|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Indonesia
Australia prepares military intervention in East Timor
What are the real motives?
By Nick Beams
8 September 1999
Use
this version to print
Moves by the Howard government and the Australian military
to lead an armed intervention in East Timor have nothing to do
with protecting the interests and welfare of the East Timorese
people against the terror campaign unleashed by Indonesian-organised
militia forces.
Rather, the aim of the military intervention is to establish
a UN protectorate in East Timor through which Australian and other
imperialist powers will seek to reinforce and prosecute their
business and strategic interests across the resource-rich Indonesian
archipelago.
The intervention has been prepared by a sustained media campaign
aimed at stampeding the genuine and legitimate public outrage
at the actions of the militias into political support for the
largest Australian military intervention since the Vietnam War.
For most of the past two decades, the same mass media supported
the military occupation of East Timor, as well as backing the
Suharto dictatorship in Indonesia. Now it is claiming to be motivated
by a desire to protect the Timorese masses. In a major editorial
published today, entitled What must be done in Timor
the Sydney Morning Herald demanded that Australian forces
intervene immediately and, if necessary unilaterally, with or
without the supposed agreement of the Habibie regime in Jakarta.
Australia, however reluctantly and without waiting for
others, must lead the wayin force. Mr Howard talks of up
to 2,000 Australian troops, but still the talk is conditional
on receiving international support and Indonesian agreement. The
time for such talks has passed. On Indonesia's past performance,
its declaration of martial law yesterday must be suspected as
intended more to gain time than resolve the crisis. Australia
should end this dangerous period of uncertainty. It should declare
its intention to move troops into East Timor if Indonesia doesn't
restore order immediately and if, in that event, the UN Security
Council fails to call together urgently a peacekeeping force.
Preparations for the landing of Australian forces in East Timor,
possibly within the next 48 hours, have already begun. A large,
high-speed navy catamaran, Jervis Bay, escorted by a navy
frigate, is now in international waters north of Darwin. It is
ostensibly on standby for evacuation, but it is carrying Special
Air Service (SAS) troops.
Howard has said his government is preparing to send up to 2,000
troops to the territory, leading an international military force
of around 5,000 personnel. Defence Minister John Moore told the
BBC that the Australian contingent would rise to around 4,000
after the initial stage.
Troops placed on alert include the 3,000 strong 1st Brigade
in Darwin and the 3rd Brigade in Townsville. The remainder of
the 600-strong SAS regiment is also on standby in Perth. Initially,
about 100 SAS personnel would land, using Black Hawk helicopters,
followed up by parachute battalions.
While being deployed on the pretext of peacekeeping, soldiers
in the 1st and 3rd Brigades have been trained in jungle warfare,
conventional operations and short-warning conflict.
They are currently receiving briefings on rules of engagement.
Today the Australian government has called for all Australian
citizens to leave the territory and is sending airforce Hercules
planes to Dili airport, accompanied by troops, to effect the evacuation.
The trigger for the intervention is likely to come from a five-member
delegation from the United Nations Security Council which is presently
in Jakarta to extract an agreement from the Habibie regime for
a UN-backed force, using the threat of the withdrawal of International
Monetary Fund bailout funds.
UN secretary-general Kofi Annan declared yesterday that the
Indonesian authorities have 48 hours to bring the situation in
East Timor under control, following the imposition of martial
law. Indonesian military chief and Defence Minister General Wiranto
insisted that Habibie declare a state of military emergency, despite
opposition within Habibie's cabinet. Under Indonesian law, the
military now has the legal power to restrict and ban movement
of people, seize all telecommunications facilities, confiscate
and censor all mail, cables and publications, and arrest and detain
people for 50 days without trial. The generals and their thugs
have, over the past 24 hours, predictably widened their reign
of terror.
Having helped create the conditions for carnage, the Western
powers are now utilising the tragedy to implement previously-prepared
plans for military intervention. Definite troop commitments have
so far come from Australia, New Zealand, Canada and several other
countries, including Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines. British
Foreign Secretary Robin Cook has pledged full support
and offered the backing of a naval vessel in the area.
The Australian government has been engaged in a flurry of discussions
with Washington to ensure US participation. Howard said today
that he was now confident of at least logistical support from
the US. The prime minister telephoned US President Bill Clinton
and told him Australians would find it very strange indeed
if the US refused assistance in what has been Australia's greatest
foreign policy crisis since Vietnam. Australian government spokesmen
have pointed to the support that Australia gave to US military
operations, in particular the Gulf War, and urged the US to reciprocate.
While the Indonesian military has imposed a virtual news blackout
on East Timor, reports continuing to filter through from Dili
and from West Timor indicate that at least 200 people have been
killed since last Saturday's announcement of the referendum vote
to separate from Indonesia. Buildings and houses in Dili have
been burned, stores looted and tens of thousands of people have
been made refugees and driven over the border to West Timor.
But aid workers and others have predicted such bloodletting
for months. Indeed, militia leaders warned of civil war
if the ballot came out in favour of secession.
Now, after 24 years of turning a blind eye to the Suharto junta's
killings in East Timor, the Australian government is organising
military intervention on the pretext that only an international
peacekeeping force can halt the violence.
This concern for humanitarianism is merely the
political cover for the continuation of the interests of Australian
capitalism by other means. For almost a quarter of a century,
the Australian government forged a partnership with the Suharto
dictatorship as the best means to facilitate operations by Australian-based
mining, construction, manufacturing and banking multinationals
and to protect their strategic interests throughout South East
Asia.
But with the disintegration of the Suharto regime under the
impact of the Asian crisis, and the withdrawal of US support for
it, the political balance of forces has begun to rapidly change.
Whereas the Indonesian generals were once the best protectors
of Western concerns, they have become a barrier to international
corporate exploitation of Indonesia's natural wealth and cheap
labour.
Some 26 years after the Whitlam Labor government was forced
by popular opposition to withdraw Australian forces from Vietnam,
an unprecedented common frontevery parliamentary political
party, the media and the trade union leaders, urged on by supporters
of East Timorese separationis advocating the dispatch of
troops. Not one dissenting voice has emerged. Instead, from the
Labor leaders, Kim Beazley and Laurie Brereton, to the radical
protest groups, one-time critics of the Vietnam War are leading
the charge for military involvement.
While workers and young people in Australia and internationally
are justifiably horrified by the slaughter in Timor, they should
recall that the 1975 invasion of the territory was only possible
because of the endorsement of Whitlam's government. And the Liberal-National
Party government of Malcolm Fraser backed the continued occupation,
resulting in the murder of an estimated 200,000 Timorese people
in the late 1970s.
Right until the present day, the Australian military has maintained
the closest collaboration with the Indonesian armed forces. From
the early 1990s, the Australian forces gave crucial assistance
to the notorious Kopassus special forces, now reported to be directing
the operations of the militias in Dili and elsewhere.
According to well-known Indonesia scholar Benedict Anderson,
Kopassus troops are legendary for their cruelty. In
East Timor they have been the pioneer and exemplar for every
kind of atrocity including rapes, murders and the mobilisation
of hooded gangsters.
Kopassus officers were regularly training with US and Australian
forces until exposure of their operations forced suspension of
these programs. David Jenkins, the Asian editor of the Sydney
Morning Herald detailed some aspects of this collaboration,
on September 7:
In 1993 an Australian Special Air Services detachment
traveled to the Kopassus special forces base in West Java to exercise
with their Indonesian opposite numbers, a controversial move given
that Kopassus had played a key role in destabilising East Timor
before Indonesia's 1975 invasion spearheaded by Kopassus troops.
Not long afterwards, commandos from Kopassus began training in
Australia, despite allegations that the Indonesia red beret unit
continued to be involved in intimidation, torture and murder,
not least in East Timor.
The following year, an Australian army battalion flew to East
Java to take part in the first-ever combined airborne exercises
with an Indonesian parachute unit. That unit, Battalion 502 of
the Army Strategic Reserve, was notorious for killing and looting
in East Timor. In 1994 the Keating government strengthened defence
training ties with Indonesia after the US Congress ended a 40-year-old
defence training program following the 1991 Dili massacre.
By 1995, the Australian Defence Force had become the
most important foreign provider of military training to Indonesia.
In that year more than 220 Indonesians trained at Australian military
establishments. Indonesia was also holding more military exercises
with Australia than it was with any other country.
This ever-closer collaboration led to the Keating government's
signing of a mutual security agreement with Suharto and his generals
in December 1995. In signing the treaty, Keating restated his
view that Suharto's 1965 coup was the most important event in
providing security and stability to the region.
As recently as March last year, the Australian Army Attaché
in Jakarta, Brigadier Jim Molan attended a ceremony at Kopassus
headquarters while disappeared activists were being
held in its torture centre. And despite a US Congressional ban
on training, it was revealed last year that Kopassus forces were
still receiving instructions from US special operations soldiers
in psychological warfaretraining that is no doubt now being
put into effect in Dili and the towns and villages of East Timor.
Neither imperialist military intervention to create an East
Timorese statelet nor continued domination at the hands of Suharto's
successors in Jakarta provide any solution for the East Timorese
people. Only a unified struggle of the masses throughout the entire
Indonesian archipelagoincluding the Timorese and Indonesian
workers, students and peasantsin alliance with their working
class brothers and sisters throughout the region and internationally
can put an end to 400 years of colonial and semi-colonial oppression.
See Also:
Pressure stepped up for UN force in East
Timor
[7 September 1999]
After vote for secession:
Western powers accelerate plans for military intervention in Timor
[4 September 1999]
The political tasks facing
the working class
The Indonesian elections and the struggle for democracy
[21 May 1999]
Indonesia
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |