| Subject: The
Age/Exclusive: Indonesian Forces In Spy Ploy
The Age [Melbourne] Tuesday 22 February
2000 -front page-
EXCLUSIVE
Indonesian forces in spy ploy
By PAUL DALEY FOREIGN AFFAIRS
CORRESPONDENT CANBERRA
PHOTO: Australian troops try on blue caps
in a ceremony yesterday marking the transition to a UN force in East
Timor. Picture: ANDREW MEARES
Operatives from Indonesia's special
forces, Kopassus, made extraordinary efforts to implicate Australia in
illegal spy flights in East Timor last year, according to Australian
intelligence sources.
The Indonesian operatives are also
alleged to have posed as United Nations employees in an attempt to
influence political outcomes in Timor.
The intelligence sources say that last
May - as the UN and Australia prepared to take leading roles in
coordinating elections to determine East Timor's future - Kopassus mounted
a "black operation " in the province.
This had included the use of helicopters
and at least one helicopter-capable vessel off the coast.
The Kopassus operation took place as
Indonesian military leaders publicly complained about unexplained
helicopter flights and maritime movements in and around East Timor, while
heavily implying that Australia was responsible.
Intelligence sources told The Age the
operation also included Kopassus using a white helicopter bearing a UN
logo.
The helicopter - which operated
extensively along the East-West border - ferried passengers falsely
claiming to be employed by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees. The
passengers urged villagers to support the pro-autonomy movement.
The revelations about the Kopassus
activities come after Indonesia's newly-elected civilian government
claimed at the weekend the Australian military had secretly operated in
East Timor.
The Defence Minister, Mr John Moore, has
dismissed the latest Indonesian allegations. His spokesman said:
"That allegation was made last year by (former Indonesian armed
forces commander) Wiranto and we denied it then... we categorically deny
it again today."
Australian intelligence operatives began
assessing shipping and aircraft movements in East Timor in the middle of
last year, after a number of senior Indonesian figures complained that
their satellite surveillance had detected unusual ship and helicopter
movements in the area.
On 9 June last year, General Wiranto
ordered increased naval and air surveillance off East Timor after what he
said were five unusual helicopter flights in May.
East Timor's then military commander,
Colonel Tono Suratman, said there had been two landings of helicopters
similar to Pumas - a description fitting Seahawk helicopters which can be
operated from Australian navy ships. He said the flights happened while a
large vessel with a helicopter landing pad sailed off the East Timor
coast.
After checking the Indonesian reports,
Australian intelligence operatives confirmed - largely through the use of
signals intelligence - that the ship and the helicopters were in fact
Indonesian and had, at the time, been used by Kopassus.
"There was no doubt that the flights
referred to involved Indonesian aircraft and an Indonesian boat and that
the Indonesians knew this while complaining publicly about the
incidents," a source said.
"It was reasonably concluded that
Indonesia was trying to implicate the UN and Australia in spy flights...
which did not happen. It was an attempt by implication to slur
international reputations before the (East Timor) vote and before UNAMET
(the United Nations Assistance Missions for East Timor).''
It is understood that the intelligence
was passed to senior Federal Government figures.
In recent days, senior Indonesian
political and military identities, including General Wiranto, have
publicly suggested that Australia made secret spy flights and landings in
East Timor.
Indonesia's Defence Minister, Dr Juwona
Sudarsono, said there was a ``strong suspicion'' Australian forces had
made secret landings by air and sea.
``Hard evidence is is very hard to
clarify... but you know the nearness of Darwin and the fact that our
troops heard night-flying helicopters and even sea landings, makes it very
hard for us not to believe it was to support the (Falintil) guerrillas,''
he said.
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