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Subject: Mass Murderers and Double Standards of Justice
Dissident Voice
Mass Murderers and Double Standards of Justice by Joseph Nevins
www.dissidentvoice.org December 20, 2003
President Bush's promise that Saddam Hussein "will face the
justice he denied to millions" took on a special meaning when I first
read his words announcing the deposed Iraqi president's capture. I had
just completed a friend's book manuscript on the events preceding the
bloody seizure of power in Indonesia by General Suharto, a man responsible
for the deaths of hundreds of thousands. But unlike in the case of
Hussein, Washington has no desire that Suharto and his accomplices be held
accountable for their crimes. The reasons why, and the fact that the
United States is in position to realize its desires, painfully illustrate
the poverty and hypocrisy of international justice in practice.
Beginning in October 1965, Suharto and his army organized and carried
out what the C.I.A. described "as one of the worst mass murders of
the 20th century." Over the course of several months, they
slaughtered members of the Indonesian communist party (PKI) along with
members of loosely affiliated organizations such as women's group and
labor unions.
Amnesty International estimated "many more than one million"
killed. The head of the Indonesia state security system approximated the
toll at half a million, with another 750,000 jailed or sent to
concentration camps.
Marshal Green, American ambassador to Indonesia at the time, wrote that
the embassy had "made clear" to the army that Washington was
"generally sympathetic with and admiring" of its actions.
Indeed, the United States had helped lay the groundwork for the coup
through its support for the military, and through intelligence operations
aimed at weakening the PKI and drawing the party into conflict with the
army. Accordingly, Washington supplied weaponry, telecommunications
equipment, as well as food and other aid to the army in the early weeks of
the killings. The U.S. embassy also provided the names of thousands of PKI
cadre who were subsequently executed.
This same military launched a full-scale invasion of neighboring East
Timor on December 7, 1975. While meeting with Suharto the previous day in
Indonesia's capital, then-president Gerald Ford and secretary of state
Henry Kissinger approved of the invasion plans and the use of American
weaponry, but asked Suharto to wait until they returned to the United
States. About 14 hours after their departure, Indonesian forces attacked.
What followed was a war and occupation that cost over 200,000 East
Timorese lives--about one-third of the pre-invasion population--and 24
years of American complicity in the slaughter. From the Ford
administration to that of Clinton, the United States provided billions of
dollars in military weaponry and training and economic assistance, as well
as diplomatic cover to Jakarta.
Today, Suharto, in retirement, resides comfortably in Jakarta, and the
brutal military he helped to build remains intact, free to commit
atrocities throughout the Indonesian archipelago. Similarly, officials
from the United States complicit with the 1965-66 slaughter and
Indonesia's reign of terror in East Timor continue their lives unhindered.
Not surprisingly, the United States and its Western allies--many of whom
also actively supported Jakarta's crimes--have made it clear that they
have no desire to see an international tribunal for Indonesia and East
Timor established.
Comparing laws to spider webs, Anarchasis observed in the 6th century
B.C. that laws catch the weak and poor, while the rich and powerful tear
them to pieces. Although not always the case, the ancient philosopher has
shown himself to be prophetic in the area of contemporary international
affairs, a profoundly undemocratic arena in which the powerful demand
accountability of their weaker enemies, while insulating themselves and
their allies from prosecution.
Whatever we may call this, it is not justice.
Joseph Nevins is an assistant professor of geography at Vassar College.
He is the author of A Not-So Distant Horror: Making and Accounting for
Mass Violence in East Timor, which Cornell University Press will publish
in early 2005.
Order Books by
Joe Nevins (writing under Matthew Jardine) on East Timor
East Timor: Genocide in Paradise
By Matthew Jardine. Basics that Americans should know. 95 pp.
Odonian/Common Courage Press, U.S., 1999. (New Edition) $8
East Timor's Unfinished Struggle: Inside the
Timorese Resistance
By Constancio Pinto and Matthew Jardine.
Preface by Jose Ramos Horta. Foreword by Allan
Nairn, A riveting
first-hand account of the East Timorese struggle.
292 pp. South End Press, US, 1996. $16
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