As the U.S.
empire continues its so-called "war on terror" via blank checks
for the military-industrial complex, the Bush Administration recently
overrode a congressional ban on military aid to Indonesia and
restored all such assistance by exploiting a "national security
waiver."
Under intense
U.S.grassroots pressure, the Clinton administration suspended
all assistance after the September 1999 Indonesian military destruction
of East Timor, and Congress subsequently legislated continuing
limits on aid. On November 22 of this year, the State Department
announced, "it is in the national security interests of the United
States to waive conditionality pertaining to Foreign Military
Financing (FMF) and defense exports to Indonesia." Senator Patrick
Leahy, author of the Congressional restrictions this maneuver
overrode, called the move "an abuse of discretion and an affront
to the Congress to waive on national security grounds a law that
seeks justice for crimes against humanity without even obtaining
the Indonesian government's assurance that it will address these
concerns makes a mockery of the process and sends a terrible message."

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Joseph Nevins's
A Not-So-Distant Horror: Mass Violence in East Timor (Cornell,
2005) is essential for understanding the broader context of Washington's
latest support for Jakarta's military. The book provides a thorough
overview of "international community" backing for the 24-year
Indonesian military occupation of East Timor, and shows the blatant
power calculations that went into the sell-out of the East Timorese.
As Nevins quotes then-U.S. Ambassador to Indonesia Stapleton Roy
saying in 1999, "Indonesia matters and East Timor doesn't."
Nevins methodically
shows the double standards implicit in the relative importance
accorded "ground zero" in the U.S. (New York City on 9/11/2001)
and the scorched-earth "ground zero" the Indonesian military left
in its wake when departing East Timor in September 1999. Though
we see or hear admonitions to "never forget" September 11 virtually
on a daily basis, few in the U.S. are aware that a military armed
and trained by our government destroyed 80% of East Timor's infrastructure
only two years earlier. In the midst of that destruction, the
military and its militia proxies killed some 1,500 civilians.
Even that
abhorrent body count is dwarfed by the many tens of thousands
killed, often with U.S.-supplied weapons, in the previous two
decades of Indonesian military terror largely ignored by mainstream
coverage of the 1999 carnage. Nevins writes of the corporate media's
disinterest in East Timor, "This silence, or 'forgetting' is a
crime of omission of sorts as it facilitates impunity. It also
helps to perpetuate myths about the supposed dedication to human
rights and principles of international law among the powerful."
Nevins, a
Vassar College professor who spent many months in occupied East
Timor throughout the 1990s, shows how both powerful Democrats
and Republicans share responsibility for keeping the occupation's
ugly history out of the public eye.
Nevins
methodically shows the
double standards implicit in the
relative importance accorded
"ground zero" in the U.S.
(New York City on 9/11/2001)
and the scorched-earth
"ground zero" the Indonesian military
left in its wake when departing
East Timor in September 1999.
Nevins cites
one especially galling example of this bipartisan collusion, a
2000 speech in which Richard Holbrooke, former Clinton Administration
ambassador to the UN and Assistant Secretary of State for East
Asian and Pacific Affairs under Jimmy Carter, heaped fulsome praise
on Iraq invasion cheerleader Paul Wolfowitz, calling the Reagan-era
ambassador to Indonesia "a continuing participant in the effort
to find the right policy for one of the most important countries
in the world, Indonesia."
Holbrooke
went on to explain that Wolfowitz's "activities illustrate something
that's very important about American foreign policy in an election
year and that is the degree to which there are still common themes
between the parties. East Timor is a good example. Paul and I
have been in frequent touch to make sure that we keep it out of
the presidential campaign, where it would do no good to American
or Indonesian interests."
Washington
and other governments have consistently blocked efforts by activists
in East Timor, Indonesia and the U.S. to achieve justice with
real reckoning for the crimes of 1974-1999.
Sadly, opposition
to those efforts has also come from East Timor's president, the
former guerrilla leader Xanana Gusmao. Gusmao recently downplayed
the findings of his country's truth commission, the Commission
for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation in East Timor (known by
its Portuguese initials, CAVR) and its recommendations for justice
and reconciliation. These include reparations to victims from
countries - including the U.S. - which backed the occupation,
and from corporations which sold weapons to Indonesia during that
period.
Though
we see or hear admonitions
to "never forget" September 11
virtually on a daily basis,
few in the U.S. are aware that
a military armed and trained by our
government destroyed 80% of
East Timor's infrastructure only two
years earlier. In the midst of that
destruction, the military and its militia
proxies killed some 1,500 civilians.
John M. Miller,
the National Coordinator of the East Timor and Indonesia Action
Network (ETAN), described the CAVR report as "the product of three
years of extensive research by dozens of East Timorese and international
experts." Miller added, "Its completion is especially timely,
given the Bush administration's recent decision to ignore the
criminal record of many high-ranking Indonesian military officers."
Miller further
noted, "Since Timor's independence referendum in September 1999,
Washington has provided monetary and other assistance
to East Timor's reconstruction and development, but such aid does
not even begin to compensate the East Timorese people for the
suffering caused by 24 years of U.S. support for Indonesian military
occupation. Along with the CAVR, we agree that the U.S. owes East
Timor reparations."
Despite East
Timorese and Indonesian calls to publicly release the CAVR report,
Gusmao has thus far failed to do so.
East Timorese
parliamentarian Leandro Isaacs, who has campaigned for an international
tribunal on Indonesian military crimes committed in East Timor,
told Australian journalist John Martinkus, "It's not just people
from Kosovo, I'm sorry to say it, who have a right to justice
because they are white. It's not just Yugoslavs who have rights.
We here also have the same level of humanity as the rest of the
world."
Sadly,
opposition to those efforts
has also come from East Timor's
president, the former guerrilla leader
Xanana Gusmao. Gusmao recently
downplayed the findings of his
country's truth commission,
the Commission for Reception, Truth
and Reconciliation in East Timor (known
by its Portuguese initials, CAVR)
and its recommendations for justice
and reconciliation... Despite East
Timorese and Indonesian calls to
publicly release the CAVR report,
Gusmao has thus far failed to do so.
The truth
commission's findings follow a May 2005 UN Commission of Experts
report on human rights violations in East Timor in 1999. That
report concluded, "The Commission wishes to emphasize the extreme
cruelty with which these acts were committed, and that the aftermath
of these events still burdens the Timorese society. The situation
calls not only for sympathy and reparations, but also for justice.
While recognizing the virtue of forgiveness and that it may be
justified in individual cases, forgiveness without justice for
the untold privation and suffering inflicted would be an act of
weakness rather than of strength." The UN Security Council is
awaiting the Secretary General's recommendations in response to
that report.
The Washington-based
National Security Archive's Indonesia and East Timor Documentation
Project assisted the CAVR in obtaining U.S. documents via Freedom
of Information Act requests. According to the Documentation Project's
director, Brad Simpson, these documents showed that "Indonesia's
invasion and occupation of East Timor and the resulting crimes
against humanity occurred in an international context in which
the support of powerful nations, especially the United States,
was indispensable."
They also
provide further backing for Nevins's argument about the bipartisan
nature of U.S. support for the Indonesian military occupation
of East Timor. The documents show that in 1977, Zbigniew Brzezinski
and other Carter Administration officials blocked declassification
of the explosive cable transcribing President Ford's and Secretary
of State Kissinger's December 6, 1975 meeting with Indonesian
dictator Suharto.
In that exchange, Ford and Kissinger explicitly approved the invasion
of East Timor. Also newly-released was a 1978 message Vice President
Walter Mondale wrote President Carter to request accelerated approval
for the sale of sixteen A-4 fighter jets to Jakarta. On May 9,
as Mondale arrived in Indonesia, Carter approved the sale but
sought clarification "on the circumstances in which they envision
the planes will be used, in particular in East Timor." The extent
of the Carter Administration's concern for the East Timorese can
be gauged by a telegram in which Mondale reassures Suharto of
their two nations' "mutual concerns regarding East Timor," in
particular, "how to handle public relations aspects of the problem."
Dan
Lev, Indonesia specialist at the
University of Washington said,
"The United States, the major country
in the world, sees the Indonesian army
as an ally, and very useful to America.
And that's what helped the army
become more engaged in the
first place, in 1957, 1958, when the
United States spotted the army as the
principal means for getting rid of the
communist party, at that point the
third largest communist party in the
world [in] 1965, it's true that the
American government of the time was
deeply grateful to the Indonesian army
for carrying out and implementing
in a sense one of the worst massacres
of the last century.
Then the issue was communism,
now the issue is terrorism."
As Dan Lev,
Indonesia specialist at the University of Washington, said in
a recent interview with Indonesia Alert [www.indonesiaalert.org],
"people in the Department of Defense in the United States are
constantly arguing that the thousands of Indonesian officers who
they train are advantaged by that training. But there's no evidence
of that! And the places where they have trained don't have to
do with human rights. They have to do with crushing people, actually.
And they have to do with intelligence services and the like."
Lev added,
"The United States, the major country in the world, sees the Indonesian
army as an ally, and very useful to America. And that's what helped
the army become more engaged in the first place, in 1957, 1958,
when the United States spotted the army as the principal means
for getting rid of the communist party, at that point the third
largest communist party in the world [in] 1965, it's true that
the American government of the time was deeply grateful to the
Indonesian army for carrying out and implementing in a sense one
of the worst massacres of the last century. Then the issue was
communism, now the issue is terrorism."
But, as Karen
Orenstein, ETAN's National Coordinator, told me, "Given the lack
of oversight or serious reform, the armed forces of the archipelago
remain by far the most significant purveyor of terror for the
people who live there."
Note: Ben Terrall is a writer and activist in Oakland. He can
be reached at: bterrall@igc.org.
This article has appeared on CounterPunch. Used with the authors
permission.
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Return
Of The Babinsa - Indonesia's Network Of Spies

General
Endriartono
Sutarto |
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With
the U.S. resuming sales of weapons to Indonesia, the country's
resurgent military are reviving their network of spies.
Indonesia's military chief General Endriartono Sutarto ordered
[in a Nov 9, 2005 news report] the return of 37,000 spies
with a mission to collect information to fight "terrorists"
in the country. This much-hated internal security system
was demobilised after the corrupt Suharto regime collapsed
in the late '90s. The Babinsa are planted in all levels
of society and act as the eyes and ears of the government.
In the past they were used to squash all forms of dissent
against the government ie state terror. It is estimated
there are 1,000 spies in Jakarta alone.
It
is unlikely that the world's most popular democracy, the
U.S., will oppose the use of the Babinsa as a tool of state
terror. Indonesia is a major oil producer in South-east
Asia and hence U.S. interest in the country.
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