Description

Book Synopsis
Dutch Edition/Nederlandse editie: Over de grens

On 17 August 1945, two days after the Japanese surrender that also brought an end to the Second World War in Asia, Indonesia declared its independence. The declaration was not recognized by the Netherlands, which resorted to force in its attempt to take control of the inevitable process of decolonization. This led to four years of difficult negotiations and bitter warfare.

In 2005, the Dutch government declared that the Netherlands should never have waged the war. The government’s 1969 position on the violence used by the Dutch armed forces during the war remained unchanged, however: although there had been ‘excesses’, on the whole the armed forces had behaved ‘correctly’. As the indications of Dutch extreme violence mounted, this official position proved increasingly difficult to maintain. In 2016, the Dutch government therefore decided to fund a broad study on the dynamics of the violence. The most important conclusions of that research programme are summarized in this book. The authors show that the Dutch armed forces used extreme violence on a structural basis, and that this was concealed both at the time and for many years after the war by the Dutch government and by society more broadly. All of this – like the entire colonial history – is at odds with the rose-tinted self-image of the Netherlands.

Table of Contents
1. Introduction
1 Background, guiding principles and methodology
Gert Oostindie

2 The Netherlands and Indonesia 1945-1949. The political-historical context
Gert Oostindie

3 The war in Indonesia 1945-1949. The military-historical context
Gert Oostindie and Rémy Limpach

Interim conclusions

2. Intermezzo
The human dimension. The search for stories about the Indonesian War of Independence
Eveline Buchheim, Fridus Steijlen, Stephanie Welvaart

i i i. Research results
1 ‘Hatred of foreign elements and their “accomplices”’ Extreme violence in the first phase of the Indonesian Revolution (17 August 1945 to 31 March 1946)
Esther Captain and Onno Sinke

2 Revolutionary worlds. Legitimacy, violence and loyalty during the Indonesian War of Independence
Roel Frakking and Martijn Eickhoff

3 ‘Information costs lives.’ The intelligence war for Indonesia, 1945-1949
Rémy Limpach

4 The myth of the ‘Dutch Method’. Heavy weapons in the Indonesian War of Independence
Azarja Harmanny

5 The law as a weapon. The actions of the Dutch judiciary during the Indonesian War of Independence
Esther Zwinkels

6 Silence, information and deception in the Indonesian War of Independence
Remco Raben and Peter Romijn

7 Silence as a strategy. International visions of the Indonesian War of Independence
Jeroen Kemperman

8 Beyond colonial guilt ranking. Dutch, British and French extreme violence in comparative perspective, 1945-1962
Thijs Brocades Zaalberg and Bart Luttikhuis

9 A guilty conscience. The painful processing of the Indonesian War of Independence in the Netherlands
Gert Oostindie and Meindert van der Kaaij

4. Closing remarks
Conclusions

5. Epilogue
Dealing with the legacies of a violent past
Hilmar Farid

Notes
Abbreviations
Further reading
Acknowledgements
About the authors
Index

Beyond the Pale: Dutch Extreme Violence in the

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A Hardback by Kon. Inst. v. Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde (KITLV), Nederlands Instituut voor Militaire Historie (NIMH), NIOD Inst. v. Oorlogs-, Holocaust- en Genocidestudies

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    View other formats and editions of Beyond the Pale: Dutch Extreme Violence in the by Kon. Inst. v. Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde (KITLV)

    Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
    Publication Date: 17/02/2022
    ISBN13: 9789463726481, 978-9463726481
    ISBN10: 9463726489

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Dutch Edition/Nederlandse editie: Over de grens

    On 17 August 1945, two days after the Japanese surrender that also brought an end to the Second World War in Asia, Indonesia declared its independence. The declaration was not recognized by the Netherlands, which resorted to force in its attempt to take control of the inevitable process of decolonization. This led to four years of difficult negotiations and bitter warfare.

    In 2005, the Dutch government declared that the Netherlands should never have waged the war. The government’s 1969 position on the violence used by the Dutch armed forces during the war remained unchanged, however: although there had been ‘excesses’, on the whole the armed forces had behaved ‘correctly’. As the indications of Dutch extreme violence mounted, this official position proved increasingly difficult to maintain. In 2016, the Dutch government therefore decided to fund a broad study on the dynamics of the violence. The most important conclusions of that research programme are summarized in this book. The authors show that the Dutch armed forces used extreme violence on a structural basis, and that this was concealed both at the time and for many years after the war by the Dutch government and by society more broadly. All of this – like the entire colonial history – is at odds with the rose-tinted self-image of the Netherlands.

    Table of Contents
    1. Introduction
    1 Background, guiding principles and methodology
    Gert Oostindie

    2 The Netherlands and Indonesia 1945-1949. The political-historical context
    Gert Oostindie

    3 The war in Indonesia 1945-1949. The military-historical context
    Gert Oostindie and Rémy Limpach

    Interim conclusions

    2. Intermezzo
    The human dimension. The search for stories about the Indonesian War of Independence
    Eveline Buchheim, Fridus Steijlen, Stephanie Welvaart

    i i i. Research results
    1 ‘Hatred of foreign elements and their “accomplices”’ Extreme violence in the first phase of the Indonesian Revolution (17 August 1945 to 31 March 1946)
    Esther Captain and Onno Sinke

    2 Revolutionary worlds. Legitimacy, violence and loyalty during the Indonesian War of Independence
    Roel Frakking and Martijn Eickhoff

    3 ‘Information costs lives.’ The intelligence war for Indonesia, 1945-1949
    Rémy Limpach

    4 The myth of the ‘Dutch Method’. Heavy weapons in the Indonesian War of Independence
    Azarja Harmanny

    5 The law as a weapon. The actions of the Dutch judiciary during the Indonesian War of Independence
    Esther Zwinkels

    6 Silence, information and deception in the Indonesian War of Independence
    Remco Raben and Peter Romijn

    7 Silence as a strategy. International visions of the Indonesian War of Independence
    Jeroen Kemperman

    8 Beyond colonial guilt ranking. Dutch, British and French extreme violence in comparative perspective, 1945-1962
    Thijs Brocades Zaalberg and Bart Luttikhuis

    9 A guilty conscience. The painful processing of the Indonesian War of Independence in the Netherlands
    Gert Oostindie and Meindert van der Kaaij

    4. Closing remarks
    Conclusions

    5. Epilogue
    Dealing with the legacies of a violent past
    Hilmar Farid

    Notes
    Abbreviations
    Further reading
    Acknowledgements
    About the authors
    Index

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