National Call-In Days
Tell Congress You Oppose Aid to the Indonesian Military
The Pentagon and State Department want to remove all Congressional
restrictions on military assistance to Indonesia’s brutal security forces.
Senators and Representatives need to hear from you that this must not be
allowed to happen, especially now as Congress makes crucial legislative
decisions.
During the Indonesian president’s late May visit to Washington, the
Bush administration announced the reinstatement of several types of
military assistance. Please urge Congress to put a check on the executive
by limiting Bush’s ability to assist Indonesia’s human rights-violating
security forces.
Representatives will be deciding in June whether to pass legislated
restrictions on assistance for the Indonesian military. ETAN activists
will be in Washington June 13 and 14 for in-person meetings (during ETAN
Advocacy Days) to tell Members of Congress to oppose aid for this brutal
military. We need you to deliver the same message by phone TODAY.
Tell your Representative and Senators:
**To actively support full restriction of military assistance for
Indonesia in the 2006 Foreign Operations Appropriations bill. IMET
(International Military Education and Training), foreign military
financing, and export licenses for defense articles should all be
restricted.
**The Indonesian military commits atrocious human rights violations,
resists reform, and remains unaccountable for crime against humanity
committed in East Timor and elsewhere.
Help set the context for ETAN’s in-person meetings during
Advocacy
Days. The Congressional switchboard number is 202-224-3121, or check
www.congress.org for contact
information. Every call makes a difference, so please contact your Members
of Congress. Please let us know the results of your efforts by sending an
email to etan@etan.org. Thanks!
Sample Letter
(modify to your own words)
Dear Senator/ Representative [LAST NAME],
I am writing to oppose U.S. support for the Indonesian military. I am
disturbed that the administration recently announced the reinstatement of
several types of military assistance that had been restricted for years
due to the military’s very poor human rights record – a record which
remains poor and for which perpetrators remain unaccountable. This follows
the February resumption of full IMET for Indonesia although it clearly had
failed to meet the congressionally-mandated condition requiring full
cooperation with the investigation into the ambush murders of two
Americans and an Indonesian in West Papua on August 31, 2002.
The Indonesian military continues to resist reform, evade accountability
for human rights violations in East Timor and elsewhere, and commit
atrocious human rights violations throughout Indonesia. According to the
State Department's Country Report on Human Rights Practices released just
two days after it reinstated full IMET for Indonesia, "Security force
members murdered, tortured, raped, beat, and arbitrarily detained
civilians and members of separatist movements, especially in Aceh and to a
lesser extent in Papua."
I urge you to actively support full restriction of military assistance for
Indonesia in the 2006 Foreign Operations Appropriations bill, including
IMET, foreign military financing, and export licenses for defense
articles. I further ask that you vigorously protest the Secretary of
State's certification of IMET and the administration’s decision to
reinstate “non-lethal” foreign military sales and the sale of excess
defense articles. Congress must act to limit the administration’s ability
to assist Indonesia’s human rights-violating security forces.
I look forward to your response.
Sincerely,
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE ZIP
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BACKGROUND
The House of Representatives will be deciding this month whether to
continue to restrict Indonesia from receiving IMET, foreign military
financing, and export licenses for lethal defense articles in the 2006
Foreign Operations Appropriations bill. The 2005 legislation forbids these
programs until a wide range of conditions are met, including presidential
certification that the Indonesian government is prosecuting members of the
armed forces accused of rights violations or aiding militia groups and
punishing those guilty of such acts. (IMET brings foreign military
officers to the U.S. for training. Foreign military financing provides
grants and loans to help countries purchase U.S.-produced weapons, defense
equipment, services and military training.)
When Indonesia’s president visited Washington in May, the Bush
administration lifted restrictions in place since 1999 on the sale of
“non-lethal” excess defense articles (surplus military equipment) and on
foreign military sales of non-lethal items, allowing the Indonesian
government to purchase military equipment, services, and training directly
from the U.S. government.
Congress first voted to restrict Indonesia from receiving IMET in
response to the November 12, 1991 Santa Cruz massacre in East Timor by
Indonesian troops wielding U.S.-supplied M-16 rifles. All military ties
with Indonesia were severed in September 1999 as the military and its
militia proxies razed East Timor. In late February, Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice restored full IMET for Indonesia. Just two days later,
the State Department's Country Reports on Human Rights Practices said,
"Security force members murdered, tortured, raped, beat, and arbitrarily
detained civilians and members of separatist movements, especially in Aceh
and to a lesser extent in Papua." East Timorese and Indonesian NGOs have
repeatedly called for restrictions on military engagement to be
maintained.
Again, please let us know the results of
your calls.
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