| Subject: Jane's Intelligence Review: E.
Timor: Can It Stand Alone?
Jane's Intelligence Review SECTION: ASIA; Vol. 12; No. 11 November 1,
2000
East Timor: can it stand alone?
By: Bertil Lintner
A year on from East Timor's vote for independence from Indonesia, its
viability as a nation still seems a long way off. Bertil Lintner examines
the guerrilla threats and suggests some options for its future defence.
A YEAR after a UN-sponsored referendum on the future of East Timor, a
semblance of normality has returned to the devastated territory. On 30
August 1999 78.5% of the East Timorese opted for secession from Indonesia,
which prompted local pro-integration militias to go on the rampage. The
capital, Dili, and virtually every other town and major village in the
territory was destroyed. Hundreds of thousands of people were forcibly
evacuated to Indonesian West Timor or deported to other Indonesian
islands. At least 1,000 people are believed to have been killed by the
militias, who, at the time, were openly aided by the Indonesian Army (Tentara
Nasional Indonesia - TNI).
The carnage ended only when the Australian-led International Force in
East Timor (INTERFET) intervened on 20 September last year. The militias
fled to West Timor and order was restored. On 25 October the UN Security
Council established the United Nations Transitional Administration in East
Timor (UNTAET), comprising governance and public administration,
humanitarian assistance and emergency rehabilitation, and an international
peacekeeping force. The reconstruction of East Timor has begun, and the
territory is expected to become a fully fledged independent nation
following next year's general election.
A year on, it is evident that the TNI, or at least some hard-line
elements within it, has yet to accept defeat. Many veterans, who fought in
the former Portuguese colony after it was invaded in December 1975, are
bitter about having to give up their 25-year struggle to keep East Timor
within the Indonesian nation. Such sentiments remain strong in Indonesia,
and are not confined to military circles. Last year's bedraggled militias,
who were armed mainly with pipe-guns and machetes, are now equipped with
automatic rifles and hand grenades. UN spokesmen in Dili and along the
West- East Timorese border also assert that it is obvious they have
received at least some rudimentary training in guerrilla tactics.
Since May this year as many as 150 militiamen in eight to 10 groups,
each of five to 30 men, have crossed the 170km border from West Timor,
which, since the UN intervention last year, has become one of the most
heavily defended frontiers in Southeast Asia. Today, East Timor is
confronted with another crisis, one that could become more apocalyptic
than last year's. It appears to be based more on long- term guerrilla
warfare rather than a simple desire to 'punish' those who opted for
secession from Indonesia.
The first attack on UN peacekeepers came on 21 June when a group of
militiamen hurled six hand grenades at an Australian Army position at
Aidabasalala, 15km from the border. Later, a command post at Nunura
bridge, between Balibo and Maliana, was attacked. Then, on 24 July, the
peacekeeping force sustained its first casualty: a 24- year-old New
Zealand soldier was shot dead near the border with West Timor. On 10
August a Nepalese peacekeeper was killed in the same area, prompting the
UN to take stronger action against the militias. Several sensitive border
areas are now patrolled regularly. The aim is to isolate the militias in
their mountain hide-outs to prevent them reaching the local people.
This strategy seems to be working, but UN spokesmen concede that there
can be no peace in East Timor as long as the militias have sanctuaries in
West Timor. Despite efforts to repatriate the refugees, at least 100,000
remain in ramshackle camps in West Timor. In recent months, the militias
have drafted new recruits from those camps. The attack on the office of
the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in the West Timorese town of
Atambua on 6 September, in which six UN workers, including three
foreigners, were killed, also shows that the Indonesian authorities are
doing little, if anything, to restrain their activities. The local army
and police did nothing to stop the militias from killing the UN officers
and burning down their buildings.
It is almost impossible to ascertain to what extent support for the
militias is a local initiative, or if it is sanctioned by the central
authorities in Jakarta. UN spokesmen in Dili are careful not to implicate
the Indonesian military as a whole, but even so, Eurico Guterres, the most
notorious of the militia leaders, was a few months ago appointed chief of
the Banteng Pemuda, the paramilitary youth wing of the Indonesian
Democratic Party-Struggle (PDI-P), which is led by vice president Megawati
Sukarnoputri. Despite the fact that the Indonesian authorities, following
immense pressure from the international community, were forced to arrest
Guterres on 5 October, little is expected to change, according to Western
military analysts. The move appeared aimed at appeasing the UN and Western
powers, which have criticised Indonesia for its support for the militias.
Guterres remains well-connected, and, it is assumed, well-protected by
powerful interests in Indonesia.
A year ago Guterres commanded one of East Timor's most vicious militia
forces, the Aitarak ('Thorn'). He is widely thought to be behind an attack
on the Dili home of pro-independence leader Manuel Carrascalao on 17 April
1999 (Carrascalao's adopted son and at least 16 other people were killed
in the attack). On 26 August, four days before the referendum, Guterres
addressed a crowd of 15,000 people in Dili and stated that East Timor
would "become a sea of fire" if independence was declared.
True to his word, he and his men burned the capital when the outcome of
the referendum was declared on 4 September. According to eyewitnesses, TNI
and police personnel actively assisted the Aitarak in the destruction of
Dili. Another, equally brutal, militia gang, the Besi Merah Putih ('Red
and White Steel', named after the colours of the Indonesian flag), burnt
down towns in western East Timor. On 6 September yet another gang, the
Laksaur, massacred over 100 people in Suai.
The INTERFET intervention and the loss of East Timor forced the
militias, and their backers within Indonesia's armed forces, to change
tactics. By 20 September 1999, the day that the first 1,190 INTERFET
troops arrived in Dili, a new 'umbrella coalition' of militia groups had
been formed in Balibo, close to the border with West Timor. The head of
the coalition, Domingos Soares, declared that this 'coalition' rejected
the results of the referendum because they were "manipulated by the
UN". Soares vowed to fight on for Indonesia's national interests.
The militias remain united under the banner of a new organisation
called UNTAS, which is the acronym in Tetum (the most widely spoken local
dialect in East and West Timor) for 'the United Timorese Knights'. Despite
his arrest, Guterres remains one of its main leaders, and the commander of
the military region which includes West Timor is Maj Gen Kiki Syahnakri,
who was in charge of East Timor throughout last year's carnage. Chief of
staff at his headquarters in Denpasar, Bali, is Brig Gen Mahidin Simbolon,
who has been identified by Western intelligence sources as the main link
between the Indonesian Army and the East Timorese militias. Maj Gen Kiki
is also a military academy classmate of Maj Gen Zacky Anwar Makarim, a
former military intelligence chief, who Indonesia's own human rights
commission has implicated in the violence in September last year.
The actual strength of UNTAS is not known, and it is also impossible to
determine how many of its members are dedicated combatants or young men
who have been forced to join its ranks. However, the fact that the
militias, although few in numbers, are back in East Timor is enough to
make local farmers scared of cultivating their fields in remote mountain
areas. Consequently, there is a shortage of food in many parts of East
Timor, and the process of reconstruction has been delayed.
Perhaps more importantly, the suspicion that the militias - and their
Indonesian backers - may be trying to establish a more permanent presence
inside East Timor, and then wait for the UN's mandate to expire next year
before they launch an all-out guerrilla war against the new state, raises
serious doubts about the viability of an independent East Timor. The only
way that East Timor could survive, military experts say, is if the UN's
mandate is extended, or if it reaches bilateral defence agreements with
countries such as Australia and New Zealand. Neither solution has been
discussed so far.
A key problem is that the force that was destined to become East
Timor's own army, the armed forces for the liberation of East Timor (Forcas
Armadas de Libertacao Nacional de Timor Leste - FALINTIL), is in total
disarray. It was part of the mandate of the INTERFET last year to disarm
'all local factions', the militias and the FALINTIL. However, the
FALINTIL's leaders objected, arguing that they had not been involved in
any human rights abuses, but had complied with the UN's directives.
A compromise was reached and FALINTIL was permitted to retain its army
and its arms, but only inside a cantonment in the town of Aileu, south of
Dili. Initially, 1,500 FALINTIL soldiers were based there, but a year of
inactivity has eroded the discipline that the FALINTIL espoused last year.
The FALINTIL feels marginalised. A group known as the Sagrada Familia
('The Sacred Family') has broken away and established a presence in the
Baucau area, east of Dili. Some of the security and intelligence groups
associated with the former resistance have become involved in smuggling,
theft and extortion rackets.
Today, the plan of transforming the FALINTIL into the nucleus of an
armed force for an independent East Timor seems remote, and the
constraints of the UN mandate have further exacerbated the difficulties.
FALINTIL commander-in-chief Taur Matan Ruak is a 'liaison officer'
attached to the peacekeeping headquarters in Dili, and there are three
former resistance commanders seconded to each of the three military
regions into which the UN has divided East Timor: East, Central and West.
However, it is not within the UN's mandate to turn the FALINTIL into a
more professional force.
Consequently, the FALINTIL cannot take part in combat, a major problem
for the UN peacekeepers, who are unfamiliar with the rugged terrain of
East Timor's interior where the militias now operate. Plans are underway
to deploy FALINTIL officers at company level within the peacekeeping
force, but many foreign delegates are opposed to posting them in the
border areas where they would be most needed because of 'Indonesian
sensitivity'. Another practical problem is that, in the field, where
fighting could erupt at any moment, the FALINTIL could be mistaken for
militias as they look the same and wear similar uniforms.
The UN's fragmented structure also adds to the confusion. 'Sector
West', in the UN's terminology, comprises 1,634 Australian troops, 665
from New Zealand, 158 from Nepal, 191 from Fiji and 40 from Ireland. This
is the most important line of defence against the militias in West Timor
and their Indonesian backers. Vigilance in the sector is high, with radar
and heat detectors scanning the border.
Despite these surveillance measures, once a militia gang has managed to
cross the border and has marched at night into 'Sector Central', they are
safe. The Portuguese troops there do little patrolling, and have been
criticised for their lax attitude to East Timor's increasing security
problems. A group of 30 militiamen has reached the middle of 'Sector
Central': nothing has been done to dislodge them apart from dropping
leaflets urging them to surrender.
If the Indonesian strategy is to wait for a UN withdrawal and then
attempt to launch an all-out guerrilla war, then an independent East Timor
needs a formidable defence. According to a recent study by the Centre for
Defence Studies at London's King's College, there are three possible
options.
The first is the closest to the FALINTIL's own vision of national
defence: a force of 3,000-5,000 troops based on the core of the former
resistance, the balance being made up of conscripts. The second option
features a professional regular core of 1,500 men, supported by an equal
number of conscripts doing a year of national service. The third
possibility is a force of 3,000 regulars, about half being former FALINTIL
soldiers, and 1,500 volunteer reservists. According to the King's College
report, the last option "appears to represent the best value for
money to meet the defence needs of East Timor at an affordable and
sustainable cost".
However, none of those options would be sufficient to deal with the
militia threat - and the support that individuals such as Guterres are
receiving from the highest level of Indonesia's military and civilian
establishment. The situation calls for more outside involvement. In the
future, Australia, because of its proximity to East Timor and the central
role it has played since the first multinational force arrived in East
Timor on 20 September last year, may have to shoulder the burden of East
Timor's defence. This would require Australian support for an indigenous
East Timorese defence force or, more likely, Australian willingness to
move its northern line of defence from Darwin on its northern shore, to
Maliana on the border with West Timor. Of equal importance is Indonesia's
willingness, or lack thereof, to accept that East Timor is no longer its
27th province.
GRAPHIC: Photograph 1, Three members of the CNRT civil security team
stand guard outside the CNRT's national congress in Dili, East Timor in
late August. The first-ever CNRT congress is discussing the future
policies of an independent East Timor. (Source: PA News)
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