The Jakarta Method is a clear and comprehensive indictment of US interventionism since 1945…but it can be poignant, too.
The Jakarta Method dismantles and repositions the American mythos, similar to two recent Pulitzer Prize winners: Nikole HannahJones'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
The Jakarta Method recasts the Cold War battle for the Third World as a series of masskilling events, carried out by the U.S. or its proxies — a pattern much of the world witnessed but could do little to stop. It sounds like a grim read, and it is, but it’s also a gripping one.
Talking Points Memo (Favorite NonFiction List)
Bevins has created a powerful record of the oftenmuddled events in Indonesia....The Jakarta Method offers an easily digestible chronology of this bloody period of Indonesian and world history.
The book’s most important achievement is in explaining how Washington’s policies from more than 50 years ago shape the world we live in today.
Trenchant....powerful....[Bevins] translates the findings of complex scholarly accounts into smooth and readable, if often heartbreaking, prose.
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.
Bevins is wellpositioned to trace the lineage of suppression across the world aided and abetted by the U.S., which provided material support and intelligence, including lists of communists and alleged communists, to client governments....Interwoven among the politics in the books are testimonies from former communists Bevins interviewed in several countries, which he relays with novelistic brio.
[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
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.
The Jakarta Method is a mustread 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.
In The Jakarta Method , Vincent Bevins argues persuasively that during the Cold War, the U.S. approved of mass murder campaigns to roll back communism in the Third World. This is a provocative, necessary book, an essential guide to anyone seeking a deeper understanding of our imperfect world. Highly recommended.
An exceptionally wellwritten narrative.... In a fascinating and disturbing journey around the world, Bevins documents the effects of Washington's virulent anticommunist crusade across several continents.
A radical new history of the United States abroad.
Bevins has written a wellresearched history of how the American campaign against Third World democracy shaped the geopolitics of our world today, with echoes still felt through Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro’s virulent anticommunism; the childhood experiences of Barack Obama’s Jakarta upbringing; and the dominating proliferation of neoliberal globalization.
This is an indispensable book for all those interested in the Third World during the era of the Cold War, and in the links between various operations of 'the AntiCommunist International', a subject whose importance will I think only increase. It might in effect emerge that the decisive global changes were not the ones that we currently see as such (the fall of the Berlin Wall), but rather what happened in countries like China, India, Vietnam, Indonesia, Brazil.
Brave New Europe Branko Milanovic
Wellresearched, packed with information, and very wellwritten.
O Estado de S. Paulo (Brazil)
Truly captivating.... Vincent Bevins offers us a compelling historical narrative, which he combines with thorough analysis and deeply personal reflections. He merges the big story of the Cold War with the stories of real individuals whose lives were profoundly affected. He masterfully connects the 1964 Brazil coup with the mass violence that took place in Indonesia in 1965, before connecting that slaughter with a series of mass murder programs in Latin America and around the world. In doing so, he offers new knowledge and insights not only into the brutal anticommunist purge in Indonesia, but into the ways that US foreign policy reshaped the world following the Second World War. Bevins is a brilliant and compassionate writer, and The Jakarta Method is eyeopening. I really hope the world pays attention to this book.
Bevins gives a concise account of how USsupported carnage in Indonesia inspired other countries to unleash their own murderous suppression of leftwing 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 anticommunist purges....[His] account raises necessary questions. Did the anticommunist mania of the 20th century make the world any safer? And if so, for whom?
Bevins is less interested in long descriptions of torture and death and more in understanding the geopolitics that lie behind them. The great originality and insight of the book is its emphasis on the international scale...The Jakarta Method is a deft and necessary reckoning.
Excellent...anchors itself in a history most Americans never learned or would rather forget.
Washington Post Ishaan Tharoor
Exceptional...If Indonesia is counted as a 'win' for the proregime change crowd, the idea of promoting regime change is absolutely bankrupt and should never be employed again.
The American Conservative
A thoroughlyresearched and fiercelyunflinching reconstruction of the events surrounding the killings of millions of Indonesians under the USbacked dictator Suharto. Drawing from world histories, archives, and personal interviews with survivors, Bevins charts the historical trail, from Brazil to Indonesia, of coup d’etats, assassinations, tortures and massacres, which served to uphold the interests of global capitalism and created a new world order
This, for my money, may be the mustread book about the Cold War. There have been quite a few, but this one is current, it's sweeping, and it's an absolute mustread, if you're only going to read one book to think about what that maybe the most eventful period in human history was all about....You cannot dismiss this book.
Essential and devastating.
director of The Act of Killing and The Look of Sil Joshua Oppenheimer
An excellent book, and I don’t write that lightly. [Bevins] weaves interviews with academic sources, backroom CIA dealings with thwarted dreams of wouldbe revolutionaries, and delivers a wellresearched and tightly written work that is at times extremely provocative, both politically and emotionally.
London School of Economics Review of Books
The Jakarta Method is a gripping, thoroughly original exploration into the global covert Cold War, the passions it provoked, and the corpses it left in its wake. A full tally of the body count of the transnational counterinsurgency Washington has been waging since the early 1960s is impossible. But Bevins' excellent book offers a different kind of reckoning, of moral costs and ongoing political consequences. 'Jakarta is coming' was spraypainted on the walls of Santiago Chile in 1972, just before that country's CIAbacked coup, a way for that nation's rich to let the poor know the fate that would befall them were they to continue to fight for a more just society. 'Jakarta' did come, leaving hundreds of thousands of dead throughout Latin America. And, in a way, it never left.
This fascinating book is a meticulous and shocking analysis of a littleknown and horrifically bloody battle of the Cold War, but it is also something more. It places the Indonesia massacre of 1965 in its global context, showing how the United States both supported it and used it as a model for repression in other countries.
Bevins has deftly chronicled the genocide of Indonesian communists in 1965.... a brilliant history of the Cold War told through global anticommunist violence.
A shocking portrait that few readers will forget....[Bevins's] research is solid and his conclusions convincing. A welldelineated excavation of yet another dark corner of American history.
Tragically, that which everyone believed we had left in the past has returned to spread throughout Latin America once more. The Jakarta Method allows us to understand the moment that Brazil is now living through, and its connection to a much larger, global scheme.
author of The Alchemist and The Pilgrimage Paulo Coelho
Bevins wrote The Jakarta Method to show how this recent but largely ignored part of our history very much informs the way we live today. He concludes with current information about his sources, some still fighting to simply have the truth of what happened in their countries acknowledged, others expatriated to places that will never completely feel like home. It can be inspiring to hear from people willing to excavate mass graves and bury victims with dignity, but to this day that truth is struggling to be heard.
Through this transnational perspective, Bevins finds connections between unexpected locations.... [He] takes a broader approach, situating the violence within the global context of the Cold War, but the story he tells is still grounded in deep ontheground investigation and extraordinary personal narratives.
North American Congress on Latin America
Gripping...[Bevins]'s analysis of these events is lucid and judicious, and his narrative is driven by effective use of interview material.
The intrepid author devoted more than a decade to work on this impressive overview of worldwide anticommunist repression…. [Bevins] sifted through archives and consulted with historians, giving his work a solid grounding in historical detail.
"The Jakarta Method is a clear and comprehensive indictment of US interventionism since 1945…but it can be poignant, too."—The Herald (Scotland) "The book’s most important achievement is in explaining how Washington’s policies from more than 50 years ago shape the world we live in today."—The News Lens (Taiwan) "Bevins has written a well-researched history of how the American campaign against Third World democracy shaped the geopolitics of our world today, with echoes still felt through Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro’s virulent anti-communism; the childhood experiences of Barack Obama’s Jakarta upbringing; and the dominating proliferation of neoliberal globalization."—Canadian Dimension "This fascinating book is a meticulous and shocking analysis of a little-known and horrifically bloody battle of the Cold War, but it is also something more. It places the Indonesia massacre of 1965 in its global context, showing how the United States both supported it and used it as a model for repression in other countries."—Stephen Kinzer, author of Overthrow, All the Shah's Men and Poisoner in Chief "In The Jakarta Method , Vincent Bevins argues persuasively that during the Cold War, the U.S. approved of mass murder campaigns to roll back communism in the Third World. This is a provocative, necessary book, an essential guide to anyone seeking a deeper understanding of our imperfect world. Highly recommended."—Jon Lee Anderson, New Yorker staff writer, author of Che Guevara and Inside the League "Truly captivating.... Vincent Bevins offers us a compelling historical narrative, which he combines with thorough analysis and deeply personal reflections. He merges the big story of the Cold War with the stories of real individuals whose lives were profoundly affected. He masterfully connects the 1964 Brazil coup with the mass violence that took place in Indonesia in 1965, before connecting that slaughter with a series of mass murder programs in Latin America and around the world. In doing so, he offers new knowledge and insights not only into the brutal anticommunist purge in Indonesia, but into the ways that US foreign policy reshaped the world following the Second World War. Bevins is a brilliant and compassionate writer, and The Jakarta Method is eye-opening. I really hope the world pays attention to this book." —Baskara T. Wardaya, Sanata Dharma University Indonesia, author of 1965 and Truth Will Out "The Jakarta Method is a gripping, thoroughly original exploration into the global covert Cold War, the passions it provoked, and the corpses it left in its wake. A full tally of the body count of the transnational counterinsurgency Washington has been waging since the early 1960s is impossible. But Bevins' excellent book offers a different kind of reckoning, of moral costs and ongoing political consequences. 'Jakarta is coming' was spray-painted on the walls of Santiago Chile in 1972, just before that country's CIA-backed coup, a way for that nation's rich to let the poor know the fate that would befall them were they to continue to fight for a more just society. 'Jakarta' did come, leaving hundreds of thousands of dead throughout Latin America. And, in a way, it never left."—Greg Grandin, Yale University, author of Fordlandia and The End of the Myth "Tragically, that which everyone believed we had left in the past has returned to spread throughout Latin America once more. The Jakarta Method allows us to understand the moment that Brazil is now living through, and its connection to a much larger, global scheme."—Paulo Coelho, author of The Alchemist and The Pilgrimage "Critically acclaimed."—New York Times
The Jakarta Method recasts the Cold War battle for the Third World as a series of mass-killing events, carried out by the U.S. or its proxies — a pattern much of the world witnessed but could do little to stop. It sounds like a grim read, and it is, but it’s also a gripping one.
Talking Points Memo (Favorite Non-Fiction List)