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{{East Indies Crisis (1960-1976)|Date=3rd of February 1960-11th of November 1976 (16 years, 7 months 9 days)|Location=Dutch East Indies}}
The East Indies Crisis, (Malay: Krisis Hindia Timur) also known as the Archipelico war, War of liberation and in the Netherlands as the Indian war (Dutch: Indische oorlog), or Oostelijke acties (Eastern actions) was a conflict fought all over the Indonesian archipelago, on the islands of Sumatra, Borneo, Malay peninsula, Java and Celebs. It was fought from 1960 up to the fall of Batavia on the 11th of November 1976. It was the 2nd and last of major uprisings across what was then the Dutch east indies and involved the Netherlands, Dutch East Indies and was supported by Nieuw Nederlandt, Taulandt, Kaap Republiek, and initially by Britain. Facing the Dutch & its allies was the “Liberation movement” supported by Russia. The war by some is considered a proxy conflict between Britain and Russia in the later stages of the cold war. Yet in the Netherlands, it’s viewed as a separate event that while heavily influenced by the cold war stands on its own. Yet after 16 years of fighting the war concluded with a new nation that was decisively pro Russian. It is noted that this was the first real televised war with people across the world but mainly across the Dutch world seeing the conflicts every day on their TVs.
The conflict emerged from the “Indische opstand van 1943” or Indian uprising of 1943, which was fought between Dutch colonial forces mainly the KNIL (Koninklijk Nederlandsch-Indisch Leger), and rebelling sultanates their militia’s and revolutionaries across the archipelago. It in turn happened as a direct result of a change in the
What started out as a relatively small and contained uprising to northern Sumatra in February 1960 had by January 1st, 1962 turned into an open revolt. the KNIL had been pushed out of the northern & central interior and was relegated to the coast with the southern parts of Sumatra still under their full control. While initially, this would not warrant further expansion, by this time small uprisings in Malaya, Borneo, and Celebs had been crushed stretching the KNIL her limited manpower. On the 1st of February 1962, the Staten-Generaal of the Netherlands approved 120.000 European Dutch soldiers to be sent to the indies to aid the KNIL in squashing the revolt and to bring back Dutch control to the archipelago. through the year it seemed to go well with Dutch forces crushing any revolts on the islands and regaining control over central Sumatra. This was done through a relative standard colonial campaign, they first secured the major population centers and worked from there. Yet unbeknownst to the Dutch forces, the Liberation was only growing in their numbers by recruiting from the countryside, which still was not fully under Dutch control, yet it was seen at that time as a winnable campaign. All changed when on new Year eve 1963 a major conventional assault by the Liberation Front was launched against major areas of Dutch control in central and northern Sumatra, most notably Padang in northwest Sumatra and Pekanbaru in central Sumatra. This conventional assault caught the Dutch forces off guard as the liberation front used older Russian tanks, heavy weapons such as artillery and mortarts. Due to the surprise and the fact that it was New Year’s eve the Dutch ability to respond was limited and it suffered for it as it lost control over Padang and Pekanbaru, it created thus a frontline across Jambi and the interior of southern Sumatra.
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