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The Jakarta Method

Washington's Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World

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The Jakarta Method

Auteur(s): Vincent Bevins
Narrateur(s): Tim Paige
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À propos de cet audio

NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY NPR, THE FINANCIAL TIMES, AND GQ

“A radical new history of the United States abroad” (Wall Street Journal) which uncovers U.S. complicity in the mass-killings of left-wing activists in Indonesia, Latin America and around the world

In 1965, the US government helped the Indonesian military kill approximately one million innocent civilians—eliminating the largest Communist Party outside China and the Soviet Union and inspiring other copycat terror programs.

In this bold and comprehensive new history, Vincent Bevins draws from recently declassified documents, archival research, and eyewitness testimony to reveal a shocking legacy that spans the globe. For decades, it’s been believed that the developing world passed peacefully into the US-led capitalist system. The Jakarta Method demonstrates that the brutal extermination of unarmed leftists was a fundamental part of Washington’s final triumph in the Cold War.
Amérique du Sud Amériques Asie Guerre et crise Liberté et sécurité Politique Amérique Latine Guerre Espionnage Union soviétique Impérialisme Socialisme Militaire Guerre du Vietnam Chine Capitalisme Iran Afrique Réfugié Moyen Âge Russie Japon impérial Moyen-Orient Guerre froide Justice sociale Indonésie Autodétermination Croisade

Ce que les critiques en disent

“A radical new history of the United States abroad.”—Wall Street Journal
"Excellent...anchors itself in a history most Americans never learned or would rather forget."
Ishaan Tharoor, Washington Post
"The Jakarta Method is a must-read to better understand how the U.S. intelligence apparatus became what it is today, and how it's ravaged so many other countries along the way."
GQ
"Bevins gives a concise account of how US-supported carnage in Indonesia inspired other countries to unleash their own murderous suppression of left-wing movements. By focusing on Indonesia and nations not aligned with either the United States or the Soviet Union, he goes beyond the typical Cold War history of arms races and intrigue....As Bevins effectively describes, we are still living in the world created by these anti-communist purges....[His] account raises necessary questions. Did the anti-communist mania of the 20th century make the world any safer? And if so, for whom?"—Foreign Policy
"Bevins is not the first to note that the Cold War frequently burned hot in the Third World, but he excels at showing the human costs of that epic ideological struggle."
The New Republic
"The Jakarta Method dismantles and re-positions the American mythos, similar to two recent Pulitzer Prize winners: Nikole Hannah-Jones's The 1619 Project and Greg Grandin's The End of the Myth.... The Jakarta Method is a devastating critique of US hypocrisy during the Cold War, and a mournful hypothetical of what the world might have looked like if Third World movements had succeeded."
Los Angeles Review of Books
"Riveting....As a polemic, The Jakarta Method is never anything less than conscientious and persuasive, but Bevins's book truly takes flight as a work of narrative journalism, tracing the history of America's violent meddling in Southeast Asia and Latin America through the stories of those it brutalized."
Jacobin
"[The Jakarta Method] sheds a welcome light on the crimes that took place in Indonesia, a history largely forgotten in the West...but it also asks the fundamental question of why America aided such atrocities... Bevins persuasively argues for his country's blanket anticommunism as a kind of zealotry, an irrational pull with origins in the foundation of the United States."
Times Literary Supplement
"Exceptional...If Indonesia is counted as a 'win' for the pro-regime change crowd, the idea of promoting regime change is absolutely bankrupt and should never be employed again."—The American Conservative
"Trenchant....powerful....[Bevins] translates the findings of complex scholarly accounts into smooth and readable, if often heartbreaking, prose."
Boston Review
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Les plus pertinents
Bevins provides a comprehensive breakdown of a monumental moment in the history of Indonesia, as well as the lead up to and blowback from the US sanctioned mass killings in Jakarta and elsewhere throughout the developing world during the Cold War. A must read for understanding geopolitics of the 1960s and 70s.

informative, harrowing, and enlightening

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Bevins does a great job telling the story of American intervention that most people dont know.

Probably the Most Important Book this Year

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In the beginning I was trying to keep up with all the names of the politicians, etc and was a little frustrated, after I just relaxed and listened to the book, it all made perfect sense. Perhaps it was because I was listening to it rather than reading it. Awesome book, so enlightening!

Amazing!

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It reveals the extent of US involvement in the 3rd world. It seems interesting to me as author talks about dream's and aspirations of the developing world and its people after years of colonial exploitation. It was hard to put down after starting and I managed to finish it in 2 days while working full-time.

Very interesting and compelling listen

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Jaw dropping to learn about the lengths the CIA went to bring capitalism world wide. The world needs to know about the mass murder and the body count of capitalism.

Required reading for anyone who calls themselves a leftist

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You will likely enjoy this book if you are that part of the left wing that likes to think of communism as fundamentally good (although occasionally led mildly astray) and the United States and that great bogeyman Capitalism as fundementally evil. What is unclear is whether the author actually believes he is being an unbiased journalist, as he suggests, or if his obvious bias is intentional. He starts by quite rightly condemning horrific atrocities in American history such as slavery and the genocide of indigenous groups. He condemns, again rightly, the corruption and murders by the nationalist Chinese forces. In comparison, one gets the impression that Stalin and Mao were slightly stern or misguided but otherwise wise and thoughtful leaders rather than being responsible for more deaths of the people in the countries they conquered and ruled than the horrific armies of the nazi and imperial Japanese regimes. He writes as if he thinks Stalin actually wanted to free the colonized people's of the world from evil colonialist forces, rather then this being a convenient propaganda tool (also used by the Americans in the 19th century), and makes no mention of the fact that much of what we call Russia was conquered and the native peoples oppressed in a similar way to that used by other colonial powers such as Britain or France or China. He makes no mention of the mass slave labor in Stalin and Mao's prison camps. I have a hard time listening to the meat of the book, about the atrocities commited by anticommunist forces, because the author appears so ignorant of basic history I am left not being sure what to believe or not in what he is attempting to describe. Did these horrific events happen, with the assistance of the USA? yes. Is this a reliable narrator to describe them? Probably not. Will you like the book if you are a coffee shop socialist who wants to impress your friends with tales of the dreadful actions of the Running Dog Lackeys of the Imperial American Capitalists in their quest to Oppress the Freedom Loving Peoples of the World? Enjoy.

unconscious vs conscious bias

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