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Australian ABC falls into line on Bali bombing
By Peter Symonds
22 November 2002
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In the wake of the Bali bombing on October 12, the Australian
media has openly lined up with the Howard government in deliberately
cultivating a climate of fear and uncertainty to justify a far-reaching
assault on basic democratic rights and support for the Bush administrations
war on terrorism. Any pretence of independent journalism
has been rapidly abandoned as outlets compete to transmit the
latest claims of government spokesmen, police and intelligence
agencies about the activities of terrorist groups.
A sharp indication of the shift was a Four Corners program
The Network, screened on ABC television on October
28, which purported to be a detailed examination of Al Qaeda operations
in South East Asia. Four Corners has, in the past, carried
out serious investigative journalism on a wide range of issues,
including sensitive cases of corporate fraud and government corruption.
The Network, however, made no attempt to approach
the subject matter critically and dovetailed completely with the
Howard governments political agenda.
The program was broadcast just one day after Howard outlawed
the Jemaah Islamiah (JI) organisation, which is allegedly linked
to Al Qaeda. From the very outset the government accused JI of
being responsible for the Bali attack. But it has presented no
evidence to support the claim. The Network conveniently
filled the gap. By regurgitating the allegations of CIA, police
and intelligence sources against JI, Four Corners, in effect,
justified the ban, as well as the violent police raids against
Indonesian families in Sydney, Melbourne and Perth that followed.
Al Qaeda and JI may well have carried out the horrific bombings
in Bali. Both of these Islamic fundamentalist organisations are
reactionary to the core. Their program does not challenge the
capitalist system, their policies offer no solution to the suffering
confronting the South East Asian masses, and their terrorist methods,
which target innocent civilians, provide a convenient pretext
for state repression. But a JI plot is only one of the possible
scenarios. The Indonesian military and police have a long record
of thuggery, violence and political provocation, something which
has been all but ignored by the Australian government and media
in the wake of the Bali tragedy.
What made The Network an abysmal piece of journalism
was its completely uncritical approach to the allegations of Al
Qaeda and JI activity in South East Asia that have been peddled
by various intelligence agencies for months. As a serious investigation,
the program failed on every level. It made no attempt to consider
alternative hypotheses. It did not in any way challenge the claims
made by the intelligence officials and experts being interviewed.
And it carried out no independent examination of the roots of
Al Qaeda, JI and Islamic fundamentalism.
To even call the program an investigation is something of a
misnomer. Most of the facts about Al Qaeda and JI
could have been obtained by reading the US-based Time magazine,
which, based on CIA sources, has published a series of sensational
articles this year on terrorism in South East Asia. Four Corners
did nothing more than dress up these claims with a bit of local
colour.
Reporter Sally Neighbour and her camera crew spent two months
in Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines and Indonesia obtaining
interviews and background shots. All of this was presented, along
with the comments of terrorist experts and footage
of the Bali bombings, in a slick professional package, dramatically
heightened with ominous background music and Neighbours
own breathless commentary.
What facts did The Network provide?
1. Four Corners obtained copies
of two classified documents that summarise the interrogation of
Omar al Faruq, an alleged Al Qaeda operative. He was arrested
in June by agents of Indonesias State Intelligence Agency
(BIN), handed over to the CIA and quietly whisked out of Indonesia
to Afghanistan without even the pretence of due legal process.
He was subjected to relentless interrogation by the CIA
for three months before he finally cracked on September
9 and provided information about Al Qaedas operations in
South East Asia.
According to the CIA, Faruq admitted to having made
preparations to attack US and other Western embassies in the region
to coincide with the anniversary of the September 11 attacks on
the US. He also confessed to plans to attack US naval ships and
bomb Christian churches as well as two plots to assassinate Indonesian
president Megawati Sukarnoputri. Most significantly from the standpoint
of Washington and Canberra, he implicated JIs alleged leader
Abu Bakar Bashir.
None of the CIAs claims has been corroborated. Faruq
has been held incommunicado in Afghanistan since he was detained.
His evidence would not be admissible in any court of law because
it was obtained under extreme duress, including, in all likelihood,
the use of torture, without the benefit of legal counsel and in
open contravention of his most basic rights. It is possible that
he simply told his interrogators what they wanted to hear, or
that he made no admissions at all.
Faruqs confession proved particularly useful
to the Bush administration in heightening public fears. On September
11, an alert was issued and US embassies in South East Asia were
shut down. Nothing happened and there is no other evidence that
attacks were planned on that date. But that did not stop the US
from using Faruqs interrogation to step up pressure on Megawati
to crack down on JI and arrest Bashir. Sally Neighbour interviewed
US Ambassador to Indonesia Ralph Boyce, who was in the forefront
of this campaign, but did not use the opportunity to question
the veracity of Faruqs statements or the methods used to
obtain them.
Interestingly enough, Indonesian authorities, when handed a
copy of Faruqs investigation, insisted that there was not
enough evidence to arrest Bashir under Indonesian law. But in
the wake of the Bali bombing, Megawati succumbed to immense international
pressure and changed the law by issuing a decree providing for
prolonged detention without trial. Bashir has since been detained
for questioning, not over the Bali attack, but for his alleged
role in a series of church bombings in Indonesia in December 2000.
He continues to deny any involvement, to insist that he does not
know Faruq and to demand the right to confront his accuser in
person.
A further question is raised by the involvement of BIN in Faruqs
arrest in June. Just three months before, three Indonesians were
detained at Manila airport after explosives were found in one
of their suitcases. The arrests were hailed as another victory
in the war against terrorism with BIN claiming credit
for providing the tip-off. But the victory rapidly
turned sour as the trio insisted the material had been planted.
Two of the three were released due to lack of evidence.
Although Agus Dwikarna, a member of the Muslim-based National
Mandate Party (PAN), is still being held, a number of commentators
allege that the entire operation was set up by BIN. In a study
published in August, the Brussels-based International Crisis Group
concluded: The claim by Agus Dwikarna and the other two
arrested with him in March 2002 that the evidence in their suitcase
in Manila was planted appears to be well-founded, but the US government
still wants to reward Indonesian intelligence for working with
Philippine authorities to bring off the arrest. Significantly,
Four Corners made no mention of this case.
2. Based on undisclosed intelligence reports and interviews
with Colonel Rodolfo Mendoza of the Philippine National Police,
Philippine National Security Adviser Roilo Golez and two expertsRohan
Gunaratna and Zachary Abuza Four Corners provided
a potted history of Al Qaedas activities in South East Asia.
In 1988, Osama bin Laden sent his brother-in-law Mohammad
Jamal Khalifa to the Philippines to set up operations. One of
his first contacts was with Riduan Isamuddin, alias Hambali, who
is now said to be JIs operations chief. Khalifa
was joined by a senior aide to Osama, Khalid Shaikh
Mohammad, who is now known to have been a key planner behind
September 11, and together established a major hub
for Al Qaeda in the Philippines.
Two specific incidents were referred to: a plot in
the 1990s in Manila to assassinate the Pope and hijack US passenger
jets, which included the idea of crashing hijacked jets
into the Pentagon, the World Trade Centre and the CIA, and
an extraordinary meeting in Kuala Lumpur in January
2000, that included Hambali, Mohammad, two of the September 11
hijackers and one of the Al Qaeda operatives involved in bombing
the warship, the USS Cole in Yemen. The CIA tipped off Malaysian
intelligence, who monitored the Kuala Lumpur gathering, which
was thought to have been a key planning session for those
[the September 11 and the USS Cole] attacks.
Sally Neighbour failed to ask any of those interviewed the
most basic question: what was the role of the CIA in establishing
Al Qaedas hub in South East Asia? In 1988, bin
Laden, Khalifa and Mohammad were part of the CIAs largest-ever
covert operationthe funding, arming and training of Mujaheddin
fighters against the Soviet-backed regime in Afghanistan. Just
two years before, CIA chief William Casey had backed a Pakistani
plan to recruit thousands of Islamic fundamentalists, like Hambali,
to fight alongside the Mujaheddin, who were being hailed in Washington
as freedom fighters, not terrorists.
In the murky world of intelligence, who is an asset
and who is an enemy is never clear-cut. What contacts did the
CIA retain within Al Qaeda and other fundamentalist groups in
the 1990s, even as bin Laden became increasingly hostile to Washington?
The issue is particularly pertinent when considering the Kuala
Lumpur meeting. If the information is accurate, it adds to a growing
body of evidence that the US security apparatus had prior knowledge
of the September 11 hijackings and did nothing to stop them.
Needless to say, Four Corners did not even pose, let
alone probe, any of the relevant questions. What did the CIA learn
from the Kuala Lumpur meeting? Why were two of those present at
a gathering involving suspected top Al Qaeda leaders subsequently
allowed to freely enter the US without any investigation or follow
up?
3. Based on the same sources, Four Corners asserted
that Bashir and Hambali were responsible for setting up a regional
terrorist networksometimes referred to as JI, in other places
as the Mujaheddin League. According to National Security Adviser
Golez, parts of northern Australia are included in
JIs aim of establishing an Islamic state throughout South
East Asia. Bashir and Hambali were the architects of a campaign
of terror waged over the last three years which included
plots against Western interests, the bombing of churches in Indonesia
in 2000 and bomb blasts in the Philippines.
JI is presented as a military-style organisation with a tight
command structure. The program lumps together Bashir and Hambali,
even though the former has denied any close association with the
latter. A number of academics familiar with Islamic groups in
the region have raised serious doubts about this interpretation,
pointing out that JI, if it exists as a distinct organisation
at all, is a rather loose network based on Bashirs Ngruki
school in central Java. The International Crisis Groups
study concluded: Association with the Ngruki network is
not equivalent to terrorism, and yet the possibility remains that
some members of the exile group who have since returned to Indonesia
may be sources of support for criminal activities.
Of the bombings and plots sheeted home to JI, only one has
resulted in a successful prosecution. Indonesian Fathur al Ghozi,
a former student at Bashirs school, was arrested in Manila
earlier this year and found guilty of carrying out bomb attacks
in the Philippines in December 2000. In the remaining cases, either
no one has been arrested or those who have been detained are being
held indefinitely without trial in Singapore and Malaysia. Like
Faruq, none of their evidence has been tested in a court of law.
Neighbours interviews with the two terrorist expertsGunaratna
and Abuzaadded nothing new to the story, other than the
weight of their academic credentials. Neighbour did not care to
press them on the sources of their information or their connections
to various intelligence agencies. Nor did she quiz Golez too closely
on why JI would include sparsely inhabited areas of northern Australia,
which have never had any historic link to Islam, in its vision
of an Islamic state. As far as Neighbour is concerned, any suggestion,
even the most far-fetched, is grist for the mill.
4. The program examined one JI plot in particular:
a plan to attack Western embassies, US ships and other targets
in Singapore, which came to light with the arrest of 31 Singaporeans,
beginning last December. Hambali allegedly ordered the attacks,
Ghozi provided the bomb-making expertise and a Malaysian bio-chemist,
Yazid Sufaat, is said to have obtained four tonnes of the fertiliser
ammonium nitrate to make the bombs. Four Corners screened
lengthy portions of a videotape that is said to have been found
in Afghanistan and made by the suspects as part of their preparations.
Their defence lawyer, Subhas Anandan, blithely told Sally Neighbour:
All of them have admitted to all the allegations.
Some or all of those detained may have been involved in such
a plot. But neither the evidence nor the alleged confessions of
the suspects have been tested in court. They are being held under
the Singapores notorious Internal Security Act (ISA), which
provides for indefinite detention without trial. Likewise, the
biochemist Yazid Sufaat, is being held under Malaysias version
of the ISA and has never had the luxury of a court case. The videotape
was made in 1997, four years before the arrests and features a
subway stationnot the alleged targets. It shows nothing
more than a possible connection to Al Qaeda.
In all of the above, there is one glaring omission. No mention
is made of the Indonesian military, which not only has its own
long record of political violence and murder but also has lengthy
associations with various Islamic extremist groups. Most notoriously,
in the 1965-66 CIA-backed coup that brought Suharto to power,
rightwing Islamic thugs worked alongside the military in butchering
an estimated 500,000 workers, poor farmers and Indonesian Communist
Party (PKI) activists.
Suharto and the military had a hand in the initial organisation
of what was called Komando Jihad, or Jemaah Islamiyah, in the
1970s. In an effort to undermine a vote for the Muslim-based Partai
Persatuan Pembangunan (PPP), General Ali Moertopo, who was in
charge of Suhartos covert operations, reactivated Islamic
extremist elements who had been suppressed under the previous
president Sukarno. While the military later cracked down on the
grouping, the operation provided a significant impetus to Bashir
and others in the forging of the Ngruki network.
After the fall of Suharto in 1998, the military became actively
involved with Islamic groups, such as Laskar Jihad, in fueling
communal tensions. The TNI has deliberately fostered instability
as a means of justifying its role in internal security and clinging
on to the political power and vast economic interests built up
over decades under the Suharto dictatorship. And it has not hesitated
to use the most ruthless methods. In 1999 in East Timor, TNI-backed
militia unleashed a wave of killings against pro-independence
supporters.
Four Corners cited two intelligence reports claiming
that Faruq told the CIA that Bashir had authorised the purchase
of three tonnes of explosives to attack US warships in Indonesia.
One account says he bought them from the Indonesian armed
forces, the TNI, the other that he bought them from a former TNI
officer, Neighbour explained. But she did not explore the
obvious question: if that is the case, what are the TNIs
connections to Bashir and JI, and what has been its involvement
in other plotsincluding the Bali bombing?
The military certainly had the means and ample motives for
carrying out the Bali attack. The TNI, or sections of it, could
have set the operation in motion in a bid to destabilise the Megawati
administration, bolster their own security role and justify closer
links with the US militaryall in the name of the war
on terrorism. Or the countrys extensive intelligence
networks, which are still controlled by the military, may have
been aware that a plot was being prepared and allowed it to proceed
for the same reasons.
Taken as a wholethat is, what was omitted as well as
what was includedThe Network meshed completely
with the political agenda of the Howard government, both in Indonesia
and at home.
The programs willingness to indict JI and ignore the
TNI lines up with a renewed push by the Howard government to reestablish
close links with the Indonesian military, including its notorious
Kopassus special forces. The move is part of broader plans by
the US, with the backing of Australia, to exploit the war
on terrorism to strengthen its strategic presence in South
East Asia.
Four Corners is completely silent on the responsibility
of the Howard government, let alone the Bush administration, in
creating the fertile soil for terrorism. If Al Qaeda and JI are
able to gain a hearing in Indonesia and elsewhere, it is because
of the widespread public hostility and anger that has been engendered
by Washingtons reckless policies in Central Asia and the
Middle East, including the invasion of Afghanistan and impeding
war against Iraq, and Canberras slavish support for them.
Moreover, The Networks utter indifference
to the methods used to detain and interrogate Faruq and others
legitimises the police state measures employed by the US, Malaysian,
Singaporean and Indonesian authorities as well as by federal and
state governments in Australia. In its efforts to stampede public
opinion behind the war on terrorism, Four Corners
has jettisoned the basic principles of serious journalism and,
like the rest of the media, lined up with the ongoing onslaught
on democratic rights.
See Also:
Unanswered questions in Bali bombing
investigations
[11 November 2002]
Australian-Indonesian families protest
ASIO raids
"We are making a public statement that we have nothing to
hide"
[6 November 2002]
Eye-witness describes violent police
raid in Australia: "There is no excuse for terrorising
women and children"
[2 November 2002]
Violent police raids in
Sydeny and Perth
Bali bombing used to activate repressive laws in Australia
[31 October 2002]
Australian government uses
Bali atrocity to demand new repressive powers
[19 October 2002]
Anger mounts over Australian
government's failure to give Bali warning
[17 October 2002]
Washington seizes on Bali
terror bombing to demand crackdown in Indonesia
[14 October 2002]
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