Michael Keaney:
> Times Higher Education Supplement, 10 September, 1999
> Ex-US president Jimmy
> Carter, now working for the UN, said of East Timor: "The Indonesian military
> and other government agencies are supporting, directing and arming
> pro-integration militias to create a climate of fear and intimidation." 
> Donald Hagger is the administrator of the Sterling Group of universities.
> >From 1980 to 1987 he was a World Bank-funded adviser to the Indonesian
> government.

Jimmy 'human rights' Carter's hypocrisy is in time-honored US tradition 
of Dwight Eisenhower's warning about military-industrial complex in his 
farewell presidential address, Robert MacNamara's crocodile tears for 
starving in Third World at press conference announcing that he was 
leaving World Bank, and Hyman Rickover's concern about danger of nuclear 
weapons upon his resignation as Naval chief who built nuclear navy.

Carter administration increased US weapons shipments to Indonesia,
facilitating the terror and massacre in East Timor to which Gerald
Ford and Henry Kissinger had given the greenlight.  Moreover, US 
voted against UN General Assembly resolution condemning Indonesian 
invasion and occupation each year of Carter's term (1977-1980).  
This resolution was on GA agenda between 1975-1982 with US abstaining 
the first time and voting consistent *nay* after that.  US ambassador 
to UN during Ford presidency, Daniel Moynihan, has indicated that he 
was told to use any measures necessary to make ineffective the UN 
response to East Timor.

US role in East Timor cannot be separated from its role in undermining
Portugese Revolution of 1974-75.  Not until overthrow of dictator
Antonio de Oliveira Salazar did Portugal initiate de-colonization (East 
Timor first appeared on UN de-colonization list in 1960).  Salazar had
ignored UN condemnations of his colonial policies and continued to
use military force in Angola, Mozambique, and Cape Verde & Guinea-
Bissau.  The military coup that ousted Salazar unleashed multiple 
progressive social movements and the new regime moved quickly to
the left.  There were Communist ministers in West European cabinet 
for the first time since 1947.  

Secretary of State Kissinger used same CIA tactics to destabilize 
Portugal that he had used previously against Salvador Allende and 
Popular Unity in Chile and that he was using against Michael Manley 
and People's National Party in Jamaica - channeling money to 
conservative groups and parties, disseminating disinformation though 
the media, working with religious officialdom (US covert operations 
in Portugal occurred at the very time such activities were under 
being investigated in Congress).  The left-ward march of the revolution 
would wane, the Soviets would opt for continuing detente, moderate 
Socialists would win parliamentary elections, the new government
would abandon pledges to assist in transition to East Timorese
sovereignty, and would Portugal would remain with the West.

The Timorese Democratic Union (UDT), the more conservative partner in  
coalition that was to mark East Timor's independent statehood broke
with the Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor (FRETLIN)
- a social-democratic formation committed to social justice,
economic redistribution, and mixed economy - and seized power.
FRETLIN, which had 'inherited' weapons from Portugal's military as it 
withdrew, gained control.  Claiming that its intervention would 
restore peace and stability in, but actually motivated by desire to 
eliminate leftist-FRETLIN and US Cold War policies that required
'allies' in war against communism, offered military funding, training,
and weapons to such counties, and maintained profitable 'trading 
partners' and investment locations, Indonesia invaded in December 1975.  
Michael Hoover


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