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Operatie Kraai

Operatie Kraai
Operation Crow
Part of Indonesian National Revolution
Date 19–20 December 1948
Location Java and Sumatra, Indonesia
Result Capture of the Indonesian Republican leadership at Yogyakarta
Growing international opposition in the United Nations to Dutch attempts to assert control over Indonesia
Territorial
changes
Dutch forces occupy parts of Java and Sumatra
Belligerents
 Indonesia  Netherlands
Commanders and leaders
Sukarno
Mohammad Hatta
General Abdul Haris Nasution
General Simon Hendrik Spoor
General Meyer
Strength
3 Mitsubishi Zeros 800–900 airborne infantry
23 Douglas DC-3s
Dutch fighter aircraft and bombers

Operation Kraai (translation: "Operation Crow") (Dutch: Operatie Kraai) was the code name for a Dutch military offensive against the newly formed Republic of Indonesia in December 1948 – January 1949. During this attack, the Dutch managed to capture the Indonesian Republic's temporary capital, Yogyakarta, and seized Indonesian leaders such as Republican President Sukarno.

Referred to by the Dutch as the second of two "Politionele acties" ("Police Actions"), it is more commonly known in Indonesian history books and military records as Agresi Militer Belanda II (Second Dutch Military Aggression).

The second Politionele Actie was aimed at forcing the Republic to co-operate with the Dutch government in the implementation of the federalist policy as stipulated in the Linggadjati Agreement. The purpose was to organise the new Indonesia as a federal state that would remain closely associated with the Netherlands. The Indonesians had breached the armistice signed following Operation Product.The Renville Agreement, as the armistice was called, stipulated the withdrawal of Indonesian forces from Dutch-occupied territory in exchange for ending the Dutch naval blockade, and this was indeed put into effect. After some time, however, the Indonesian military, secretly, returned and began guerrilla operations against the Dutch.

By September 1948, the Dutch military command had succeeded in decoding the Republic's encrypted secret code, gaining crucial intelligence on Indonesian military and diplomatic strategies and plans. This allowed General Simon Hendrik Spoor to counteract Republic actions on the battlefield and diplomatic stage. The Dutch were so confident of this advantage that they held a press conference in Jakarta three days prior to the actual attack. The Dutch also timed their attack to co-ordinate with plans by the Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru to dispatch a private plane to fly Sukarno and Hatta to Bukittinggi in West Sumatra where they would head an emergency government. A Republican delegation led by Sukarno would then be flown to New York via New Delhi to advocate the Republic's cause in the United Nations General Assembly. Throughout the Indonesian National Revolution, newly independent India had been sympathetic to the Republic cause which they viewed as a struggle against Western imperialism.


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