| Subject: ITT: The Daughter's Generals
In These Times October 15, 2001
The Daughter's Generals; Bush's cronies are eager to renew ties with
the Indonesian military
By Frida Berrigan; Frida Berrigan is a research associate with the Arms
Trade Resource Center.
Things seemed to be looking up for Indonesia in July, when President
Abdurrahman Wahid, widely viewed as corrupt and incompetent, finally was
voted out of office -- and Vice President Megawati Sukarnoputri assumed
leadership. Megawati, the daughter of Indonesia's founding father,
Sukarno, is seen by many as a clean break from the legacy of General
Suharto, who ruled the vast archipelago with an iron fist for more than 30
years.
But to write a new chapter of Indonesian history, Megawati must first
subordinate the powerful military to civilian control and resolve the
conflicts in Aceh and Irian Jaya, where separatist movements have battled
with Indonesian forces for decades. Claiming to assist this worthy task,
the Pentagon, White House and a consortium of corporations want to renew
weapons sales and military training.
Washington applauded Megawati's choice of a stable of advisers with
close ties to international lending institutions and U.S. corporations.
Finance Minister Boediono is the former director of the World Bank's
Indonesia office and worked for Bank of America in Jakarta. Laksamana
Sukardi, the new minister of state-owned enterprises, is a former Citibank
executive. These choices demonstrate Megawati's commitment to creating a
favorable climate for investment.
Throughout Indonesia, U.S. corporations doing business there benefit
from a cowed and cheap work force, nonexistent labor and environmental
protections and generous tax breaks. But as she flings open the door to
businesses, Megawati slams the door on negotiated solutions to the bloody
conflicts in Aceh and Irian Jaya.
While Defense Minister Matori Abdul Djalil is a civilian, other
military advisers include Lt. Gen. Agum Gumelar, whose ties to the
notorious Kopassus counter-insurgency units are well known, and Lt. Gen.
Hari Sabarno, who adamantly opposes autonomy in Aceh and Irian Jaya.
These two provinces are the sites of massive operations by oil giant
ExxonMobil and mining company Freeport-McMoRan, respectively. ExxonMobil
pays the Indonesian military millions of dollars to protect its oil fields
and operations in Aceh, an arrangement that led to a recent lawsuit by
Acehnese villagers, who charge that soldiers on the company's payroll were
responsible for rape, torture and murder.
Historically, the United States has consistently armed Indonesia's
military with everything from F-16 fighter planes to M-16 combat rifles.
Since Indonesia's invasion of East Timor in 1975, in which 200,000 people
were killed, the United States has transferred more than $ 1 billion in
weaponry to Jakarta.
Congress stanched the flow of weapons following the 1991 Santa Cruz
massacre in East Timor, where soldiers wielding M-16s mowed down 270
unarmed people. Congress strengthened the ban in response to military and
paramilitary violence after East Timor's vote for independence in 1999.
Central to this legislation are criteria for the resumption of military
ties, including the return of East Timorese refugees and prosecution of
soldiers involved in human rights violations.
Two years after the violence, a newly independent East Timor is still
struggling to recover, and Indonesia has failed to meet the congressional
criteria. Violence in Aceh and Irian Jaya continues to escalate. Despite
these grim realities, officials in Washington are bending over backward to
re-engage with the military. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld recently
said he is "anxious to re-establish the military-to-military
relationship with Indonesia."
While Bush himself is not well briefed on the region -- his one remark
on the conflict in East Timor during his campaign was an awkward reference
to the "East Timorians" -- his backers in the oil, gas and other
industries are urging that the ban be lifted. The U.S.-ASEAN Business
Council, a private body made up of the heads of corporations with
interests in Southeast Asia -- including ExxonMobil, Freeport-McMoRan,
Boeing and Coca-Cola -- released a report in February urging the new
administration to "life the embargo on military equipment and
training while re-establishing direct military-to-military contacts."
The Council on Foreign Relations also argues in a July report that the
ban on military sales and training is "heavy-handed" and
"short-sighted." Their report concludes that "the United
States must cease hectoring Jakarta and re-engage Indonesia's army."
Nearly one-third of the report's 27-member panel is made up of corporate
representatives, including ExxonMobil and baked-goods giant Sara Lee, both
of which have extensive investments in Indonesia.
Given the report's pro-weapons-sales position, it is not surprising
that Dov Zakheim, a former Reagan official who just signed on as the
comptroller in Bush's Pentagon, drafted the report. Between working for
Reagan and Bush II, Zakheim was a lobbyist for weapons manufacturers like
McDonnell Douglas (now part of Boeing), promoting arms sales to Saudi
Arabia, Israel and elsewhere.
Despite the push coming from the Pentagon, White House and big
business, many in Congress oppose re-establishing military ties. Most
prominent among them is Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa). He visited a church in
East Timor just days before the 1999 vote, where hundreds sought refuge
from the military violence. Everyone he met was later killed. In memory of
that horror and because no one has been prosecuted for that crime, he
pledges opposition to the resumption of military aid: "I'll do
everything I can to stop it."
GRAPHIC: Picture, Megawati greets East Timor independence leader Xanana
Gusmao. ADEK BERRY/AFP
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