There are three good reasons why Americans should
care about East Timor. First, since the Indonesian invasion of December 1975,
East Timor has been the site of some of the worst atrocities of the modern era
-- atrocities which are mounting again right now. Second, the US government has
played a decisive role in escalating these atrocities and can easily act to
mitigate or terminate them. It is not necessary to bomb Jakarta or impose
economic sanctions. Throughout, it would have sufficed for Washington to
withdraw support and to inform its Indonesian client that the game was over.
That remains true as the situation reaches a crucial turning point -- the third
reason.
President Clinton needs no instructions on how to
proceed. In May 1998, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright called upon
Indonesian President Suharto to resign and provide for “a democratic
transition.” A few hours later, Suharto transferred authority to his handpicked
vice president. Though not simple cause and effect, the events illustrate the
relations that prevail. Ending the torture in East Timor would have been no
more difficult than dismissing Indonesia’s dictator in May 1998.
Not long before, the Clinton administration welcomed
Suharto as “our kind of guy,” following the precedent established in 1965 when
the general took power, presiding over army-led massacres that wiped out the
country’s only mass-based political party (the PKI, a popularly supported
communist party) and devastated its popular base in “one of the worst mass
murders of the 20th century.” According to a CIA report, these massacres were
comparable to those of Hitler, Stalin, and Mao; hundreds of thousands were
killed, most of them landless peasants. The achievement was greeted with
unrestrained euphoria in the West. The “staggering mass slaughter” was “a gleam
of light in Asia,” according to two commentaries in The New York Times, both
typical of the general western media reaction. Corporations flocked to what
many called Suharto’s “paradise for investors,” impeded only by the rapacity of
the ruling family. For more than 20 years, Suharto was hailed in the media as a
“moderate” who is “at heart benign,” even as he compiled a record of murder,
terror, and corruption that has few counterparts in postwar history.
Suharto remained a darling of the West until he
committed his first errors: losing control and hesitating to implement harsh
International Monetary Fund (IMF) prescriptions. Then came the call from
Washington for “a democratic transition” -- but not for allowing the people of
East Timor to enjoy the right of self-determination that has been validated by
the UN Security Council and the World Court.
In 1975, Suharto invaded East Timor, then being taken
over by its own population after the collapse of the Portuguese empire. The
United States and Australia knew the invasion was coming and effectively
authorized it. Australian Ambassador Richard Woolcott, in memos later leaked to
the press, recommended the “pragmatic” course of “Kissingerian realism,”
because it might be possible to make a better deal on Timor’s oil reserves with
Indonesia than with an independent East Timor. At the time, the Indonesian army
relied on the United States for 90 percent of its arms, which were restricted
by the terms of the agreement for use only in “self-defense.” Pursuing the same
doctrine of “Kissingerian realism,” Washington simultaneously stepped up the
flow of arms while declaring an arms suspension, and the public was kept in the
dark.
The UN Security Council ordered Indonesia to
withdraw, but to no avail. Its failure was explained by then-UN Ambassador
Daniel Patrick Moynihan. In his memoirs, he took pride in having rendered the
UN “utterly ineffective in whatever measures it undertook” because “[t]he
United States wished things to turn out as they did” and “worked to bring this
about.” As for how “things turned out,” Moynihan comments that, within a few
months, 60,000 Timorese had been killed, “almost the proportion of casualties
experienced by the Soviet Union during the Second World War.”
The massacre continued, peaking in 1978 with the help
of new arms provided by the Carter administration. The toll to date is
estimated at about 200,000, the worst slaughter relative to population since
the Holocaust. By 1978, the United States was joined by Britain, France, and
others eager to gain what they could from the slaughter. Protest in the West
was minuscule. Little was even reported. US press coverage, which had been high
in the context of concerns over the fall of the Portuguese empire, declined to
practically nothing in 1978.
In 1989, Australia signed a treaty with Indonesia to
exploit the oil of “the Indonesian Province of East Timor” -- a region sober
realists tell us is not economically viable, and therefore cannot be granted
the right of self-determination. The Timor Gap treaty was put into effect
immediately after the army murdered several hundred more Timorese at a
graveyard commemoration of a recent army assassination. Western oil companies
joined in the robbery, eliciting no comment.
After 25 terrible years, steps are finally being
taken that might bring the horrors to an end. Indonesia agreed to permit a
referendum in August 1999 in which the Timorese were to be permitted to choose “autonomy”
within Indonesia or independence from it. It is taken for granted that if the
vote is minimally free, pro-independence forces will win. The occupying
Indonesian army (TNI) moved at once to prevent this outcome. The method was
simple: Paramilitary forces were organized to terrorize the population while
TNI adopted a stance of “plausible deniability,” which quickly collapsed in the
presence of foreign observers who could see firsthand that TNI was arming and
guiding the killers.
The militias are credibly reported to be under the
direction of Kopassus, the dreaded Indonesian special forces modeled on the US
Green Berets and “legendary for their cruelty,” as the prominent Indonesia
scholar Benedict Anderson observes. He adds that in East Timor, “Kopassus
became the pioneer and exemplar for every kind of atrocity,” including
systematic rapes, tortures, and executions, and organization of hooded
gangsters. Concurring, Australia’s veteran Asia correspondent David Jenkins
notes that this “crack special forces unit [had] been training regularly with
US and Australian forces until their behavior became too much of an
embarrassment for their foreign friends.” Congress did bar US training of the
killers and torturers under IMET, but the Clinton Administration found ways to
evade the laws, leading to much irritation in Congress but little broader
notice. Now, congressional constraints may be more effective, but without the
kind of inquiry that is rarely undertaken in the case of US-backed terror, one
cannot be confident.
Jenkins’s conclusion that Kopassus remains “as active
as ever in East Timor” is verified by close observers. “Many of these army
officers attended courses in the United States under the now-suspended
International Military Education and Training (IMET) program,” he writes. Their
tactics resemble the US Phoenix program in South Vietnam, which killed tens of
thousands of peasants and much of the indigenous South Vietnamese leadership,
as well as “the tactics employed by the Contras” in Nicaragua, following
lessons taught by their CIA mentors that it should be unnecessary to review.
The state terrorists “are not simply going after the most radical
pro-independence people but going after the moderates, the people who have
influence in their community.”
‘It’s Phoenix’ ... notes a well-placed source in
Jakarta,” Jenkins writes. That source adds that the aim is “‘to terrorize
everyone’ -- the NGOs, the [Red Cross], the UN, the journalists.”
The goal is being pursued with no little success.
Since April, the Indonesian-run militias have been conducting a wave of
atrocities and murder, killing hundreds of people -- many in churches to which
they fled for shelter -- burning down towns, driving tens of thousands into
concentration camps or the mountains, where, it is reported, thousands have
been virtually enslaved to harvest coffee crops. “They call them ‘internally
displaced persons,’“ an Australian nun and aid worker said, “but they are
hostages to the militias. They have been told that if they vote for
independence, they will be killed.” The number of the displaced is estimated at
50,000 or more.
Health conditions are abysmal. One of the few doctors
in the territory, American volunteer Dan Murphy, reported that 50 to 100
Timorese are dying daily from curable diseases while Indonesia “has a
deliberate policy not to allow medical supplies into East Timor.” In the
Australian media, he has detailed atrocious crimes from his personal
experience, and Australian journalists and aid workers have compiled a shocking
record.
The referendum has been delayed twice by the UN
because of the terror, which has even targeted UN offices and UN convoys
carrying sick people for treatment. Citing diplomatic, church, and militia sources,
the Australian press reports “that hundreds of modern assault rifles, grenades,
and mortars are being stockpiled, ready for use if the autonomy option is
rejected at the ballot box,” and warns that the TNI-run militias may be
planning a violent takeover of much of the territory if, despite the terror,
the popular will is expressed.
Murphy and others report that TNI has been emboldened
by the lack of interest in the West. “A senior US diplomat summarized the issue
neatly: ‘East Timor is Australia’s Haiti’“ -- in other words, it’s not a
problem for the United States, which helped create and sustain the humanitarian
disaster in East Timor and could readily end it. (Those who know the truth
about the United States in Haiti will fully appreciate the cynicism.)
Reporting on the terror from the scene, Nobel
Laureate Bishop Carlos Ximenes Belo called for “an international military force”
to protect the population from Indonesian terror and permit the referendum to
proceed. Nothing doing. The “international community” -- meaning Western powers
-- prefers that the Indonesian army provide “security.” A small number of
unarmed UN monitors have been authorized -- but subsequently delayed -- by the
Clinton administration.
The picture in the past few months is particularly
ugly against the background of the self-righteous posturing in the “enlightened
states.” But it simply illustrates, once again, what should be obvious: Nothing
substantial has changed, either in the actions of the powerful or the
performance of their flatterers. The Timorese are “unworthy victims.” No power
interest is served by attending to their suffering or taking even simple steps
to end it. Without a significant popular reaction, the long-familiar story will
continue, in East Timor and throughout the world.
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