Until 1945, Indonesia was a Dutch colony known as the Netherlands East
Indies. In 1930, the area had over 60 million inhabitants and was a
major exporter of oil, rubber, tin and quinine. It was a particularly
strong trading partner for Japan, providing some 13 percent of Japan's
oil needs--second only after the United States. Following Germany's
occupation of the Netherlands in May 1940, Japan decided to expand its
influence in the Netherlands East Indies via diplomatic negotiations to
acquire the necessary strategic goods of oil, rubber and tin. However,
the negotiations did not provide Japan with the access it had hoped to
gain.
Up until the mid-1930s the colonial authorities considered the
probability of military conflict between the major powers in Asia to be
very low and that any military presence in the colony was primarily
aimed at enforcing Dutch rule. This task was mainly the responsibility
of the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army (KNIL). This force, designed
primarily for colonial policing, underwent a series of cutbacks in the
interwar years before the aggressive posture of Japan made this position
increasingly unrealistic. The Japanese threat became acute with the
seizure of the southern Chinese island of Hainan in February 1939 and
the occupation of French Indochina by Japanese troops. Northern
Indochina was occupied in September 1940 and Southern Indochina in July
1941. Japan thereby acquired bases from which the Netherlands East
Indies was within reach of its naval and air forces.
The East Indies Army had developed a modernization program with a time
span of four to five years. This 1936 reinforcement plan focused on
building up a strike air force, introducing tanks, and increasing the
firepower of the infantry and artillery and this was put to the test at
the end of 1941 with the declaration of hostilities.