Tools
Change country:

The Particular Brutality of Colonial Wars

Even the most well-read World War II enthusiast is likely unaware of one major military operation that happened in 1945. It involved Royal Air Force bombers, 24 Sherman tanks, and 36,000 troops—some of them British, the rest Indian and Nepalese Gurkhas under British command. More than 600 of these soldiers died, including a British brigadier general.

Despite the year, the fighting happened after the war ended. It took place in Indonesia. One of the dirty secrets of 1945 is that just as the Allies were speaking loftily of having saved the world from German and Japanese tyranny, they began new battles to regain colonies they had lost in the war: France retook Algeria and Indochina, and the Dutch wanted Indonesia back. With the Netherlands half a world away and devastated by war, the British stepped in to help.

Few Anglophones know either Dutch or Indonesian, and that’s likely one reason we know far less about that archipelago’s long and painful history than, say, about India’s ordeals under the Raj. Yet Indonesia is the world’s fourth-most-populous country, and the one with the largest number of Muslim inhabitants. A single island, Java, has more people than France and Britain combined. David Van Reybrouck’s immensely readable new history of the nation, Revolusi: Indonesia and the Birth of the Modern World, fills an important gap.

Van Reybrouck is a Dutch-speaking Belgian best known for his Congo: The Epic History of a People, published in 2014. Although his writing is dazzling, some of us who follow events in that country felt he was a mite too gentle in dealing with Belgian colonial rule, especially the forced-labor system that so enriched the colony’s founder, King Leopold II. But he shows no such reticence when it comes to the Dutch in Indonesia.

How, he asks, did the once-tiny settlement that today is the immense city of Jakarta “ever become a thriving hub of world trade? The answer was simple: by enslaving people.” Between 1600 and 1900, an estimated 600,000 people were traded by the Dutch in Asia. Some 150,000 slaves came from Bali alone. All of this began under the Dutch East India Company, which, like its British counterpart (they were founded a mere two years apart), had its own army. The company ran the colony for two centuries and was the first corporation anywhere to have tradable stock.

The colonial regime brought vast riches to the mother country and much bloodshed to the islands; a single war from 1825 to 1830 cost roughly 200,000 Indonesian lives. Several decades later, slave labor in the archipelago was in some years generating more than half of the total Dutch tax revenue. (Surprisingly, Van Reybrouck does not mention someone who noticed this, Leopold of Belgium. Enviously eyeing these huge profits set the king on a similar path in his new African colony. Forced labor, he declared, was “the only way to civilize and uplift these indolent and corrupt peoples.”) As with many colonial conquests, the resources that first loomed large for the Dutch—spices—were soon eclipsed by others that proved even more lucrative: coffee, tea, tobacco, and sugar. Ultimately, major profits came from feeding an industrializing world’s hunger for coal and, above all, oil.

Although many scattered revolts took place throughout the centuries of Dutch rule, a profusion of local languages and the expanse of the islands (stretching a distance as far as from Ireland to Kazakhstan, Van Reybrouck points out) meant that national consciousness was slow in coming. An official independence movement did not begin until 1912—by coincidence the same year that saw the African National Congress born in South Africa. The charismatic orator Sukarno, the man who became the movement’s often-imprisoned leader, had the ability to knit together its nationalist, Communist, and Islamic strands. When the Japanese occupied the islands during World War II, they imprisoned Dutch officials and professed anti-colonial solidarity with the Indonesians, but before long began seizing natural riches and imposing their own forced-labor system. A mere two days after Japan announced its surrender to the Allies but before the Dutch could again take over, Sukarno saw his chance and issued a declaration of independence, the postwar era’s first.

Then, in response, came the British invasion, the first round of a four-year colonial war as vicious as any in the 20th century. Heavily armed by the United States, the Dutch battled, in vain, to reestablish control over the sprawling territory. Possibly as many as 200,000 Indonesians died in the conflict, as well as more than 4,600 Dutch soldiers.

As in most counter-guerilla wars, captured fighters were routinely tortured to force them to reveal the whereabouts of their comrades. The Dutch soldier Joop Hueting left a chilling memoir, which Van Reybrouck summarizes: “The platitudes in the letters home. ‘Everything still fine here,’ ‘how lovely that Nell has had her baby,’ because why worry them with stories that they, with their crocheted doilies and floral wallpaper and milk bottles on the doorstep, wouldn’t understand … stories about bamboo huts burning so fiercely that the roar of the flames drowns out the screams of the people who lived there, stories about naked fifteen-year-olds writhing on the concrete with electric wires attached to their bodies.”

Hueting went public for the first time in a television interview he gave in 1969, two decades after his return from Indonesia, provoking death threats so severe that he and his family sought police protection. For the rest of his life, he collected testimonies from fellow Dutch veterans, but, Van Reybrouck writes, “it is bewildering that shortly before his death, the NIOD, the Dutch Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, showed no interest … As a result, the legacy of the post-war Netherlands’ most important whistle-blower is languishing in the attic of a private house in Amsterdam.” No country, including our own, reckons easily with such parts of its past; few Americans learn much about the similarly brutal colonial war we waged in the Philippines from 1899 to 1902.

To their credit, some Dutch people were uneasy about the war. Although 120,000 draftees were sent to Indonesia, a remarkable 6,000 refused to board the ships, many of them sentenced to prison as a result. An unknown number of others, foreshadowing our own war resisters during the Vietnam years, concocted medical or psychiatric ailments or quietly slipped out of the country. Among those who did go to Indonesia, at least two—echoing a handful of Black American troops in the Philippines a half century earlier—switched sides.

The best-known of them, Poncke Princen, had been jailed in Holland and Germany by the Nazis, then joined the Dutch army after liberation. Sent to Indonesia, he deserted and took up arms with the rebels. He remained after independence, becoming a member of the Indonesian Parliament and an outspoken human-rights advocate. Those activities won him lengthy prison terms under both Sukarno and his successor, Suharto; sadly, postindependence Indonesia saw long periods of repression.

Many voices we hear in Revolusi are of people whom Van Reybrouck himself talked with. Another Dutch deserter who went over to the rebels was 90 years old when the author tracked him down, in the Dutch city of Assen. With astounding energy, Van Reybrouck found dozens of other elderly eyewitnesses in huts, apartments, and nursing homes all over the world—in Holland, Indonesia, Japan (veterans of the World War II occupation force), and Nepal (Ghurkas from the British army). And even when all the participants involved in a particular event are now dead, he often manages to find a daughter or grandson with a story to tell. Van Reybrouck has visited just about every place that figures in Indonesia’s history, and evokes them with a narrative zest all too rare among historians. When approached from the air, for example, a pair of islands look “like two emerald-green cufflinks on the sleeve of the Pacific.”

That 1945–49 war saw scenes of appalling savagery. One notorious Dutch commander, Raymond Westerling, would have “his men surround a suspicious kampong in the early morning … Anyone who tried to escape … was gunned down … After searching the houses, Westerling addressed the silent crowd and went through his list of suspects … One after the other, the suspects were forced to squat.” If he thought someone had information he wasn’t yielding, Westerling would begin firing bullets.

“The first one shot was Regge, a cousin of mine,” a woman told Van Reybrouck. “They shot him six times. In his right foot, his left foot, his right knee, his left knee … It was Westerling himself who shot him. He didn’t say anything. He drank a soft drink, threw the bottle in the air and shot it.” Westerling claimed to have personally killed 563 people. After the war, he ran a secondhand bookstore in Amsterdam, took opera lessons, and ended up as a swimming-pool lifeguard.

Many things make colonial wars particularly brutal: the colonizers’ lust for wealth; their fear that their enemies might be anywhere, instead of behind a clearly defined front line; their belief that the colonized people belong to an inferior race. But in the case of the Dutch in Indonesia—as of the French in Algeria, who also practiced torture and murder on a huge scale—was there an additional factor as well?

Immediately before its war against Indonesian independence fighters, the Netherlands itself emerged from five years of ruthless German occupation. The country had been plundered. The massive bombing of Rotterdam had leveled the city’s medieval core and left nearly 80,000 people homeless. The occupiers had banned all political parties except a pro-Nazi one. Those suspected of being in the resistance had been jailed and tortured; many of them had been killed. In the winter of 1944–45, the Germans had cut off heating fuel and food for much of the country, and some 20,000 people had starved to death. More than 200,000 Dutch men, women and children had died of causes related to the war, just over half of them Jews who’d perished in the Holocaust. As a percentage of the population, this was the highest death rate of any country in Western Europe. And more than half a million Dutch citizens had been impressed as forced laborers for the Nazis, usually working in war factories that were the targets of Allied bombers.

When victims become perpetrators, are they unconsciously taking revenge? Many conflicts, including those raging today—think of Gaza, for instance—have this underlying subtext. The whistleblower soldier Joop Hueting reported a haunting piece of graffiti he saw as Dutch troops advanced in Java, which answered the question definitively: “Don’t do to us what the Germans did to you!”


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
‘The Good Doctor Finale Was as Preposterous as You’d Expect
Photo Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/ABCIt’s hard to overstate how gaga viewers were over The Good Doctor when it first premiered in 2017. The ABC medical drama stars Freddie Highmore as Dr. Shaun Murphy—an autistic surgeon with savant syndrome. A lot of critics might’ve panned the show when it first began, but audiences flocked to it week after week. At one point, the show’s viewership managed to best even the years-long record holder Big Bang Theory, an achievement shocking enough to inspire a flurry of think pieces. On Tuesday night, the series wraps up its seven-season run with a fittingly sentimental and preposterous series finale that dares to ask, what if not one but TWO people in Dr. Shaun Murphy’s life were dying?In the years following his sparkling debut, our blue-eyed, pure-hearted good doctor has faced a serious fall from grace. The show’s self seriousness combined with its trope-y and frankly ableist depiction of autism turned it into a meme last year, when social media users roasted one infamously embarrassing scene to hell and back. That frenzy also led X users to resurface other clips from the show, in which Shaun—an actual doctor who made it through medical school—commits such gaffes as forgetting that trans people exist and also failing to realize that not all brown folks are terrorists. What a pity this show is coming to a close!But how did it all wrap up? If you’re a person who wants to watch this finale unspoiled, this is your warning—spoilers lie ahead.Read more at The Daily Beast.
7 m
thedailybeast.com
LI village with contaminated water demands fed help for new $55M treatment facility: ‘It’s their constituents’
"We will not allow the Village of Hempstead to be another Flint, Michigan," Mayor Waylyn Hobbs Jr. told The Post Tuesday evening.
8 m
nypost.com
Mets’ Brooks Raley to have season-ending elbow surgery in blow to bullpen
Brooks Raley will undergo surgery next week for ligament damage and bone spurs in his left elbow, manager Carlos Mendoza said after the Mets’ 7-6 loss to the Guardians on Tuesday.
nypost.com
Filip Chytil implies he will be in Rangers’ lineup for Game 1 vs. Panthers
Filip Chytil did not outright state he is playing Wednesday, but implied he will be: “It’s gonna be nice to be involved in tomorrow’s game as well.”
nypost.com
Whitman, Leonardtown advance to Maryland 4A baseball championship
Chesapeake, Magruder, Glenelg and Patuxent also reached state title games on Tuesday.
washingtonpost.com
Adams, Hochul remain silent on NYC congestion pricing, pretend their just bystanders to legal graft
The $15 daily fee for cars and up to $36 for trucks and buses is the latest version of what the crooks from Tammany Hall called legal graft.
nypost.com
Secret Service denies involvement in Hunter Biden gun fiasco — despite FBI doc claiming otherwise
The agency’s latest denial, however, comes after federal court filings on Monday showed that the FBI interviewed the owner of the StarQuest Shooter gun store in Wilmington, Del., who said that both Delaware State Police and Secret Service agents visited his business the day after the .38-caliber revolver went missing.
nypost.com
It’s Gemini season, and the dead are trying to communicate — here’s how to safely talk back
Double trouble — it’s Gemini season folks, that hyperverbal, chaos as currency, gossip as cardio, poetry in motion, high-octane time of year when communication and curiosity become our governing tenants. And it’s not just the living getting loud. Rachel Stavis, world-renowned exorcist, and best-selling author of “Sister of Darkness: The Chronicles of a Modern Exorcist,”...
nypost.com
Sean "Diddy" Combs accused of drugging, sexual assaulting model in 2003
Crystal McKinney, a former model, accused Sean "Diddy" Combs of drugging and sexually assaulting her in New York City over 20 years ago. She filed the lawsuit under the NYC Gender Motivated Violence Act.
cbsnews.com
Letitia James Celebrates Abortion Care Win
New York's highest appeals court upheld the state's law that requires businesses to cover medically necessary abortions in their health care policies.
newsweek.com
Yankees done in by long ball as offense sputters in second straight loss to Mariners
Bryan Woo & Co. let up just five hits in a stingy performance that was backed by four Mariners home runs in a 6-3 Yankees loss in The Bronx. 
nypost.com
Benjamin Netanyahu Denies Starving Gazans Amid Near-Famine Conditions
CNNBenjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday denied the allegation from an International Criminal Court prosecutor that he was starving Palestinians in Gaza as a method of war, arguing the ICC arrest warrant was based on “a pack of lies.”On CNN, Netanyahu labeled ICC prosecutor Karim Khan a “rogue prosecutor” putting forth “false charges” after he had applied for arrests for the Israeli prime minister and Israel’s defense minister, Yoav Gallant, as well as three leaders of Hamas. Khan accused the Israeli pair of “causing extermination, causing starvation as a method of war, including the denial of humanitarian relief supplies, [and] deliberately targeting civilians in conflict.”Netanyahu also compared the notion of his arrest to how it would have looked if President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill had been arrested for leading the allied war effort in the 1930s and 1940s.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
American Airlines ‘outrageously’ suggests girl, 9, to blame after creepy flight attendant records her in bathroom
“I was absolutely shocked and I think it’s outrageous,” the family's attorney told The Post. “The idea that American Airlines and its lawyers would blame a 9-year-old girl for being filmed, in my opinion, just smacks of desperation and depravity.
nypost.com
I’m an Italian chef — here’s why I’ll never order these so-called ‘Italian’ dishes Americans can’t stop eating
They're nothing but a bunch of im-pastas.
nypost.com
Iowa State Police confirm fatalities, injuries as tornadoes rip through counties
Gov. Reynolds authorized a proclamation of disaster emergency for 15 counties on Tuesday.
abcnews.go.com
Mets’ Jake Diekman freaks out on water cooler after rough outing
Jake Diekman didn’t even last an inning in Tuesday’s loss, and he took out his anger on an unsuspecting water cooler in the Mets dugout. 
nypost.com
Nats shift from uplifting to deflating during a 10-0 loss to the Twins
One day after a 12-3 rout snapped a five-game skid, the Nationals managed just three hits and Patrick Corbin got lit up.
washingtonpost.com
Jonathan Quick provides Rangers with special leadership despite backup role
Jonathan Quick’s influence goes well beyond his 92 games of playoff experience, the X’s and O’s and any insight he may have into opposing goalies.
nypost.com
50 Cent reacts to Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ latest sexual assault lawsuit from former model: ‘Another one’
Crystal McKinney filed a lawsuit against Combs on Tuesday, claiming she was drugged and sexually assaulted by the disgraced music mogul in 2003.
nypost.com
WATCH: Family pulls dozens of balloons from sea during boat trip
A Southern California family's boat trip turned into a disappointing cleanup exercise as they collected dozens of deflated balloons from the ocean.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Dolientes inician días de funerales por el presidente de Irán y las víctimas de un accidente aéreo
Dolientes iraníes comenzaron a reunirse el martes para los funerales y procesiones fúnebres por el presidente, el canciller y los otros fallecidos en un accidente de helicóptero, una serie de ceremonias organizadas por el gobierno que buscan tanto honrar a las víctimas como proyectar una imagen de fortaleza en el inestable Oriente Medio.
1 h
latimes.com
'Apocalyptic' Tornado Tears Up City in Iowa
Videos on social media show debris and flattened houses amid violent storms in Iowa.
1 h
newsweek.com
Anya Taylor-Joy asumió duros retos físicos y emocionales para ponerse al frente de ‘Furiosa’
La actriz de ascendencia argentina Anya Taylor-Joy habla de los desafíos que enfrentó al protagonizar la nueva cinta de la saga de ‘Mad Max’
1 h
latimes.com
LaMelo Ball facing lawsuit for allegedly driving over child's foot at fan event: report
A mother is pursing legal action against NBA star LaMelo Ball. She claims the Hornets guard ran over her son's foot as fans attempted to get Ball's autograph, WSOC reported.
1 h
foxnews.com
Sauce Gardner bringing his Jets Super Bowl vibes back
Jets cornerback Sauce Gardner is not shying away from high expectations for the 2024 season.
1 h
nypost.com
Rangers not changing game to suit Panthers’ heavy play
The Rangers certainly don’t intend on letting their Eastern Conference final adversary dictate the type of game they want to play.
1 h
nypost.com
UC seeks injunction to halt strike as academic workers threaten to expand walkouts
The legality of the ongoing strike by UC academic workers in support of pro-Palestinian demonstrators will go before the state labor board this week.
1 h
latimes.com
Fani Willis and Judge Presiding Over Georgia Trump Election Case Defeat Challengers
The intense public interest in the election case has thrust both Fani Willis and Judge Scott McAfee into the national spotlight
1 h
time.com
Alleged victim in Rashee Rice alleged nightclub attack does not want star to face charges
Rashee Rice's eventful offseason has taken another turn. The Chiefs star wide receiver was accused of attacking a photographer at a Dallas-area nightclub on May 6 -- weeks after he and SMU wideout Theodore “Teddy” Knox were allegedly involved in a high-speed car race.
1 h
nypost.com
Congo divulga nombre de tercer estadounidense involucrado en intento golpista
La República Democrática del Congo divulgó el martes el nombre de un tercer estadounidense involucrado en un frustrado intento de golpe de Estado, mientras familiares en Utah lloraban la muerte de Christian Malanga, el líder de la insurrección ocurrida durante el fin de semana.
1 h
latimes.com
Donald Trump Sees Thousands of Kentucky Republicans Vote Against Him
Thousand of Republican voters in Kentucky voted for candidates who have dropped out of the race.
1 h
newsweek.com
Víctimas de escándalo de sangre infectada en Reino Unido comenzarán a recibir indemnización este año
Las miles de personas que resultaron infectadas con sangre o productos sanguíneos contaminados proporcionados por el servicio de salud pública del Reino Unido comenzarán a recibir sus pagos de indemnización definitiva este año, dijo el martes el gobierno.
1 h
latimes.com
Giant invasive, pet-eating snakes take over Puerto Rico: ‘It’s very, very bad’
"My cats are gone, my chickens are gone ... It's a problem."
1 h
nypost.com
‘The Show’ Episode 102: Dave Dombrowski Talks First-Place Phillies
It's been a remarkable start to the season for a Phillies team that was a win away from back-to-back World Series appearances last year.
1 h
nypost.com
JESSE WATTERS: Biden sent men with guns to his political opponent's house, turning their bedrooms upside down
Fox News' Jesse Watters gives his take on the 'major bombshell' in former President Trump's classified documents case on 'Jesse Watters Primetime.'
1 h
foxnews.com
Colorful socialite Jose Castelo Branco, 61, accused of assaulting 95-year-old wife, the diamond heiress Betty Grafstein, in Portugal
Uptown is abuzz with shocking news from Portugal, Page Six hears.
1 h
nypost.com
Teresa Giudice’s daughter Milania gets in car accident in her brand new Mercedes convertible
The reality star's second youngest daughter was reportedly uninjured after wrecking her luxury car in a collision with another driver on Friday.
1 h
nypost.com
Rancher, 21, vanishes while walking to work in ‘extremely rural’ Utah community
"Based on the information that we have received, we are concerned about the possibility that Elizibeth is in danger of serious bodily injury or death."
2 h
nypost.com
Do these simple exercises to improve your sex life — you’ll be amazed by the difference
Want to have your world rocked? Start by moving your body.
2 h
nypost.com
ESPN reporter Harry Lyles Jr. hilariously responds to ricochet shot from Florida State AD
ESPN college football reporter Harry Lyles Jr. was minding his own business when he was the subject of a barb from Florida State director of athletics Michael Alford.
2 h
nypost.com
Asesino serial canadiense acusado de matar a 26 mujeres es hospitalizado tras ser atacado en prisión
El asesino serial canadiense condenado Robert Pickton, que llevó a víctimas femeninas a su granja de cerdos durante una ola de crímenes cerca de Vancouver en la década de 1990 y principios de la del 2000, fue agredido en prisión y se encuentra hospitalizado en condición grave, informaron el martes las autoridades.
2 h
latimes.com
Severna Park boys’ lacrosse keeps the streak alive with eighth straight title
The Falcons won the Maryland 3A championship Tuesday with an 8-6 win over Towson.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Nestlé launches food line targeting Ozempic, other weight-loss drug users
Nestlé is launching a line of food products tailored to people using weight-loss medication in an effort to capitalize on a market expected to reach $30 billion in the next six years.
2 h
nypost.com
Behar admits she holds back criticism of Biden, Maher tells her that's how ‘you lose all credibility’
Bill Maher challenged the co-hosts of "The View" after one of them admitted she is "afraid" to criticize President Biden in front of her viewers.
2 h
foxnews.com
These Rangers own what makes them different from 2022 squad
So many of the important faces are the same from two years ago — 13, in fact, are holdovers — but the tenor is entirely different and so are expectations.
2 h
nypost.com
Justin Fields has eyes on Steelers' starting quarterback job: 'Russ knows that'
Justin Fields isn't taking a back seat to Russell Wilson as they both join the Pittsburgh Steelers. He's gunning for the starting job, and he says Wilson knows it.
2 h
foxnews.com
Giuliani says he will stop accusing Georgia workers of election tampering
A federal jury in December ordered Giuliani, a former attorney to Donald Trump, to pay $148 million to poll workers for falsely accusing them of election fraud.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Petrochemical company fined more than $30 million for 2019 explosions near Houston
The U.S. Justice Department said a Texas petrochemical company has agreed to pay more than $30 million over two explosions in 2019 that injured workers and forced thousands to evacuate.
2 h
foxnews.com