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: East
Timor
Australian military occupation of East Timor proceeds full
steam ahead
By Peter Symonds
27 May 2006
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As Australian troops pour into East Timor and take control
of the capital Dili, the neo-colonial character of the operation
is becoming increasingly evident. Under the pretext of preventing
civil war and helping the Timorese people, Australian imperialism
has moved to reassert its dominance in East Timor, to install
a compliant regime and to protect its economic and strategic interests.
Australian Prime Minister John Howard declared yesterday: There
is a significant governance problem inside East Timor, theres
no point in beating about bush. The country has not been well-governed
and I do hope that the sobering experience for those in elected
positions of having to call in help from outside will induce the
appropriate behaviour inside the country.
By last night at least 500 Australian troops, backed by armoured
vehicles and Black Hawk attack helicopters, had fanned out in
Dili, after seizing the international airport on Thursday. An
Australian frigate and supply ship are stationed in Dili harbour.
Three more troop carriers are due in the next two days, to bring
the numbers to 1,300 soldiers and 500 support personnela
force larger and far more heavily armed than East Timors
tiny military. Australian troops will be reinforced by 200 New
Zealand troops, 500 Malaysian military personnel and 120 Portuguese
paramilitary police. The US is providing heavy airlift capacity
and has sent 50 marines to guard its embassy in Dili.
Howard stressed that the Australian-led force was in East Timor
to stay. Theres no point in pulling out early. Its
a big thing to send 1,300 troops in. Its a very foolish,
shortsighted thing to pull them out before their job is completed.
These tasks always last longer than you expect in the beginning.
The Australian press speculated that troops would remain at least
until after Timorese elections next year, but Howards remarks
foreshadow the possibility of a much longer military occupation.
Howards claims to have received an invitation
from East Timor are transparently thin. In a Mafia-style operation,
Canberra made Dili an offer it could not refuse. Amid deepening
tensions within the East Timorese security forces, Australia dispatched
troops and warships to the Timor Sea on May 12 without even informing
the Timorese Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri. The move was designed
to put pressure on Alkatiri, to encourage dissident pro-Australian
elements, and to preempt any intervention by rival powers, particularly
Portugal, East Timors former colonial ruler.
The Howard government has made no secret of its hostility to
Alkatiri, who is increasingly being demonised in the Australian
press as an autocrat, an incompetent and an elitist, out of touch
with the sentiments of ordinary East Timorese. In Rupert Murdochs
Australian, for instance, foreign editor Greg Sheridan
branded Alkatiri as a disastrous prime minister who
has entrenched the clique of ageing, dogmatic Marxist-Leninists
within Fretilin and exacerbated every division within East Timorese
society.
Canberra had been pinning its hopes on a challenge by a faction
led by UN ambassador Jose Luis Guterres to oust Alkatiri at last
weeks congress of the ruling Fretilin party. When the elitist
Alkatiri easily beat off his rival, the Howard government moved
to intervene, using clashes between government and rebel soldiers
and police as the pretext. While the full story of the factional
divisions between easterners and westerners
within the security forces remains to be told, it is no surprise
that a dubious figureMajor Alfredo Reinadowith strong
connections to Australia and its military has emerged as the purported
rebel leader.
Relying heavily on East Timors President Xanana Gusmao
and Foreign Minister Jose Ramos Horta, the Australian government
used sporadic fighting between rebels and loyalists
to extract an initial request for assistance on Wednesday night.
While Howard insisted that the full intervention force would only
be sent in once formal arrangements were in place, his stance
abruptly changed on Thursday evening. Pointing to instances of
violence, magnified out of all proportion by the Australian media,
he gave the order to go full steam ahead without any
final agreement on the rules of engagement with Dili.
Howard told the press: We will go in without any conditionality.
Weve made a judgement the situation is deteriorating so
badly that if we were to wait until we got three or four signatures
on paper there might be significant further bloodshed and damaged
property... Given the deteriorating situation, we will go ahead
without any conditionality with the full deployment and the 1,300
[troops] will be in place in very short order.
These comments underscore Howards complete contempt for
the national sovereignty of East Timor. To intervene without
any conditionality, let alone in response to any threat
to Australia, constitutes a naked act of imperialist aggression.
Moreover, the willingness of the UN and all the major powers to
immediately sanction the military occupation exposes the hollowness
of the grandiose rhetoric surrounding the granting of independence
to East Timor in 2002.
Preparations for a coup
Having presented the East Timorese government with a fait accompli,
an Australian delegation, including senior military and diplomatic
officials, met with East Timorese leaders late on Thursday to
extract a formal agreement sanctifying the mission and giving
Canberra a free hand. Defence Minister Brendan Nelson bluntly
warned that Australian troops would not hesitate to use
whatever level of force is required to see they are disarmed and
do not threaten the life and safety of innocent people.
Nelson did not specify who they might begovernment
or rebels.
In an extraordinary admission that the Australian government
is pursuing its own political agenda, Howard declared that the
military would not take sides and would remain neutral.
In other words, the Australian government has not sent soldiers
to protect the government of East Timor, but is arrogating to
itself the right to determine who the enemy is. The
real target is Alkatiri and his government.
Already efforts are underway by Gusmao and Horta, regarded
as reliable allies in Canberra, to push Alkatiri aside. On Thursday,
Gusmao announced that he was assuming full control of the East
Timorese security forces, despite objections from Alkatiri that
the decision was unconstitutional. Horta has declared that he
intends to organise talks between the rival factions on Sunday,
even though Alkatiri has branded rebel leader Major Reinado a
criminal and refused to negotiate to him. Not without justification,
earlier in the week Alkatiri described the moves against him as
a real effort to launch an outright coup against the government.
With the backing of the US and the UN, the Australian government
is planning a major political intervention. An article in todays
Australian by defence analyst Bob Lowry, a former adviser
in East Timor, indicated the scope of what is being prepared.
Lowry called for the sacking of the present home affairs and defence
ministers, the disbanding of the defence ministry, the integration
and downsizing of the police and military, the installation of
a foreign chief of police, and a full review of the constitution.
He stopped short of openly calling for the ousting of Alkatiri,
saying only that his future must be left to the political
process. UN Secretary General Kofi Annan has dispatched
top UN political troubleshooter Ian Martin, who presided over
the 1999 independence referendum, to oversee these political processes.
Howard is no more concerned about the plight of the East Timorese
people today than he was in 1999. The guiding policy of successive
Australian governments, Labor and Coalition, going back to Canberras
tacit support for the Suharto dictatorships invasion in
1975, has been to obtain control of oil and gas reserves in the
Timor Sea and establish a strong security presence in the region.
As in 1999, Australia has intervened quickly to preempt efforts
by Portugal and other European countries to secure influence in
East Timor. Canberras objection to Alkatiri is not that
he is an elitist, but that he has sought support from other powers,
particularly Portugal, and refused to immediately buckle to Australian
bullying in negotiations over the Timor Sea oil and gas.
For all the talk of helping the East Timorese people, the Howard
government has done nothing since 1999 to alleviate the countrys
desperate social conditions. East Timor remains one of the poorest
countries in Asia with unemployment of more than 50 percent, widespread
poverty and a severe lack of basic services. It is this appalling
social crisis that has led to ethnic tensions, whipped up by an
unscrupulous and privileged ruling elite, all of whom, including
Gusmao, Horta and Alkatiri, regard the masses with contempt. While
it is prepared to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to secure
its military and political objectives in East Timor, the Howard
government is offering only $A1 million in material assistance
to the East Timorese.
In carrying out this latest act of neo-colonial aggression,
Australia has above all been dependent on the backing of the Bush
administration. US support was essential for ensuring UN backing
for a military intervention led by Australia, rather than one
of its rivals. As foreign editor Greg Sheridan commented in the
Australian: When you are confronting a regional crisis,
having the worlds biggest power as your best friend is an
immense advantage. US assistance is evident in logistics support,
but much more importantly in the politics of the UN Security Council.
At home, the Howard government has relied on the slavish support
of the entire political and media establishment. Opposition leader
Kim Beazley immediately offered Howard the strong and unqualified
support of the Labor Party. The media has not only uniformly
backed the intervention, but has played a particularly venal role
in whipping up an atmosphere of crisis and hysteria to justify
it. Under conditions where a majority of Australians oppose the
illegal US-led occupation of Iraq, the ruling class fears that
any criticism will prompt people to start drawing conclusions
about the predatory nature of the operation in East Timor.
The invasion of East Timor comes just a month after the Howard
government dispatched more than 300 heavily-armed soldiers and
police to prop up its 2003 occupation of the Solomon Islands,
amid growing opposition and discontent. The two operations have
provoked a debate in Australian ruling circles on the need to
expand the military to deal with further challenges to Australian
interests in the region.
An editorial in todays Australian raised the spectre
of a series of failed states and the need for a military
presence in each. Canberra faces a long-term, Solomons-style
commitment to East Timor if a dangerous slide into instability
on our doorstep is to be avoided. As with the Solomon Islands,
the bloodshed in East Timor underscores that independence is just
the first step to nationhood. The long-term scenario would appear
to demand a series of Australian garrisons stretching across an
unstable Asia-Pacific.
The editorial underlines the fact that the Australian bourgeoisie
has no intention of respecting the independence and
nationhood of any of the countries in its sphere
of influence in the Asia-Pacific region. On the contrary,
it is asserting its unconditional right to intervene
anywhere and at any time to protect its economic and strategic
interests.
See Also:
Australian troops deployed to occupy
East Timor
[25 May 2006]
Gunboat diplomacy: Australian warships
deploy to East Timor
[16 May 2006]
Police gun down demonstrators in East
Timor
[3 May 2006]
Australian troops dispatched
to Solomon Islands to suppress local population
[21 April 2006]
Poor conditions in East Timor
spark riot by sacked soldiers
[20 April 2006]
Australia brushes
aside East Timorese sovereignty in oil and gas deal
[16 May 2005]
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