| Subject: SF Examiner: Of Dogs and Fleas
Of Dogs & Fleas
By Conn Hallinan San Francisco Examiner February 8, 2002
The problem of lying down with dogs, goes the old saying, it that you
end up with fleas. Over the years, the US has run with some nasty brutes,
from the Congo's Mobutu to Iraq's Saddam Hussein. One would think we
learned a few lessons from those kind of alliances, but in its worldwide
crusade against terrorism, the Bush Administration is about to bunk down
with the Indonesian Army, a pack of junkyard canines with a record of
murder and mayhem second to none.
Shortly after Sept. 11, the White House, led by Dep. Sec. Of State,
Administration super hawk,and former ambassador to Indonesia Paul
Wolfowitz, began maneuvering to loosen restrictions on military aid to
Jakarta. The latter was cut off by the Clinton Administration during the
Indonesian Army's 1999 rampage in East Timor that killed thousands of
civilians and destroyed 70 percent of the tiny country's infrastructure.
But Bush Administration officials argue that the Indonesian Army has
"reformed" since those bad old days (two years ago) and now
needs our help in its struggle against "terrorism" by separatist
movements in several provinces. In any case, they claim, U.S. intelligence
says Osama bin Ladin and Al Queda are active with extremist groups in
Java. These days all you have to do is mention "Al Queda" and
the Marines start tooling up. But if we aren't careful, the US is likely
to find itself in the middle of several very nasty civil wars, which have
little to do with jihad, but quite a lot to do with very worldly things
like gold, copper, and oil.
The Indonesian Army, while small by regional standards, has done a
stunningly efficent job of massacring its own people over the years. Since
the press these days has been imitating a bunch of stenographers with
amnesia, a little history about the outfit to which we are about to sell
helicopters and communication equipment seems in order.
The Army got off to a good start on the business of killing its own
when it suppressed an uprising in 1965 by murdering some 500,000 leftists,
many of them fingered, according to recently declassified documents, by
the US Embassy in Jakarta. Oh yes, we've run with these guys before,
supplying them over 90 percent of their military hardware over the past 30
years.
Indonesia put those to deadly use in 1975 when it invaded tiny East
Timor, a former Portuguese colony on Indonesia's eastern edge. That
invasion, according to the same documents, had the full blessing of then
President Gerald Ford and Sec. Of State, Henry Kissinger.
According to the United Nations, Indonesia's 24 years of occupation
resulted in the deaths of over 200,000 Timorese, or one third the pre-
invasion inhabitants. In terms of percentage of the population, not even
Pol Pot managed that kill ratio.
When Timor voted for independence in a1999 UN-sponsored referendum, the
Indonesian Army and its militia allies systematically destroyed the
country, killing at least 2,000 people and forcing 250,000 more into
concentration camps in West Timor.
The Indonesian Army is presently engaged in suppressing two other
independence movements, one in Sumatra's Aceh Province and the other in
Irian Jaya on the country's eastern edge. The campaign in Aceh has killed
over 6,000 people, 1,500 in the last year alone. In Irian Jaya, which
makes up the western side of Papua New Guinea, the Army has been jailing
pro-independence supporters, and firing on demonstrators. In November,
Kopassus, the Indonesian Army's equivalent of the SS, invited one of Irian
Jaya's independence leaders to a dinner. He ended up strangled to death on
the side of the road,
From all indications, that violence is likely to escalate. In a recent
speech to military cadets, Indonesian President Magawati Sukanoputri told
them "You can do your duty without being worried about human
rights," a green light to unleash the full fury of the Army's
repressive skills. No more Mr. Nice Guys.
While Jakarta says its civil wars are about terrorism, what's really at
stake are billions of dollars in raw materials. The siezure of East Timor
allowed Indonesia to claim part of the Timor Gap, a channel between Timor
and Australia, estimated to contain anywhere from 1 to 6 billion barrels
of oil. While the Indonesians have finally left East Timor, they are
hanging onto the Gap.
In Iryan Jaya (recently renamed West Papua) the Army is deep into
logging, as well as protecting the investments of the US operated
Freeport- McMoran gold and copper mine and the Atlantic Richfield oil
company.
Indonesia's problems are caused by greed, not terrorism, and by the
nature of its own army. Both Aceh and Iryan Jaya's independence movements
were peaceful until Army repression sparked a violent response. As Sidney
Jones, the Asia Director of Human Rights Watch put it, "The brutality
of the army created the mass base for separatist movements."
In the name of fighting "terrorism," we are about to bed down
with this outfit. Bad idea the first time around, bad idea the second.
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