Overview of the 1965 killings in Indonesia / Robert Cribb
Lieutenant Colonel Untung declares the September 30 coup / Untung Syamsuri
An anti-communist policy for Indonesia is presented to the Covert Oversight Committee / State Department
US diplomats formulate anti-communist response to September 30 incident / Marshall Green
A catalogue of anti-communist violence in East Java / Anonymous
Sukarno is forced from power / Ottawa Citizen
Suharto dies / Shawn Donnan and John Aglionby
PKI survivors still face stigma in Indonesia / Alexandra di Stefano Pironti
Indonesia still struggles to confront the events of 1965 / Endy Bayuni
The Communist PKI were a violent threat in 1965 / Francis J. Galbraith
The Communist PKI were not a violent threat in 1965 / Ruth McVey and Benedict R. Anderson
The US supplied lists of communists which aided the 1965 Indonesian massacre / Kathy Kadane
The US did not supply lists of communists to the indonesian government / Michael Wines
The massacre of the PKI was exaggerated / Richard Cabot Howland
The 1965 killings constituted genocide / Robert Cribb
Suharto was a thoughtful and effective leader, despite flaws / Richard Wolcott
Suharto was a corrupt tyrant who damaged Indonesia / John Gittings
Indonesia still struggles with the historical memory of the 1965 genocide / Adrian Vickers and Katharine McGregor
An Indonesian Catholic recalls his experiences as an anti-Communist before 1965 / Jusuf Wanandi
A Western observer describes the violence of 1965 / John Hughes
A Indonesian emigre describes the tensions around communism in 1965 and after / Pipit Rochijat
Indonesians recount their role in the 1965 massacres / Anthony Deutsch
An Indonesian writer describes his imprisonment following 1965 / Pramoedya Ananta Toer
Bibliography of primary documents