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The Jakarta Method: Part IV - Paradigms of CIA Subversion

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Manage episode 316544886 series 3299019
Content provided by After the 'End of History'. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by After the 'End of History' or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

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After the ‘End of History’ is a podcast about International Relations and History. It is part of the Hawks & Sparrows project.

Want more? Please consider supporting the podcast on Patreon to receive bonus episodes, as well as early releases of the monthly Hawks & Sparrows newsletter.

You can also follow us on Twitter @after_history.
Thanks for listening,
Mario and Tom

*

The long reach of the CIA from Latin America to Southeast Asia is discussed here in our last conversation on Vincent Bevins's The Jakarta Method as a product of its early successes in using the imperial toolkit to squash social democratic projects in Latin America, particularly Guatemala and Brazil.
We also trace the patterns of anti-communist tactics through the CIA's PSYOPs and repression of leftwing parties in Southeast Asia, focusing, of course, on Indonesia from the tragic period following the September 30th Movement. We also take a critical look at Stalinist Popular Frontism and its disarming of radical parties' ability to adequately defend themselves, politically and militarily, against the coming wave of imperial brutalization.
Our discussion concludes with an assessment of the balance sheet in Second and Third World countries following these historic defeats for social democratic and communist organizations in the developing and Communist world.
As with other discussions in this series, our source material drew from Odd Arne Westad's The Global Cold War. We also read Eric Hobsbawm's The Age of Extremes for its detail on land reform movements in the Third World, as well as Lucien Rey's "Dossier of the Indonesian Drama," which first appeared in The New Left Review, Number 36 (March/April 1966).
Jason King kindly provides the music that you hear in After the 'End of History.' You can find more of his work on Soundcloud.

Support the show

  continue reading

51 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 316544886 series 3299019
Content provided by After the 'End of History'. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by After the 'End of History' or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Send us a text

After the ‘End of History’ is a podcast about International Relations and History. It is part of the Hawks & Sparrows project.

Want more? Please consider supporting the podcast on Patreon to receive bonus episodes, as well as early releases of the monthly Hawks & Sparrows newsletter.

You can also follow us on Twitter @after_history.
Thanks for listening,
Mario and Tom

*

The long reach of the CIA from Latin America to Southeast Asia is discussed here in our last conversation on Vincent Bevins's The Jakarta Method as a product of its early successes in using the imperial toolkit to squash social democratic projects in Latin America, particularly Guatemala and Brazil.
We also trace the patterns of anti-communist tactics through the CIA's PSYOPs and repression of leftwing parties in Southeast Asia, focusing, of course, on Indonesia from the tragic period following the September 30th Movement. We also take a critical look at Stalinist Popular Frontism and its disarming of radical parties' ability to adequately defend themselves, politically and militarily, against the coming wave of imperial brutalization.
Our discussion concludes with an assessment of the balance sheet in Second and Third World countries following these historic defeats for social democratic and communist organizations in the developing and Communist world.
As with other discussions in this series, our source material drew from Odd Arne Westad's The Global Cold War. We also read Eric Hobsbawm's The Age of Extremes for its detail on land reform movements in the Third World, as well as Lucien Rey's "Dossier of the Indonesian Drama," which first appeared in The New Left Review, Number 36 (March/April 1966).
Jason King kindly provides the music that you hear in After the 'End of History.' You can find more of his work on Soundcloud.

Support the show

  continue reading

51 episodes

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