-Caveat Lector-

http://www.newsunlimited.co.uk/Print/0,3858,3903530,00.html

US trained butchers of Timor

Exclusive: Washington trained death squads in secret while Britain has
spent £1m
helping Indonesian army

Ed Vulliamy in New York and Antony Barnett
Sunday September 19, 1999
The Observer

Indonesian military forces linked to the carnage in East Timor were
trained in the United States under a
covert programme sponsored by the Clinton Administration which continued
until last year.

The Observer can also disclose that the Government has spent about £1
million in training more than 50
members of the Indonesian military in Britain since it came to power.
Human rights campaigners claim a
number of these are likely to have links with those complicit in the
attrocities.

The US programme, codenamed 'Iron Balance', was hidden from legislators
and the public when Congress
curbed the official schooling of Indonesia's army after a massacre in
1991. Principal among the units that
continued to be trained was the Kopassus Ð an elite force with a bloody
history Ð which was more
rigorously trained by the US than any other Indonesian unit, according
to Pentagon documents passed to
The Observer last week. Kopassus was built up with American expertise
despite US awareness of its role
in the genocide of about 200,000 people in the years after the invasion
of East Timor in 1975, and in a
string of massacres and disappearances since the bloodbath. Amnesty
International describes Kopassus
as 'responsible for some of the worst human rights violations in
Indonesia's history'.

The Pentagon documents Ð obtained by the US-based East Timor Action
Network and Illinois
congressman Lane Evans Ð detail every exercise in the covert training
programme, conducted under a
Pentagon project called JCET (Joint Combined Education and Training).
They show the training was in
military expertise that could only be used internally against civilians,
such as urban guerrilla warfare,
surveillance, counter-intelligence, sniper marksmanship and
'psychological operations'.

Specific commanders trained under the US programme have been tied to the
current violence and to some
of the worst massacres of the past 20 years, including the slaughter at
Kraras in 1983 and at Santa Cruz in
1991. The US-trained commanders include the son-in-law of the late
dictator General Suharto, Prabowo
Subianto, and his mentor, General Kiki Syahnakri Ð the man appointed
last week by the so-called 'reform'
government as commissioner for martial law in East Timor.

The secret programme unveiled in the document became the focus for
military training when above-board
aid was curtailed by Congress after the Santa Cruz massacre. Congress
had stepped in after up to 270
peaceful protesters Ð many of them schoolchildren Ð were murdered by
Kopassus shock troops as they
paraded through Dili.

American sponsorship of the Indonesian regime began as a matter of Cold
War ideology, in the wake of
defeat in Vietnam. The left-wing movement in East Timor was feared by
Jakarta and seen by the US as an
echo of those in southern Africa and of Salvador Allende's government in
Chile. Jakarta's harassment of the
Timor government and the invasion of 1975 were duly encouraged by the
United States.

The training of Indonesia's officer corps peaked during the
mid-Eighties. In 1990 a former official at the US
Embassy in Jakarta cabled the State Department to say US sponsorship had
been 'a big help to the
(Indonesian) army. They probably killed a lot of people and I probably
have a lot of blood on my hands'.

But the horror of Santa Cruz in 1991, when trucks were seen dumping
bodies in the sea, was too much.
The US decided that the training, while still available, should be paid
for by the recipient nation Ð in other
words, it would no longer be military aid. The covert programme then
became the main means of training
Indonesia's military Ð still at the American taxpayers' expense.

In an undated prospectus, the Pentagon says the prime mission was to 'to
develop, organise, equip, train,
advise and direct indigenous militaries'. The scale was small, to offer
concentrated 'significant special
training' which would create 'self-sufficient small units'. In 1996, for
instance, 10 exercises involved 376 US
personnel and 838 Indonesians or 'loyal' Timorese.

Britain also made a significant contribution to Indonesia's military
training. The Observer has established
that, since May 1997, 24 senior members of Indonesia's forces have been
trained in UK military colleges.
This included training in running military units efficiently and how to
used technical equipment like guided
missiles. In addition, 29 Indonesian officers have studied at
non-military establishments.

Revelations of the extent to which Labour has used taxpayers' money to
aid the Indonesian military has
angered many MPs, who claim it makes a mockery of Foreign Secretary
Robin Cook's 'ethical foreign
policy'. In the last four years of the Tory Government, only one
Indonesian soldier was trained in the UK.

Ann Clwyd, the Labour chair of the all-party group on human rights, has
previously shown that Indonesian
military trained here have subsequently committed atrocities. She said:
'It is simply not acceptable that we
have been training these people. We know the police, the army, the
militia are all interlinked. How many of
those trained by this Government are now involved in the East Timor
operation?'

Last week both America and Australia suspended military co-operation
with Indonesia. Funding for the
military training would have been made available by the Foreign Office
and Ministry of Defence through the
Defence Military Assistance Fund. Earlier this year Defence Minister
Doug Henderson admitted that
training one Indonesian navy officer at the Joint Service Command and
Staff College and another on the
International Principal Warfare Course at HMS Dryad cost the Government
£170,000.

Many of the Indonesian officers were trained at the Royal Military
College at Shrivenham, Oxfordshire, as
part of a ' private and commercial initiative' by Cranfield University.
As well as courses on managing army
units, the training includes map-making and electronics. In the past two
years the Foreign Office has also
given £200,000 to eight Indonesian high-flyers through its Chevening
scholarship programme. This
included two policemen, two from the army and two from the navy. On
Friday, the Indonesian authorities
stopped three servicemen taking up their scholarships.

Both the Ministry of Defence and Foreign Office defend the training
given as 'constructive engagement' . A
spokesman for the MoD said: 'It is a way of ensuring professionalism in
foreign armies. It encourages
higher standards, good governance and greater respect for human rights.'

The Foreign Office points out that many of the Indonesian officers on
non-military courses are studying
subjects such as international law and human rights.

Last summer seven members of Kopassus finished a post-graduate course in
defence studies at Hull
University. The Ministry of Defence arranged the deal after liaising
with General Prabowo. Although the
course was initiated before the general election, it started after
Labour's victory. George Robertson, then
Defence Secretary, was happy for it to continue. Despite Prabowo's links
to atrocities in East Timor,
Robertson once described him as 'enlightened'.

The Foreign Secretary, Robin Cook, meanwhile, says in today's Observer
that 'there is a mopping-up
operation to be done in Britain on the myths that have mushroomed among
commentators who have only
discovered the plight of East Timor in the last fortnight'. He denies
that Britain has 'armed Indonesia to the
teeth', or provided weapons to the militias, and says that Britain has
not given fresh subsidies to buy Hawk
trainers.

Amnesty International's East Timor country specialist, Deborah Sklar,
traces the regime's 'over-reliance on
thuggish military operations' as being due to the demands of the foreign
investment community and even
from the World Bank.

She cites a blueprint called The East Asian Miracle, written by US
Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers,
in which he urges governments to 'insulate' themselves from 'pluralist
pressures' and to suppress trade
unions. This, she says, became a primary Kopassus role during the years
of training by the United States.

'If the US,' says Sklar, 'has supplied to the Indonesians equipment that
has been concerned in the
perpetration of human rights abuses, then that is an outrage.'

                        © Copyright Guardian Media Group plc. 1999


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