The Guardian [UK]
                     Tuesday September 7, 1999
                          by John Pilger

      Jakarta's godfathers -  It is grotesque hypocrisy for
        Tony Blair to weep for the children of Dunblane.



Having finally discovered East Timor, most of the media have now left,
blaming a "descent into violence". The long, silent years mock these
words .  The descent began almost a quarter of a century ago when
Indonesian  special  forces invaded the defenceless Portuguese colony.

On December 7, 19 75, a lone  radio voice rose and fell in the static:
"The soldiers are killing  indiscriminately. Women and children are
being shot in the streets.  Th s is  an appeal for international help.
This is an SOS - please help us."

 No help came, because the western democracies were secret partners
in a  crime  as great and enduring as any this century; proportionally,
not even Pol  Pot  matched Suharto's spree. Air Force One, carrying
President Ford and his  secretary of state Henry Kissinger, climbed out
of Indonesian airspace  the day the bloodbath began. "They came and
gave Suharto the green light,"   hilip  Liechty, the CIA desk officer in
Jakarta at the time, told me. "The invasion  was delayed two days so
they could get the hell out. We were ordered to  give  the Indonesian
military everything they wanted. I saw all the hard  intelligence; the
place was a free-fire zone. Women and childre n were herded  into
school buildings that were set alight - and all because we didn't  want
some little country being neutral or leftist at the United Nations."

And all  because western capital regarded Indonesia as a "prize".
Having been tipped off about the invasion, the British ambassador
cabled the  foreign office that it was in Britain's interests for
Indonesia to "absorb  the territory as soon and as unobtrusively as
possible".

Since t hen,  the  foreign office has lied incessantly about East
Timor - not misled,  lied. When the film I made with David Munro and Max
Stahl, Death of a Nation,  disclosed  the extent to which the British
were involved, especially the use of British  Aerospace Hawk fighter
aircraft in East Timor, officials of the south-east  Asian department
tried to denigrate and smear East Timorese witnesses  to the  Hawks'
bombing raids, whose relatives had been killed an d maimed by  British
cluster bombs. When Robin Cook's predecessor, David Owen, licensed
the  sale of the first Hawks to Indonesia in 1978, he dismissed reports
of the  Ea t  Timorese death toll, then well over 60,000 or 10% of the
population, as "exaggerated".

For almost 20 years, the BBC and the major western news agencies
preferred to  "cover" East Timor from Jakarta, which was like reporting
on a Nazi -occupied  country from Berlin. The coverage was minute; not
offending the invader  and keeping your visa became all-important. A
Jakarta-based BBC correspondent  told me that my film, made
undercover in East Timor, had " made life  very  difficult for us here".
In Whitehall, a refined system of flattery worked well. Senior broadcasters
and commentators popped into the foreign office without any material
favours  expected. For them, the flattery and "access" were enough.

Thus, both  Tory  and Labour governments, Indonesia's biggest weapons
suppliers, were able to  go about their business of complicity in
genocide unchallenged, bar the  efforts of a few honourable exceptions.
More recently, the grotesque hypocrisy of Tony Blair weeping for the
chi ldren  of Dunblane, then sending machine guns that mow down
children in Ea st  Timor,  was ignored. So was Robin Cook's epic
cynicism, allowing him t o leap  from  telling parliament in 1994 that
Hawk aircraft had been "obse rved on bombing  runs in East Timor in
most years since 1984" to denying his own words - to  the public-
relations stunt of an "ethical" foreign policy whil e his  functionaries
lied to journalists that no Hawks were operational in East Timor. Now that
Hawks have been visible to all over East Timor, Baroness  Symond s,
who has the Orwellian title of defence procurement minister, insults
the intelligence and humanity of Radio 4 listeners by lecturing a  defere
ntial  James Naughtie on "rights". East Timor's tormentors should have
British weapons because they "have a right under the United Nations
charter to  d efend  themselves". Moreover, "they have a right" to come
to next week's  British  government-sponsored arms fair in Surrey, the
biggest ever. Last year,  her  government approved the sale of A3625bn
in arms, a record nev er reached by the  Tories and surpassed only by
the US. Tomorrow, the East Timorese leader, Xanana Gusmao, is due
to be  released from  house arrest in Jakarta. If he returns to his
homeland, he is likely to  be  killed and the murder weapon is likely
to be British; the Heckler and  Koch  rapid-firing gun, supplied to
Indonesia's Kopassus gestapo by British  Aerospace, is perfect for the
job. All arms sales to Indonesia, by the  way,  are heavily subsidised
by the British taxpayer.

As for getting the Indonesians out of East Timor,
their western godfathers  can achieve a great deal if they want to.
Blair has the power to freeze  arms  shipments. The US controls $45bn
underwriting Jakarta's collapsed  economy.  They always say they act
in our name. So raise your v oice now.




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