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From Labor Action, Vol. 13 No. 26, 27 June 1949, p. 2.
Transcribed & marked up by Einde O’Callaghan for ETOL.
To the Editor:
An agreement has been reached between the Dutch imperialists and the Indonesian Republican government by which the republic has, in effect, accepted a position of autonomy within the empire. This has been the Dutch formula for its own creature in the East Indies: the so-called United States of Indonesia. The decisive terms of the new relationship have been left to future negotiations under conditions of Dutch ascendancy. This also was part of the original Dutch plan. Whatever decisions are reached, an independent and free Indonesia will not emerge from these discussions.
The leadership of the governmental parties resumes the disastrous course of compromise on an issue which cannot be compromised – national freedom. This leadership has failed again. It is necessary to forge a new leadership for the republic. Only those who loyally fought in the republican war can make the claim for such a new popular leadership. That was the meaning of the policy I advocated in Labor Action.
R. Magnus, who up till yesterday saw the main enemy to be the republican leadership, in a letter two weeks ago in Labor Action writes: “once, despite its compromises and capitulations [this leadership], represented in a distorted way the need and aspirations of the people ...”
But the conclusions drawn by R. Magnus are sectarian and dangerous.
The central question for socialists in Asia is not even seen by Magnus as a problem: the reconstruction of a revolutionary leadership and party. Our relations to social-democracy in Indonesia, as in India, should be determined by this overriding consideration.
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