ZNet Commentary
>http://www.zmag.org/Sustainers/Content/2006-06/23pilger.cfm
>
originally published in the New Statesman, 26 June, as
"Despatches: Australia builds its empire"
http://www.newstatesman.com/200606260026
>
>
East Timor: The Coup The World Missed
June 23, 2006
By John Pilger
>
>In my 1994 film Death of a Nation there is a scene on
board an aircraft flying between northern Australia
and the island of Timor. A party is in progress; two
men in suits are toasting each other in champagne.
"This is an historically unique moment," effuses
Gareth Evans, Australia's foreign
>affairs minister, "that is truly uniquely
historical." He and his Indonesian counterpart, Ali
Alatas, were celebrating the signing of the Timor Gap
Treaty, which would allow Australia to exploit the oil
and gas reserves in the seabed off East Timor. The
ultimate prize, as Evans put it, was "zillions" of
dollars.
>
Australia's collusion, wrote Professor Roger Clark, a
world authority on the law of the sea, "is like
acquiring stuff from a thief . . . the fact is that
they have neither historical, nor legal, nor moral
claim to East Timor and its resources". Beneath them
lay a tiny nation then suffering one of the most
brutal occupations of the 20th century. Enforced
starvation and murder had extinguished a quarter of
the population: 180,000 people. Proportionally, this
was a carnage greater than that in Cambodia under Pol
Pot. The United Nations Truth Commission, which has
examined more than 1,000 official documents, reported
in January that western governments shared
responsibility for the genocide; for its part,
Australia trained Indonesia's Gestapo, known as
Kopassus, and its politicians and leading journalists
disported themselves before the dictator Suharto,
described by the CIA as a mass murderer.

These days Australia likes to present itself as a
helpful, generous neighbour of East Timor, after
public opinion forced the government of John Howard to
lead a UN peacekeeping force six years ago. East Timor
is now an independent state, thanks to the courage of
its people and a tenacious resistance led by the
liberation movement Fretilin, which in 2001 swept to
political power in the first democratic elections. In
regional elections last year, 80 per cent of votes
went to Fretilin, led by Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri,
a convinced "economic nationalist", who opposes
privatisation and interference by the World Bank. A
secular Muslim in a largely Roman Catholic country, he
is, above all, an anti-imperialist who has stood up to
the bullying demands of the Howard government for an
undue share of the oil and gas spoils of the Timor
Gap.

On 28 April last, a section of the East Timorese army
mutinied, ostensibly over pay. An eyewitness,
Australian radio reporter Maryann Keady, disclosed
that American and Australian officials were involved.
On 7 May, Alkatiri described the riots as an attempted
coup and said that "foreigners and outsiders" were
trying to divide the nation. 

A leaked Australian Defence Force document has since
revealed that Australia's "first objective" in East
Timor is to "seek access" for the Australian military
so that it can exercise "influence over East Timor's
decision-making". A Bushite "neo-con" could not have
put it better.
>
>The opportunity for "influence" arose on 31 May, when
the Howard government accepted an "invitation" by the
East Timorese president, Xanana Gusmão, and foreign
minister, José Ramos Horta - who oppose Alkatiri's
nationalism - to send troops to Dili, the capital. 

This was accompanied by "our boys to the rescue"
reporting in the Australian press, together with
a smear campaign against Alkatiri as a "corrupt
dictator". Paul Kelly, a former editor-in-chief of
Rupert Murdoch's Australian, wrote: "This is a
highly political intervention . . . Australia is
operating as a regional power or a political hegemon
that shapes security and political outcomes."

Translation: Australia, like its mentor in Washington,
has a divine right to change another country's
government. Don Watson, a speechwriter for the former
prime minister Paul Keating, the most notorious
Suharto apologist, wrote, incredibly: "Life under a
murderous occupation might be better than life in a
failed state . . ."
>
Arriving with a force of 2,000, an Australian
brigadier flew by helicopter straight to the
headquarters of the rebel leader, Major Alfredo
Reinado - not to arrest him for attempting to
overthrow a democratically elected prime minister but
to greet him warmly. Like other rebels, Reinado had
>been trained in Canberra. John Howard is said to be
pleased with his title of George W Bush's "deputy
sheriff" in the South Pacific. He recently sent
troops to a rebellion in the Solomon Islands, and
imperial opportunities beckon in Papua New Guinea,
Vanuatu and other small island nations.

The sheriff will approve.

>*************
>Charles Scheiner
>P.O. Box 1182, White Plains, NY 10602 USA
>Tel. +1-914-831-1098 or +1-914-473-3185 (mobile)
>email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] skype: cscheiner
>

>[This message was distributed via the east-timor news
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>ETAN see http://etan.org/etan/donate.htm ]


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