Dear cj, Below are some interesting angles and background on the East Timor situation. In cj#982, Chomsky quoted the following NY Times piece as giving the 'very clear' reasons for US inaction: ...the Clinton Administration "has made the calculation that the United States must put its relationship with Indonesia, a mineral-rich nation of more than 200 million people, ahead of its concern over the political fate of East Timor, a tiny impoverished territory of 800,000 people that is seeking independence." Chomsky may be satisfied with this explanation, but it just doesn't make sense. Indnoesia is in debt to the IMF, suffered mass civil unrest last year, and is dependent on Western investments and on US arms and assistance. There is no Soviet block for Indonesia to run and join, even if it wanted to. What possible danger does Washington face from Indonesian disfavor? Since when does the master fear the slave? Besides, it is _US arm twisting - such as the threatened arms cutoff, and who knows what else behind the scenes - which are compelling Indonesia to submit to the Australian-led force, and to publicly rotate their leadership cadre. Furthermore, if the US only wanted to avoid conflict with Indonesia, it could have simply kept the two-decades media blackout going as regards East Timor genocide, and maneuvered to avoid the UN plebescite from occurring. As I see it, the evidence is clear that our US/NWO leaders _wanted to make a public issue out of East Timor, and they wanted a local, regional force to carry out the ensuing intervention. The NY Times piece, rather than being a candid explanation, seems more like a cover story - it is aimed at a non-mass establishment audience who, disturbed by what they see on television, are seeking an 'insider' reason for what's going on. Given Chomsky's reaction, the NY Times propaganda team did a pretty good job... you know their motto, "Whatever fits, we'll print as news." As to _why our leaders wanted these developments, one needs to notice the sequence of intervention innovations over the past decade or so, of which East Timor is only the most recent. One also needs to keep in mind the regional kultur-kampf architecture of the new world order regime. Just as NATO is taking on a more aggressive imperialist role in its region, so is Australia in its region. Such powers are the rooks and bishops on the NWO chess board. The US is the Queen, kept in reserve for major battles. Simply by being there, it pins the pieces of the enemy. It may be Australian ships that sail to East Timor, but it's the US fleet and bases that provide the implicit cover. You know the story of the smuggler? The border guard inspected the donkey's load every day, and could never find any contraband. But he was _sure smuggling was going on. Years later he met the fellow and asked him what he had been smuggling... "donkeys." It's the same thing with intervention. We concerned citizens - the border guards of truth and justice - keep inspecting the baggage: we sympathize with the people of Kosovo and of East Timor, and we say 'no contraband' in _this intervention. We don't notice that interventionism itself is what's being smuggled right under our eyes. As IMF diktats have been creating unrest worldwide, the rate of Western interventions has been accelerating rapidly. This is what we should be noticing. Each time there's less fanfare, less worry about legal authorizations, and less opposition - despite what you might assume from Internet discussions. The road to hell is paved with good intentions, and the road to a global military regime is paved with the skillful manipulation of human-rights sympathies. yours, rkm ============================================================================ Date: Tue, 14 Sep 1999 09:47:54 -0700 (PDT) To: (Recipient list suppressed) From: Tom Condit <•••@••.•••> Subject: Re: East Timore & Intervention Look, the guns killing people in East Timor came from the U.S. The troops deployed there were trained by the U.S. The C.I.A. probably tutored the Indonesian military in setting up "militias" to front for them in the massacre (although it's typical of North American arrogance to assume that no one is capable of doing evil deeds without our instruction). If the U.S. sends troops to intervene, they will do their best to preserve the Indonesian status quo. If they cut off military aid, they'll resume it the minute people aren't looking. It's no coincidence that the Australia government is pushing hardest for intervention. Australia has traditionally been strongly allied with the Indonesia murderers and has major economic interests there. Imperialist intervention will serve the needs of the imperialists first, and those of the people of East Timor last. Sure, there'll be some "humanitarian" fallout, but if you don't want the whole history of imperialist massacre which has been the history of the 20th century to continue through the 21st century, then at some point you have to refuse to be tricked, refused to be drawn into their game, and simply and flatly say: "No! We're not for your military intervention. We want all military aid to all governments cut off, and we want our own government disarmed." Tom Condit •••@••.••• The Peace & Freedom Party needs 12,000 more registrants in California by October 5. Phone 800-345-8683 to get a registration form. Visit our web site at http://www.peaceandfreedom.org "Among the vanquished the poor people went hungry, among the victors the poor people went hungry." -- Bertold Brecht ============================================================================ Date: Tue, 14 Sep 1999 13:23:40 -0500 (CDT) From: Mark Whitaker <•••@••.•••> To: •••@••.••• Subject: A MISSING TIMOR PUZZLE PIECE: raw material extraction favortism for United States and Australia [Various bits of information and suppositions.] ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Thu, 09 Sep 1999 13:03:26 +1000 From: Bruce Moon <•••@••.•••> To: •••@••.••• Subject: THE TIMOR TRAGEDY!!! Most readers of this list will by now heard of the TIMOR TRAGEDY. Given the brutality and obviously compelling nature of the violence in film, the media have -- correctly -- portrayed this issue in its graphic form. Unfortunately, the background issues are yet to properly surface. I post the following on the basis that -- yet again -- crude oil politics is structuring the geopolitical outcome. ******** I'd like to express a viewpoint about the TIMOR situation that seems to be overlooked by the Australian (and thus global) media. The media have -- rightly -- focussed on the issue of TIMOR as both a democratic and a humanitarian matter. In this portrayal, the 'baddie's' are the Indonesian government. To some degree, the lack of forcefulness by the UN post election announcement is also being portrayed as a problem. In a larger geo-political portrayal, the 'baddie's' are the Australian government. How so, you ask? The Timor Shelf - North Sea continental seabed is rich in hydrocarbons (crude oil, gas, etc.) and is the source of over 80% of Australia's transport energy requirements. Moreover, the methane gas extracted from the region provides energy to industry in both Australia and Japan. The LNG [liquified natural gas) industry is currently worth around A$1.3 billion to the Australian economy. When considering the reserves of methane in the pacific region, Australia and Indonesia command control over some 55%. As the world moves from coal to methane as an industrial energy source, this strategic position is extremely valuable. Some years ago, Australia signed an agreement with Indonesia to codify (that is, carve up) the extraction rights for hydrocarbon resources from the Timor Shelf. While the terms of that agreement were heavily influenced in favour of Australia, the second primary beneficiary was the US sector of the oil development industry. Australian Foreign Minister Downer has made no mistake about Australia's preference for TIMOR; it should stay with Indonesia. This decision is not based on any respect for Indonesia -- successive Australian governments have paid scant regard for Indonesian interests -- rather, the decision was always premised on maintaining the joint agreement over hydrocarbon usage of the Timor Shelf. A new state of Timor would eventually push for a renegotiation of the Timor Shelf agreement. Clearly, it is sitting astride a very productive hydrocarbon reserve and with little other economic potential, it would have no alternative than to stake its claim to production revenue. The losers in such an eventuality would be both Indonesia and Australia. The posturing by the Australian government over the intentions of the Indonesian government to rebuke the Timorese for not selecting the inevitable choice needs to be seen in relation to its long term strategy. There is little doubt that the use of the term 'invasion' by Minister Downer and Prime Minister Howard is mere posturing to allay the Australian public sentiment of anger at the lack of responsible action. If the Australian government had really wanted to ensure peace was to be maintained in Timor after the election, it would have developed this option months before the election date. As an aside, the reason why the Australian police 'supervisors' were put into Timor without arms was precisely because Indonesia wouldn't let armed officers into the area. Most will not know that the Australian government operates a covert surveillance service of Indonesian activities from the Australian mainland. The base for listening to the telephone conversations by key Indonesian Ministers and military leaders is located outside Toowoomba On the east coast of Australia). Leaked knowledge indicates that the Australian government was advised more than 2 months ago that Indonesia had no intentions of letting Timor become independent. If this information is correct -- and there is no reason for suspecting it to be false -- it means that the current posturing of the Australian government is merely that; posturing. Like the Gulf War, the Timor conflict is not really about issues of democracy. Rather it is about maintaining the current agreements over access to a prolific hydrocarbon resource. ============================================================================ Subject: One Million Indonesians Died In U.S. Backed Coup Date: Thu, 16 Sep 1999 04:10:32 -0400 x-sender: •••@••.••• From: The Wisdom Fund <•••@••.•••> Bcc: Mime-Version: 1.0 [THE WISDOM FUND: News & Views] Released September 15, 1999 The Wisdom Fund, P. O. Box 2723, Arlington, VA 22202 Website: http://www.twf.org -- Press Contact: Enver Masud Artilce: http://www.twf.org/News/Y1999/0915-Indonesia.html One Million Indonesians Died In U.S. Backed Coup by Enver Masud WASHINGTON, D.C. -- One million Indonesians are reported to have died in the U.S. backed coup that led to the Suharto presidency, and the occupation of East Timor. Aid agencies estimate (BBC, September 13) that between 600 and 7,000 people have been killed and as many as 300,000 have fled their homes since the UN-backed August 30 referendum on East Timor's future. Now pro-Jakarta militias, angered by President Habibie's decision to allow international peacekeepers into East Timor, have told aid workers (The Times, September 14) that they will take revenge by embarking on a violent killing spree in West Timor. Should this occur, would the UN approved, Australia led, multinational force extend operations to West Timor? The wider catastrophe we fear may become reality, and the likely winners will not be the Indonesians who suffered under 350 years of colonial oppression, and had their lives shattered once again when U.S. backed Suharto assumed the presidency and ousted President Sukarno. G.C. Allan and Audrey Donnithorne, in Western Enterprise in Indonesia and Malaya, write "In 1940 only 240 Indonesian students graduated from the high schools and only 37 from the colleges. In that year out of over 3,000 higher civil servants there were only 221 Indonesians, and even in the middle ranks a larger number of posts were held by Europeans and Eurasians, who counted as Dutch." By 1945, writes Reba Lewis author of Indonesia: Troubled Paradise, 93 per cent of the people were still illiterate. After 350 years of colonial domination, there were only a hundred Indonesian physicians; less than a hundred Indonesian engineers; and in a nation dependent upon the efficiency of its land productivity, only ten Indonesian agricultural experts. Indonesia proclaimed independence on August 17, 1945, and on December 27, 1949, Indonesia became legally independent from the Netherlands (Holland). In 1958 the U.S. attempted to oust Sukarno. Washington correspondents Thomas Ross and David Wise in their book The Invisible Government, relate how in 1958 the U.S. supplied a right-wing rebel force in Indonesia with arms and a small air force of B-26 bombers for the failed attempt. "Between October 1, 1965, and April or May of the following year, the right-wing military regime of Generals Nasution and Suharto seized power and consolidated its strength in Indonesia. In that scant seven months as many as a million people were slaughtered. The rising toll of victims appeared occasionally in the press here, recorded with little more passion than a sports score."-- Deirdre Griswold, The Second Greatest Crime of the Century Until the October 1, 1965 coup, Indonesia was one of the most dynamic countries. "The Sukarno government," writes Ms. Griswold, "took a number of bold steps in foreign policy that shocked the Western capitals and threatened to be infectious. Indonesia withdrew from both the UN and the Olympic games, declaring them to be dominated by imperialism, and started to set up rival international bodies. At the very moment that the right-wing coup was taking place, a conference against foreign military bases, which of course was aimed first and foremost at the U.S. with its 3,000 installations overseas, was in session in Djakarta." After twenty-five years of fighting the Japanese, the Dutch and the U.S. imperialists, the 1965 coup and the subsequent slaughter of a million Indonesians, paved the way for U.S. companies who began arriving in 1966, writes Ms. Griswold, for "the feast." Unilever setup oil and edible fat plants. Uniroyal, another U.S. international giant, got its rubber plantation and latex plant. Union Carbide, Singer Sewing Machine and National Cash Register got back properties expropriated during the revolution. Eastern Airlines partnered with the Indonesia airline Garuda; Mobil Oil secured oil exploration rights. For a mere $75 million Freeport Sulphur got a contract for exploiting West Irian copper which is 20 times as rich as ores found in Arizona and Utah. The U.S. armed, trained Suharto military invaded the former Portugese colony of East Timor in 1975 to stop a civil war between pro- and anti-Marxist groups. President Suharto did what his Western mentors had done to acquire colonies or to consolidate their own state boundaries, and 200,000 East Timorese are reported to have been killed resisting the Indonesian occupation. If there is a lesson in all of this it is that wrongs cannot be righted until the facts are known and understood. Peace and social justice cannot prevail until the rich and powerful set an example for the weak and impoverished. [Enver Masud visited Indonesia in the early 1950's when his father was the UNESCO Mission Chief, and several times in the mid-1990's as an engineering management consultant for The World Bank. He is founder of The Wisdom Fund.] Copyright © 1999 The Wisdom Fund - All Rights Reserved. Provided that it is not edited, and author name, organization, and URL are included, this article may be printed in newspapers and magazines, and e-mailed to others. 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