| Subject: WfC: Perfect timing - Ashcroft
gets cover from Pearl Harbor anniversary, expo
Laura Flanders WorkingForChange 12.07.01
http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?ItemID=12473
Perfect timing Ashcroft gets cover from Pearl Harbor anniversary,
exposure from Timor revelation
Timing is everything and the Attorney General's timing was perfect.
John Ashcroft's testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee came on the
eve of the 60th anniversary of the last occasion before Sept. 11 on which
Americans were the targets of a "sneak attack." Patriotic
commemoration of Pearl Harbor literally edged out analysis of Ashcroft's
testimony on many of today's front pages.
But the Attorney General's public appearance is also timely in a
different way. December 7 is also the anniversary of the Indonesian
invasion of East Timor. And Ashcroft testified to Congress on the
anniversary of one of the mostly deadly lies American politicians ever
told.
War talk, familiar to those who were around 60 years ago, peppered the
attorney general's speech. Critics of a Justice Department crackdown on
immigrants "aid terrorists" and undermine national unity, he
said. And while no Senator mentioned the post-Pearl Harbor round-up of
innocent Japanese Americans and their internment in camps without charge,
questions about the contemporary version of the same tactic were slapped
back to the senators by a defiant Ashcroft:
''To those who pit Americans against immigrants and citizens against
noncitizens, to those who scare peace-loving people with phantoms of lost
liberty, my message is this: Your tactics aid terrorists, for they erode
our national unity and diminish our resolve,'' he said. ''They give
ammunition to America's enemies, and pause to America's friends.''
Ashcroft flatly said that he would not tell the senators everything
they want to know about the detainees or about his policy recommendations
to President Bush.
Newly declassified documents from another December 6 remind one that
there's a precedent for that kind of defiance, too. According to official
documents posted Thursday to the National Security Archive website, on
December 6, 1975, the United States offered full and direct approval to
Indonesia's invasion of East Timor.
As reported by the Agence France Presse today: "The documents
prove conclusively for the first time that the United States gave a 'green
light' to the invasion, the opening salvo in an occupation that cost the
lives of up to 200,000 East Timorese."
Then Indonesian President Gen. Suharto briefed President Gerald Ford
and his Secretary of State Henry Kissinger on his plans for the former
Portuguese colony when they were in Jakarta, just hours before the
invasion began.
"We want your understanding if we deem it necessary to take rapid
or drastic action," Suharto told his visitors, according to a
long-classified State Department cable.
Ford replied: "We will understand and will not press you on the
issue. We understand the problem you have and the intentions you
have."
Kissinger appeared to be concerned about the possible political fallout
back home.
"It is important that whatever you do succeeds quickly, we would
be able to influence the reaction in America if whatever happens, happens
after we return," he said. "The president will be back on Monday
at 2:00 p.m. Jakarta time. We understand your problem and the need to move
quickly but I am only saying that it would be better, if it were done
after we returned."
The invasion took place on December 7, the day after Ford and Suharto
met.
"Timor was never discussed with us when we were in
Indonesia," Kissinger has said since. "At the airport as we were
leaving, the Indonesians told us that they were going to occupy the
Portuguese colony of Timor. To us that did not seem like a very
significant event." The transcript of his denial is available from
the East Timor Action network, which advocated independence for East
Timor.
It took the East Timorese 25 years to win independence from Indonesia
and 27 years for the truth to come out in the Washington Post (12/6/01
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A5291-2001Dec6.html). White
House efforts to "influence" the public have a long and
successful history, and clearly we the people are not immune to the
practice yet.
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