(Redirected from Japanese Occupation of Indonesia)
'
Imperial Japan occupied
Indonesia' during
World War II from March
1942 until after the end of War in 1945. The period was one of the most critical in
Indonesian history. The occupation was the first serious challenge to the
Dutch in Indonesia—it ended the Dutch colonial rule—and, by its end, changes were so numerous and extraordinary that the subsequent watershed, the
Indonesia Revolution, was possible in a manner unfeasible just three years earlier.
[1] Under
German occupation itself, the Netherlands had little ability to defend its colony against the
Japanese army and within only two months, the Japanese navy and army over ran Dutch army forces in little more than a month, ending 300 years of
Dutch colonial presence in Indonesia. In 1944–45, Allied troops largely by-passed Indonesia and did not fight their way into the most populous parts such as
Java and
Sumatra. As such, most of Indonesia was still under Japanese occupation at the time of their surrender in August 1945.
The most lasting and profound effects of the occupation were, however, on the Indonesian people. Initially, most had optimistically and even joyfully welcomed the Japanese as liberators from their Dutch colonial masters. This sentiment quickly changed as the occupation turned out to be the most oppressive and ruinous colonial regime in Indonesian history. As a consequence, Indonesians were for the first time politicised down to the village level. But this political wakening was also partly due to Japanese design; particularly in
Java and to a lesser extent
Sumatra, the Japanese indoctrinated, trained and armed many young Indonesians and gave their nationalist leaders a political voice. Thus through both the destruction of the Dutch colonial regime and the facilitation of Indonesian nationalism, the Japanese occupation created the conditions for a claim of Indonesian independence. It would be Indonesians, however, who immediately following World War II would be the ones to fight a bitter five-year diplomatic, military and social struggle before securing that independence.
Background
Until 1942, Indonesia was ruled by the Netherlands and was known as the
Netherlands East Indies. In 1929, during the so-called
Indonesian National Revival, Indonesian nationalists leaders
Sukarno and
Mohammad Hatta (later founding
President and
Vice President), foresaw a Pacific War and the opportunity that a Japanese advance on Indonesia might present for the independence cause.
[2]
The Japanese spread the word that they were the 'Light of Asia'. It was the only Asian nation that had successfully transformed itself into a modern technological society at the end of the nineteenth century and it had remained independent when most Asian countries had been under European or
American power, and had beaten a European power, Russia, in war.
[3] Following militarism in
China Japan turned its attention to Southeast Asia advocating to other Asians a '
Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere', a type of trade zone under Japanese leadership. The Japanese had gradually spread their influence through Asia in the first half of the twentieth century and during the 1920s and 1930s had established business links in the Indies. These ranged from small town barbers, photographic studios and salesmen, to large department stores and firms such as
Suzuki and
Mitsubishi becoming involved in the sugar trade.
[4] Japanese aggression in
Manchuria and
China in the late 1930s caused anxiety amongst the
Chinese in Indonesia who set up funds to support the anti-Japanese effort. Dutch intelligence services also monitored Japanese in Indonesia.
[5]
A number of Japanese had been sent by their government to establish links with Indonesian nationalists, particularly with Muslim parties while Indonesian nationalists were sponsored to visit Japan. Such encouragement of Indonesian nationalism was part of a broader Japanese plan for an 'Asia for the Asians'.
[6]
In November 1941, ''Madjlis Rakjat Indonesia'', an Indonesian organization of religious, political and
trade union groups, submitted a memorandum to the Dutch East Indies Government requesting the mobilization of the Indonesian people in the face of the war threat.
[7] The memorandum was refused because the Government did not consider the ''Madjlis Rakyat Indonesia'' to be representative of the people. Within only four months, the
Japanese had occupied the archipelago. On the night of
January 10-11,
1942, the Japanese
attacked Menado in
Celebes. At about the same moment they
attacked Tarakan, a major
oil extraction centre and port in the north east of
Borneo.

Japanese advance through Indonesia, 1942
The Invasion
Main articles: Netherlands East Indies campaign
In January the
American-British-Dutch-Australian Command (ABDACOM) was formed to co-ordinate
Allied forces in South East Asia. On February 27, the Allied fleet was defeated in the
Battle of the Java Sea. From February 28 to March 1, 1942, Japanese troops landed on four places along the northern coast of Java almost undisturbed. On March 8, the Allied forces in Indonesia surrendered. Dutch civilians who were still in the country, were
interned
Over three hundred years of Dutch colonial rule in Indonesia had been swept away in a few weeks. Liberation from the Dutch was initially greeted with optimistic enthusiasm by Indonesians who came to meet the Japanese army waving flags and shouting support such as “Japan is our older brother” and “''banzai Dai Nippon''”. In
Aceh the local population rebelled against the Dutch colonial authorities, even before the arrival of the Japanese. As renowned Indonesian writer
Pramoedya Ananta Toer noted “With the arrival of the Japanese just about everyone was full of hope, except for those who had worked in the service of the Dutch”
[8]
The occupation
Initially Japanese occupation was welcomed by the Indonesians as liberators.
[9] During the occupation, the Indonesian nationalist movement increased in popularity. In July 1942, leading nationalists like
Sukarno accepted Japan's offer to rally the public in support of the Japanese war effort. Both Sukarno and
Mohammad Hatta were decorated by the Emperor of Japan in 1943.

Japanese Occupation currency
Japanese rulers divided Indonesia into three regions; Sumatra was placed under the 25th Army, Java and
Madura were under the 16th Army, while
Borneo and eastern Indonesia were controlled by the Navy 2nd South Fleet. The 25th Army was headquartered in
Singapore and also controlled
Malaya until April 1943, when its command was narrowed to just Sumatra and the headquarters moved to
Bukittinggi. The 16th Army was headquartered in
Jakarta, while the 2nd South Fleet was headquartered in
Makassar.
Experience of the Japanese occupation of Indonesia varied considerably, depending upon where one lived and one's social position. Many who lived in areas considered important to the war effort experienced
torture,
sex slavery, arbitrary arrest and execution, and other
war crimes. Many thousands of people were taken away from Indonesia as
unfree labour (''
romusha'') for Japanese military projects, including the
Burma-Siam Railway, and suffered or died as a result of ill-treatment and starvation. People of Dutch and mixed Dutch-Indonesian descent were particular targets of the Japanese occupation.
During the World War II occupation, tens of thousands of Indonesians were to starve, work as slave labourers, be forced from their homes. In the National Revolution that followed, tens, even hundreds, of thousands, including civilians would die in fighting against the Japanese, Allied forces and other Indonesians before Independence was achieved.
John W. Dower cites a
United Nations report stating that four million people died in Indonesia as a result of famine and forced labor during the Japanese occupation, including 30,000 European civilian internee deaths (Dower, 1986, ''War Without Mercy'').
Materially, whole railway lines, railway rolling stock, and industrial plant in Java were lifted and shipped back to Japan and Manchuria. British intelligence reports during the occupation noted significant removals of any materials that could be used in the war effort.
The only prominent politician was leftist
Amir Sjarifuddin who was given 25,000
guilders by the Dutch in early 1942 to organise an underground resistance through his
Marxist and nationalist connections. The Japanese arrested Amir in 1943 and he only escaped execution following intervention from Sukarno whose popularity in Indonesia, and hence importance to the war effort, was recognised by the Japanese.The Japanese arrested Amir in 1943 and he only escaped execution following intervention from Sukarno whose popularity in Indonesia, and hence importance to the war effort, was recognised by the Japanese. Apart from Amir's Surabaya-based group, the most active pro-Allied activities were among the Chinese,
Ambonese, and
Menadonese.
[10]
Indonesian nationalism
During the occupation, the Japanese encouraged and backed Indonesian nationalistic feeling, created new Indonesian institutions and promoted nationalist leaders such as Sukarno. In the decades before the war, the Dutch had been overwhelmingly successful in suppressing the small nationalist movement in Indonesia such that the Japanese proved fundamental for coming Indonesian independence.
[11]
The Japanese regime perceived Java as the most politically sophisticated but economically the least important area; its people were Japan’s main resource. As such—and in contrast to Dutch suppression—the Japanese encouraged Indonesian nationalism in Java and thus increased its political sophistication (similar encouragement of nationalism in strategic resource-rich Sumatra came later, but only after it was clear the Japanese would lose the war). The outer islands under naval control, however, were regarded as politically backward but economically vital for the Japanese war effort, and these regions were governed the most oppressively of all. These experiences and subsequent differences in nationalistic politicisation would have profound impacts on the course of the Indonesian Revolution in the years immediately following independence (1945 – 1950).
In addition to new-found Indonesian nationalism, equally important for the coming independence strugle and internal revolution was the Japanese orchestrated economic, political and social dismantling and destruction of the Dutch colonial state.
End of the occupation
General MacArthur had wanted to fight his way with
Allied troops to liberate Java in 1944-45 but was ordered not to by the joint chiefs and
President Roosevelt. The Japanese occupation thus officially ended with
Japanese surrender in the Pacific and two days later
Sukarno declared
Indonesian Independence but Indonesia would have to spend the next four years
fighting the Dutch for its independence. American restraint from fighting their way into Java certainly saved many Japanese, Javanese and American lives. On the other hand, Indonesian independence would have likely been achieved more swiftly and smoothly had MacArthur had his way and American troops occupied Java.
[12]
See also
★
Netherlands Indian roepiah
References
;General
★
A Modern History of Indonesia, , Adrain, Vickers, Cambridge, , ISBN 0-521-54262-2
;Further reading
★
Java in a Time of Revolution: Occupation and Resistance, 1944-1946, Anderson, Ben, , , Cornell University Press, 1972, ISBN 0-8014-0687-0
★
The Way of a Boy: A Memoir of Java, Hillen, Ernest, , , Viking, 1993, ISBN 0-670-85049-7
;Notes
1. Ricklefs, M.C. ''A History of Modern Indonesia Since c. 1300.'' Second Edition. MacMillan, page 199, 1991.
2. Sukarno: An Autobiography, , , Sukarno, Bobbs-Merrill, , ; Sukarno: A Political Biography, , John David, Legge, , , ISBN 978-9814068642
3. Vickers (2005), page 87
4. A Modern History of Indonesia, , Adrain, Vickers, Cambridge, , ISBN 0-521-54262-2
5. Vickers (2005), page 83
6. Vickers (2005), pages 83-84
7. Independence the Issue, Charles Bidien, , , Far Eastern Survey,
8. Pramoedya Ananta Toer, ''The Mute’s Siloquay'', trans. Willem Samuels (New York: Penguin, 1998), pp. 74-106 (St. Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1975). Cited in Vickers (2005), p85)
9. Indonesia :: Japanese occupation Encyclopædia Britannica Online
10. The Indonesian National Revolution 1945-1950, , Anthony, Reid, Longman Pty Ltd, , ISBN 0-582-71046-4
11. Vickers (2005), page 85
12. Indonesian Destinies, , Theodore, Friend, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, , ISBN0-674-01834-6