Nah, rupanya benar kan? Memang Australia telah menyusupkan
pasukan SAS-nya sejak Bulan April 1999!

Jadi mereka pula yang mematangkan situasi di Dili agar muncul kekacauan.
Propaganda rakyat Timtim vs. Milisi tak habis-habisnya mereka dengungkan.
Rupanya ada udang di balik batu. Benar-benar Indonesia bangsa yang apes dan
bodoh. Bukannya sibuk membuat barisan anti penyusupan malahan menyuruh IMF
menekan Indonesia. Demo-demo anti Aussie dibilang karena dibayar. Semua
malahan beramai-ramai ikut ambil bagian dalam mensukseskan propaganda Aussie
dan AS dengan berbagai aksi HAM yang bener-bener keblinger, dan bersaing
dengan berbagai LSM-LSM yang memang dibayar oleh negara barat.

TNI bukan tidak kurang tololnya. Mereka selalu saja menutup-nutupi semua hal
sebagai milik mereka sendiri. Dasar memangnya tolol jadi sudah pantas kalau
mereka masuk ke barak. Mereka mesti angkat beban lagi, latihan lari lagi.
Mengurusi keamanan saja tidak becus kok mau ikut-ikutan pemerintahan segala.
Kok nggak malu.

Mestinya mereka buka saja masalah sebenarnya di koran. Ngapain
ditutup-tutupin. Saat ini kejadian di P. Kisar juga tidak ada tindak
lanjutnya. Kirim pasukan kek ke sana. Siarkan secara besar-besaran, biar
rakyatnya ngerti kalau kita punya masalah keamanan sangat besar. Siapa sih
Kapuspen ABRI waktu itu? Yang model-model nggak becus begitu mending
sekalian digantung saja di Monas.

Gaya Suharto dulu memang terlalu kalem. Sangat berbeda dengan gaya Sukarno
yang mampu membuat anak negeri ikut merasa memiliki. Setelah Suharto
lengser, budaya 'low profile' tetap dipakai tetapi modal kepercayaan nggak
punya. Ya bubar saja deh.


Jeffrey Anjasmara

'------------------
Elite forces scouted island from April

Daring to win ... Australian Special Forces
soldiers during an exercise.

By IAN HUNTER, in London

Australian special forces and navy divers
were scouting the terrain of East Timor and
Indonesian forces deployments inside the
territory months before the actual landing of
United Nations-approved peacemakers last
month, a senior Australian defence source has
revealed. Members of the elite Perth-based
Special Air Services Regiment and the Royal Australian Navy's
Clearance Diving Team (CDT) have been operating clandestinely on the
island since early this year.

The sole task of the two elite units was reconnaissance in preparation for a
large Australian Defence Force (ADF) deployment.

The SAS's principal subjects have been infrastructure in and around
Dili,Indonesian ground force operations in the hinterland and movements of
military traffic across the West Timor frontier. CDT divers scoured Dili
harbour and nearby anchorages for anti-shipping mines, explosives and traps.
They also surveyed nearby sites in case an amphibious landing became
necessary. From the shore they scouted for Indonesian military (TNI) and
militia obstacles and deployments.

The two units train together off the coast near Perth. While the SAS,
whose strength is put at "over 500" by the Defence Department, stayed at
Swanbourne for the Gulf War, the CDT performed Timor-style work in
Kuwait during that conflict. Their orders did not authorise offensive
strikes, interdiction or sabotage. Deployed by submarine and extracted
by helicopter, they were inserted when the Prime Minister put the
Darwin-based 1 Brigade on 28-day standby in April.

Although the helicopter flights were made at extremely low level to avoid
detection by radar, the TNI did make it known in June that it was aware of
unauthorised intrusions, though it suspected the flights involved covert
weapons shipments to independence fighters.

On June 9, the Indonesian armed forces commander, General Wiranto,
ordered increased naval and air surveillance off the East Timor coast after
five helicopter flights were reported in May and June.

The then East Timor military commander, Colonel Tono Suratman, said
there had been two helicopter landings in the area of Larinkuten, near
Viqueque, of a large helicopter similar to the French-designed Puma. At the
same time as the helicopter landings were reported, a vessel with a
helicopter landing pad had also been sighted off East Timor's coast, he
said.

The description fits with the Seahawk helicopters operated from RAN
frigates.

The covert operations before the creation of the Interfet force are
classified secret and will remain so under the Federal Cabinet's 30-year
rule.

A senior ADF special forces and intelligence officer recently said the
small force was observing Indonesian military activity as a necessary
precursor to full-scale deployment. The same tactics were used by the
British SAS during the 1982 Falklands and 1990-91 Gulf wars.

In July the same officer was saying that the official outlook was that the
ADF would deploy shortly and that ensuing peacekeeping and United
Nations stabilisation plans would be similar to those effected in Cambodia
in 1991.

At that time, he said that ADF headquarters in Canberra expected the
eventual UN-sponsored intervention force to be small and include only a
minimal armed security force. ADF planning did not anticipate an
Australian component as large as 4,500 personnel.

The SAS and CDT cells transmitted constant reports on TNI and militia
activities to ADF headquarters and the ultra-secret Defence Signals
Directorate (DSD), also in Canberra. Only 20 or so people, including the
Prime Minister, were allowed access to these reports and attached
assessments. Most members of Cabinet have not seen them. The job of
the DSD has been to analyse the reports and conclude whether the recent
atrocities were a sustained policy of terror or a violent reaction to
impending independence.

The SAS cells, comprising no more than five troopers, would never have
been in a position to intervene. Such operations would have required the
support of the SAS's Sabre Squadron, which has not seen action since the
Vietnam War.

In armed contact with the TNI and militia, the general observations,
technical descriptions and assessments of TNI capabilities in Timor have
been invaluable.

Major-General Peter Cosgrove, the Interfet leader, inadvertently referred to
the ongoing reconnaissance recently when he said he was interested to read
reports of what the TNI and militia groups were doing in remote and border
areas. The covert surveillance gave the ADF the most comprehensive
intelligence survey of the Indonesian military and paramilitary activity as
the East Timor situation deteriorated mid-year. This has been uncomfortable
knowledge in one respect. United States agencies have complained to the
Australian Ambassador, Mr Andrew Peacock, about being denied access to
Australian reports because they were known to be much more detailed than
anything Washington had.

Mr Peacock declined to forward the reports because the names and
operational deployment details would be compromised.

The US has its navy and the CIA watching the zone. Los Angeles class
submarines are capable of positioning pods called Ivy Bells on
underwater communication links. After a month or two they are retrieved and
then decoded.

They are believed to have been listening to TNI traffic for as long as the
SAS has been on the island.

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