| Subject: Nation: Kissinger's Green Light to
Suharto
The Nation Magazine (U.S.) - February 18, 2002
Kissinger's Green Light to Suharto
By Christopher Hitchens
In a few weeks, East Timor will be able to celebrate both its
independence as a country and its status as a democracy. Elections will
have produced a government able to seek and receive international
recognition. An undetermined number of Timorese, herded by the Indonesian
Army into the western part of the island during the last spasms of cruelty
before Jakarta formally abandoned its claim to the territory, will not be
able to celebrate. And the entire process is gruesomely overshadowed by
the murder of at least a quarter of a million Timorese during the illegal
Indonesian occupation. The new nation will need friends, and help of all
kinds, and everybody should consider contributing something (send checks
to Global Exchange/East Timor Relief, PO Box 420832, San Francisco, CA
94142).
The elections and the independence ceremony were supposed to take place
twenty-seven years ago, when the Portuguese colonial power surrendered its
authority. But the Indonesian military dictatorship had another idea,
which was to engulf its tiny neighbor by force. General Suharto and his
deputies made it fairly obvious that they wanted the territory but not the
people. They came horribly close to succeeding in this foul design. Ever
since, there has been an argument over the precise extent of US complicity
with the 1975 aggression. It was known that President Gerald Ford and his
Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger, were in Jakarta on December 6 of that
year, the day before Indonesian air, land and naval forces launched the
assault. Scholars and journalists have solemnly debated whether there was
a "green light" from Washington.
Kissinger, who does not find room to mention East Timor even in the
index of his three-volume memoir, has more than once stated that the
invasion came to him as a surprise, and that he barely knew of the
existence of the Timorese question. He was obviously lying. But the
breathtaking extent of his mendacity has only just become fully apparent,
with the declassification of a secret State Department telegram. The
document, which has been made public by the National Security Archive at
George Washington University, contains a verbatim record of the
conversation among Suharto, Ford and Kissinger. "We want your
understanding if we deem it necessary to take rapid or drastic
action," Suharto opened bluntly. "We will understand and will
not press you on the issue;' Ford responded. "We understand the
problem you have and the intentions you have." Kissinger was even
more emphatic, but had an awareness of the possible "spin"
problems back home. "It is important that whatever you do succeeds
quickly," he instructed the despot. "We would be able to
influence the reaction if whatever happens, happens after we return.... If
you have made plans, we will do our best to keep everyone quiet until the
President returns home." Micromanaging things for Suharto, he added:
"The President will be back on Monday at 2 PM 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." As ever,
deniability supersedes accountability.
There came then the awkward question of weaponry. Indonesia's armed
forces, which had never yet lost a battle against civilians, were equipped
with US-supplied materiel. But the Foreign Assistance Act forbade the use
of such armaments except in self-defense. "It depends on how we
construe it; whether it is in self-defense or is a foreign
operation," Kissinger mused.. (At a later meeting back at the State
Department on December 18, the minutes of which have also been
declassified, he was blunt about knowingly violating the statute. For a
transcript of the minutes, see Mark Hertsgaard, "The Secret Life of
Henry Kissinger," October 29, 1990.)
An even more sinister note was struck later in the conversation, when
Kissinger asked Suharto if he expected "a long guerrilla war."
The dictator replied that there "will probably be a small guerrilla
war," while making no promise about its duration. Bear in mind that
Kissinger has already urged speed and dispatch upon Suharto. Adam Malik,
Indonesia's foreign minister at the time, later conceded in public that
between 50,000 and 80,000 Timorese civilians were killed in the first
eighteen months of the occupation. These civilians were killed with
American weapons, which Kissinger contrived to supply over Congressional
protests, and their murders were covered up by American diplomacy, and the
rapid rate of their murder was something that had been urged in so many
words by an American Secretary of State. How is one to live with the shame
of this? How is one to tolerate the continued easy and profiteering
existence of such a man, who had no sooner left office than he went into
business partnership with the same genocidal dictatorship he -had helped
arm and encourage? Read with any care, this State Department telegram
shows a knowing conspiracy-there isn't another legal term for it-to break
international law, US law and (it could well be argued) the Genocide
Convention. Ford may have been an abject moron, but Kissinger was a
professional: He knew perfectly well that a colony of a NATO country could
not be invaded and occupied except in flat defiance of every international
covenant and principle. He also knew that US law explicitly forbade the
use of US weapons for such a purpose.
The disclosure of the new and unarguable documents merited a few inches
in the Washington Post and got me a whole minute on the BBC World Service.
So there you have it. Henry Kissinger the mass murderer (and pal of Ted
Koppel). Henry Kissinger the errand boy for dictatorship (and confidant of
Charlie Rose). Henry Kissinger the profiteer from genocide (and orator at
Kay Graham's funeral). Henry Kissinger the man who told Suharto to hurry
up and get on with it (and chum of Harold Evans and Tina Brown). Henry
Kissinger, the man who has hired Bill Clinton's disgraced Chief of Staff,
Mack McLarty, to be a partner in the firm of Kissinger Associates. What
can one say about countries and cultures so corrupt and depraved that they
will give succor, and even acclaim, to those who murder without
conscience?
see also Kissinger Pages
Back to February menu
January
World Leaders Contact List
Human Rights Violations in East Timor
Main Postings Menu
Note: For those who would like to fax "the
powers that be" - CallCenter is a Native 32-bit Voice Telephony software
application integrated with fax and data communications... and it's free of charge!
Download from http://www.v3inc.com/ |