0851 January 1963

Pension law; establishment of SOKSI labor union; annual labor report; vocational training plans.

0899 898.061 Economic Matters: Labor—Wages 898.062 Economic Matters: Labor—Unions 0920 January 1960 0930 February 1960 0932 March 1960

Government restrictions on trade unions; strikes against former Dutch enterprises.

0936 April 1960 0943 May 1960 0944 June 1960

Dock workers’ boycott of Japanese shipping. 0950 July 1960

Proposal for single national labor organization called OPPI; strike against British rubber plantation; call for nationalization of American-owned enterprises.

0969 August 1960

Plans to crack down on Communist-dominated unions; opposition to proposed OPPI labor organization.

0980 September 1960

Call for boycott of Dutch goods; U.S. overseas labor policy.

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Reel 13 Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs cont.

898.062 Economic Matters: Labor—Unions cont. 0001 October 1960

Travel of Indonesian trade unionists to Soviet bloc countries; anti–SOBSI measures by army.

0010 November 1960 0013 December 1960

Crackdown on Communist-dominated unions; formation of federation of government employees’ unions.

0023 January 1961 0024 February 1961

Role of unions in Indonesian socialism; call for nationalization of Belgian enterprises.

0034 March 1961

Proposal for an all-Indonesian trade union convention. 0053 April 1961

Anticommunist labor opportunities in future U.S. construction contracts.

0062 May 1961 0065 June 1961 0083 July 1961

Labor unrest at Faroka cigarette plant; strikes and work stoppages on North Sumatran rubber estates.

0089 August 1961

Dismissal of workers striking illegally against government enterprises; legislative support for compulsory collection of union dues by employers.

0098 September 1961

SOBSI; Communist control of joint oil workers union meeting; establishment of OPPI.

0145 October 1961 0149 November 1961 0155 December 1961

PERBUM constitution and basic rules.

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0184 January 1962

Merger and federation of noncommunist oil unions. 0187 February 1962

GASBIINDO organization and attitudes. 0191 March 1962

Decisions of Joint Secretariat of Labor; report on Indonesian trade union movement.

0206 April 1962

GASBIINDO union instruction courses. 0210 May 1962 0215 June 1962 0220 July 1962

KBKI National Congress. 0226 August 1962 0231 September 1962

New STANVAC labor agreement. 0239 October 1962

SOBSI proposals on economic problems. 0244 November 1962

Unemployment problems in West Irian; SOBSI proposals on economic problems; SOBSI printers union threatens boycott of USIS; IFPAAW operations; STANVAC labor negotiation agreements.

0265 December 1962

Production incentives for state enterprise employees. 0272 January 1963

KBKI cooperation with SOBSI; ICFTU representation in Indonesia; STANVAC labor negotiations; GASBIINDO problems in West Java; GASBIINDO applies for International Monetary Fund affiliation; West Java labor disputes statistics; creation of SOKSI.

0303 898.065 Economic Matters: Labor—Prevention of Accidents 0305 898.08 Economic Matters: Insurance 0319 898.081 Economic Matters: Insurance—Life

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0327 898.087 Economic Matters: Insurance—Aviation 898.10 Financial Matters [General] 0328 January 1960

National income and capital formation; budget; government issues debentures and promissory notes against frozen deposits; Export-Import Bank loans.

0343 February 1960

Budget; national income. 0350 March 1960

1959 government bond issue; USSR loan agreement and credit; budget.

0378 April 1960

Banking situation; budget. 0384 May 1960

National income; budget. 0423 July 1960

USSR credit. 0426 August 1960

Budget. 0428 September 1960

Indonesian monetary measures. 0464 October 1960

Increases in Treasury bill rates; government bond issue; national income and capital formation.

0472 November 1960

Budget. 0477 December 1960

First interest payments authorized on 1959 frozen deposits; foreign debt and repayment capacity.

0486 January 1961

Budget; monetary measures; Export-Import Bank loan. 0515 February 1961

Budget. 0532 March 1961

Budget.

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0542 July 1961 0544 August 1961

Money supply. 0545 October 1961 0550 November 1961 0556 December 1961

Budget. 0563 January 1962

Request for U.S. loan; national income; fertilizer loan. 0570 February 1962 0571 March 1962

Export regulations. 0578 April 1962

Japanese loan to Indonesia. 0579 May 1962

Japanese loan to Indonesia. 0584 June 1962

Export-Import Bank attitude toward loans to Indonesia; Japanese loan to Indonesia.

0590 July 1962

Foreign debt repayment schedule. 0595 August 1962

Stabilization aid planning and program; budget; Japanese loan to Indonesia; production sharing regulations; Bank Indonesia credit policy.

0644 September 1962

Stabilization program; foreign debt repayment schedule; Japanese production sharing offers.

0667 October 1962

Foreign credit offers; Export-Import Bank attitudes toward loans to Indonesia; balance of payments.

0692 November 1962

Stabilization program; budget.

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0726 December 1962 Export-Import Bank loan for Indonesia; production sharing arrangements; balance of payments; stabilization program.

0761 January 1963

Stabilization program; exchange rates; production sharing arrangements.

0807 898.11 Financial Matters: Taxation 0852 898.112 Financial Matters: Taxation—Income 0853 898.13 Financial Matters: Monetary System 898.131 Financial Matters: Monetary System—Foreign Exchange

[Indonesian foreign exchange rates.] 0886 January 1960 0905 February 1960 0919 March 1960

Obligation to report foreign exchange holdings abroad. 0954 April 1960 0974 May 1960 0979 June 1960 0982 July 1960 0985 August 1960 0994 September 1960

Obligation to report foreign exchange holdings abroad.

Reel 14 Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs cont.

898.131 Financial Matters: Monetary System—Foreign Exchange cont.

[Indonesian foreign exchange rates.] 0001 October 1960 0006 November 1960 0012 December 1960

Foreign exchange allocations. 0033 January 1961

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0051 February 1961 0054 March 1961 0058 April 1961 0063 May 1961 0065 June 1961 0074 July 1961 0078 August 1961 0084 September 1961 0087 October 1961 0089 November 1961 0090 December 1961 0095 January 1962 0104 February 1962 0107 March 1962

Foreign exchange regulations. 0140 April 1962

Foreign exchange regulations. 0183 May 1962

Foreign exchange regulations. 0201 June 1962

Foreign exchange allocations. 0205 July 1962 0209 August 1962 0224 September 1962 0231 October 1962 0238 November 1962 0241 December 1962

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0245 January 1963 0247 898.132 Financial Matters: Monetary System—Counterfeiting 898.14 Financial Matters: Banks; Banking 0249 January 1960

Technical assistance for Indonesia Development Bank. 0250 February 1960 0252 April 1960 0255 May 1960

Imposition of bank credit ceiling. 0259 June 1960 0261 July 1960 0263 August 1960

Reorganization of Bank of Indonesia. 0268 October 1960

Interest rates; credit controls; technical assistance for Indonesian Development Bank.

0273 November 1960

Technical assistance for Indonesian Development Bank; nationalization of Dutch-owned Factory Bank.

0280 July 1961 0282 October 1961 0284 March 1962 0285 May 1962 0287 June 1962 0289 August 1962 0294 September 1962

Statements of condition of Bank Dagang Negara and Indonesian National Commercial Bank.

0339 October 1962 0341 November 1962

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0344 December 1962 Statements of condition and annual reports of Indonesian commercial banks.

0434 January 1963

Outstanding bank credits; Indonesian Development Bank annual report.

0469 898.1456 Financial Matters: Banks; Banking—Branch Banks of the Netherlands

in Indonesia 0470 898.15 Financial Matters: Exchanges 0473 898.151 Financial Matters: Exchanges—Stock 898.16 Financial Matters: Lands

[Land reform; agrarian law.] 0474 January 1960 0476 February 1960 0478 March 1960 0481 April 1960 0485 May 1960 0490 August 1960 0513 September 1960 0518 October 1960 0580 November 1960 0584 January 1961 0586 February 1961 0588 March 1961 0618 April 1961 0621 May 1961 0666 June 1961 0668 August 1961 0669 September 1961

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0689 November 1961 0691 December 1961 0694 February 1962 0696 March 1962 0697 April 1962 0701 May 1962 0703 August 1962 0705 October 1962 0708 November 1962 0715 898.1600 Financial Matters: Lands—Right of Nationals of Other Countries to

Hold or Acquire Real Property in Indonesia 0722 898.1611 Financial Matters: Lands—Right of U.S. Nationals to Hold or Acquire

Real Property in Indonesia 0725 898.171 Financial Matters: Intellectual, Technical and Industrial Property—

Patents 0730 898.172 Financial Matters: Intellectual, Technical and Industrial Property—

Trademarks 0736 898.173 Financial Matters: Intellectual, Technical and Industrial Property—

Copyrights 0737 898.181 Financial Matters: Immigration; Emigration—Foreign Visas; Tourism 0793 898.181DJ [898.191DJ Financial Matters: Industrial Matters—Expositions; Exhibitions:

Djakarta] 898.19 Financial Matters: Industrial Matters 0805 January 1960

State enterprises in Indonesia; nationalization of Dutch construction and pharmaceutical companies; National Planning Council.

0831 March 1960

Reports on industry in East Java.

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0841 April 1960 Report on industry in East Java.

0846 July 1960 0850 August 1960

Report on industry in North Sumatra. 0860 September 1960

Nationalization of Dutch businesses and enterprises. 0878 October 1960

Sino-Soviet bloc economic aid; survey of industrial and agricultural production in East Java.

0911 November 1960

Nationalization of Dutch maritime businesses; establishment of industrial councils.

0924 January 1961 0926 February 1961

Industrial development projects. 0928 March 1961

Seizure of Belgian enterprises. 0942 April 1961

Industrial development projects. 0951 May 1961

Joint enterprise concept. 0959 June 1961

Report on industry and agriculture in West Sumatra. 0973 July 1961 0978 October 1961 0980 January 1962 0981 February 1962 0983 April 1962 0984 May 1962 0987 July 1962

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0989 August 1962 0990 December 1962

Establishment of Production Sharing Interdepartmental Committee; production sharing arrangements.

0993 January 1963

Production sharing arrangements.

Reel 15 Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs cont.

0001 898.1901 Financial Matters: Industrial Matters—Atomic Energy for Peaceful

Purposes 898.191DJ Financial Matters: Industrial Matters—Expositions; Exhibitions:

Djakarta 0088 January 1960 0090 July 1960 0091 October 1960 0101 November 1960 0107 January 1961 0109 February 1961 0114 March 1961 0116 September 1961 0117 October 1961 0120 November 1961 0121 December 1961 0123 January 1962 0124 February 1962 0127 April 1962 0133 May 1962 0139 June 1962

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0141 July 1962 0144 August 1962 0162 September 1962 0171 October 1962 0214 November 1962 0219 December 1962 0225 January 1963 0240 898.191ME Financial Matters: Industrial Matters—Expositions; Exhibitions:

Medan 0243 898.191SO Financial Matters: Industrial Matters—Expositions; Exhibitions: Solo 0247 898.20 Agriculture [General] 0279 898.211 Agriculture: Soil—Reclamation 0280 898.22 Agriculture: Pests 0281 898.23 Agriculture: Field Crops 0283 898.2311 Agriculture: Field Crops—Grains: Wheat 0284 898.2317 Agriculture: Field Crops—Grains: Rice 0373 898.2321 Agriculture: Field Crops—Fibers: Cotton 0386 898.2331 Agriculture: Field Crops—Alkaloidal Plants: Tobacco 0452 898.2333 Agriculture: Field Crops—Alkaloidal Plants: Coffee 0454 898.2334 Agriculture: Field Crops—Alkaloidal Plants: Cocoa 0455 898.235 Agriculture: Field Crops—Sugar 0479 898.236 Agriculture: Field Crops—Garden Crops 0489 898.2377 Agriculture: Field Crops—Fruits: Copra [0494 898.2317 Agriculture: Field Crops—Grains: Rice] 898.2395 Agriculture: Field Crops—Trees: Rubber 0497 February 1960

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0504 March 1960 0507 April 1960

Labor problems on U.S.–owned rubber estates. 0525 May 1960

Security report on U.S. Rubber Company estates. 0532 June 1960 0533 August 1960 0536 October 1960 0540 November 1960

Rubber production by Goodyear Rubber Company estates; extent and legal status of American rubber plantations.

0559 December 1960

Future of estate development in North Sumatra. 0560 January 1961

Investigation of production conditions at Goodyear Rubber Company estates.

0579 April 1961

Refusal of government to renew estate concessions. 0588 June 1961

Negotiations regarding estate concessions. 0591 July 1961

Negotiations regarding estate concessions. 0593 August 1961

Negotiations regarding estate concessions. 0598 September 1961

Negotiations regarding estate concessions. 0613 October 1961

Negotiations regarding estate concessions. 0619 November 1961

Estate rubber production in East Sumatra and Atjeh. 0620 December 1961

Choice of Indonesian firms to operate rubber estates returned under 1960 agrarian law.

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0624 January 1962 Negotiations regarding estate concessions; restrictions on local sales of export-ready rubber.

0643 February 1962

Soviet purchases of Indonesian rubber; negotiations regarding estate concessions.

0657 March 1962

Establishment of rubber pooling system; U.S. rubber disposal procedures; negotiations regarding estate concessions.

0667 April 1962

Negotiations regarding estate concessions; U.S. rubber disposal program.

0684 May 1962

Negotiations regarding estate concessions. 0698 June 1962

Negotiations regarding estate concessions; rubber production statistics.

0703 July 1962

Negotiations regarding estate concessions. 0710 August 1962 0711 September 1962

Possible bankruptcy of U.S.–owned rubber estates. 0716 October 1962

Report on unstable operating conditions on U.S.–owned rubber estates.

0722 January 1963

Transfer of U.S.–owned rubber estates to Indonesian government. 0724 898.2422 Agriculture: Animal Husbandry—Domestic Animals: Stock

Raising 0726 898.24224 Agriculture: Animal Husbandry—Domestic Animals: Stock

Raising—Poultry 0729 898.2423 Agriculture: Animal Husbandry—Domestic Animals: Dairying 0730 898.243 Agriculture: Animal Husbandry—Wild Animals 0734 898.245 Agriculture: Animal Husbandry—Fisheries

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0758 898.25 Agriculture: Mines; Mining 0795 898.251 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Laws; Regulations 0804 898.254 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Base Metals 0805 898.2544 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Base Metals: Tin 0857 898.2546 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Base Metals: Uranium 0861 898.2547 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Base Metals: Others 0875 898.2552 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Carbon: Coal 898.2553 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Carbon: Petroleum 0884 January 1960

Increased petroleum prices; petroleum law; Permina progress report; Pan American Oil Company interest in Indonesia; assignment of controllers to foreign oil companies; government supervision of domestic sales and distribution of petroleum products; STANVAC operations in Indonesia.

0923 February 1960

Rebel activity against oil installations in South Sumatra; STANVAC operations in Indonesia.

0952 March 1960

Japanese plans for development of Permina oil fields. 0969 April 1960

Japanese plans for development of Permina oil fields; annual petroleum statistics; STANVAC operations in Indonesia.

Reel 16 Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs cont.

898.2553 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Carbon: Petroleum cont. 0000 May 1960

STANVAC operations in Indonesia; demand for replacement of Dutch oil company employees.

0007 June 1960

STANVAC operations in Indonesia; petroleum law; CALTEX operations in Central Sumatra.

0017 July 1960

Petroleum report; proposal for nationalization of foreign oil companies; unrest among CALTEX supervisory personnel.

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0065 August 1960

Proposal for nationalization of foreign oil companies; Permina Oil Company developments; STANVAC operations in Indonesia; Asamera Oil Corporation policies; rebel activities affecting oil exports.

0102 September 1960

Rebel activities affecting oil exports; petroleum law; CALTEX operations in Central Sumatra.

0131 October 1960

Petroleum law; STANVAC operations in Indonesia. 0141 November 1960

STANVAC operations in Indonesia; petroleum law; termination of special foreign exchange arrangements of oil companies.

0183 December 1960

Termination of special foreign exchange arrangements of oil companies; CALTEX and STANVAC operations; Japanese- Indonesian agreement on exploitation of North Sumatra oil resources; proposed nationalization of foreign oil companies.

0207 January 1961

Status of oil company negotiations; Shell operations; proposed nationalization of foreign oil companies; STANVAC and Permina Oil Company operations; Japanese-Indonesian agreement on exploitation of North Sumatra oil resources; petroleum policy.

0308 February 1961

STANVAC operations; negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; petroleum policy; CALTEX operations.

0341 March 1961

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; possible oil exploration agreement with Pan American International Oil Company; creation of new Indonesian national oil company; CALTEX operations; petroleum statistics.

0378 April 1961

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; STANVAC operations.

0397 May 1961

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies. 0410 June 1961

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies.

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0423 July 1961 Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies.

0428 August 1961

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies. 0447 September 1961

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies. 0462 October 1961

CALTEX operations; Indonesian government plans to participate in oil industry; expansion of government petroleum operations in East Java; negotiations on status of foreign oil companies.

0496 November 1961

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies. 0515 December 1961

Reort on Indonesian petroleum industry developments; petroleum statistics; negotiations on status of foreign oil companies.

0531 January 1962

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; inventory of Indonesian petroleum industry.

0552 February 1962

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies. 0566 March 1962

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies. 0575 April 1962

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; Asamera Oil Corporation’s Indonesian project; Pan American International Oil Company operations; Shell disposes of principal oil field and refinery on Java.

0593 May 1962

Status of Shell Oil Company in Indonesia; negotiations on status of foreign oil companies.

0602 June 1962

CALTEX and PERTAMIN operations; tensions between Shell Oil Company and War Administration in Balikpapan; negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; agreement between Pan American Oil Company and Indonesia; establishment of prorated marketing system.

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0651 July 1962 Tensions between Shell Oil Company and War Administration in Balikpapan; crude oil imports; negotiations on status of foreign oil companies.

0658 August 1962

STANVAC operations; domestic consumption of refined petroleum products; crude oil production, imports, and exports.

0669 September 1962

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; crude oil imports. 0679 October 1962

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; CALTEX production development allowance.

0707 November 1962

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; PRC as market for Indonesian crude oil.

0734 December 1962

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; CALTEX operations.

0755 January 1963

Negotiations on status of foreign oil companies; STANVAC operations; tensions between Shell Oil Company and War Administration in Balikpapan.

0771 898.2553A Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Carbon: Petroleum—Advisers 0772 898.2566 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Other Mining Products: Cement 0795 898.2567 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Other Mining Products: Phosphates 0796 898.2569 Agriculture: Mines; Mining—Other Mining Products: Bauxite 0808 898.261 Agriculture: Engineering—Public Works 898.2612 Agriculture: Engineering—Public Works: Roads; Highways 0813 February 1960 0814 May 1960

Report on highway transportation in Indonesia. 0822 August 1960 0825 February 1961

Djakarta bypass project; road conditions in Atjeh and North Sumatra.

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0828 May 1961

Soviet road project in East Kalimantan. 0830 July 1961

Djakarta bypass project. 0845 August 1961

Djakarta bypass project. 0892 September 1961

Djakarta bypass project. 0900 October 1961

Djakarta bypass project. 0904 November 1961

Djakarta bypass project. 0908 March 1962

Djakarta bypass project. 0917 April 1962

Djakarta bypass project. 0919 May 1962

Djakarta bypass project. 0923 June 1962

Djakarta bypass project. 0924 August 1962

Djakarta bypass project. 0925 September 1962

Djakarta bypass project. 0926 October 1962 0928 November 1962

Djakarta bypass project. 0931 December 1962

Djakarta bypass project. 0934 898.2614 Agriculture: Engineering—Public Works: Utilities

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Reel 17 Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs cont.

0001 898.313 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Foods—Grain Products 0008 898.317 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Foods—Spices; Extracts 0018 898.318 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Foods—Sugar Products 0025 898.319 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Foods—Edible Oils 0033 898.323 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Animal and Vegetable Products,

Inedible—Tobacco Manufactures 0047 898.324 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Animal and Vegetable Products,

Inedible—Rubber Manufactures 0102 898.325 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Animal and Vegetable Products,

Inedible—Oils, Fats, and Greases 0106 898.3251 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Animal and Vegetable Products,

Inedible—Oils, Fats, and Greases: Palm Oil 0108 898.327 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Animal and Vegetable Products,

Inedible—Miscellaneous 0109 898.331 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Iron and Steel and Related Industries—

Steel Mill Products 0117 898.3311 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Iron and Steel and Related Industries—

Steel Mill Products: Heavy Machinery 0137 898.3312 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Iron and Steel and Related Industries—

Steel Mill Products: Light Machinery 0153 898.332 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Iron and Steel and Related Industries—

Building and Paving Materials 0175 898.333 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Iron and Steel and Related Industries—

Transportation Equipment 0179 898.3331 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Iron and Steel and Related Industries—

Transportation Equipment: Motor Vehicles 0193 898.3332 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Iron and Steel and Related Industries—

Transportation Equipment: Railroads 0199 898.3333 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Iron and Steel and Related Industries—

Transportation Equipment: Aircraft

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0202 898.3334 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Iron and Steel and Related Industries— Transportation Equipment: Shipbuilding

0208 898.335 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Iron and Steel and Related Industries—

Communications Equipment 0209 898.34 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Household Furnishings 0210 898.343 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Household Furnishings—Appliances 0217 898.3461 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Household Furnishings—Other:

Kitchenware 0218 898.35 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Textile Industry 0279 898.352 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Textile Industry—Cotton Manufactures 0280 898.358 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Textile Industry—Synthetic Fibers 0282 898.391 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Other Manufactures—Lumber 0285 898.392 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Other Manufactures—Paper Products 0315 898.3931 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Other Manufactures—Non-Metallic

Minerals: Glass and Clay Products 0320 898.3932 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Other Manufactures—Non-Metallic

Minerals: Petroleum Products 0369 898.394 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Other Manufactures—Metal

Manufactures 0410 898.397 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Other Manufactures—Chemicals 0417 898.3971 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Other Manufactures—Chemicals:

Medicines and Pharmaceuticals 898.3972 Manufacturers; Manufacturing: Other Manufactures—Chemicals:

Fertilizers [Export-Import Bank loan to construct fertilizer plant.] 0426 January 1960 0427 February 1960 0429 May 1960 0434 June 1960 0438 August 1960 0441 September 1960

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0443 October 1960 0466 November 1960 0476 December 1960 0478 January 1961 0491 February 1961 0500 March 1961 0505 April 1961 0509 May 1961 0512 June 1961 0514 July 1961 0515 November 1961 0519 December 1961 0521 January 1962 0529 February 1962 0530 March 1962 0532 May 1962 0535 June 1962 0548 August 1962 0550 December 1962 0552 898.40 Social Matters [General] 0556 898.401 Social Matters: Census 0596 898.41 Social Matters: People 0601 898.411 Social Matters: People—Race Problems 0603 898.412 Social Matters: People—Language 0607 898.413 Social Matters: People—Religion

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0664 898.414 Social Matters: People—Manners and Customs 0667 898.4141 Social Matters: People—Manners and Customs: Divorce 0670 898.422 Social Matters: History—Monuments 898.423 Social Matters: History—Public Records 0672 March 1960

Dictionary of common Indonesian abbreviations.

Reel 18 Internal Economic, Industrial, and Social Affairs cont.

0001 898.424 Social Matters: History—Commemorative Celebrations 0048 898.43 Social Matters: Education 0098 898.431 Social Matters: Education—Elementary and Secondary 0100 898.432 Social Matters: Education—Universities 0183 898.433 Social Matters: Education—Technical 0188 898.434 Social Matters: Education—of the Physically Handicapped 0190 898.435 Social Matters: Education—Vocational 0191 898.44 Social Matters: Fine Arts 0195 898.441 Social Matters: Fine Arts—Painting 0211 898.442 Social Matters: Fine Arts—Sculpture 0214 898.45 Social Matters: Amusements; Sports 0216 898.451 [898.453 Social Matters: Amusements; Sports—Athletics] 0224 898.452 Social Matters: Amusements; Sports—Motion Pictures 0246 898.453 Social Matters: Amusements; Sports—Athletics 898.46 Social Matters: Societies 0262 January 1960 0263 February 1960

All Indonesian Youth Congress.

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0273 June 1960 Sumatra Planters’ Association.

0279 July 1960

Institute of Indonesian Literature; Indonesian-Rumanian Friendship League; Cuban-Indonesian Friendship Society.

0299 December 1960

Indonesian Students Movement Concentration. 0302 January 1961

Central Youth Front. 0304 February 1961 0310 March 1961

Sukarno bans societies with principles and aims originating outside of Indonesia; Youth Front of North Sumatra; youth organizations in Medan.

0326 April 1961

Sukarno bans societies with principles and aims originating outside of Indonesia.

0341 May 1961 0346 August 1961

Communists’ use of friendship associations as propaganda vehicles.

0347 September 1961 0353 October 1961

Regulation of international friendship societies; women’s organizations.

0368 December 1961

Women’s organizations. 0370 February 1962

Proposed Indonesian American Friendship Association. 0375 March 1962

Proposed Indonesian American Friendship Association. 0378 May 1962 0380 July 1962

Indonesian American Friendship Association activities.

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0386 September 1962 0387 December 1962 0389 898.4612 Social Matters: Societies—Better Citizenship Organizations:

Boy Scouts 0395 898.47 Social Matters: Etiquette 0397 898.47411 Social Matters: Etiquette—Ceremonial Communications: with the U.S. 0412 898.49 Social Matters: Disasters; Relief Measures 0449 898.501 Public Order, Safety, and Health: National Police 0495 898.51 Public Order, Safety, and Health: Municipal Government 0500 898.511 Public Order, Safety, and Health: Municipal Government—

Police Organization 0504 898.52 Public Order, Safety, and Health: Crime 0505 898.521 [798.521 National Defense Affairs: Intelligence Activities—Biographical Data] 0507 898.53 Public Order, Safety, and Health: Traffic in Narcotics 0510 898.54 [798.54 National Defense Affairs: Maneuvers] 0511 898.55 Public Order, Safety, and Health: Public Health 0564 898.551 Public Order, Safety, and Health: Public Health—Vital Statistics 0566 898.555 Public Order, Safety, and Health: Public Health—Practice of

Medicine and Surgery 0571 898.56 Public Order, Safety, and Health: Charities; Philanthropic

Organizations 0572 898.561 Public Order, Safety, and Health: Charities; Philanthropic

Organizations—Red Cross 0576 898.562 Public Order, Safety, and Health: Charities; Philanthropic

Organizations—Hospitals 0592 898.5622 [798.5622 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Ships; Aircraft:

Military Aircraft]

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0593 898.563 [798.563 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies—Bases] 0595 898.712 [998.712 Transportation: Land Transportation—Railroads] 0604 898.8294 [998.8294 Science: Earth Sciences—Geophysics: Meteorology]

Communications; Transportation; Science

0607 998.00 Communications [General] 0610 998.10 Postal [General] 0613 998.15 Postal: Complaints Against Service 0614 998.30 Telephone [General] 0620 998.40 Radio; Radiobroadcasting [General] 0635 998.50 Television [General] 0638 998.521 [998.721 Transportation: Air Transportation—Laws and Regulations] 0640 998.56 [798.56 National Defense Affairs: Equipment and Supplies] 0641 998.60 Public Press [General] 998.61 Public Press: Newspapers; Magazines 0660 January 1960

Banning of procommunist newspapers. 0662 February 1960

Chinese newspapers shut down after government revokes newsprint allocation.

0669 March 1960

Banning of procommunist newspapers. 0677 April 1960

Report on Chinese language press in Indonesia; banning of procommunist newspapers.

0692 May 1960

Democratic League activities.

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0699 June 1960 Indonesian press reaction to summit conference.

0712 July 1960

Banning of procommunist newspapers. 0714 August 1960

Banning of procommunist newspapers. 0717 September 1960

Army plans concerning Chinese language press; government seizure of presses and decision to close Djakarta newspapers.

0721 October 1960

Shutdown of Chinese language newspapers. 0726 November 1960

Failure of many major newspapers and magazines to receive new publishing license.

0730 December 1960

Government attitudes toward the press; North Sumatra war administrator orders closing of Chinese language newspapers.

0738 January 1961

Communist activities; anti-Western and anti-American press; survey of newspapers published in Surabaya consular district.

0762 February 1961

Banning of procommunist newspapers. 0776 March 1961 0779 April 1961

Reel 19 Communications; Transportation; Science cont.

998.61 Public Press: Newspapers; Magazines cont. 0001 May 1961

English language press in Indonesia. 0005 June 1961

USIS press list. 0013 July 1961

Survey of newspapers published in Surabaya consular district. 0018 August 1961

USIS press list.

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0024 October 1961

Opening of new Chinese language daily in Medan. 0026 November 1961

Banning of procommunist newspapers. 0027 December 1961

West Irian dispute. 0028 January 1962

Anticommunist newspapers denied publication license. 0030 April 1962

Press comment on raw material shortages. 0035 May 1962

Editorial comment on NATO solidarity. 0036 June 1962

War Administration takes over Antara news agency. 0041 July 1962

Communist Review. 0061 August 1962

Difficulties faced by Indonesian press; Asian Games. 0065 September 1962

Anti-Chinese campaign in Communist press; Asian Games. 0071 October 1962

Anti-American press; government takeover of Antara news agency; press reactions to Cuban missile crisis.

0083 November 1962

Anti-American press; allegations of U-2 flights over Indonesia; decline in newspaper circulation.

0108 December 1962

Merger of Antara and PIA news agencies. 0110 January 1963

PIA ceases publication. 0116 998.62 Public Press: Newsgathering Agencies 0125 998.6211 Public Press: Newsgathering Agencies—U.S. 0189 998.6241 Public Press: Newsgathering Agencies—Great Britain

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0190 998.6261 Public Press: Newsgathering Agencies—USSR 0193 998.6293 Public Press: Newsgathering Agencies—China 0194 998.63 Public Press: Censorship 0199 998.70 Transportation [General] 0209 998.71 Transportation: Land Transportation 0213 998.711 Transportation: Land Transportation—Laws and Regulations 0214 998.712 Transportation: Land Transportation—Railroads 0277 998.713 Transportation: Land Transportation—Buses 0280 998.714 Transportation: Land Transportation—Motor Vehicles 0289 998.72 Transportation: Air Transportation 0330 998.7200 Transportation: Air Transportation—between Indonesia and Other

Countries 0331 998.721 Transportation: Air Transportation—Laws and Regulations 0337 998.722 Transportation: Air Transportation—Rates 0340 998.723 Transportation: Air Transportation—Accidents 0341 998.724 Transportation: Air Transportation—Airports 0356 998.726 Transportation: Air Transportation—Sale; Purchase 0395 998.73 Transportation: Water Transportation 0446 998.7300 Transportation: Water Transportation—between Indonesia and Other

Countries 0451 998.7301 Transportation: Water Transportation—Rivers 0453 998.731 Transportation: Water Transportation—Laws and Regulations 0459 998.734 Transportation: Water Transportation—Port Facilities 0486 998.736 Transportation: Water Transportation—Movements of Vessels 0487 998.739 Transportation: Water Transportation—Sale; Purchase 0496 998.74 Transportation: Navigation

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0497 998.75 Transportation: Seamen 0508 998.80 Science [General] 998.801 Science: Research and Development 0511 February 1960

Ford Foundation problems. 0513 May 1960

Indonesian Council of Sciences. 0517 February 1961

Research Institute of the Sumatra Planters Association publications.

0642 December 1961

Organizational developments in Indonesian scientific research. 0659 April 1962 0660 July 1962 0661 998.8016 Science: Research and Development—Scientific Training Program 0669 998.8212 Science: Earth Sciences—Geography: Surveying 0708 998.828 Science: Earth Sciences—Geology 0710 998.8294 Science: Earth Sciences—Geophysics: Meteorology 0719 998.8295 Science: Earth Sciences—Geophysics: Oceanography 0721 998.8296 Science: Earth Sciences—Geophysics: Seismology 0733 998.832 Science: Natural Sciences—Botany 0735 998.84 Science: Medical Sciences 0737 998.867 Science: Engineering—Power Plants

International Political Relations—Bilateral Treaties—Indonesia

0739 698.00 Political Relations between Indonesia and Other Countries 0759 698.0041 Political Relations between Indonesia and Other Countries: Economic

Treaties and Agreements—Trade Agreements

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0793 698.0042 Political Relations between Indonesia and Other Countries: Economic Treaties and Agreements—Treaties of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation

0794 698.93 Political Relations between Indonesia and China

Reel 20 International Political Relations; Bilateral Treaties—U.S.–Indonesia

0001 611.56D Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia 611.98 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia 0007 January 1960

Campaign against Western culture. 0018 February 1960 0020 April 1960

Complaints regarding treatment of Indonesian national by U.S. agricultural attaché; Indonesian role in American foreign policy.

0046 June 1960

U.S. opposition to Sukarno; West Irian dispute. 0067 July 1960

West Irian dispute. 0073 August 1960

West Irian dispute. 0079 September 1960 0080 October 1960

West Irian dispute. 0085 December 1960

U.S. propaganda; West Irian dispute; U.S. opposition to Sukarno. 0102 January 1961

West Irian dispute; U.S. opposition to Sukarno. 0135 February 1961

Soviet military and economic aid. 0148 March 1961

West Irian dispute; U.S. military aid. 0168 April 1961

Kennedy-Sukarno talks.

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0188 May 1961 West Irian dispute.

0193 June 1961 0196 July 1961 0202 August 1961

Protection and promotion of U.S. interests in Sumatra. 0217 September 1961

West Irian dispute. 0223 October 1961 0229 November 1961

Economic deterioration and development problems; West Irian dispute.

0240 December 1961

West Irian dispute. 0250 January 1962

Indonesian attitudes toward U.S. presence in Southeast Asia; West Irian dispute.

0266 February 1962

West Irian dispute; demonstrations against U.S. embassy and consulates.

0279 March 1962 0285 April 1962

Moslem revolutionary forces in South Sulawesi. 0287 May 1962

West Irian dispute. 0294 June 1962 0300 July 1962

West Irian dispute. 0307 August 1962

West Irian dispute. 0315 September 1962

West Irian dispute.

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0328 October 1962 Indonesian support for Communist position on Berlin and German questions; allegations of U-2 flights over Indonesia.

0334 November 1962

Indonesian government position on Cuban missile crisis; attack on U.S. consulate in Surabaya.

0337 January 1963 0338 611.982 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: War;

Hostilities 0339 611.98231 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: War;

Hostilities—Enemy Property: Blocked Funds 0340 611.984 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: Economic

Treaties and Agreements 611.9841 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: Economic

Treaties and Agreements—Trade Agreements 0413 January 1960 0418 February 1960 0419 March 1960 0420 June 1960 0428 July 1960 0431 August 1960 0432 September 1960 0438 October 1960 0469 November 1960 0491 December 1960 0505 January 1961 0523 February 1961 0532 March 1961 0543 April 1961 0547 May 1961

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0550 June 1961 0555 July 1961 0599 August 1961 0610 September 1961 0655 October 1961 0685 November 1961 0702 December 1961 0730 January 1962 0746 February 1962 0805 March 1962 0809 April 1962 0814 May 1962 0822 June 1962 0826 July 1962 0834 August 1962 0835 September 1962 0838 October 1962 0841 November 1962 0853 December 1962 0868 January 1963 0872 611.98421 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: Economic

Treaties and Agreements—Treaties of Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation: Consular Functions

0903 611.9843 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: Economic

Treaties and Agreements—Financial Treaties and Agreements 0921 611.9845 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: Economic

Treaties and Agreements—Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy

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68

0945 611.985 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: Cultural

Treaties and Agreements 0949 611.987 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: Military and

Defense Agreements 0968 611.989 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: Other Relations;

Bilateral Treaties 0982 611.9893 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: Other Relations;

Bilateral Treaties—Communications Treaties 0985 611.9894 Political Relations between the U.S. and Indonesia: Other Relations;

Bilateral Treaties—Air Navigation Treaties

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SUBJECT INDEX

The following index is a guide to the major topics in this microform publication. The first number after an entry refers to the reel, while the four-digit number following the colon refers to the frame number at which the subject begins. Hence, 4: 0200 directs the researcher to Frame 0200 of Reel 4. By referring to the Reel Index, which constitutes the initial segment of this guide, the researcher will find topics arranged in the order in which they appear on the film.

This subject index provides an entry under each of the topic names assigned by the State Department in its decimal number classification system for which documents appear in the collection. In order to avoid confusion, the term “Foreign relations” has been substituted for the State Department’s term “Political relations.” Additional terms have been supplied to provide more detailed topical access. Terminology and spellings are those used in the original documents. Researchers may consult the acronym list on page xxvii. Abbreviations

Indonesian dictionary 17: 0672 Accidents

air transportation 19: 0340 prevention of 13: 0303

Action Program, U.S. 4: 0200

Advisers petroleum 16: 0771

Agents general—in United States 5: 0717 immunities; privileges—in United

States 5: 0718 Agrarian Affairs, Department of

unification with Department of Agriculture 7: 0514

Agrarian law 14: 0474–0708; 15: 0620

Agriculture fertilizers 17: 0426–0550 field crops 15: 0281–0722 general 15: 0247 pests 15: 0280 production—in East Java 14: 0787 soil 15: 0279 in West Sumatra—report on 14: 0959 see also Animal husbandry

Agriculture, Department of unification with Department of Agrarian

Affairs 7: 0514 Aidit, Dipa Nusantara

resignation, from parliament 7: 0692 Aircraft

general 17: 0199 military 9: 0886–1008; 10: 0001–0069;

18: 0592 Air force

department 7: 0915 leadership 8: 0093 and Sukarno 7: 0999

Air navigation treaties U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0985

Air operations Attack on presidential palace 1: 0257 U-2 flights 4: 0335; 19: 0083; 20: 0328

Airports 19: 0341

Air transportation see Transportation, air

Aliens right to sue 7: 0741 work permits 12: 0604

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Alkaloidal plants cocoa 15: 0454 coffee 15: 0542 tobacco 15: 0386

All Indonesia Economic Congress 10: 0634

All Indonesia Youth Congress 1: 0257; 18: 0263

Amusements; sports athletics 18: 0216, 0246 general 18: 0214 motion pictures 18: 0224 see also Asian Games

Animal and vegetable products, inedible general 17: 0108 oils, fats, and greases 17: 0102, 0106 rubber manufactures 17: 0047 tobacco manufactures 17: 0033

Animal husbandry dairying 15: 0729 fisheries 15: 0734 stock raising 15: 0724, 0726 wild animals 15: 0730

Animals domestic 15: 0724, 0726, 0729 wild 15: 0730

Antigovernment leaders arrests of 3: 0717, 0871

Antara news agency merger with PIA news agency 19: 0108 War Administration takes over

19: 0036, 0071 Appliances

17: 0210 Armaments; ordnance

atomic weapons 9: 0817 general 9: 0813 guided missiles; rockets 9: 0829

Armed forces chiefs of, given ministerial rank in

cabinet 7: 0915 waste and corruption 7: 0532; 8: 0170 see also Military personnel see also National defense affairs

Army anti–SOBSI measures 13: 0001 Chinese language press plans

18: 0717 civic action programs 7: 1003 civilization role 7: 1003

commandeering of oil tank trucks by 7: 0994

confrontation with PKI Party 2: 0356 Sukarno 2: 0158

contacts with KMT 7: 0915 control of plantation hospitals 8: 0047 corruption in 3: 0189, 0871 dissatisfaction with Sukarno 7: 0990 leadership 7: 0984 and noncommunist political groups

2: 0356, 0798 opposition to Communist in cabinet

9: 0444 strength reduction 7: 1003; 8: 0133 see also National defense affairs

Asamera Oil Corporation Indonesian project 16: 0575 policies 16: 0065

Asian Games 19: 0061, 0065

Association of Southeast Asian States 3: 0001

Athletics 18: 0216, 0246 see also Asian Games

Atjeh political conditions in 3: 0560 road conditions 16: 0825 rubber estate production 15: 0619

Atomic energy for peaceful purposes 15: 0001 treaties—U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0921 see also Indonesian Atomic Energy

Council Atomic weapons

9: 0817 Attorney General’s Office

reorganization 7: 0321 Australia

admission of Indonesian nationals for visit or study in 9: 0451

military missions 10: 0247 talks with United States, United

Kingdom, and New Zealand regarding Indonesia 4: 0502

Aviation insurance 13: 0327

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Balance of payments 13: 0667, 0726 see also Trade

Bali political forces in 2: 0798

Balikpapen War Administration–Shell Oil Company

tension 16: 0602, 0651, 0755 Bank Dagang Negara

statement of condition of 14: 0294 Bank of Indonesia

credit policy 13: 0595 reorganization 14: 0263

Banks; banking Bank Dagang Negara 14: 0294 Bank of Indonesia 13: 0595; 14: 0263 branch banks of the Netherlands

14: 0469 commercial 14: 0344 credit ceiling 14: 0255 Factory Bank 14: 0273 general 13: 0378; 14: 0249–0434 Indonesian Development Bank

14: 0239, 0268, 0273, 0434 Indonesian National Commercial Bank

14: 0294 Base metals

general 15: 0804, 0861 tin 15: 0805 uranium 15: 0857

Bauxite 16: 0796

Belgium investments 12: 0366

Betjak problem 12: 0832

Blocked funds U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0339 see also Frozen assets

Body for Development of Working Potential

activites 3: 0001 Body for Supervising Activity of the State Apparatus

dissolution of 7: 0502 Bonds

government 13: 0350, 0464 see also Stock exchange

Botany 19: 0733

Boycotts of Dutch goods 12: 0980 of Japanese shipping 12: 0944 of USIS—SOBSI printers’ union

13: 0244 see also Demonstrations

Budget 13: 0328–0384, 0426, 0472, 0486–

0532, 0556, 0595, 0692 Building and paving materials

17: 0153 see also Cement

Burma military missions 10: 0261

Buses 19: 0277 see also Transportation, land

Cabinet; ministry attorney general, office of 7: 0321 cabinet ministers

lists of 7: 0343 parliamentary criticism of 7: 0451

changes in 3: 0560, 0611; 4: 0502; 7: 0321–0558

general 7: 0321–0558 Ministry of Religion 7: 0378 PKI Party inclusion 2: 0423; 7: 0558 reorganization 1: 0136, 0257; 3: 0363,

0717, 0871 California Texas Oil Company (CALTEX)

operations in Central Sumatra 16: 0007, 0102 general 16: 0183, 0308, 0341, 0462,

0602, 0734 production development allowance

16: 0679 supervisory personnel unrest 16: 0017

Canada investments 12: 0352

Capital cooperative systems 12: 0515 corporations 12: 0529 domestic trade conditions 12: 0590 formation 13: 0328, 0464 investments 12: 0129–0513

Celebes rebel activities in 3: 0093

Cement 16: 0772 see also Building and paving materials

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Censorship Film Censorship Board 7: 0389, 0395 press 19: 0194

Census 17: 0556

Central Sumatra CALTEX operations in 16: 0007, 0102 military situation and leadership in

7: 0963 security conditions in 7: 0915

Central Youth Front 18: 0302

Ceremonial communications with United States 18: 0395

Charities; philanthropic organizations general 18: 0571 hospitals 18: 0576 Red Cross 18: 0572

Chemicals fertilizers 17: 0426–0550 general 17: 0410 medicines and pharmaceuticals

17: 0417 Chief executive

5: 0843–0915; 6: 0001–0976; 7: 0001–0290

see also Sukarno, Achmed China, People’s Republic of (PRC)

economic relations with Indonesia 12: 0026

as market for Indonesian crude oil 16: 0707

newsgathering agencies 19: 0193 political relations with Indonesia

19: 0794 propaganda campaign 1: 0919

Citizenship general 5: 0829 organizations 18: 0389 passports 5: 0837

Civic action program army role in 7: 1003 general 8: 0093–0302, 0792 see also Countersubversion program

Civil defenses 10: 0263

Civil service general 7: 0580 salary increase 12: 0744 see also Government

Coal 15: 0875

Cocoa 15: 0454

Coffee 15: 0452

Commemorative celebrations 18: 0001

Commercial treaties see Friendship, commerce, and

navigation treaties Commissaries

military 10: 0104 Communications

equipment 17: 0208 general 18: 0607 treaties—U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0982

Communism; Communists activities 1: 0796; 2: 0026, 0280,

0423–0678, 0886; 3: 0093–0949; 4: 0001–0414; 18: 0738

Film Censorship Board control 7: 0389, 0395

friendship associations 18: 0346 general 5: 0504–0710 influence 5: 0648 propaganda 2: 0001; 18: 0340 Provincial Arbitration Board infiltration

12: 0781 terrorists—trial of 5: 0630 unions—plans for crackdown on

12: 0969; 13: 0013 and U.S.–owned enterprises 5: 0632 see also Socialism

Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI) confrontation with army 2: 0356 confrontation with government 2: 0026 exploitation of economic problems

11: 0265 inclusion in cabinet 2: 0423; 7: 0558 operations 5: 0504–0710 “shadow cabinet” 5: 0612 Sixth National Congress 5: 0504 Sukarno calls for cooperation with

3: 0305 Communist Review

19: 0041 Community development program

3: 0500

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Concessions expiring—government refusal to extend

12: 0226 foreign estate 12: 0249, 0272–0293,

0317, 0330; 15: 0579, 0588–0613, 0624–0703

U.S. Steel, in West Irian 12: 0337 Conferences and congresses

All Indonesia Economic Congress 10: 0634

All Indonesia Youth Congress 1: 0257; 18: 0263

Indonesian Women’s Conference 2: 0678

KBKI National Congress 13: 0220 Nadhatul Ulama National Congress

12: 0758 People’s Consultative Congress

1: 0001; 2: 0280, 0356, 0536, 0678; 7: 0699

SOBSI Third National Congress 12: 0622

Summit Conference 18: 0699 Conscription

9: 0446 Construction companies

nationalization of Dutch-owned 14: 0805

Construction contracts United States—anticommunist labor

opportunities in 13: 0053 see also Building and paving materials

Consular functions treaties U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0872

Cooperative systems 12: 0515

Copra 15: 0489

Copyrights 14: 0736

Corporations 12: 0529

Corruption general 4: 0253 in the military 3: 0189, 0871; 7: 0532;

8: 0170; 9: 0420 in Sumatra 3: 0093

Cotton general 15: 0373 manufactures 17: 0279 see also Fibers

Council of Sciences 7: 0493; 19: 0513

Counterfeiting 14: 0247

Countersubversion program 8: 0093 see also Civic action program

Coups d’état attempts by military 7: 0997

Courts national 7: 0741

Credit Bank of Indonesia policy 13: 0595 ceiling 14: 0255 controls 14: 0268 foreign offers 13: 0350, 0423, 0667

Crime 18: 0504 see also Narcotics traffic

Cuban-Indonesian Friendship Society 18: 0295

Cuban missile crisis Indonesian government position on

20: 0334 press reaction to 19: 0071

Cultural treaties and agreements U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0945

Dairying 15: 0729

Debentures government-issued, against frozen

deposits 13: 0328 Debt, foreign

repayment 13: 0477, 0590, 0644 Defense finances

control agency for 8: 0170 Democratic League

activities 7: 0594 ban on 2: 0798 general 1: 0447–0796 propaganda 2: 0026

Demonstrations anti-American 2: 0678 in Djakarta 4: 0502

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Demonstrations cont. at Indian consulate 4: 0200 in Medan 5: 0668 against Shell Oil Company 12: 0797 against U.S. embassy and consulates

20: 0266 see also Rebels see also Terrorists

Development banks Export-Import 12: 0223; 13: 0328,

0486, 0584, 0667, 0726; 17: 0426–0550

Indonesian 14: 0249, 0268, 0273, 0434 Diplomatic representation, U.S.

agricultural attaché 20: 0020 demonstrations against 20: 0266 Surabaya consulate 4: 0335; 19: 0013;

20: 0334 Disasters

18: 0412 Dissidents

see Rebels Divorce

17: 0667 Djakarta

demonstrations in 4: 0502 expositions; exhibitions 7: 0586;

14: 0793; 15: 0088–0225 newspapers 18: 0717

Djakarta bypass project 8: 0864; 16: 0825, 0830–0925, 0928,

0931 Djuanda

first minister 7: 0451 report to parliament 3: 0189

Dock workers boycott of Japanese shipping by

12: 0944 Drugs

see Medicines and pharmaceuticals East Java

see Java, East East Kalimantan

see Kalimantan, East East Sumatra

rubber estate production in 15: 0619 Economic aid

Sino-Soviet bloc 14: 0878 Soviet 10: 0634; 20: 0135

Economic development in North Sumatra 10: 0817 objectives 8: 0792 plans 7: 0525; 10: 0767, 0785, 0817,

0932; 11: 0171, 0672–0849 problems 20: 0229 projects

Export-Import Bank financing of 12: 0223

general 11: 0084, 0756 see also Economic planning see also Eight year plan see also Five year plan see also Seven year plan

Economic matters capital 12: 0129–0590 eight year plan 11: 0672–0849 five year plan 10: 0850 food conditions 12: 0108 general 10: 0268–0994; 11: 0001–

0629 housing 12: 0068 insurance 13: 0305–0327 Peace Corps 11: 0855–0970 retail prices 12: 0027 seven year plan 11: 0980 statistics 12: 0025 technical assistance 12: 0001 see also All Indonesia Economic

Congress see also Production incentives see also Production sharing

Economic planning 11: 0537 see also Economic development see also Eight year plan see also Five year plan see also Seven year plan

Economic problems general 3: 0500 PKI Party exploitation of 11: 0265 SOBSI proposals on 13: 0239, 0244

Economic regulations 11: 0501

Economic relations general 12: 0002 with PRC 12: 0026

Economic reviews and assessments 10: 0268–0994; 11: 0001–0629 see also Weeka reports

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Economic stabilization aid planning 13: 0595 program 8: 0093, 0289; 11: 0469,

0501, 0581, 0629; 13: 0595, 0644, 0692–0761

Economic Study Group, U.S. 11: 0838, 0845

Economic treaties and agreements U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0340 see also Economic aid

Economy Hatta, Mohammad—views 10: 0326

Edible oils 17: 0025

Education elementary and secondary 18: 0098 general 18: 0048 of the physically handicapped 18: 0188 technical 18: 0183 universities 18: 0100 vocational 18: 0190 see also Labor Education Center

Education, Ministry of anti-Western bias 7: 0426

Eight year plan 2: 0423; 11: 0672–0849

Election Commission composition of 3: 0949

Election laws 3: 0189, 0443, 0815, 0871; 4: 0001,

0414, 0502; 7: 0697 Employment

alien work permits 12: 0604 Employment Service

organization of 12: 0797 Enterprise councils

establishment of 2: 0423 Etiquette

ceremonial communications with United States 18: 0397

general 18: 0395 Europe

investments in 12: 0345 Europe, Eastern

investments 12: 0465 Exchanges

general 14: 0470 stock 14: 0473

Executive branch cabinet; ministry 7: 0321–0558 chief executive 5: 0843–0915;

6: 0001–0976; 7: 0001–0290 civil service 7: 0580 general 5: 0840 governors of districts 7: 0301

Export-Import Bank fertilizer loan 17: 0426–0550 financing of development projects

12: 0223 loans to Indonesia 13: 0328, 0486,

0584, 0667, 0726 see also Economic development

Exports petroleum 16: 0102, 0658 regulations 13: 0571 rubber 15: 0624

Expositions; exhibitions Djakarta 7: 0586; 14: 0793; 15: 0088–

0225 Medan 15: 0240 Solo 15: 0243

Factory Bank nationalization of 14: 0273

Faroka cigarette plant labor unrest 13: 0083 see also Tobacco

Fertilizers general 17: 0426–0550 loan 13: 0563; 17: 0426–0550

Fibers cotton 15: 0373 synthetic 17: 0280

Field crops alkaloidal plants 15: 0386–0454 fibers 15: 0373 fruits 15: 0489 garden 15: 0479 general 15: 0281 grains 15: 0283, 0284, 0494 sugar 15: 0455 trees 15: 0497–0722

Film Censorship Board Communist control of 7: 0389, 0395

Financial matters banks; banking 14: 0249–0469 exchanges 14: 0470, 0473 general 13: 0328–0761

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Financial matters cont. intellectual and industrial property

14: 0725–0736 monetary system 13: 0853, 0886–

0994; 14: 0001–0247 taxation 13: 0807, 0852

Financial treaties and agreements U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0903

Fine arts general 18: 0191 painting 18: 0195 sculpture 18: 0211

Fisheries 15: 0734

Five year plan 10: 0850 see also Economic development see also Economic planning

Flag 5: 0821

Food conditions 12: 0108 edible oils 17: 0025 grain products 17: 0001 spices; extracts 17: 0008 sugar products 17: 0018

Ford Foundation 19: 0511

Foreign Affairs, Department of officials—list of 7: 0395, 0465 organizational changes 7: 0502

Foreign credit general 13: 0667 USSR 13: 0350, 0423

Foreign estates concession negotiations 12: 0249,

0272–0293, 0317, 0330; 15: 0579, 0588–0613, 0624–0703

Foreign exchange allocations 14: 0012, 0201 foreign-owned oil companies 16: 0183,

0207 general 13: 0886–0994; 14: 0001–

0245 holdings 13: 0919, 0994 rates 13: 0761, 0886–0994; 14: 0001–

0245 regulations 14: 0107–0183

Foreign nationals employment of 12: 0630, 0635 exodus of, from Indonesia 1: 0919 see also Aliens

Foreign policy, U.S. 20: 0020

Foreign relations general 19: 0739 Indonesia-China 19: 0794 U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0001–0337

France investments 12: 0354

Friendship associations; societies Communist use of, as propaganda

vehicles 18: 0346 Cuban-Indonesian Friendship Society

18: 0295 Indonesian-American Friendship

Association 18: 0370, 0375, 0380 Indonesian-Rumanian Friendship

League 18: 0295 regulation of 4: 0502; 18: 0353

Friendship, commerce, and navigation treaties

with Indonesia 19: 0793 Frozen assets

first interest payments authorized on 13: 0477

government issues debentures and promissory notes against 13: 0328

see also Blocked funds Fruits

copra 15: 0489 GASBIINDO

applies for International Monetary Fund affiliation 13: 0272

attitudes 13: 0187 organization 13: 0187 union instruction courses 13: 0206 in West Java 13: 0272

Geology 19: 0708

Germany, Federal Republic of investments 12: 0502

Glass and clay products 17: 0315

Goodyear Rubber Company rubber estates 15: 0540, 0560

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Government executive branch 5: 0840–0915;

6: 0001–0976; 7: 0001–0580 Federal Republic of Indonesia—

establishment and objectives 1: 0447

general 5: 0728 judicial branch 7: 0741, 0743, 0840 leadership patterns 1: 0136 legislative branch of 7: 0586–0703 military role in 1: 0001; 2: 0280 municipal 18: 0495, 0500 territory 5: 0729 see also Political affairs

Governors district 7: 0301

Grains food products 17: 0001 rice 15: 0284, 0494 wheat 15: 0283

Great Britain see United Kingdom

Guided missiles 9: 0829

Hatta, Mohammad articles by 1: 0616 views on guided economy 10: 0326

Heavy machinery 17: 0117

Highways see Roads; highways

History commemorative celebrations 18: 0001 monuments 17: 0670 public records 17: 0672

Hospitals general 18: 0576 military 10: 0104 plantation 8: 0047 see also Medicine and surgery

Household furnishings appliances 17: 0210 general 17: 0209, 0217

Housing 12: 0068

Imports crude oil 16: 0651–0669

Income national 13: 0328, 0343, 0384, 0464,

0563

Indonesian American Friendship Association

18: 0370–0380 Indonesian Atomic Energy Council

7: 0321 Indonesian Development Bank

annual report 14: 0434 technical assistance for 14: 0249,

0268, 0273 Indonesian National Commercial Bank

14: 0294 Indonesian Peace Committee

appeal by 3: 0500 general 5: 0605

Indonesian-Rumanian Friendship League 18: 0295

Indonesian Students Movement Concentration

18: 0299 Indonesian Women’s Congress

2: 0678 Indonesia Party

disunity within 3: 0815 Industrial councils

14: 0911 Industrial development

projects 14: 0926, 0942 see also Economic development

Industrial matters atomic energy for peaceful purposes

15: 0001 expositions; exhibitions 7: 0586;

14: 0793; 15: 0088–0243 general 14: 0805–0993 see also Production incentives see also Production sharing see also Productivity campaign

Information, Department of organizational network 7: 0321

Institute of Indonesian Literature 18: 0279

Institute of International Affairs establishment of 7: 0389

Institutes of Higher Learning and Science, Department for

establishment of 7: 0389 Insurance

aviation 13: 0327 general 13: 0305 life 13: 0319

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Intelligence activities biographical data 8: 0954–1032;

9: 0001–0295; 18: 0505 by USSR 9: 0299

Interest rates 14: 0268

International affairs see Institute of International Affairs

International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU)

representation of, in Indonesia 13: 0272

International Federation of Plantation, Agricultural, and Allied Workers (IFPAAW)

operations 13: 0244 International Labor Organization

Convention Number 106 ratification of 12: 0731

Investments Belgium 12: 0366 Canada 12: 0352 Europe 12: 0345 Europe, Eastern 12: 0465 France 12: 0354 general 12: 0129, 0135 Germany, Federal Republic of

12: 0502 guaranties 12: 0293 Japan 12: 0513 laws 12: 0186 United Kingdom 12: 0349 U.S. 12: 0186–0342 USSR 12: 0501

Irian, West see West Irian

Iron and steel and related industries 17: 0109–0208

Islam as anticommunist force 5: 0605 see also Moslems

Jani, General appointed chief of staff 9: 0424

Japan agreement with Indonesia on

exploitation of North Sumatra oil resources 16: 0183, 0207

investments 12: 0513 loan to Indonesia 13: 0578–0584, 0595

Permina oil fields—development of 15: 0952, 0969

production sharing offers 13: 0644 Java

labor force sample survey in 12: 0709 Shell disposes of principal oil field and

refinery on 12: 0272; 16: 0575 Java, East

agricultural production 14: 0878 industry 14: 0831, 0841, 0878 labor conditions 12: 0758, 0797 legislature membership 7: 0652 petroleum operations 16: 0462

Java, West GASBIINDO problems in 13: 0272 labor dispute statistics 13: 0272

Joint enterprise concept 14: 0951

Joint Secretariat of Labor decisions 13: 0191

Judicial branch jurisdiction 7: 0741 laws; statutes 7: 0743, 0840

Jurisdiction rights of aliens to sue in national courts

7: 0741 Kalimantan

political situation 1: 0136 transmigration program 1: 0001

Kalimantan, East Soviet road project in 16: 0828

Kalimantan, West economic conditions in 10: 0634

Kennedy, John F. talks with Sukarno 20: 0168

Khrushchev, Nikita visit to Indonesia 1: 0257

Kitchenware 17: 0217

Konsetrasi Buruh Inspeki Pendidikan (KBKI—labor union)

cooperation with SOBSI 13: 0272 National Congress 13: 0220

Kuomintang (KMT) Indonesian army contacts with 7: 0915

Labor accidents, prevention of 13: 0303 agreement with STANVAC 13: 0231,

0244 Chinese 12: 0603

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conditions 12: 0745, 0758, 0773, 0797 developments 12: 0630 disputes 13: 0272 docks 12: 0944 education project 12: 0641 general 5: 0822; 12: 0601–0851 in Java 12: 0709 in Java, East 12: 0758, 0797 in Java, West 13: 0272 legislation 12: 0812, 0840, 0844 in Madura 12: 0709 policy, U.S. 12: 0980 reports 12: 0604, 0709, 0731, 0851 skilled 12: 0603 in Sumatra, North 12: 0745, 0773 in Sumatra, South 12: 0630 unrest at Faroka cigarette plant

13: 0083 Labor, Department of

instructions regarding dismissals of workers 12: 0641

organization 12: 0797, 0832 Labor Advisory Council

12: 0844 Labor Education Center

12: 0822 Labor Safety Service

12: 0641 Labor strikes

against former Dutch enterprises 12: 0932

illegal 13: 0089 against North Sumatra rubber estates

13: 0083 against United Kingdom rubber

plantation 12: 0950 Labor unions; organizations

Communist-dominated 12: 0969; 13: 0013

dues 13: 0089 GASBIINDO 13: 0187, 0206, 0272 general 5: 0824; 12: 0920–0980;

13: 0001–0303 government employees 13: 0013 government restrictions on 12: 0932 ICFTU 13: 0272 IFPAAW 13: 0244 International Labor Organization

12: 0731 KBKI 13: 0220, 0272

Nadhatul Ulama 12: 0758 oil workers 13: 0098, 0184 OPPI 12: 0950, 0969; 13: 0093 PERBUM 13: 0155 report on 13: 0191 role of socialism in 13: 0024 SOBSI 12: 0601, 0622; 13: 0001,

0098, 0239, 0244, 0272 SOKSI 12: 0851; 13: 0272

Lands general 14: 0474–0708 right of nationals of other countries to

hold or acquire real property in Indonesia 14: 0715

right of U.S. nationals to hold or acquire real property in Indonesia 14: 0722

Land transportation see Transportation, land

Language 17: 0603 see also Institute of Indonesian

Literature Laws; statutes; regulations

agrarian 14: 0474–0708; 15: 0620 commercial 7: 0840 economic 11: 0501 election 3: 0189, 0443, 0815, 0871;

4: 0001, 0414, 0502; 7: 0697 export 13: 0571 foreign exchange 14: 0107–0183 general 7: 0743 investment 12: 0186 labor 12: 0812, 0840, 0844 manpower placement 12: 0779 mining 15: 0795 pension 12: 0851 petroleum 15: 0884; 16: 0007, 0102–

0141 political activities 4: 0062 presidential succession 1: 0447 production sharing 13: 0595 security 7: 0944 state of emergency 1: 0001 transportation

air 18: 0638; 19: 0331 land 19: 0213 water 19: 0453

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Legislature general 7: 0586–0703 regional 7: 0642–0644, 0652

Life insurance 13: 0319

Light machinery 17: 0117

Literature see Institute of Indonesian Literature

Lombok political activities 3: 0093

Longshoremen see Dock workers

Lumber 17: 0282

Machinery heavy 17: 0117 light 17: 0137

Madura labor force sample survey in 12: 0709 political conditions in 3: 0560

Magazines 18: 0660–0779; 19: 0001–0110 see also Press

Malaya military bases in Indonesia 10: 0102

Manners and customs divorce 17: 0667 general 17: 0664

Manpower Placement Law 12: 0779

Manpower planning 12: 0832

Manufacturers; manufacturing building and paving materials 17: 0153 chemicals 17: 0410, 0417, 0426–0550 communications equipment 17: 0208 foods 7: 0001–0025 glass and clay products 17: 0315 household furnishings 17: 0209–0217 lumber 17: 0282 metal manufactures 17: 0369 oils, fats, and greases 17: 0102 palm oil 17: 0106 paper products 17: 0285 petroleum products 17: 0320 rubber manufactures 17: 0047 steel mill products 17: 0109–0137 textile industry 17: 0033–0280

tobacco manufactures 17: 0033 transportation equipment 17: 0175–

0202 Maritime businesses

Dutch-owned 14: 0911 May Day

4: 0701 Medan

demonstrations in 5: 0668 expositions; exhibitions 15: 0240 newspaper—Chinese daily 19: 0024 riot by military personnel in 8: 0047 youth organizations 18: 0310

Medical sciences 19: 0735

Medicine and surgery practice of 18: 0566

Medicines and pharmaceuticals general 17: 0417 manufacturing facilities 12: 0202, 0210,

0219 nationalization of Dutch-owned

companies 14: 0805 see also Narcotics traffic

Merchant marine 8: 0001

Metal manufactures 17: 0369

Meteorology 18: 0604; 19: 0710

Military academies admission of Indonesian nationals for

visit or study in Australia 9: 0451 general 9: 0449

Military aid United Kingdom 9: 0486 U.S. 3: 0363; 7: 0898–1012; 8: 0001–

0952; 9: 0452–0692; 20: 0148 USSR 7: 0963; 8: 0072–0111, 0170–

0264, 0302, 0619, 0768; 9: 0481, 0491, 0492, 0631, 0688, 0692; 20: 0135

Military and defense agreements U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0949

Military bases general 10: 0073; 18: 0593 Malaya 10: 0102 U.S. 10: 0081 USSR 10: 0097

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Military commissaries 10: 0104

Military construction program 8: 0486

Military missions Australia 10: 0247 Burma 10: 0261 general 10: 0140 Netherlands 10: 0248 Philippines 10: 0262 Timor 10: 0251 United Kingdom 10: 0245 U.S. 10: 0144–0241 USSR 10: 0252 Yugoslavia 10: 0258

Military personnel buildup in Timor 8: 0264 commissioned officers 1: 0136;

7: 0915; 9: 0342–0444 conscription 9: 0446 corruption 7: 0532; 8: 0170 general 9: 0342–0444 Medan riot 8: 0047

Military standardization program 8: 0038

Mines; mining base metals 15: 0805–0861 bauxite 16: 0796 carbon 15: 0875–0969; 16: 0001–0771 cement 16: 0772 general 15: 0758 laws; regulations 15: 0795 phosphates 16: 0795

Ministry of Religion organizational structure 7: 0378

Monetary system counterfeiting 14: 0247 foreign exchange 13: 0886–0994;

14: 0001–0245 general 13: 0853 measures 13: 0428, 0486

Money supply 13: 0544

Monuments 17: 0670

Moslems revolutionary forces in South Sulawesi

20: 0285 see also Islam see also Rebels

Motion pictures 18: 0224

Motor vehicles 17: 0179; 19: 0280

Municipal government general 18: 0495 police 18: 0500

Mutual Security Program 8: 0457–0952

Nadhatul Ulama (labor union) national congress 12: 0758

Narcotics traffic 18: 0507

Nasution, Abdul Haris chief of staff 8: 0111 and Sukarno 7: 0944 visit to USSR 9: 0380

National courts rights of aliens to sue 7: 0741

National defense affairs bases 10: 0073–0102; 18: 0593 civil defenses 10: 0263 equipment and supplies 9: 0452–1008;

10: 0001–0069; 18: 0592, 0640 general 7: 0898–1012; 8: 0001–0302 hospitals; commissaries; post

exchanges 10: 0104 intelligence activities 8: 0954–1032;

9: 0001–0299; 18: 0505 maneuvers; troop movements 9: 0302;

18: 0510 missions 10: 0140–0262 movements of naval vessels of Great

Britain within the territorial jurisdiction of Indonesia 9: 0339

Mutual Security Program 8: 0457–0952 organization 9: 0341–0451 overflights 9: 0319, 0331

National Front activities 2: 0026, 0158, 0536–0886;

3: 0001; 4: 0253 Central Board 2: 0158 membership 2: 0158; 3: 0001 organization 1: 0447; 3: 0611 program 1: 0447

National Guidance, Department of formation of 7: 0334

National income see Income

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Nationalization of American-owned enterprises

12: 0950 of Belgian businesses 13: 0024;

14: 0928 of Dutch-owned businesses 14: 0805,

0860, 0911 of Factory Bank 14: 0273 of foreign-owned oil companies

16: 0017, 0065 National Planning Council

14: 0805 National Research, Department of

7: 0532 National security

finances—control agency 8: 0170 NATO

19: 0035 Naval vessels

general 9: 0843 movements of 19: 0486 United Kingdom—movements within

territorial jurisdiction of Indonesia 9: 0339

U.S.—visits to Indonesia 10: 0144–0241

Navigation general 19: 0496 taxes on 10: 0265

Navigation treaties see Friendship, commerce, and

navigation treaties Netherlands

branch banks in Indonesia 14: 0469 businesses, in Indonesia 12: 0932 businesses—nationalization by

Indonesia 14: 0805, 0860, 0911 missions 10: 0248 nationals 1: 0919; 12: 0630, 0635

Netherlands New Guinea see West Irian

Newsgathering agencies Antara news agency 19: 0036, 0071,

0108 China 19: 0193 general 19: 0116 United Kingdom 19: 0189 U.S. 19: 0125 USSR 19: 0190

Newspapers anticommunist 19: 0028 circulation—decline in 19: 0083 Djakarta—government decision to

close 18: 0717 general 10: 0264; 18: 0660–0779;

19: 0001–0110 procommunist—banning of 18: 0660,

0669, 0677, 0712, 0714, 0762; 19: 0026

published in Surabaya consular district—survey 19: 0013

publishing licenses—failure of many newspapers to receive new 18: 0726

Newspapers, Chinese North Sumatra War Administration

orders closing of 18: 0730 opening of new daily in Medan

19: 0024 shut down after government revokes

newsprint allocations 18: 0662, 0721

New Zealand U.S.–United Kingdom–Australia talks

4: 0502 Nonmetallic minerals

glass and clay products 17: 0315 petroleum products 17: 0320

North Sumatra economic development 10: 0817 industry in—reports on 14: 0850 labor conditions 12: 0745, 0773 membership in regional legislature

7: 0644 military situation and leadership in

7: 0963 petroleum resources—Japanese-

Indonesian agreement on exploitation of 16: 0813, 0207

road conditions in 16: 0825 rubber estate development—future of

15: 0559 security conditions in 7: 0909 U.S.–owned rubber estates—report on

12: 0787 War Administration orders closing of

Chinese language newspapers 18: 0730

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North Sumatra, University of 2: 0423

“Observations and Reflections on Indonesia in Transition”

1: 0616 Oceanography

19: 0719 Oil

see Petroleum, oil, and lubricants Oils

edible 17: 0025 inedible 17: 0102 palm 17: 0106

OPPI (national labor organization) establishment of 13: 0098 opposition to 12: 0969 proposed creation of 12: 0950

Overflights by other countries 9: 0319 by United States 9: 0331

Overseas Chinese issue 1: 0447; 2: 0798; 3: 0093, 0363, 0672

Pacification see Civic action program

Painting 18: 0195

Pan American Oil Company 15: 0884; 16: 0341, 0575, 0602

Paper products 17: 0285

Parliament committees 7: 0321, 0636, 0644 criticism of cabinet ministers by 7: 0451 dissolution by Sukarno 1: 0257 First Minister Djuanda’s report to

3: 0189 members 7: 0594 party voting strength in 7: 0628 PKI Party 7: 0692 procedural rules 7: 0635 secretariat reorganization 7: 0694

Passports 5: 0837

Patents 14: 0725

Peace see Indonesian Peace Committee

Peace Corps general 11: 0855–0970 personnel 11: 0862

program for Indonesia 11: 0941 propaganda attacks against 4: 0200

Pensions legislation 12: 0851

People general 17: 0596 language 17: 0603 manners and customs 17: 0664, 0667 race problems 17: 0601

PERTAMIN operations 16: 0602

Pests agricultural 15: 0280

People’s Consultative Congress 1: 0001 see also Provisional People’s

Consultative Congress Permina Oil Company

developments 15: 0884; 16: 0065 oil fields—development of 15: 0952,

0969 operations 16: 0207

Persatuan Buruh Minjak (PERBUM—labor union)

constitution and basic rules 13: 0155 Petroleum companies

Asamera Oil Corporation 16: 0065, 0575

CALTEX 16: 0007, 0017, 0102, 0183, 0308, 0341, 0462, 0602, 0679, 0734

employees—demands for replacement of Dutch nationals 16: 0000

foreign-owned assignment of controllers to

15: 0884 nationalization proposal 16: 0017,

0065, 0183, 0207 negotiations on status of 16: 0207–

0651, 0669–0755 special foreign exchange

arrangements 16: 0141, 0183 Indonesian national 16: 0341 Pan American Oil Company 15: 0884;

16: 0341, 0575, 0602 Permina Oil Company 15: 0884, 0952,

0969; 16: 0065, 0207 PERTAMIN 16: 0602

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Petroleum companies cont. Shell Oil Company 12: 0272, 0797;

16: 0207, 0575, 0593, 0602, 0651, 0755

STANVAC 13: 0231, 0244, 0272, 15: 0923, 0969; 16: 0000, 0007, 0065, 0131–0308, 0378, 0658, 0755

Petroleum, oil, and lubricants advisers 16: 0771 domestic sales and distribution

15: 0884 exploration agreements 16: 0341 exports 16: 0102, 0658 general 15: 0884–0969; 16: 0000–

0755 imports 16: 0651–0669 industry 16: 0462, 0515, 0531 installations, in South Sumatra

15: 0923 laws 15: 0884; 16: 0007, 0102–0141 marketing system 16: 0602 operations in East Java 16: 0462 policy 16: 0207, 0308 PRC market for 16: 0707 prices 15: 0884 production 16: 0658 products 16: 0658; 17: 0320 rebel activities against 15: 0923;

16: 0102 report 16: 0017 resources in North Sumatra 16: 0183,

0207 statistics 15: 0969; 16: 0341, 0515

Philanthropic organizations see Charities; philanthropic

organizations Philippines

missions 10: 0262 Phosphates

16: 0795 Physically handicapped

education of 18: 0188 PIA news agency

19: 0108, 0110 Police

assistance programs 8: 0219, 0914 national 18: 0449 organization 18: 0500

Political activities; forces leadership patterns 1: 0136 on Lombok 3: 0093 regulations on 4: 0062 Sumbawa 3: 0189 temporary ban on 2: 0280 Timor 2: 0001

Political affairs agents—in United States 5: 0717,

0718 communism 5: 0504–0710 flag 5: 0821 general 1: 0001–0919; 2: 0001–0886;

3: 0001–0949; 4: 0001–0502 May Day 4: 0701 socialism 5: 0714 Weeka reports 4: 0717–0984; 5: 0001–

0489 see also Government

Political conditions Atjeh 3: 0560 Madura 3: 0560 Sulawesi 4: 0502

Political parties and organizations activities of 1: 0001–0919; 2: 0001–

0158, 0356–0886; 3: 0001–0363, 0500, 0560, 0717, 0871; 4: 0001, 0335–0502

Central Youth Front 18: 0302 Democratic League 1: 0447–0796;

2: 0026, 0798; 7: 0594 dissident—proposed ban on 2: 0026–

0280 Indonesian Students Movement

Concentration 18: 0299 Indonesia Party 3: 0815 National Front 1: 0447; 2: 0026, 0158,

0536–0886; 3: 0001, 0611; 4: 0253

PKI Party 2: 0026, 0356, 0423; 3: 0305; 5: 0504–0710; 7: 0558; 11: 0265

Population census 17: 0556 see also People

Port facilities 19: 0459

Postal matters complaints against service 18: 0613 general 18: 0610

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Post exchanges 10: 0104

Poultry 15: 0726

Power plants 19: 0737

Presidential powers 1: 0001

Presidential succession government regulations regarding

1: 0447 Press

anti-American 18: 0738; 19: 0071, 0083

anti-Western 18: 0738 censorship 19: 0194 Chinese language 18: 0677, 0717 Communist—anti-Chinese campaign

19: 0065 on Cuban missile crisis 19: 0071 English language 19: 0001 general 18: 0641; 19: 0061 government attitudes toward 18: 0730 newsgathering agencies 19: 0116–

0193 newspapers; magazines 10: 0264;

18: 0660–0779; 19: 0001–0110 publication licenses 18: 0726; 19: 0028 summit conference 18: 0699

Prices petroleum 15: 0884 retail 12: 0027

Production incentives for state enterprise employees

13: 0265 Production sharing

arrangements 11: 0501, 0537; 12: 0285–0317, 0334, 0342; 13: 0726, 0761; 14: 0990, 0993

Japanese 13: 0644 regulations 13: 0595

Production Sharing Interdepartmental Committee

14: 0990 Productivity campaign

12: 0619 Promissory notes

government-issued, against frozen deposits 13: 0328

Propaganda anti–Peace Corps 4: 0200 Communist 2: 0001 Democratic League 2: 0026 friendship associations; societies

18: 0346 PRC 1: 0919 U.S. 20: 0085

Provincial Arbitration Board Communist infiltration of 12: 0781

Provisional People’s Consultative Congress

composition of 2: 0280, 0356, 0536 general 2: 0678 operations of 2: 0536 recommends cabinet changes 7: 0699

Publication licenses newspapers and magazines 18: 0726;

19: 0028 Public health

general 18: 0511 practice of medicine and surgery

18: 0566 vital statistics 18: 0564

Public order, safety, and health charities; philanthropic organizations

18: 0571–0576 public health 18: 0511–0566

Public records 17: 0672

Public safety see Public order, safety, and health

Public works general 16: 0808 roads; highways 16: 0813–0931 utilities 7: 0585, 0740; 16: 0934

Race problems 17: 0601

Radio; radiobroadcasting 18: 0620

Railroads 17: 0193; 18: 0595; 19: 0214

Rates air transportation 19: 0337

Raw materials shortages 19: 0030

Rebels activities of 1: 0447; 2: 0423, 0798,

0886; 3: 0093; 4: 0253; 15: 0923; 16: 0102

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Rebels cont. amnesty for 3: 0363, 0443 SEATO cooperation with 1: 0919 surrender of 3: 0001, 0189–0363 trials of 1: 0616, 0796; 2: 0001

Reclamation soil 15: 0279

Red Cross 18: 0572

Regional legislatures abolition of 7: 0642 East Java 7: 0652 North Sumatra 7: 0644

Regulations economic 11: 0501 export 13: 0571 foreign exchange 14: 0107–0183 political activities 4: 0062 presidential succession 1: 0447 production sharing 13: 0595 security 7: 0944

Relief measures 18: 0412

Religion 17: 0607 see also Islam see also Moslems

Research and development general 19: 0511–0660 scientific training program 19: 0661

Rice general 15: 0284, 0494 purchase program 11: 0335

Rivers 19: 0451

Roads; highways Djakarta bypass project 8: 0864;

16: 0825, 0830–0925, 0928, 0931 general 16: 0813–0931

Rockets 9: 0829

Rubber estates British 12: 0950 concessions—negotiations 15: 0579,

0588–0613, 0624–0703 development of 15: 0559 general 15: 0497–0722 Goodyear Rubber Company 15: 0540,

0560 kidnappings of employees 1: 0136

local sales restrictions 15: 0624 manufactures 17: 0047 national stockpile 7: 0451 North Sumatra 13: 0083 pooling system 15: 0657 production 15: 0619 protection of 2: 0280 purchases by USSR 15: 0643 raids on 1: 0136, 0257; 2: 0158 statistics 15: 0698 strikes and work stoppages 12: 0950;

13: 0083 surplus 7: 0451

Rubber estates, American-owned bankruptcy of 15: 0711 disposal program 15: 0657, 0667 general 12: 0263 labor problems 15: 0507 legal status 15: 0540 in North Sumatra 12: 0787 operating conditions 15: 0716 reports on 12: 0787; 15: 0716 security 15: 0525 transfer of 15: 0722

Rumania see Indonesian-Rumanian Friendship

League Samosir Island

military situation in 7: 0935 Science

earth sciences 19: 0669 engineering 19: 0737 general 19: 0508 medical sciences 19: 0735 natural sciences 19: 0733 research and development 19: 0511–

0661 Scientific research and development

general 19: 0511–0660 organizational developments in

19: 0642 scientific training program 19: 0661

Scientific training program 19: 0661

Sculpture 18: 0211

Seamen 19: 0497

Security regulations 7: 0944

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Seismology 19: 0721

Sentral Organisasi Buruh Seluruh Indonesia (SOBSI—labor union)

army measures against 13: 0001 constitution 13: 0098 on economic problems 13: 0239, 0244 indirect Hungarian subsidy of 12: 0601 KBKI cooperation with 13: 0272 National Board members 13: 0098 organizational provisions 13: 0098 printers’ union threatens boycott of

USIS 13: 0244 Third National Congress 12: 0622

Sentral Organisasi Karyawan Socialist Indonesia (SOKSI—labor union)

establishment of 12: 0851; 13: 0272 Seven year plan

11: 0980 see also Economic planning

Shell Oil Company demonstrations against 12: 0797 oil field and refinery on Java 12: 0272;

16: 0575 operations in Indonesia 16: 0207 status of 16: 0593 tensions with War Administration in

Balikpapen 16: 0602, 0651, 0755 Shipbuilding

17: 0202 Ship charters

10: 0266 Shipping

Japanese 12: 0944 Socialism

general 5: 0714 role of labor unions in 13: 0024 see also Communism; Communists

Social matters amusements; sports 18: 0214–0246 census 17: 0556 disasters; relief measures 18: 0412 education 18: 0048–0190 etiquette 18: 0395, 0397 fine arts 18: 0191–0211 general 17: 0552 history 17: 0670, 0672; 18: 0001 language 17: 0603 manners and customs 17: 0664, 0667 people 17: 0596–0667

Societies better citizenship organizations

18: 0389 general 18: 0262–0387

Solo expositions; exhibitions 15: 0243

Southeast Asia U.S. presence in—Indonesian attitudes

toward 20: 0250 see also Association of Southeast

Asian States Southeast Asian Treaty Organization (SEATO)

cooperation with rebels 1: 0919 South Sumatra

civil-military relations in 8: 0170 labor developments in 12: 0630 rebel activity against oil installations in

15: 0923 security conditions in 7: 0915

Soviet bloc economic aid 14: 0878 travel of Indonesian trade unionists to

countries of 13: 0001 Spices; extracts

17: 0008 Standard Oil Vacuum Company (STANVAC)

labor agreement 13: 0231, 0244 labor negotiations 13: 0272 operations of, in Indonesia 15: 0923,

0969; 16: 0000, 0007, 0065, 0131–0308, 0378, 0658, 0755

State enterprises employee incentives 13: 0265 general 14: 0805

State of emergency laws 1: 0001

Statistics economic 12: 0025 labor disputes in West Java 13: 0272 petroleum 15: 0969; 16: 0341, 0515 rubber production 15: 0540, 0698 vital 18: 0564

Steel mill products general 17: 0109 heavy machinery 17: 0117 light machinery 17: 0137

Stock exchange 14: 0473

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Stock raising general 15: 0724 poultry 15: 0726

Strikes see Labor strikes

Students Indonesian Students Movement

Concentration 18: 0299 Subversive activities

1: 0447 Sugar

food products 17: 0018 general 15: 0455

Sukarno, Achmed air force confrontation with 7: 0999 army confrontation with 2: 0158;

7: 0990 bans non-Indonesian societies

18: 0310, 0326 calls for cooperation with PKI Party

3: 0305 dissolution of parliament 1: 0257 Kenndy, John F.—talks with 20: 0168 opposition to 2: 0536 opposition to, by United States

20: 0046, 0085 showdown with General Nasution

7: 0944 speeches 1: 0447; 4: 0062; 5: 0843–

0915; 6: 0001–0976; 7: 0001–0277

travel itineraries 5: 0843–0915; 6: 0001–0976; 7: 0001–0277

Sulawesi political conditions in 4: 0502

Sulawesi, South Moslem revolutionary forces in

20: 0285 request for assistance in development

of mineral resources 12: 0293 Sumatra

collapse of rebellion 3: 0443 corruption in 3: 0093 rebel activities 3: 0093 regional development plan 11: 0171 surrender of rebels in 3: 0189, 0305 U.S. interests in 20: 0202 see also Central Sumatra see also East Sumatra see also North Sumatra

see also South Sumatra see also West Sumatra

Sumatra Planters’ Association general 18: 0273 Research Institute publications

19: 0517 Sumbawa

political forces on 3: 0189 Summit conference

Indonesian press reaction 18: 0699 Surabaya

consular district 19: 0013 U.S. consulate—attack on 4: 0335;

20: 0334 Surveying

19: 0669 Taxation

general 13: 0807 income 13: 0852 navigation 10: 0265

Technical assistance general 12: 0001 for Indonesian Development Bank

14: 0249, 0268, 0273 Technical education

18: 0183 Telephone

18: 0614 Television

18: 0635 Territory

5: 0729 Terrorists

Communist—trials of 5: 0630 see also Demonstrations see also Rebels

Textile industry cotton manufactures 17: 0279 general 17: 0218 synthetic fibers 17: 0280

Timor Chinese in 2: 0423 missions 10: 0251 political forces in 2: 0001 troop buildup in 8: 0264

Tin 15: 0805

Tobacco general 15: 0386 manufactures 17: 0033

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Tourism 14: 0737

Trade conditions—domestic 12: 0590 see also Balance of payments

Trade agreements Indonesia–other countries 19: 0759 U.S.–Indonesia 20: 0413–0868

Trademarks 14: 0730

Trade unions ICFTU 13: 0272

Transmigration program in Kalimantan 1: 0001

Transportation general 19: 0199–0497 highway—report on 16: 0814

Transportation, air accidents 19: 0340 airports 19: 03411 general 19: 0289 between Indonesia and other countries

19: 0330 laws and regulations 18: 0638;

19: 0331 rates 19: 0337 sale; purchase 19: 0356

Transportation, land buses 19: 0277 general 19: 0209 laws and regulations 19: 0213 motor vehicles 19: 0280 railroads 18: 0595; 19: 0214

Transportation, water charters 10: 0266 between Indonesia and other countries

19: 0446 laws and regulations 19: 0453 movements of vessels 19: 0486 port facilities 19: 0459 rivers 19: 0451 sale; purchase 19: 0487 taxes on navigation 10: 0265

Transportation equipment aircraft 17: 0199 general 17: 0175 motor vehicles 17: 0179 railroads 17: 0193 shipbuilding 17: 0202

Treasury bills rates increase 13: 0464

U-2 flights over Indonesia 4: 0335; 19: 0083;

20: 0328 Unemployment

in West Irian 13: 0244 Unions

see Labor unions; organizations United Indonesian Republic

proclamation of 1: 0136 United Kingdom

investments 12: 0349 military aid to Indonesia 9: 0486 missions 10: 0245 movements of naval vessels within the

territorial jurisdiction of Indonesia 9: 0339

newsgathering agencies 19: 0189 rubber plantations—labor strikes

against 12: 0950 security talks with United States,

Australia, and New Zealand regarding Indonesia 4: 0502

Universities 2: 0423; 18: 0100

University of North Sumatra politics and education at 2: 0423

Uranium 15: 0857

U.S. Economic Study Group see Economic Study Group, U.S.

U.S. Information Service press list 19: 0005, 0018 SOBSI printers’ union threatens

boycott of 13: 0244 U.S. Rubber Company

estates—security report 15: 0525 USSR

credits 13: 0350, 0423 economic aid for Indonesia 10: 0634;

20: 0135 investments 12: 0501 loan agreement 13: 0350 military aid to Indonesia 7: 0963;

8: 0072–0111, 0170–0264, 0302, 0619, 0768; 9: 0481, 0491, 0492, 0631, 0688, 0692; 20: 0135

military bases in Indonesia 10: 0097 missions 10: 0252

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USSR cont. newsgathering agencies 19: 0190 road project in East Kalimantan

16: 0828 rubber purchases 15: 0643 visit to, by Abdul Haris Nasution

9: 0380 U.S. Steel

concession in West Irian 12: 0337 Utilities

7: 0585, 0740; 16: 0934 Visas

14: 0737 Vocational education training plans

general 12: 0851 Wages

12: 0899 War; hostilities, U.S.–Indonesia

enemy property—blocked funds 20: 0339

general 20: 0338 War Administration

in Balikpapen—tensions with Shell Oil Company 16: 0602, 0651, 0755

North Sumatra—orders closing of Chinese language newspapers 18: 0730

takes over Antara news agency 19: 0036, 0071

War plan 7: 0963

Water transportation see Transportation, water

Weeka reports 4: 0717–0984; 5: 0001–0489

Western culture campaign against 20: 0007

West Irian dismissals of Indonesian workers in

12: 0704 unemployment problems in 13: 0244 U.S. Steel concession in 12: 0337

West Irian dispute 1: 0257, 0919; 2: 0026, 0280, 0536,

0678, 0886; 3: 0001–0305, 0443, 0560–0949; 4: 0001, 0062, 0253, 0414; 8: 0017, 0031, 0047, 0072, 0111, 0219; 9: 0667, 0674; 19: 0027; 20: 0067, 0073, 0080–0102, 0148, 0188, 0217, 0229–0266, 0287, 0300–0315

West Java see Java, West

West Kalimantan see Kalimantan, West

West New Guinea see West Irian

West Sumatra agriculture in—report on 14: 0959 corruption and communism among

troops stationed in—report on 9: 0420

industry in—report on 14: 0959 Wheat

15: 0283 Women

Indonesian Women’s Congress 2: 0678

organizations 18: 0353, 0368 role of, in developing Asian nations

3: 0189 Youth Front of North Sumatra

18: 0310 Youth organizations

All Indonesian Youth Congress 1: 0257; 18: 0263

Central Youth Front 18: 0302 in Medan 18: 0310 Youth Front of North Sumatra 18: 0310

Yugoslavia missions 10: 0258

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