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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Indonesia
The US exploits terrorist threats to step up pressure
on Indonesia
By John Roberts
2 October 2002
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On the first anniversary of the September 11 terror attacks
on the US, the Bush administration declared a high-level terrorist
alert as part of its efforts to maintain momentum in the global
war on terrorism. A particular focus of the alert was South
East Asia, where several US embassies were shut down.
Justification appeared from two sources. On September 16, the
Singapore Home Affairs Ministry issued a statement reporting the
arrest of 21 Singapore citizens for alleged terrorist activity,
18 of whom will be detained for at least two years without trial
under the countrys notorious Internal Security Act (ISA).
One day earlier, the US-based Time magazine published
a detailed account of the CIAs interrogation of Kuwaiti-born
Omar al-Faruq. In line with its previous sensational accounts
of Terror in Asia, the magazine provided lurid, but
unsubstantiated, details of links between Al Qaeda and Islamic
fundamentalist groups in South East Asia and their plans for attacking
US targets in the region, including in Singapore.
While US and Singapore authorities maintained there was no
link, the information released in both cases conveniently provided
proof of connections between Al Qaeda and the Islamic
group Jemaah Islamiyah. The timing was also fortuitous. According
to Time, Omar al-Faruq, who had said nothing for months,
finally broke down and divulged everything to his
CIA interrogators on September 9. The Singapore roundup occurred
in August, but was not announced until after the Time disclosures.
The events coincided with the capture of Al Qaeda suspect Ramzi
Binalshibh and four other men after a shoot out in Karachi on
September 11, and the FBIs arrest of six young Arab-Americans
in Lackawanna, New York, on September 13, on completely unsubstantiated
allegations that they constituted an Al Qaeda sleeper cell.
Taken together, these developments have been used by the Bush
administration to justify its war on terrorism and
to claim it is reaping successes.
Announcing the recent arrests, the Singapore Home Affairs statement
alleged that 19 of the 21 detainees were Jemaah Islamiah members
and two were connected to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)
in the southern Philippines. Three had undergone military training
in Afghanistan and one attended MILF training sessions in southern
Mindanao.
But none of the detained has been formally charged with any
criminal offence. They are accused of reconnoitering targets on
Jurong Island off Singapores coastthe site of a number
of chemical plants, the Defence Ministry, water pipelines from
Malaysia and a US warship. The only evidence released has been
notes, photos and maps, allegedly seized from the homes of three
of the arrested.
US authorities welcomed the arrests. We appreciate Singapores
strong support in the campaign against terrorism and continue
to engage with the Singaporean government on numerous aspects
of the campaign, a US official in Jakarta declared. Singapore
has become an important American regional ally and military base,
with around 100 US warships passing through the port each year.
The roundup follows a similar operation in Singapore last December,
which resulted in the arrest of 15 people, of whom 13 are still
being detained without trial under the ISA. Those detentions,
along with others by Malaysian authorities, were the occasion
for the US administration and mediawith Time magazine
in the forefrontto mount a sensational campaign claiming
that the region as a whole, and Indonesia in particular, had become
a sanctuary for Al Qaeda and a hotbed of terrorist activity.
The Singapore government claimed at the time that it had prevented
a major terrorist attack using truck bombs on the local diplomatic
missions of the US, Britain, Israel and Australia.
CIA interrogation
The latest allegations have led to renewed demands that the
Indonesian administration of President Megawati Sukarnoputri take
tougher action against terrorism and in particular, arrest Abu
Bakar Bashir, the alleged leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, and others
accused of being connected to the organization. But Jakarta has
repeatedly refused, insisting there is no evidence. Bashir, who
lives in Yogyakarta, has steadfastly denied the accusations and
even threatened legal action against the US for defamation.
The Time article purported to provide a detailed account
of the activities of al-Faruq and his South East Asian Al Qaeda
connections. The 31-year-old Kuwaiti was arrested by Indonesian
police near Jakarta on June 5 and shipped out of the country to
Afghanistan three days later. He was handed over to US authorities
at the Bagram air base north of Kabul for interrogation.
The CIA claims that al-Faruq, who has never been charged or
convicted of any offence under US or Indonesian law, is a major
figure in the Al Qaeda network. He allegedly took orders directly
from senior Al Qaeda officials, including Abu Zubaydah, who is
currently being interrogated in the US. His task was to plan
large-scale attacks against US interests in Indonesia, Malaysia,
the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Taiwan, Vietnam and Cambodia
to coincide with the September 11 anniversary.
How such operations were to take place remains unclear. The
Al Qaeda leadership and bases in Afghanistan had been severely
disrupted or destroyed. Pakistani security forces, along with
US Special Forces, the CIA and FBI were hunting down suspects
in Pakistan. Zubaydah and al-Faruq were in custody. Yet, according
to Time, other operatives would assume responsibilities
for planned attacks.
The CIA claimed al-Faruq enlisted Jemaah Islamiah to provide
operational and logistic support for the anniversary attacks and
that Abu Bakar Bashir authorised the use of the organisations
resources. Al-Faruq was also supposed to have admitted to being
involved in two plots to assassinate Megawati Sukarnoputrithe
first during the 1999 elections and the second in August 2001
after she had assumed the presidency.
No supporting evidence has been provided, however, to verify
any aspect of the CIAs report. The large-scale attacks
carried out by other operatives failed to materialise.
The information itself is the product of three months of extreme
pressure on al-Faruq, if not physical torture. The Time
article openly admitted that he had been subjected to psychological
interrogation tactics, including prolonged isolation and sleep
deprivation.
US officials have wasted no time in renewing demands that Indonesia
detain Bashir and shut down Jemaah Islamiah. A senior US official
was quoted by the New York Times as saying: [Bashirs]
not just a rabble rouser and trouble maker, but has been directly
involved in terrorist activities. Over the past two weeks,
the US ambassador in Jakarta, Ralph Boyce, has held three meetings
with 15 Muslim organizations, seeking to persuade them that Al
Qaeda is active in Indonesia and has to be dealt with.
On September 17, a senior White House aide, Karen Brooks, was
dispatched to Jakarta to convince Megawati to take tougher anti-terrorist
measures. Brooks is a former Fulbright scholar in Jakarta and
a personal friend of Megawati.
According to the New York Times, Brooks visit
was to impress on Ms Megawati the seriousness of the problem,
but even more important, it was to give some courage to the Indonesia
leader, who faces the prospect of widespread demonstrations by
Muslims if she cracks down too hard. The Far Eastern
Economic Review reported that the US official warned Megawati
that, if Jakarta failed, the US would unilaterally put both Bashir
and Jemaah Islamiah on its terrorist hit list.
Megawati Sukarnoputri and the military are already collaborating
closely with Washington behind the scenes as indicated by
al-Faruqs arrest and rapid dispatch to Afghanistan. But
the Bush administrations invasion of Afghanistan and its
preparations for war against Iraq have generated widespread popular
distrust and opposition. There is also deep suspicion about US
motives for its anti-terrorist activities in the region and its
developing ties with the Indonesian military.
The Sydney Morning Herald reported the latest meetings
between Boyce and Muslim leaders as follows: His audience
was deeply distrustful of the US administration, skeptical of
claims of Al Qaeda operations in Indonesia and hostile to Mr Bushs
plans to attack Iraq. The CIAs history of covert activities
in Indonesia in the 1950s and 1960s was raised repeatedly and
the CIA was accused of leaking to Time magazine its evidence
obtained from al-Faruq to blacken Indonesias reputation.
Solahuddin Wahid, a leader of the Muslim-based Nahdlatul Ulama
organisation told the New York Times on September 24 that
the latest revelations were one of Washingtons
propaganda tricks. What has been leaked by the
CIA is described by many as a mere American scenario to corner
Indonesia into nodding to whatever the US is planning to do,
he said.
Whatever the exact truth about the alleged information extracted
from the Singapore detainees and al-Faruq, the Bush administration
is exploiting the terrorist threats to strengthen
US political and military clout throughout South East Asia, especially
Indonesia.
See Also:
Why has South East Asia become
the second front in Bush's "war on terrorism"?
[26 April 2002]
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