Mark Curtis, Editor, Declassified UK 1
Economic interests
Political reform
'The vast majority of the poorer Chinese were employed in the tin mines and on the rubber estates and they suffered most from the Japanese occupation of the country ... During the Japanese occupation, they were deprived both of their normal employment and of the opportunity to return to their homeland ... Large numbers of Chinese were forced out of useful employment and had no alternative but to follow the example of other distressed Chinese, who in small numbers had been obliged to scratch for a living in the jungle clearings even before the war' (CO, 1952b).
The reality of the war
'A community of squatters would be surrounded in their huts at dawn, when they were all asleep, forced into lorries and settled in a new village encircled by barbed wire with searchlights round the periphery to prevent movement at night. Before the ‘new villagers’ were let out in the mornings to go to work in the paddy fields, soldiers or police searched them for rice, clothes, weapons or messages. Many complained both that the new villages lacked essential facilities and that they were no more than concentration camps' (Lapping, 1985, p. 223).
'Resettlement' offered further opportunities. One was a pool of cheap labour for employers. Another was that, as a government newsletter said, it could 'educate [the Chinese] into accepting the control of government'. The colonial authorities declared that 'We still have a long way to go in conditioning the [Chinese] to accept policies which can easily be twisted by the opposition to appear as acts of colonial oppression'. But the task was made easier because 'it must always be emphasised that the Chinese mind is schizophrenic and ever subject to the twin stimuli of racialism and self-interest' (CO, 1949 and 1951b).
Collective punishment
Psychological warfare
'The decision to call them ‘bandits’ or ‘terrorists’ was taken originally because of the insurance implications of the words ‘insurgents’ or ‘rebels’ or ‘enemy’… It was only much later when our propaganda machine began to get going in South East Asia that the propaganda angle of the matter was ever considered' (Carruthers, 1995, p. 77).British officials were also keen to avoid any words that might suggest a popular uprising, and always played down the political roots of the rebellion (Bayly and Harper, 2007, p. 436). 'On no account should the term ‘insurgent’, which might suggest a genuine popular uprising, be used', Colonial Office official J. D. Higham stated (Carruthers, 1995, p. 77). In 1952 a defence ministry memorandum stipulated that insurgents—previously usually referred to as bandits—would be officially known as 'communist terrorists' or CTs (CO, 1952g).
Conclusion
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Carruthers, S. L. 1995. Winning Hearts and Minds: British Governments, the Media and Colonial Counter-Insurgency, 1944–1960. UK: Leicester University Press.
Colonial Office. 1949. CO 717/182/52928/4. ‘Monthly Review of Chinese affairs’, December 1949. Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1950a. CO 717/203/52911. ‘Foreign Office to Washington on 26 October 1950’ Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1950b. CAB 21/1682. ‘Malaya Committee: Operation against Bandits, etc’ in Memorandum by the Colonial Secretary on 15 November 1950. Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1951a. CO 1022/39/SEA/10/93/01 ‘Representations by British Business Interests in Malaya about the Effects of the Emergency’ in Memorandum to the Colonial Office on 15 November 1951. Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1951b. CO 1022/148/SEA 75/167/01 ‘Assessment of Chinese Community Support in Combating Communism in Malaya’ in Memorandum by J. P. Biddulph on 6 June 1951. Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1951c. CO 1022/2/SEA/10/03. ‘Information Supplied about the General Emergency Situation in Malaya’ in Foreign Office telegram on 22 March 1951. Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1952a. CO 1022/267/SEA/192/469/01. ‘Malaya: Brief for Minister of State’ in House of Commons Debates on the Federation of Malaya. Kew: The National Archives.
______1952b. CO 1022/20/SEA/10/72/01. ‘The Squatter Problem in Malaya’, March 1952’. Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1952c. CO 1022/2/SEA/10/03. ‘Information Supplied about the General Emergency Situation in Malaya’ in Broadcast Speech to Australia, 12 October 1952. Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1952d. CO 1022/45/SEA/10/162/02. ‘Jerrom, T.C.’s memorandum to Higham, J.D. on 30 April 1952’. Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1952e. CO 1022/45/SEA/10/162/02. ‘Jerrom, T.C.’s memorandum to Higham, J.D. on 6 May, 12 May and 19 May 1952’. Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1952f. CO 1022/54/SEA/10/409/01. ‘Punishment of the Malayan Town of Tanjong Malim for non-cooperation with the Administration: Reconciliation with the town after the visit of the High Commissioner, General Sir Gerald Templer in August 1952’ in Letter to Colonial Office. Kew: The National Archives.
______ 1952g. CO 1022/48/SEA/10/172/01 Proposal that Bandits in Malaya be Known Officially as Communist Terrorists. Kew: The National Archives.
______1953a. CO 1022/2/SEA/10/03 ‘Brief for Selwyn Lloyd on 21 April 1953’. Kew: The National Archives.
______1953b. CO 1022/26/SEA/10/45/01 ‘Use of Chemicals in Clearing Under-growth near Ambush Points and in Destroying Terrorist Crops in Malaya’ in Humphrey, A., Federation of Malaya to Higham, J.D. on 19 January 1953. Kew: The National Archives.
______1953c. CO 1022/26/SEA/10/45/01 ‘Use of Chemicals in Clearing Under-growth near Ambush Points and in Destroying Terrorist Crops in Malaya’ in Kearns, H. and Woodford, E. “The Chemical Control of Roadside Vegetation” of 2 February 1953. Kew: The National Archives.
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______ 2010. Secret Affairs: Britain’s Collusion with Radical Islam (London: Serpent's Tail).
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Lapping, B. 1985. End of Empire. New York: St Martin Press, p. 223.
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Stewart, B. 2000. ‘Winning in Malaya: An Intelligence Success Story’, in Aldrich, R. et al. The Clandestine Cold War in Asia, 1945–65. London: Routledge, pp. 267–283.
The Economist. 1954. ‘A Plan for Rubber’. 9 October 1954.
The United Kingdom Parliament. 1952. ‘The Situation in Malaya’ in Hansard Paper debated in the House of Lords on 27 February 1952, column 302.