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Don Greenlees and Robert Garran
Deliverance: The Inside Story of East Timor's Fight for Freedom
Allen & Unwin, $35pb, 375pp, 1 86508 367 4
THE ACCOUNT
OF the events surrounding East Timor's liberation from Indonesia
by News Limited journalists Don Greenlees and Robert Garran is subtitled
'The inside story of East Timor's fight for freedom'. Dealing as
it does primarily with the diplomatic machinations of the Indonesian
and Australian governments in that period, it would be fair to say
the subtitle should read 'The inside story of those who worked against
East Timor's fight for freedom'. By detailing the story of East
Timor's transition to independence from the perspective of Jakarta
and Canberra, the two reporters run dangerously close to echoing
the perceptions of these two governments. The book reads in some
parts like press releases from, alternately, the Australian Department
of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) and the Indonesian state newsagency,
Antara. A well-placed former Australian army officer remarked to
me that, after reading the book, he came away 'almost feeling sorry
for the TNI [Indonesian Army]'.
In
many ways, this account offers glimpses into events in the inner
sanctums of Habibie and Howard that have not been recounted elsewhere,
and therein lies its historical value. However, it is full of blithe,
incorrect assumptions that mirror the lines being pushed by the
two main players at the time for their own ends. On page 44, they
relate the death of a schoolteacher in East Timor in December 1998.
They state that he was killed by FALINTIL pro-independence guerrillas.
In East Timor, at the time, it was well known that the killers were
Indonesian military posing as FALINTIL. It is a small point, but
not in the context that this example of a so-called FALINTIL atrocity
was cited by Australian government representatives to explain away
the rise of the militia.
Similarly,
the authors' account of what happened in the village of Alas in
November 1998 is a replica of the DFAT version of events. They disregard
an episode widely viewed as the beginning of the arming of civilian
militia in East Timor as pro-independence propaganda. The reported
death of fifty independence supporters, and the destruction of houses
and property in the town as reprisal for a FALINTIL attack, pre-dated
the Australian government's letter of support for eventual self-determination
and Habibie's offer of a ballot in early 1999. Because of that,
Australian officials were still in the habit of downplaying the
excesses of the Indonesian military. Greenlees and Garran follow
the Foreign Affairs line that only nine people were killed, including
three Indonesian soldiers. That was the assessment of DFAT, based
on the report of its military attaché, who visited the town
for half an hour in the presence of TNI, and the ICRC who also visited
in the presence of the military. Journalists in East Timor, myself
included, were receiving a very different picture, composed of armed
militia controlling the town and killings occurring. That impression
was reinforced when I was among the first three journalists to enter
the town two weeks later. The militia were very much in control,
to the extent that they tried to kill my guide. Contrary to the
authors' claim, parts of the town were burnt down, and the remaining
population were under armed guard in the school. The authors then
use this incident as an example, claiming: 'It would not be the
last time a description of a violent event and estimates of dead
or injured would prove to be greatly exaggerated.' That Greenlees
and Garran unquestionably take the DFAT line on this incident, though
neither of them was present in East Timor, and dismiss out of hand
many contrary accounts, weakens many of the other claims in their
book. One has to ask what other information in the book they have
accepted uncritically from diplomatic sources with their own agendas.
Sometimes
this works both ways. The account of Howard's letter to Habibie,
and the latter's response offering the possibility of self-determination
for the East Timorese is interesting. It reveals that Howard
had no intention of proposing independence for East Timor. He simply
wanted to defuse the issue and delay any process of self-determination.
It makes Howard's subsequent grandstanding on the East Timor issue
rather hollow. By his own admission early in 1999, he was prepared
to postpone their fate for another ten years.
The
strength of the authors' diplomatic connections again comes into
focus with the reference to the suggestion of US Assistant Secretary
of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs,
Stanley Roth, to Ashton Calvert, Secretary of DFAT, that the peacekeeping
option had to be pursued. Note that this was in a meeting in late
February. The agreement that gave the Indonesian state control of
security had not yet been signed. Why, then, is the reader subjected
to a spirited defence of Calvert's reasons for rejecting Roth's
overtures regarding the need for peacekeepers? With the benefit
of hindsight and this book surely has that, appearing three
years after the events it is obvious that Calvert's thinking
was wrong and led, according to the UN, to the deaths of 1500 East
Timorese immediately after the ballot. So why do the authors expend
so much effort defending him?
The
book has a tendency to represent the Indonesian military in a sympathetic
light. A great deal of attention is paid to the concept of 'Bumihangas'.
Greenlees and Garran explain that the concept of the 'scorched earth'
policy 'was nearly as old as the Indonesian republic; indeed, it
featured in Indonesian military doctrine'. So what? Does the fact
that the Indonesian military dynamited public buildings during its
retreat from Bandung in 1946, to deny the city to the Dutch, have
any relevance as to why the Indonesian military destroyed East Timor
while they retreated in September 1999? There are many small examples
in the book of the way the authors downplay or belittle the direct
involvement of senior military figures and redirect the blame towards
the militia. When they do blame the Indonesian military, they go
out of their way to explain how upset and humiliated the Indonesian
military were. How upset and humiliated the East Timorese were after
twenty-four years of murder, rape and theft at the hands of the
same Indonesian military is barely touched upon.
The
authors refer to the 'allegations that tens of thousands of East
Timorese were forced to leave against their will'. They are, of
course, talking about the forced deportation of 250,000 East Timorese
across the border to West Timor after the announcement of the ballot.
As someone who was present in Dili whilst this was taking place
(Don Greenlees left the day after the announcement of the ballot,
along with all but twenty-seven foreign journalists), I can say
that there was nothing 'alleged' about the columns of people forced
at gunpoint by the Indonesian military that I encountered. Nor was
there anything alleged about the Indonesian air force C-130s that
deported people to West Timor, or the hundreds of military trucks
used to move people out of the Indonesian navy ships in the harbour
to which those at gunpoint were being marched. It is these small,
frequent references in the book, giving the benefit of the doubt
to the Indonesian line, that are insidious. You've got to wonder
if the authors seek to distort the history of what happened in order
to diminish the rôle played by the Indonesian military. There
is a word for this. It's called revisionism.
Unfortunately,
it doesn't end there. The near rebellion in the UN compound to prevent
an evacuation by the UN staff, who were abandoning the East Timorese
to their fate, is represented as having been an order from Ian Martin,
the very man who ordered the evacuation. It is interesting to note
that the only people Greenlees and Garran quote in relation to the
period when they were not present are UN officials, DFAT officials
and Indonesian military. The other foreigners in Dili during this
period are dismissed, as are the East Timorese, because their testimony
would jeopardise the hypothesis that it was mainly the militia who
were responsible for the destruction. At best, the authors concede
that some members of the Indonesian police and the military broke
ranks and joined the militia. This fits comfortably with the shifting
of blame for the sacking of Dili away from the Indonesian military,
a process we are still seeing in the tribunal in Jakarta, and one
that seems to be succeeding.
Lastly,
it is worth mentioning one more tactical omission, this time on
the part of Garran. Interestingly, he makes no reference to the
Australian Army briefing given to then Defence
Minister John Moore in Oecusse in December 1999, at which Garran
was present. Intelligence Captain Andrew Plunkett outlined in detail
how Indonesian military and police had rounded up and killed nearly
fifty men in the enclave before the arrival of the Australian peacekeeping
force. Plunkett was reprimanded for his candour, and not a word
has been
heard from the Australian military about it since. I
was told later that the briefing had been 'off the record', although
it clearly had not been, and myself and Geoff Thompson from the
ABC duly filed the information. How much more 'off the record' material
regarding the Indonesian military's direct involvement in the violence
didn't make it into this 'inside story'?
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