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Subject: Nairn on U.S. Complicity in Timor
THE NATION [US]
September 27, 1999
US Complicity in Timor
While the Indonesian military's thugs continue their rampage in East
Timor, most foreign reporters have fled the country. As of September 7,
frequent Nation contributor and award-winning journalist Allan Nairn was
believed to be the only US reporter still there. Nairn left the besieged
UN compound and walked the streets of Dili, where he hid in abandoned
houses as he observed troops and militia burning and looting. Nairn has
been writing about the troubles there for years. In 1991, after being
badly beaten by Indonesian troops while witnessing the massacre of several
hundred East Timorese, he was declared a "threat to national
security" and banned from the country. He has entered several times
illegally since then. In his most recent Nation dispatch from East Timor,
on March 30, 1998, Nairn disclosed the continuing US military training of
Indonesian troops implicated in the torture and killing of civilians. He
filed this report by satellite telephone to The Nation through Amy
Goodman, host of Pacifica Radio's Democracy Now!
--The Editors
Dili, East Timor
It is by now clear to most East Timorese and a few Westerners still
left here that the militias are a wing of the TNI/ABRI, the Indonesian
armed forces. Recently, for example, I was picked up by militiamen who
turned out to be working for a uniformed colonel of the National Police.
[Editors' note: The Indonesian government has denied any connection
between the militias and either the police or the military.] But there is
another important political fact that is not known here or in the
international community. Although the US government has publicly
reprimanded the Indonesian Army for the militias, the US military has,
behind the scenes and contrary to Congressional intent, been backing the
TNI.
US officials say that this past April, as militia terror escalated, a
top US officer was dispatched to give a message to Jakarta. Adm. Dennis
Blair, the US Commander in Chief of the Pacific, leader of all US military
forces in the Pacific region, was sent to meet with General Wiranto, the
Indonesian armed forces commander, on April 8. Blair's mission, as one
senior US official told me, was to tell Wiranto that the time had come to
shut the militia operation down. The gravity of the meeting was heightened
by the fact that two days before, the militias had committed a horrific
machete massacre at the Catholic church in Liquiça, Timor. YAYASAN HAK, a
Timorese human rights group, estimated that many dozens of civilians were
murdered. Some of the victims' flesh was reportedly stuck to the walls of
the church and a pastor's house. But Admiral Blair, fully briefed on
Liquiça, quickly made clear at the meeting with Wiranto that he was there
to reassure the TNI chief. According to a classified cable on the meeting,
circulating at Pacific Command headquarters in Hawaii, Blair, rather than
telling Wiranto to shut the militias down, instead offered him a series of
promises of new US assistance.
According to the cable, which was drafted by Col. Joseph Daves, US
military attaché in Jakarta, Admiral Blair "told the armed forces
chief that he looks forward to the time when [the army will] resume its
proper role as a leader in the region. He invited General Wiranto to come
to Hawaii as his guest in conjunction with the next round of bilateral
defense discussions in the July-August '99 time frame. He said Pacific
command is prepared to support a subject matter expert exchange for
doctrinal development. He expects that approval will be granted to send a
small team to provide technical assistance to police and...selected TNI
personnel on crowd control measures."
Admiral Blair at no point told Wiranto to stop the militia operation,
going the other way by inviting him to be his personal guest in Hawaii.
Blair told Wiranto that the United States would initiate this new
riot-control training for the Indonesian armed forces. This was quite
significant, because it would be the first new US training program for the
Indonesian military since 1992. Although State Department officials had
been assured in writing that only police and no soldiers would be part of
this training, Blair told Wiranto that, yes, soldiers could be included.
So although Blair was sent in with the mission of telling Wiranto to shut
the militias down, he did the opposite.
Indonesian officers I spoke to said Wiranto was delighted by the
meeting. They took this as a green light to proceed with the militia
operation. The only reference in the classified cable to the militias was
the following: "Wiranto was emphatic: as long as East Timor is an
integral part of the territory of Indonesia, Armed Forces have
responsibility to maintain peace and stability in the region. Wiranto said
the military will take steps to disarm FALINTIL pro-independence group
concurrently with the WANRA militia force. Admiral Blair reminded Wiranto
that fairly or unfairly the international community looks at East Timor as
a barometer of progress for Indonesian reform. Most importantly, the
process of change in East Timor could proceed peacefully, he said."
So that was it. No admonition. When Wiranto referred to disarming the
WANRA force, he was talking about another militia force, different from
the one that was staging attacks on Timorese civilians. When word got back
to the State Department that Blair had said these things in a meeting, an
"eyes only" cable was dispatched from the State Department to
Ambassador Stapleton Roy at the embassy in Jakarta. The thrust of this
cable was that what Blair had done was unacceptable and that it must be
reversed. As a result of that cable from Washington to Roy, a corrective
phone call was arranged between General Wiranto and Admiral Blair. That
call took place on April 18.
I have the official report on that phone call, which was written by
Blair's aide, Lieut. Col. Tom Sidwell. According to the account of the
call and according to US military officials I spoke to, once again Blair
failed to tell Wiranto to shut the militias down. In fact, Blair instead
permitted Wiranto to make, in essence, a political speech saying the same
thing he had said before. Here is one passage from the account:
"General Wiranto denies that TNI and the police supported any one
group during the incidents"--meaning during the military attacks.
"General Wiranto will go to East Timor tomorrow to emphasize three
things:...Timorese, especially the two disputing groups, to solve the
problem peacefully with dialogue; 2) encourage the militia to disarm; 3)
make the situation peaceful and solve the problem." At no point did
Blair demand that the militias be shut down, and in fact this call was
followed by escalating militia violence and increases in concrete, new US
military assistance to Indonesia, including the sending in of a US Air
Force trainer just weeks ago to train the Indonesian Air Force.
Allan Nairn
see also:
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