Kesian bener  tentera kita. kenapa bisa bernasib seperti itu, ya? Padahal dulu dia 
dikenal sebagai pasukan yang gagah perkasa semasa perang merebut kemerdekaan :(

Apa ini semua karena dia mulai punya hopbbi membunuhi rakyat? Ah pusing, ah. :(


On Mon, 20 Sep 1999 18:05:31   Jeffrey Anjasmara wrote:
>Rupanya milisi pro-integrasi hanya berani bila tidak
>ada lawan. Seorang wartawan Irlandiapun mengemukakan
>hal senada. Sementara itu pasukan unyil TNI semakin
>kelihatan bertambah unyil. ABCNews menyinggung pasukan
>unyil yang melongo melihat pasukan raseksa Aussie yang
>tinggi besar dengan pakaian tebalnya, sehingga makin
>mengesankan keperkasaannya.
>
>Di bawah ini artikel dari Sidney Morning Herald, yang
>menyebutkan pasukan TNI sbb:
>
>  "...They ran across the dusty tarmac, securing the
>  perimeter. But waiting and watching were a few dozen
>  Indonesian soldiers, representatives of a humiliated,
>  embittered and culsively violent force that is leaving
>  East Timor in disgrace.
>
>Saya jadi ingat dengan acara dalam 'Animal Planet' yaitu
>tentang sekelompok anjing liar (wild dog) di Masai Mara,
>Afrika. Mereka kelihatan perkasa dan mengandalkan jumlah
>untuk memburu zebra, wildebeast, ataupun kerbau liar.
>Hal ini hanya terjadi bila tidak ada Singa atau kucing
>besar lainnya di sekitarnya. Sering sekali mangsa yang
>diperoleh dengan susah payah harus ditinggalkan saja
>bila seekor singa mendekat. Gambaran ini rasanya pas
>dengan wajah TNI masa kini.
>
>Pada akhirnya, pasukan TNI makin kehilangan muka.
>Rasanya mereka sudah harus mulai latihan senam pagi lagi.
>Terlama banyak dan terlalu lama mereka duduk-duduk minum
>kopi di belakang meja birokrasi, shg membuat personil TNI yang
>seharusnya kekar menjadi berperut buncit karena kurang
>olah raga. Sungguh tidak mempunyai kebanggaan diri dan
>tidak membanggakan rakyat Indonesia.
>
>Pidato Wiranto tentang Lapangan Ikada tak lebih dari
>romantisme sejarah yang dibesar-besarkan. Tekadnya untuk
>mempertahankan tanah air serasa terlalu dibesar-besarkan.
>Tidak ada real power di dalam tubuh TNI. Yang ada hanya
>real loser. Sudah sepantasnya bila mereka minggir teratur
>dan memberikan jalan bagi pemimpin sipil untuk tampil.
>Sejarah membuktikan pimpinan militer tidak bisa membangun
>militer yg disegani. Yang dapat melakukannya justru
>pimpinan sipil seperti jaman Sukarno.
>
>Demikian layar pertunjukan secara pelan ditutup, sejalan
>dengan selesainya serial cerita 'TNI gugur'.
>
>
>+anjas
>------------------------
>              Bullies melt away after soldiers hit the
>              streets
>
>              By LINDSAY MURDOCH, Herald Correspondent in
>              Dili
>
>              The thugs of Dili's streets disappeared quickly. When the
>              first Australian soldiers arrived in full combat dress, their
>              rifles at the ready, the militiamen pretended they were the
>              very refugees they had terrorised for weeks.
>
>              Some of the killers, rapists and looters walked in small
>              groups along debris-strewn streets waving at the
>              Australians who began arriving shortly after dawn
>              yesterday in huge cargo planes from Townsville and
>              Darwin in what is likely to be Australia's most significant
>              military operation since World War II.
>
>              But the militias no longer carried the rifles given them by
>              the Indonesian armed forces or brandished their
>              machetes, knives or home-made pistols.
>
>              A couple of the thugs were confronted by heavily armed
>              New Zealand soldiers on Dili's docks but handed over
>              their pistols without argument.
>
>              "They are basically cowards," said an Irish journalist,
>              Robert Carroll, who has spent the past nine days hiding
>              out in Dili and the surrounding mountains. "They ran
>              away when real soldiers arrived."
>
>              The militia last night emptied their rifles into the air as
>              they had done every night since the United Nations
>              announced that the East Timorese had rejected
>              Indonesia's brutal rule and voted to become the world's
>              newest independent state.
>
>              They set alight or trashed the few buildings still
>              habitablein the town from which 70,000 people have fled.
>
>              But as hundreds of foreign troops arrived, tense and ready
>              for action, the bullies disappeared and the fires were
>              burning themselves out.
>
>              Major Chip Henriss-Anderssen, of Townsville's 3rd
>              Brigade, said at Dili wharf that genuine refugees appeared
>              to be frightened and remained in small groups.
>
>              "But after a while they came up, one or two at a time, and
>              shook our hands," he said. "The little kids were saying,
>              hey mister! Perhaps after a while we will be able to teach
>              them to say g'day."
>
>              The scene at Dili's airport was surreal. Shortly after dawn
>              crack Special Air Service troops based in Perth were
>              among the first Australians to arrive in giant Hercules
>              transports.
>
>              They ran across the dusty tarmac, securing the perimeter.
>              But waiting and watching were a few dozen Indonesian
>              soldiers, representatives of a humiliated, embittered and
>              convulsively violent force that is leaving East Timor in
>              disgrace.
>
>              Indonesia has never suffered so great a humiliation - the
>              world's fourth most populous nation rejected by people
>              who had suffered 24 years of repression, most of whom
>              are now homeless and still living in terror.
>
>              The few dozen Indonesian soldiers who remained to
>              watch wave after wave of troops arriving did not seem too
>              fussed. Asked about the destruction and looting, one said:
>              "This incident happened before we arrived." He declined
>              further comment.
>
>              Major-General Peter Cosgrove, the Australian
>              commander of the multinational peacekeeping force,
>              described the reception his soldiers received as "benign".
>
>              "We have had a cordial reception from the TNI
>              [Indonesian armed forces]."
>
>              Nobody mentioned that it was the TNI which through its
>              proxy militias had destroyed most of what Indonesia
>              claimed was its 27th province and stood by and watched
>              mass killings and other atrocities.
>
>              General Cosgrove was not underestimating the risks as
>              more than 1,000 of his troops sat under the few trees at
>              the airport with shade. "It is still from my point of view a
>              very risky environment beyond the sight of the nearest
>              Australian soldier."
>
>              Our group of 40 journalists was ordered not to leave the
>              airport after we arrived in a crammed Hercules from
>              Darwin.
>
>              The first soldiers who went into the now wrecked
>              departure lounge found it smeared with excrement. Red
>              and white banners, the colours of Indonesia's flag, still
>              hang outside the VIP lounge, one of the few buildings in
>              Dili not destroyed.
>
>              Tonight we will be escorted under armed guard to the
>              Turismo, the waterfront hotel from where many of us had
>              fled in fear of our lives.
>
>              The hotel is trashed but we will set up a makeshift camp
>              in the mosquito-infested garden where only a couple of
>              weeks ago Australia's former deputy prime minister, Mr
>              Tim Fischer, and an Australian delegation of ballot
>              observers sat and drank beer and talked confidently of the
>              birth of a new nation.
>
>              There is some good news, though. The UN compound
>              where we spent six long and scared days before being
>              evacuated has not been burnt and much of the UN's
>              equipment is untouched.
>
>              But a UN official who has been staying at the fortified
>              Australian consulate, not far from the airport, said: "It's a
>              pretty horrific picture overall. There are thousands of
>              people dying up in the hills without food or water. They
>              need urgent help. There is nothing left in the town for
>              people to return to."
>
>              Robert Carroll, the Irish journalist, said he had seen
>              young children with bloated stomachs and families with
>              nothing to eat but small portions of rice.
>
>              "People have been told the peacekeepers are coming but
>              they don't believe anything any more," he said.
>
>______________________________________________________
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