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Bulletins and News Discussion for February 19th to February 25th, 2023 - The Shadow of Suharto - COTW: Indonesia

Image is of Jakarta, the capital of Indonesia and the fastest sinking city in the world. A new capital is being built elsewhere in Indonesia.


I was going to make Indonesia the COTW anyway (unless something really massive happened somewhere else) due to the elections that might really designate the end of an era in Indonesian politics. Michael Roberts wrote up a big piece on Indonesia about a week ago, one day before the election began, so a lot of this information is coming from him.


Indonesia has been ruled by President Joko Widodo for 10 years, but is now barred from a third term constitutionally. Under his presidency, the Indonesian economy has seen fairly good GDP growth overall - about 5% per year, or an average of 4% per capita - and is broadly popular with the electorate. The biggest problems are the common ones, such as a lack of jobs and a high cost of living. Widodo's successors have naturally promised more jobs and an economic plan that clearly draws at least some inspiration from China's rise from the periphery to the heights of the world economy and manufacturing, but this seems pretty unlikely for Indonesia because, well, Indonesia is ruled by capitalist bourgeoisie parties and China is not. Indonesia's main gigs are palm oil, nickel ore, and oil, with internal manufacturing of these primary commodities only slowly growing and reliant on foreign labour.

Indonesia has a rather big employment problem. On the face of it, things don't seem bad, with an unemployment rate of only 5% - but this is only because it counts anybody who works even a couple hours per week. 60% of the workers in Indonesia are in the informal sector, with no real labour rights, sick pay, or guaranteed wages. And half of the ~8 million unemployed are young people. Indonesia is the sixth most unequal country on the planet, with at least 36% of the population in poverty, and the four richest men own as much as the bottom 100 million. This was a natural consequence of the policies of the dictator Suharto, who came to power in a coup overthrowing the communist nationalist leader Sukarno and killing one million communists, a period covered by Bevin's The Jakarta Method. At a fundamental level, not that much has changed since Suharto, and the country seems doomed to a path of slowing economic growth and massive amounts of environmental degradation under a plundering elite who will presumably fly off to New Zealand with the rest of them once the seas swallow the country, unless a communist movement can be rebuilt from ashes and can learn the lessons of 1965-66.

Though results have yet to be officially announced, it seems that 72-year-old Prabowo Subianto is overwhelmingly likely to have handily won the election. Once banned from the United States for human rights violations - a truly phenomenal feat - he has been the Minister of Defense since 2019, was an army lieutenant under Suharto and was his son-in-law. While this is obviously a particularly bad outcome, none of the other candidates seemed likely to fundamentally alter the trajectory of Indonesia, so the game was rigged from the start.


The Country of the Week is Indonesia! Feel free to chime in with books, essays, longform articles, even stories and anecdotes or rants. More detail here.

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  • I'm reminding a fellow Arab communist that everyone in the Arab world in 2011 was a "western backed fascist, jihadist salafist, or liberal comprador" but regardless people still took to the streets correctly

    You seriously gonna tell all me those kids who came streaming in from the slums and highrises were on the payroll of the liberal comprador elites? Those motherfuckers were too busy sitting in cafes with laptops in faces tweeting about hope and change to notice what was going on

    People forget this but it took everyone by surprise, and I mean everyone including the US empire and its allies, that why I know it was a correct moment and not some jumped up color revolution

    It's just a shame there was no left to take advantage of it and in the end it got countered

    • It didn’t get countered. It succeeded in its purpose of destabilizing and destroying the Middle East. It destroyed Gaddafi. It installed western backed puppets or justified intervention to do so. It destabilized Syria and funneled soldiers and young men from Egypt, Libya and Tunisia into Syria in attempts to destroy Assad.

      Gaddafi, Mubarak and Assad at least were better than the protesting groups, the arab spring was a reactionary movement fueled by Qataris, Turks, Israelis, Westerners and Saudis - the usual suspects. They destroyed the last vestiges of secular baathism and soviet aligned nations, instead installing easier controlled ISIS and Al Qaeda and Muslim Brotherhood types.

      You think the kind of guy who took CIA guns and shoved a bayonet up Gadafi’s ass were prole heroes?

      Those liberals posing about hope and change from the cafes were doing it on behalf of the Arab spring, they were pro-Arab spring. They were giving ideological cover to this “real moment” you talk about, exactly as you are doing now by obfuscating what happened. The people on the street were scum, they were extortionist salafists. You are naive and ignorant and being chauvinistic ignoring my direct experience with what occurred and the outcomes. My family and I were hounded and exploited for everything by what amounted to organized criminal gangs as they became the de facto government. My father had to give up basically everything he owned to thugs coming around collecting for "protection". Our women had to wear burkas where they never legally had to before. In Egypt a Qatari Islamist backed group got power first and then quickly was couped by an Israeli/Western backed power (Sisi), but both were reactionaries and imperialist compradors.

      My father wasn't rich or well connected to the government either. He was just a normal working class guy. This was the typical experience of millions of Egyptians.

      • It didn’t get countered. It destroyed Gaddafi. It installed western backed puppets or justified intervention to do so. It destabilized Syria and funneled soldiers and young men from Egypt, Libya and Tunisia into Syria in attempts to destroy Assad.

        You're just describing the counter, which if you remember didn't start until March, almost 4 months into the Spring

        You think the kind of guy who took CIA guns and shoved a bayonet up Gadafi’s ass were prole heroes?

        What do opportunist scum in Libya have to do with the kids in Tahrir Square? Or the kids who were massacred in Bahrain by the Saudis, what about the Jordanians who flooded the streets and got shot down, the Moroccans who got their asses beat by police, you're telling me the US wanted Mubarak couped? The old bastard was one of their oldest and most well-behaved clients

        Those liberals posing about hope and change from the cafes were doing it on behalf of the Arab spring, they were pro-Arab spring. They were giving cover to this “real moment” you talk about. The people on the street were scum, they were extortionist salafists. You are naive and ignorant and being chauvinistic ignoring my direct experience with what occurred and the outcomes. In Egypt a Qatari Islamist backed group got power first and then quickly was couped by an Israeli/Western backed power (Sisi), but both were reactionaries and imperialist compradors.

        Everyone was involved in the Spring, from poor slum kids, liberals in cafes, "extortionist salafists", leftists, old commies, trade unionists, students, fruit sellers, homeless, everyone, you're confusing opportunism for intentional conspiracy, also don't pretend you're the only one who had direct experience with what happened, I know plenty who also did, including the Egyptian commie who literally mentored me, they understood from the jump that 2011 was a 1848 moment and as such a necessary wake-up call for left currents in the Arab world who until that moment were extinct

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