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August 30, 2001

From the Bloodbaths
In East Timor to a Suicide in Alexandria

Sandra Jenkins woke up about 6 am on a muggy June morning outside Washington,
DC in 1999 to find a note from on her husband on the night-table beside the
bed. "Spread my ashes at our house in Fadden." She called a friend and told
her, "I think Merv has done something to himself". The friend told Sandra
that she had to go find him before the kids did.

"I went downstairs". recalled Sandra to the Australian news program Four
Corners, earlier this year. "I was hoping to find him asleep on the sofa.
Maybe he'd taken some sleeping pills. But he wasn't there. I opened the
Venetian blinds and I saw him standing outside. I thought he was standing.
But something wasn't right. I followed his body down and he washe was
hanging."

The man at the end of the rope was Merv Jenkins, a top intelligence officer
with the Australian security forces. He had killed himself on his birthday at
his home on Spy Hill, in Arlington, Virginia.

His wife, Sandra, believes that Merv was driven to suicide by the CIA. The
story, which has received no press attention in the US, involves the complex
and bloody relationship between US and Australian intelligence agencies, the
Indonesia military and East Timor.

Jenkins was one of Australia's top covert operatives. He had led the
Australian special forces group, known as the 660 Signal Troop, which
coordinated communications for numerous operations inside East Timor, when
Australian forces were essentially working has hired guns for Suharto and the
CIA. Later Jenkins became the commanding officer for Australia's electronic
warfare department.

Then in 1996 Jenkins got what he thought was his dream job: top liaison
between Australia's Defense Intelligence Organization and the CIA and Defense
Intelligence Agency. In this position, Jenkins was supposed to pass on
satellite imagery and intercepted communications from Indonesia to the
Americans.

Jenkins arrived in Washington at a fraught moment. Despite the best efforts
of the CIA and the Australian military, the Suharto regime was beginning to
crumble and the independence movement inside East Timor was once again
gaining momentum and being countered with increasingly vicious reprisals by
Indonesian troops, acting on intelligence provided by US and Australian
sources.

The CIA repeatedly carped that the intelligence coming from Australia on
Indonesia matters, including East Timor, was "insufficiently detailed" and
"too anodyne" in nature. The Agency threatened Jenkins that if things didn't
improve they were going to cut the Aussies off from the intelligence gathered
at Pine Gap, the satellite control complex outside Alice Springs, which
eavesdrops on Iraq, Indonesia, Afghanistan, India and China.

"Merv was angry because the CIA was upset that he wasn't passing over more
information that they really required, and that they, the CIA, expected a lot
more out of Australia. They expected a lot more information", Peter Czeti, a
former intelligence officer at the Australian embassy in DC, told the
Canberra Times, " We would be requested for intelligence material by our
allies on numerous occasionsWe would make those requests and send them back
to Australia and they would sit there. And I mean for months, years. And they
were never fulfilled. And these were areas that we were experts in, so
there's no reason why we couldn't have provided the material. It's just that
it never happened."

In fact, there were plenty of reasons why the Australian intelligence
agencies may have been reluctant to turn over detailed intelligence reports
on the operations of the Aussie military in East Timor. During Clintontime,
the Australians had largely become a surrogate for US operatives in the
region, even as Clinton moved to distance the administration from the
collapsing Suharto regime and the rampages of the Indonesian military.

For example, in May Captain Andrew Plunkett, an intelligence office for the
3rd Battalion of the Royal Australian Regiment, who served in East Timor said
that the Australian intelligence agencies instructed his and other units to
conceal evidence of war crimes by the Indonesia army and militias.

Plunkett, who now faces prosecution for violating government secrecy laws,
charges that the Australian military ignored intelligence reports about the
impending massacre of 50 people at a police station in the East Timor border
town of Maliana in September, 1999. "Australian intelligence sources had
accurately reported on Indonesian plans to kill independence supporters in
Maliana, but those reports were pushed up the chain of command, hosed down
and politically wordsmithed by the Asia Division of the Department of Foreign
Affairs and Trade", Plunkett told the Australian TV show Dateline on May 9 of
this year. "None of this information was passed on to the UN troops on the
ground."

When Indonesian militias attacked independence demonstrators in and around
Maliana, the UN told the people to go to the local police station where they
would be protected by Indonesian police. Instead, the police and Indonesian
soldiers trapped several thousand people on the police grounds and allowed
militiamen to hack at least 47 people to death with machetes.

Plunkett, who was assigned the task of examining mass graves, also said that
Australian soldiers were instructed to undercount the death toll. The
official death count at Maliana was 12. But Plunkett says that the
Australians and the UN knew that many of the bodies had been put in mass
graves or dumped in rivers or the ocean. Plunkett says that he examined more
than 60 bodies himself in the Maliana area.

It was precisely this kind of information on the situation in East Timor
prior to the independence referendum that the CIA was pressuring Merv Jenkins
to pass along. In May of 1999, Jenkins came across an AUSTEO (Australian Eyes
Only Document) cable from the Department of Foreign Affairs describing the
activities of the Indonesian militias and troops in East Timor. Jenkins,
under extreme pressure, slipped the information to his contacts in the CIA.
He was soon reprimanded by his superiors. An email from his superiors at the
Defense Intelligence Security Office warned: "Issues are becoming extremely
sensitive as there are foreign policy implications. It is imperative that
extra care is taken with the passing of material to the US and Canada."

The CIA was equally upset. When the agents saw what Jenkins handed over, they
realized that the Australians had been holding back key information on the
movements of Indonesian troops in East Timor. They demanded more documents
from Jenkins. He tried to comply, telling his superiors that "the pressure
from CIA has been intense and building". But Jenkins didn't know that he was
being spied on by his own employees, two uniformed officers who were supposed
to be couriers between his office and the CIA.

The two men began opening Jenkins' packets and soon discovered that he was
sending AUSTEO documents on East Timor to the CIA. They informed the
Australian Department of Foreign Affairs, the very same office that
suppressed the intelligence reports from Maliana. One of the men, Dennis
Magennis, wrote a letter to the Department of Foreign Affairs denouncing
Jenkins' ties to the CIA "as barely one step removed from treachery". He said
that he could not rule out the use of violence against Jenkins and warned
that unless the Department stopped the liaisons "external means must be
found."

In any event, an investigation of Jenkins' ties to the CIA was soon launched
and, at the end of May 1999, he was hauled in for an interrogation. He came
out of the meeting shaken.

"When I first saw him, he was clearly under enormous stress", said Noel
Adams, a former Aussie intelligence officer and colleague of Jenkins. "You
could see it in his face. His eyes were red-rimmed. It shocked me. I was
dismayed to see how he was."

After the session, Jenkins sent an email to his superiors in Canberra saying
that he felt he had been abused. He said that he was "angry and frustrated"
and wanted to discuss the matter with top agency officials when he returned
to Australia in August. He never made it back. Two days after sending this
note, he was dead, hanging from a rope in his garage. It was his 48th
birthday.

"There's a culture there that excludes people," said Jenkins' mother, Enid.
"People who are honest and have integrity. And being accountable for what
they've done. And it's the old boy stuff again. You know? Here's the bottle
of whiskey. Here's the gun. You know what to do."

CounterPunchers should not conclude from that the CIA was somehow wearing the
white hat in this dark affair. The Agency wanted more information on the
rampages of the Indonesian militias in East Timor, but not in order to
stimulate preventative action, but as a quid pro for the electronic
intercepts the US was furnishing Australia.


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