http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=20051014&articleId=1085

Inside Indonesia's War on Terror

October 14, 2005
SBS DATELINE - 2005-10-12

SBS DATELINE Archives - October 12, 2005

Editor's note

We bring to the attention of our readers the transcript of an SBS 
Australia program,

The controversial report which includes extracts from an interview with 
the former President of Indonesia Abdurrahman Wahid, points to the 
involvement of the Indonesian Military Intelligence and Police in the 
2002 Bali bombing.

We also refer our readers to a report first published in early 2003, 
which focusses on the ties between Indonesian Military Intelligence 
(BIN) and Jemaah Islamiah (JI), which is alleged to have masterminded 
both the October 2002 and October 2005 Bali bombings.

The Transcript of this program has been removed from the archives of the 
SBS, Australia's Special Broadcasting Services.
see: 
<http://news.sbs.com.au/dateline/index.php?page=archive&daysum=2005-10-12#>

Italics added.

Inside Indonesia's War on Terror Today - as you would almost certainly 
know - is the third anniversary of the first Bali bombing and our major 
report tonight provides an alarming twist to the ongoing terror campaign 
being waged in Indonesia. David O'Shea, a long-time "Indonesia-watcher", 
reports that where terrorism is concerned in that country - with its 
culture of corruption within the military, the police, the intelligence 
services and politics itself - all is never quite what it seems. 
REPORTER: David O’Shea

When the second Bali bomb exploded, Australia once again found itself on 
the front line in the war on terror. But for Indonesians, this was 
simply the latest in a long line of atrocities. They have born the brunt 
of hundreds of attacks over the years, most of them unreported in the 
West. Once again Australia and Indonesia joined forces in the hunt for 
the Bali killers.

SUSILO BAMBANG YUDHOYONO, INDONESIAN PRESIDENT: We are determined to 
continuously fight terrorism in Indonesia with an effective global, 
regional and international cooperation.

JOHN HOWARD, AUSTRALIAN PRIME MINISTER: Tragic incidents such as this so 
far from driving apart the people of Australia and Indonesia would only 
bring us closer together.

This show of unity is impressive and it plays well to Australian 
audiences but many Indonesians don't see it that way.

JOHN MEMPI, SECURITY AND INTELLIGENCE ANALYST (Translation): Why this 
endless violence? Why are there acts of terrorism year in, year out? 
Regimes change, governments change, but violence continues. Why? Because 
there is a sort of shadow state in this country. A state within a state 
ruling this country.

For seven years I've reported from every corner of this vast nation and 
seen first hand the havoc that terrorists wreak. Tonight I want to tell 
you a very different story about Indonesia's war on terror. It contains 
many disturbing allegations even from a former president.

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID, FORMER INDONESIAN PRESIDENT: The Australians if they 
get the truth, I think it's a grave mistake.

REPORTER: What do you mean?

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: Yeah, who knows that the owners to do this, to do 
that -- orders to do this, to do that came from within our own forces, 
not from the culprits, from the fundamentalist people.

(1) TERRORISM - THE CASH COW:

Indonesia's police are doing very nicely, thank you very much, out of 
the war on terror. They now have all the latest equipment, courtesy of 
the millions of dollars pouring in from the West. The money ensures the 
world's most populous Muslim nation remains on side in the fight against 
terrorism. Mastering all of this new technology represents a steep 
learning curve for the Indonesian police. Unfortunately today they 
forget to set up the X-ray machine properly.

POLICE (Translation): Is the film in?

POLICE 2 (Translation): I haven't put it in yet.

Luckily there's an old print lying around from a previous exercise. 
Because of the war on terror, American and Australian support for the 
Indonesian police has never been stronger. During Dai Bachtiar's 5-year 
reign as police chief, Indonesia endured countless act of terror 
including three major ones - in Bali, then the Marriott Hotel and the 
Australian Embassy in Jakarta. These massive blasts might have forced 
the resignation of any other senior official but Dai Bachtiar managed to 
survive with the backing of powerful friends at home and abroad.

POLICE CHIEF (Translation): I met Paul Wolfowitz.

In Indonesia's parliament earlier this year, I found the police chief 
boasting about how he gets the star treatment when he visits Washington.

POLICE CHIEF (Translation): I went to Washington, to the White Hosue, to 
the West Wing. I spoke to Colin Powell in his office. I went to the 
Pentagon, I met the director of the CIA, the director of the FBI, I met 
them all.

Indonesia's police are in charge of the war on terror. Years of human 
rights abuse by the Indonesian military, or TNI, mean it's now out of 
favour in Washington, but it seems the police can do no wrong.

POLICE CHIEF (Translation): I asked Powell. "You say the TNI has to 
reform, don't the police have to as well?" Building trust takes time.

Many Indonesians would find the idea of trusting the police laughable. 
It has long been regarded as one of the most corrupt and incompetent 
institutions in the country. Former president, Abdurrahman Wahid sums up 
what many people here belief.

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: All of them are liars.

REPORTER: Just to be clear, you have your doubts about the police 
ability to investigate properly all of this?

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: Oh, yes.

But none of this seems to worry Indonesia's allies in the war on terror.

POLICE (Translation): Have you just got back?

DAI-BACHTIAR, POLICE CHIEF (Translation): I see this man a lot.

POLICE (Translation): Were you in America? Did you get any more money?

DAI-BACHTIAR (Translation): 10 million. We get big bucks. We got 50 
million all up. Sure. They keep asking about 88.

That's Detachment 88, the police counter-terror unit which receives a 
great deal of the international aid, including substantial assistance 
from Australia. Like the military, Detachment 88 is controversial. Its 
members stand accused of repeatedly using torture in interrogation of 
suspects. But these allegations don't seem to even raise an eyebrow.

DAI-BACHTIAR (Translation): The Secretary-General of Interpol came to 
visit Aceh. I met him. He said our police were dealing with terrorism in 
a professional manner. 500 million euros. For the police. Long term. So 
far I've received directly 500 from Denmark. They gave 5, but 500 all 
up. The Dutch gave 2.

The money is flowing like water but outside the chamber, unrelated to 
the anti-terror funding, is a scene that should make donors think twice. 
A man from the Religious Affairs Commission sitting next door counts 
cash to be distributed amongst voting politicians. Call it corruption or 
even the trickle down effect, but it's this kind of informal funds 
distribution which keeps the wheels turning in the Indonesian economy.

DAI-BACHTIAR (Translation): Well now, for example, the other day I got 2 
million from Holland... From America... it was 50. Is it 50 already? You 
know how much the army got? 600. Then they had to get involved.

With all the cash flowing about, some politicians want to stay as close 
as possible to Dai Bachtiar.

POLITICIAN (Translation): Isn't our police chief great? That's obvious.

With the cash cow growing fatter by the day, some analysts even suggest 
the police now have too much to gain from the war on terror.

JOHN MEMPI (Translation): But why is there always this worry about 
bombings? This subservience to foreigners, this paranoia about bombs. 
You must help us with money, with equipment and training, so that we can 
do something. We need funds to combat these terrorists. And to convince 
the foreigners bombings do happen. Indeed there are acts of terrorism in 
Indonesia but done by "terrorists" in inverted commas.

(2) A TERRORIST ON THE PAYROLL:

To most Australians terrorism in Indonesia means Jemaah Islamiah. Abu 
Bakar Bashir, Dr Azahari and Noordin Mohammed Top have become household 
names and we're led to believe they're the masterminds behind every 
atrocity. But there's another side to the JI story that Australia hasn't 
heard and it's part of the extraordinary family history of this man.

LAMKARUNA PUTRA (Translation): This is Tengku Fauzi Hasbi after he was 
released. He returned to working and supporting his family.

Lamkaruna Putra's father was an Acehnese separatist leader descended 
from a long line of Acehnese fighters. He went on to become a key figure 
in Jemaah Islamiah. Fauzi Hasbi who used the alias Abu Jihad was in 
contact with Osama bin Laden's deputy. He lived for many years in the 
house next door to Abu Bakar Bashir in Malaysia and was very close to JI 
operations chief Hambali. Umar Abduh is an Islamist convicted of 
terrorism and jailed for 10 years under the Suharto regime. He belonged 
to a group that attacked police stations and hijacked a Garuda flight to 
Bangkok. He remembers Fauzi Hasbi as a hardliner who traded arms was 
willing to commit acts of violence.

UMAR ABDUH (Translation): Fauzi Hasbi is known in the Islamic movement 
as someone who, from the beginning, has supported the Jihad as the 
struggle of the Muslim people, aside from his background in the Free 
Ache Movement.

Fauzi Hasbi was so relaxed amongst the militants, and they with him, 
that he even took his son to a critical meeting in Kuala Lumpur in 
January 2000 as JI was preparing for its violent campaign. The 
attendance list was a who's who of accused terrorists.

LAMKARUNA PUTRA (Translation): There was someone from MILF in Mindanao, 
his name was Ustad Abu Rela, commander of the Abu Sayyaf. Ustad Abdul 
Fatah from Patani was there. People from Sulawesi and West Java came to 
the meeting. The organisation was managed by Hambali. Rabitah means 
organisation. It linked Islamic organisations.

REPORTER (Translation): So Hambali was chairman?

LAMKARUNA PUTRA (Translation): Yes, Hambali chaired it.

Hambali and co would have known their colleague Fauzi Hasbi had been 
captured in 1978 by this Indonesian military special forces unit but 
they wouldn't have known that he became a secret agent for Indonesian 
military intelligence. The commanding officer that caught him was 
Syafrie Syamsuddin, now a general and one of Indonesia's key military 
intelligence figures. These documents obtained by Dateline prove beyond 
doubt that Fauzi Hasbi had a long association with the military. This 
1990 document, signed by the chief of military intelligence in North 
Sumatra, authorised Fauzi Hasbi to undertake a special job. And this 
1995 internal memo from military intelligence HQ in Jakarta was a 
request to use brother Fauzi Hasbi to spy on Acehnese separatist, not 
only in Indonesia but in Malaysia and Sweden. And then this document, 
from only three years ago, assigned him the job of special agent for 
BIN, the national intelligence agency. Security analyst John Mempi says 
Fauzi Hasbi alias Abu Jihad played a crucial role within JI in its early 
years.

JOHN MEMPI (Translation): The first Jemaah Islamiyah congress in Bogor 
was facilitated by Abu Jihad, after Abu Bakar Bashir returned from 
Malaysia. We can see that Abu Jihad played an important role, he was 
later found to be an intelligence agent. So an intelligence agent has 
been facilitating the radical Islamic movement.

The extraordinary story of Fauzi Hasbi raises many important questions 
about JI and the Indonesian authorities. Why didn't they smash the 
terror group in its infancy? Do they still have agents in the 
organisation? And what information, if any, have they had in advance 
about the recent deadly spate of terror attacks? The Indonesian 
intelligence chief refused Dateline's request for an interview and dead 
men tell no tales. The man who held all the secrets, Abu Jihad was 
disembowelled in a mysterious murder in early 2003, just after he was 
exposed as a military agent. His son, Lamkaruna Putra died in this plane 
crash last month.

(3) PROMOTING TERRORISM:

Fauzi Hasbi's death led to a flurry of speculation about shadowy 
intelligence links to Indonesia's terror networks.

UMAR ABDUH (Translation): So there is not a single Islamic group, either 
in the movement or the political groups that is not controlled by Intel. 
Everyone does what they say.

Umar Abduh says his terrorist group was incited to violence after 
infiltrators showed a letter saying Muslim clerics would be assassinated.

UMAR ABDUH (Translation): There is a document stating that the Muslim 
leaders would be executed, we as a younger generation were immediately 
angered. Damn it, this is not right, we have to kill all those Cabinet 
members and military leaders, that was our plan.

And he's not the only one who says he was used by intelligence agents. 
Another convicted terrorist is Timsar Zubil who exploded three bombs in 
Sumatra in 1978. Although no-one was killed, he paid a heavy price.

TIMSAR ZUBIL (Translation): At first I was sentenced to death, it was 
changed to a life sentence, I served 22years.

Zubil now believes he was set up by former president Suharto's 
intelligence agency.

TIMSAR ZUBIL (Translation): We may have deliberately been allowed to 
grow in such a way, that we young people who were very emotional, were 
provoked into committing illegal acts.

REPORTER (Translation): Who let this happen?

TIMSAR ZUBIL (Translation): The ones who had the authority to ban us, in 
this case the ones in power, the Suharto regime. I have only started 
thinking of this recently, but at the time I was active, I didn’t think 
it through.

After Zubil was captured, beaten and tortured, something remarkable 
occurred. The authorities made up a provocative name for his group - 
Komando Jihad.

TIMSAR ZUBIL (Translation): It hadn’t occurred to us to use that name, 
but they told us that was to be the name of our organisation. We had no 
plans to use the name Komando Jihad. They told us to just accept it for 
the time being and if we wanted to deny it later in court, that was up 
to us. But it made no difference to the court, they insisted that the 
name was indeed ours.

(4) STATE SPONSORED TERROR:

Indonesia's recent history of terrorist attacks began with a deadly 
campaign that unfolded on Christmas Eve 2000. Bombs exploded almost 
simultaneously at 18 sites, mostly churches, across six provinces, 19 
people died and 120 were injured. Jemaah Islamiah took the blame. It was 
the first real mention of the group in Australia. But Indonesians had 
another theory - they suspected the military, the only organisation with 
the capacity to pull off an operation of this scale, a full two years 
before the first Bali bomb. The respected news magazine Tempo even 
splashed the allegation on its front cover as part of a special 
investigation. The most revealing information in the report related to 
the bomber's network operating in Medan, North Sumatra. The man 
convicted of making the bombs in Medan is somewhere behind these prison 
walls. Our repeated requests to interview Edi Sugiarto over many months 
have been ignored by the Indonesian authorities. Guilty or not, 
reputable sources claim he was so severely tortured before his trial he 
would have admitted to anything. But it's clear he wasn't acting alone. 
The Tempo investigation included telephone records revealing sensational 
information of direct links between the bombers and military 
intelligence. The records also show that Fauzi Hasbi, the military 
intelligence agent in Jemaah Islamiah who we mentioned earlier, was at 
the centre of the plot. He had spoken to Edi Sugiarto, the bomb maker, 
seven times and had also called a businessman well connected with the 
military 35 times. That businessman in turn rang a Kopassus special 
forces intelligence officer 15 times and the officer had called the 
businessman 56 times. With Edi Sugiarto in jail, all further 
investigation ceased and five years on, sources in Medan are too afraid 
to talk. The trail has gone stone cold.

(5) TERROR IN TENTENA:

George Aditjondro is an early riser. As Indonesia's leading researcher 
into corruption in high places there never seem to be enough hours in 
the day. For two years he's been investigating a terror campaign in 
Poso, Central Sulawesi. His research reveals that terror in Indonesia is 
much more complex than we are led to believe.

GEORGE ADITJONDRO: There is a mafia, a corruption mafia in Poso who were 
defending the interests of themselves because if the corruption leaked, 
the corruption mafia could be exposed, that means the end of their 
career and also the end of their additional income.

Aditjondro says this corrupt network of local government officials, 
police and others is using terror to protect a local racquet in Central 
Sulawesi.

GEORGE ADITJONDRO: Between corruption and terror, there is a very close 
link because those who were carrying out the terror were paid with 
corruption money.

Central Sulawesi had just emerged from years of conflict before the 
latest outrage on May 28 this year. In the predominantly Christian town 
of Tentena, 60km to the south of Poso, two bombs left 23 people dead. A 
blast that claimed more victims than the second Bali attack, but 
received scant coverage outside Indonesia. The first foreign journalist 
to arrive on the scene, without any evidence at all reported Jemaah 
Islamiah was to blame for the attack and then promptly flew back to 
Jakarta. Like the latest Bali bombs, the two bombs that exploded here 
were full of shrapnel, designed to kill and maim. The first one went off 
at 8.05 in the morning when the market is busiest.

WOMAN (Translation): This is a thoroughfare, people are always passing, 
people who want to go there pass here.

This woman is one of thousands of Christian refugees who found sanctuary 
in Tentena during sectarian violence that cost hundreds of lives in 
recent years.

WOMAN (Translation): I’m still traumatised. We were chased out of our 
villages and came here, but it is not safe here either.

A second bomb blew 10 minutes later around 200m away on the other side 
of the market. Reverend Rinaldy Damanik says it was placed and timed to 
cause maximum casualties.

REVEREND RINALDY DAMANIK (Translation): The bits of metal in the bomb 
flew as far as that church. What’s really going on? They showed they can 
do it under the police’s noses. That’s the police station, imagine this 
happening in front of the police station.

Reverend Damanik is a powerful figure in this Christian stronghold. For 
years he defended his community as Islamic fighters swarmed in to wage 
jihad. I first met him at Christmas in 2001 after villages all around 
Tentena were razed. He was convinced the army was behind the violence 
and had even left a calling card.

REVEREND RINALDY DAMANIK (Translation): This is an ammunition box that 
we found at the time of the attacks in Sepe. It is clearly labelled, 
Department of Defence, Republic of Indonesia. 1400 pieces of 5.56mm 
calibre munitions. This means it was meant for M-16s.

George Aditjondro says that in every Indonesian hotspot, the army 
foments trouble by funding and arming both sides. In the case of Central 
Sulawesi, both Muslim and Christian militia.

GEORGE ADITJONDRO: So the money do not have to come from rich people 
like Osama bin Laden and the weapons doesn't have to come from southern 
Philippines or from other exotic places but is actually coming from the 
official sources and that is why I am saying that the kind of terrorism 
which we see in Indonesia is home grown terrorism. It's a kind of duel 
function or triple function of the armed forces.

The late reverand Agustina Lumentut told me in 2001 that the Indonesian 
military was using proxy armies to do their dirty work.

THE LATE REVEREND AGUSTINA LUMENTUT: It is for sure, for sure that the 
army is behind the jihad, or in front of jihad, yeah. No other 
interpretation.

It was proved beyond all doubt that one of the extremist groups, the 
Laskar Jihad, was supplied, transported and incited by the central 
government to go on its murderous spree.

THE LATE REVEREND AGUSTINA LUMENTUT: Who dare among them to say "Stop 
going that." Because they have reason for doing that, they are 
registered officially by the government, the central government.

Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is applauded in Australia 
as a moderate Muslim leading the fight against terror in Indonesia. But 
as the influential coordinating minister for politics and security, he 
chose not to stop the Laskar Jihad and was even supporting them.

SUSILO BAMBANG YUDOYONO: They also play a role in defending truth and 
justice that is expected by Muslims in Indonesia. For me, as far as what 
they are doing is legal and not violating law, then this is OK. This was 
a ridiculous statement.

Yudhoyono was well aware of the carnage that was under way. Since 2001 
things had improved somewhat, as Reverend Damanik tells these 
politicians from Jakarta visiting after the May 28 bombs. But local 
leaders are afraid terrorism is being used to derail reconciliation 
between Muslims and Christians.

REVEREND RINALDY DAMANIK (Translation): The wounds are very deep but 
they can be endured. But the question is, what is happening to this 
country? People can’t work because they’re always on their guard, what 
can we achieve when we’re like that? What’s happening to our country? We 
need to think about this, but it’s hard to answer right now.

With weapons handed in and a peace deal holding up well, Reverend 
Damanik's former sworn enemy is also very suspicious about the times of 
the bomb in May. Muslim leader Adnan Arsan wonders whether the attack 
was designed to prevent the army from leaving.

ADNAN ARSAN (Translation): Just when a security unit’s work is over and 
someone says “We’re going home and I hope there’s no more trouble…”Just 
as they are being recalled there’s another explosion and more killing.

In the days following the blast, all the big names in Indonesian 
security and intelligence descend on the area. Central Sulawesi police 
commander Arianto Sutardi tells me the investigation is going well.

REPORTER (Translation): Sir, have you any idea who the perpetrators are?

ARIANTO SUTARDI, POLICE COMMANDER (Translation): We’ve arrested some 
already and we’re pursuing others.

Then national police chief Dai Bachtiar, the man receiving all the 
foreign cash arrives to assert his authority. After less than one hour 
on the ground, he's made his assessment.

DAI-BACHTIAR (Translation): We all hope… incidents like this are 
criminal acts, we need to expose the perpetrators and put them on trial. 
People entrust this task to the security forces.

Considering the evidence of corruption here and the police chief's 
record of enforcing justice, that's unlikely. George Aditjondro's 
research has uncovered a scam involving local police who have looted up 
to $2 million for the resettlement of refugees.

GEORGE ADITJONDRO: You can see a cabal involving both the district head, 
the acting district head at the time, certain police agents, certain 
people within the department of social affairs and their friends. They 
were carrying out both the corruption as well as using the corruption 
money to pay the terrorists. So you can see we are talking about home 
grown terrorism paid by home grown corruption.

He says the May 28 Tentena blasts were an attempt to stop honest police 
uncovering more about their scam.

GEORGE ADITJONDRO: You can say that the bombing can be seen as the apex, 
the ultimate development of the kind of terror which they were 
committing. It had gone as far as paying police to decapitate a village 
head man, the village head man of Pinadapa.

The corrupt and murderous cabal identified by Aditjondro is now suing 
him and the police seem to be in no hurry at all to follow up the leads 
as he identified. Instead on his departure the police chief Dai Bachtiar 
offers another bland statement about the certain groups responsible for 
the violence.

DAI-BACHTIAR (Translation): The situation seemed so promising but 
certain groups have taken advantage of it to carry out actions such as 
bombings, which of course will again cause fear and anxiety.

As Dai Bachtiar's plane heads back to Jakarta, more bigwigs arrive. 
Syamsir Siregar is the recently appointed head of the national 
intelligence agency BIN. His appearance is supposed to inspire 
confidence in this investigation. But BIN has a long-standing dismal 
reputation in Indonesia for dirty tricks. The agency is currently 
fending off damning evidence that it was behind the poisoning of 
Indonesia's best known human rights campaigner, Munir Said Thalib. As I 
reported earlier this year, Munir was given a lethal dose of arsenic in 
his orange juice on a Garuda flight to Europe. On the Tentena bomb 
investigation, Siregar has nothing to say.

REPORTER (Translation): If you don’t want to talk about this, what about 
the Munir case? How’s the internal investigation into the involvement of…

SYAMSIR SIREGAR (Translation): You speak good Indonesian!

REPORTER (Translation): If any rogue elements are involved, what will 
you do? …

SYAMSIR SIREGAR (Translation): We’ll take action. I’ve given orders to 
act against rogue elements.

Rogue elements indeed. Travelling with him is Timbul Silaen, he was 
police chief during the carnage in East Timor. He was acquitted of 
crimes against humanity, one of several commanders who escaped justice 
for orchestrating the bloodshed. Now he's officially retired from the 
police force. So what on earth is Timbul Silaen doing here with the new 
chief of intelligence? Is he just along for the ride or is he now on the 
intelligence payroll? Whatever the answer, the continuing role of these 
same old state terrorists is truly disturbing. It's no wonder the locals 
are now deeply suspicious of anyone sent in to protect them. While the 
police can claim some success arresting terrorists in Java, in this 
region results are few and far between. After years of state sponsored 
terror, no-one wants to help the authorities. This woman jokes that fear 
of talking to the police has become a popular movement.

WOMAN (Translation): The tight lipped movement. People don’t want to be 
witnesses. They are scared so they shut up, if they see something they 
deny it, they’re scared.

The first real break in the investigation comes a week after the attack 
and leads police to, of all places, Poso prison. Incredible as it may 
sound, a police forensics team finds evidence the bomb was manufactured 
in the workshop, used for prisoner rehabilitation.

POLICE (Translation): It’s a workshop for teaching them welding skills.

The fact that the bomb may have been assembled in a state-run facility 
further bolsters the central thrust of Aditjondro's remarkable research. 
That there is high level involvement in terror in Sulawesi.

GEORGE ADITJONDRO: What we have found out is just the tip of the 
iceberg. It shows a permanent pattern which has been going on for the 
last five years.

For the record, the authorities reject his allegations.

(6) QUESTIONS ABOUT BALI:

Two weeks after the second Bali attack and despite plenty of help from 
the Australian Federal Police, Indonesian authorities are still pursuing 
the culprits. But a familiar pattern has emerged. Asia's most wanted 
men, the so- called masters of disguise, Dr Azahari and Noordin Top have 
been named as the masterminds. And once again everyone is insinuating 
Jemaah Islamiah is behind the bombs. That may eventually be proved 
correct, but so far no evidence has been produced, at least publicly, to 
back that claim. As we've shown tonight, after enduring years of 
state-sponsored terror, it's no wonder many Indonesians question what 
they're being told about this latest atrocity.

GEORGE ADITJONDRO: You hear again the sources - the statements that it 
was carried out by Azahari and Noordin Mohammed Top and a radical Muslim 
groups behind it. Although what I heard is this actually shows a 
rivalry, internal rivalry within the armed forces.

George Aditjondro didn't provide any evidence to back his allegation, 
but theories like this are hard to write off just yet. Former president 
Abdurrahman Wahid tried in vain to rein the military and it cost him the 
presidency. In 2003 just after the Marriott Hotel blast, he was clearly 
frustrated by foreign intelligence claims that JI were to blame.

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: They can say whatever they want but we are here, we 
live here, we know them. But I won't say who.

REPORTER: But you know who it is, you think?

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: No, no, I don't know. When I said that I meant we 
cannot know - we cannot know the truth about that. That is the problem 
always.

REPORTER: But that bomb has been blamed also on Jemaah Islamiah.

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: Yeah, I know but you don't have any kind of proof. 
The proof is that the bomb is similar to that belong to the police. It's 
a problem for us then. Every bomb there until now it belongs to the 
government.

Today is the third anniversary of the first Bali attack that saw 202 
people killed, including 88 Australians. Abdurrahman Wahid now has 
questions about that attack as well. While some regard him as an 
Eccentric, he is the former president and is often described as the 
conscience of the nation, revered by tens of millions of moderate 
Muslims. As such, he's one of only a few people publicly prepared to 
canvass the unthinkable - that Indonesian authorities may have had a 
hand in the Bali atrocity. He believes that the plan for the second, 
massive at the Sari Club, which caused the majority of casualties, was 
hatched way above the head of uneducated villagers like Amrozi.

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: Amrozi was involved in the lighter bomb. That's a 
problem always. Even though I agree that he should be given a stiff 
punishment, but it doesn't mean that he is involved. No, no, no.

REPORTER: So you believe that the Bali bombers had no idea that there 
was a second bomb?

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: Yeah, precisely.

REPORTER: And who would you suggest planted the second bomb?

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: Well, it looks like the police.

REPORTER: The police?

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: Or the armed forces, I don't know.

Wahid's speculation is chilling and again there's no evidence to support 
it. But there's no doubt that he's a barometer of how many Indonesians 
view the whole terror campaign.

(7) BACK TO THE FUTURE:

This ceremony in July marked a significant moment in the evolution of 
Indonesia's fight against terrorism. The nation's most senior police 
watched as their chief, Dai Bachtiar, was replaced by General Sutanto, 
touted as a cleanskin. Following his swearing in, he made an impressive 
start - launching a high profile anti-drug campaign and promising to 
crack down on rampant corruption within the police force. But for now, 
he's getting familiar with the rhetoric required for the job.

GENERAL SUTANTO (Translation): We are sharing experience with other 
countries in order to eradicate the terrorism.

But it's not the experience sharing with other countries that matters, 
like every police chief before him, he will only ever play second fiddle 
to the army and will struggle to control the cabal of rogue elements who 
still wield massive power here. Abdurrahman Wahid says that no policeman 
would dare to properly investigate repeated allegations that their big 
brothers in the military are involved in the terror campaign.

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: They know it's against see, what they do - was 
against you see, several, you know, senior officers, even of the police 
itself. So they don't want to be involved.

REPORTER: Because?

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: Of the fear.

REPORTER: The fear of what? Of the senior officers that are involved in 
this?

ABDURRAHMAN WAHID: Yeah, yeah, yeah.

At the moment it's the police who are receiving all the equipment, 
support and training to take on the terrorists. At the opening of this 
multimillion dollar training facility, which is part funded by 
Australia, the Indonesians were keen to show off their skills. The war 
on terror has brought the two nations closer together, but any 
Australian concerns about corruption and human rights in this new 
partnership appear to have been put aside for now. But the Indonesian 
police's leading role in the fight against terror may be about to change 
anyway. In the wake of the latest attack in Bali, President Yudhoyono 
has taken steps to rehabilitate the military's tarnished name and bring 
them back into the counter terror drive. For those who risked their 
lives opposing Suharto's brutal military, it's a disturbing thought. 
That the retired general, President Yudhoyono, known in Indonesia by his 
initials Sbyeah, may be ushering in a return to those bad old days.

GEORGE ADITJONDRO: Now, General SBY, himself, he doesn't like to be 
called general SBY, he likes to be called Dr SBY has made the statement 
that the military is ready to help, to assist the police in chasing the 
terrorists. In other words, the military is looking for an alibi for a 
reason to reconsolidate their power as during the Suharto period.

Berita-berita terkait :
1. Who was Behind the 2002 Bali Bomb Attack?
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=CHO20051014&articleId=1081
2. War Propaganda
http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/CHO301A.html
3. Fabricating an Enemy
http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/CHO301B.html




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