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& East Timor
Australian imperialism and East Timor:
The Prime Minister's Address to the Nation
By Nick Beams
21 September 1999
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Delivering his Address to the Nation on national
television on Sunday night, Australian Prime Minister John Howard
opened a new chapter in the history of Australian imperialism.
In the past, stretching back to the Boer War and World War
I, and continuing right through to the Gulf War in 1990-91, Australian
military operations have always been conducted at the behest of,
or in collaboration with, the great powersfirst Britain
and then the United States.
But on this occasion, boosted by a bellicose media campaign
and the protest movements demanding Australian troops in,
Howard launched a military campaign prepared, organised and led
by the Australian government and its armed forces.
In the 19th century, British manufacturers would purchase stately
homes, or even have them constructed, in order to invest themselves
with an aura of tradition and history. In like manner, Howard
invoked a mythical military tradition as he sought to elevate
himself to statesmen-like heights in launching the largest ever
military campaign initiated by Australia.
Our soldiers, he proclaimed, go to East Timor
as part of a great Australian military tradition, which has never
sought to impose the will of this country on others, but only
to defend what is right.
The traditions Howard was actually following were those laid
down by every 20th century capitalist politician announcing a
foreign military interventionthe invocation of the ideals
of freedom, democracy and morality in order to cover up the real,
baser motives.
The record of the Australian military, steeped in the history
of the racist White Australia policy, has been one of enforcing
the dictates of the major powers and propping up military dictatorships
and repressive regimes throughout the Asian region against the
working class and peasant masses.
One need only recall the last major military action by Australian
armed forces in the Vietnam War. The then Prime Minister Harold
Holt proclaimed Australia was all the way with LBJ,
as half a million US troops waged a brutal war against the Vietnamese
people and the US airforce rained down destruction from the sky
in line with the declared policy of bombing the country back to
the Stone Age.
Prior to the Vietnam War, Australian troops had joined with
British forces in so-called counter-insurgency operations during
the Malayan Emergency of the 1950s, aimed at ensuring the installation
of an authoritarian, pro-imperialist regime after independence.
And before that, Australian forces had joined the US invasion
of Korea, assisting in the imposition of a military dictatorship,
as the US military sought to establish its hegemony in East Asia
at the start of the Cold War.
Throughout the post-war period, the Australian military enjoyed
the closest collaboration with the military regimes throughout
South-East Asia. In no case were these ties more assiduously pursued
than with the bloody Suharto regime, which came to power in 1965-66
through the mass murder of 500,000 to 1 million workers, peasants
and Communist Party members.
Little wonder, then, that the Australian head of the so-called
Interfet force, Major-General Peter Cosgrove enjoyed such cordial
relations with his Indonesian counterparts when he visited the
East Timor capital, Dili, on Sunday. He was no doubt renewing
old acquaintances struck up during previous joint Indonesian-Australian
military exercises.
Howard's myth-making was not confined to military history.
It assumed truly breathtaking proportions when he invoked the
suffering of the East Timorese people as the reason for the dispatch
of Australian forces.
We have all sensed, he declared, that a small,
vulnerable community was about to be denied the freedom they have
sought for so long, and voted so overwhelmingly to achieve.
But one of the major obstacles encountered by the East Timorese
people in their long struggle against oppression has been the
supporteconomic, political and militaryprovided by
successive Australian governments to the Indonesian military,
ever since the invasion of East Timor in 1975.
This close collaboration continued throughout the period leading
up to the August 30 referendum. The Australian government, despite
warnings from its own intelligence sources and the public utterances
of militia leaders that the territory would be turned into a sea
of fire if there were a vote for independence, insisted
that the Indonesian military remain in control.
If there is anger in Indonesian government and military circles
at Australia's current actions, it is because they feel betrayed
by their closest allythe only government in the world that
had provided legal recognition to the forcible incorporation of
East Timor as Indonesia's 27th province.
As for the United Nations, its officials told the Timorese
people it would be safe to vote, even as they were receiving briefings
from Australia warning that a massacre was being prepared.
The violence unleashed after the referendum result was declared
on September 4 did not come as a surprise. It had been anticipated
by the Howard government and formed part of its strategic planninga
fact acknowledged by the prime minister in the course of his address.
Declaring he was proud that Australia was asked to lead
the peacekeeping force, he continued: Months ago,
we made ready an additional brigade of the Australian Army in
case Australian forces were needed for peacekeeping operations
in East Timor. As a result, we were able to respond immediately
to the United Nation's request, not only to participate but also
to lead the multinational force.
In other words, knowing of the plans of the Indonesian military
and the militias, the Australian government made ready to be first
in on the action.
In the only reference to the real motivation for the East Timor
operationthe largest Australian military mobilisation since
World War 2Howard acknowledged that it was in our
national interest to do so.
Those interests centre on immediate economic considerations,
in particular the oil reserves covered by the Timor Gap Treaty
with Indonesiareserves said to be worth anywhere between
$11 billion and $19 billion and constituting the 23rd largest
oilfield in the world.
Legal opinion has already been provided that, in the event
of East Timor becoming independent, the treaty would have to be
renegotiated. By controlling the military situationan operation
which, in Howard's words, could be long and protractedthe
Australian government is working to ensure that an independent
East Timor will function as a de facto Australian protectorate,
with consequent economic benefits extracted according to the old
maxim to the victor go the spoils.
Significantly, the East Timorese leader Xanana Gusmao is now
in Darwin, working out plans for a transitional governmentpossibly
to include sections of the militiawhich, no doubt, will
ensure that Australian economic interests are well protected.
Besides the immediate economic benefits, there are wider geo-political
considerations behind the Australian and UN intervention into
East Timor.
In the aftermath of the end of the Cold War, former political
alliances and arrangements have broken down. New arrangements
have to be developed. All the major, as well as the minor, powers
recognise that in order to stake their claims and assert their
interests they must take part in the action. This is the reason
for the ever-lengthening list of countries preparing to send forces
to the tiny half-island. Besides Australia, those committing military
personnel include the US, France, Britain, Italy, Canada, New
Zealand, Portugal, South Korea, the Philippines, Brazil, Thailand
and Singapore with offers of assistance coming from
China, Russia, Malaysia, Fiji, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Argentina.
The specific interests of Australian imperialism in this post-Cold
War struggle for control of the vital resources of the region
were spelt out in an editorial published in the Sydney Morning
Herald last Friday.
Pointing to the new political consensus on the
deployment of Australian troops abroad, it insisted that this
rare agreement be seized upon to start building
Australia's defence capability for the next century.
The crisis in East Timor, after all, is also a reminder
that we live in an unpredictable, and potentially unstable, world.
To the north, the complexion of Indonesia's post Suharto politics,
together with the country's ability to deal peacefully with other
separatist challenges, is uncertain. So, too, is Papua New Guinea's
future without a lasting settlement in Bougainville and fundamental
reform of PNG's political institutions. The China-Taiwan conflict
may erupt into a shooting war. Beyond that is the simmering conflict
on the Korean peninsula. To the west, rising tensions between
Pakistan and India are particularly dangerous, even to their distant
neighbours, because both possess nuclear weapons. Even to the
south it is conceivable that, before long, Australia may become
locked in a conflict over competing claims to the resources of
the Antarctic continent.
In conclusion, the editorial noted that building the kind of
military capability needed for the future would be much
more expensive than Australians have become accustomed to
and that it was necessary to begin a national debate
involving discussion about trade-offs in areas such as tax
cuts and welfare expenditure against increases in defence spending.
Such a frank assessment, which is indicative of the wide-ranging
strategical discussions now taking place in ruling circles, underscores
the fact that the military intervention in East Timor has nothing
to do with the defence of the rights of the East Timorese people.
It is part of a wider agenda for the pursuit of the national interests
of Australian imperialism abroad, coupled with deepening attacks
on social conditions and living standards at home.
See Also:
East Timor and protest politics
[17 September 1999]
"Shoot-to-kill" mandate
Vietnam War veteran to command Australian forces in Timor
[15 September 1999]
US threats clear way for military intervention
in East Timor
[14 September 1999]
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