Quote:

"for the past sixty years the fate of [Indonesia] has been directly
tied to U.S. foreign policy." This policy has included "the
tolerance and occasional encouragement of tyranny, corruption, and
environmental degradation when it served our interests," as well as
"our tireless promotion of American-style capitalism and
multinational corporations." In his earlier book, Dreams from My
Father, Obama describes Suharto's seizure of power
<http://www.tinyrevolution.com/mt/archives/002531.html> : "Word was
that the CIA had played a part in the coup, although nobody knew for
sure. More certain was the fact that after the coup the military had
swept the countryside for supposed Communist sympathizers. The death
toll was anybody's guess: a few hundred thousand, maybe; half a
million...



Election 2008

Where the Presidential Candidates Stand

The East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN) is non-partisan and
does not and will not support any political party or candidates. Below
we summarize the positions and history of a number of U.S. presidential
candidates on some issues of concern to ETAN as they relate to Indonesia
and East Timor (Timor-Leste). ETAN welcomes additional information and
any corrections. Write us at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

* Senator Barack Obama (Democratic Party)

* Senator John McCain (Republican Party)

* Cynthia McKinney (Green Party)

* Ralph Nader (Independent)

* Bob Barr (Libertarian Party)

* Brian Moore (Socialist Party)

Senator Barack Obama (Democratic Party)

Obama lived in Indonesia for four years during his childhood, arriving
in 1967 as a six-year old. He has emphasized the importance of his youth
experiences in Southeast Asia, stating that
<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/21/us/politics/21dems.html>  they were
"[p]robably the strongest experience I have in foreign
relations." In his book The Audacity of Hope, Obama points out that
"for the past sixty years the fate of [Indonesia] has been directly
tied to U.S. foreign policy." This policy has included "the
tolerance and occasional encouragement of tyranny, corruption, and
environmental degradation when it served our interests," as well as
"our tireless promotion of American-style capitalism and
multinational corporations." In his earlier book, Dreams from My
Father, Obama describes Suharto's seizure of power
<http://www.tinyrevolution.com/mt/archives/002531.html> : "Word was
that the CIA had played a part in the coup, although nobody knew for
sure. More certain was the fact that after the coup the military had
swept the countryside for supposed Communist sympathizers. The death
toll was anybody's guess: a few hundred thousand, maybe; half a
million."

Obama serves on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and its
sub-committee for East Asian and Pacific Affairs. Susan E. Rice, a top
Obama foreign policy advisor has said
<http://www.smh.com.au/cgi-bin/common/popupPrintArticle.pl?path=/article\
s/2008/02/03/1201973740729.html>  that in an Obama administration,
"[y]ou will see an understanding that Indonesia is one of the most
important countries in the world."

Members of Obama's "senior working group on national
security" <http://www.reuters.com/article/asiaCrisis/idUSN18390929> 
have mixed records.   Madeline Albright was Secretary of State during
the second Clinton administration, and during her tenure activists
continually struggled to move the U.S. policy to restrict support to the
Indonesian military. The U.S. temporarily cutoff military assistance to
Indonesia in 1999, as its military and proxy militias destroyed East
Timor, but only after a massive outcry. By the middle of the next year,
some military contacts resumed <http://etan.org/et2000a/tiesrelease.htm>
. Former Senator David Boren, another senior advisor, sat on the board
of Phillips Petroleum – which was involved in drilling for oil in
the Timor Gap during the Indonesian occupation – during the 1990s
and early 2000s. During an official visit to Indonesia in 1992, Jakarta
refused him permission to go to East Timor.

Other Obama advisors include Merrill Anthony ("Tony") McPeak,
retired Air Force Chief of Staff, who oversaw the transfer of fighter
planes to Indonesia
<http://www.democracynow.org/2008/1/3/vote_for_change_atrocity_linked_us\
>  in the early 1990s. Richard Holbrooke has a long history of
involvement with U.S./Indonesian relations. In his role as Assistant
Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs during the Carter
administration, Holbrooke was the major architect of U.S. policy toward
Indonesia and East Timor during the late 1970s. At that time, U.S.
military assistance to the Suharto regime increased. In 1980 Holbrooke
declared that Indonesia was "perhaps one of the greatest nations in
the world." Later, Holbrooke, as UN ambassador under President
Clinton, supported the UN-organized referendum and argued for Indonesian
accountability for human rights violations in East Timor and elsewhere,
but when asked he has refused to acknowledge his own role in the
occupation of East Timor.

Obama inserted language
<http://www.etan.org/estafeta/05/spring/3cong.htm>  in the 2006 Foreign
Affairs Authorization bill calling for resolution to the conflict in
Aceh. He has stated
<http://www.barackobama.com/2007/08/01/remarks_of_senator_obama_the_w_1.\
php>  that as president he would create a "Shared Security
Partnership Program," which would "provide $5 billion over three
years for counter-terrorism cooperation with countries around the world,
including information sharing, funding for training, operations, border
security, anti-corruption programs, technology, and targeting terrorist
financing." While the program will "focus on helping our
partners succeed without repressive tactics," it is unclear how this
will function with an unreformed and corrupt Indonesian security
apparatus that maintains a deeply entrenched culture of impunity.

Obama has yet to speak to calls for an international tribunal for crimes
against humanity committed by Indonesia against the East Timorese.

Senator John McCain (Republican Party)

McCain was first elected to the Senate in 1986. In 2006, he argued
<http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,17960589-31477,00.ht\
ml>  that Indonesia "can be a great force for peace and stability in
the region, if they develop along the lines that we want them to,"
as well a regional counter to China. He has recently called for
<http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20071101faessay86602/john-mccain/an-endur\
ing-peace-built-on-freedom.html>  an "elevated partnership with
Indonesia," though he has yet to clarify what that means.

McCain receives advice
<http://www.cfr.org/publication/16194/foreign_policy_brain_trusts.html> 
from former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who along with President
Gerald Ford gave Indonesian president Suharto the "green light"
to invade East Timor in 1975. McCain describes Kissinger as one of his
heroes <http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/05/us/politics/05policy.html> .

McCain, in a 2007 article
<http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20071101faessay86602/john-mccain/an-endur\
ing-peace-built-on-freedom.html>  in Foreign Policy wrote that
"[t]he United States should set the standard for trade
liberalization in Asia," by "…institutionalizing economic
partnerships with…Indonesia" in building toward "an
ambitious Pacific-wide effort to liberalize trade."

In November 1991, he signed a letter with 51 other Senators expressing
human rights and humanitarian concerns about East Timor following the
Santa Cruz massacre. In June 1994, he voted to oppose a provision
<http://www.etan.org/legislation/archive/sendeb94.htm>  that would
require that any lethal military equipment supplied to Indonesia
"shall expressly state the understanding that the equipment may not
be used in East Timor."  The motion to end consideration of the
provision passed 59-35.

McCain has yet to address calls for an international tribunal for crimes
against humanity committed by Indonesia against the East Timorese.

Cynthia McKinney (Green Party)

McKinney served 12 years in the House of Representatives as a Democrat
from Georgia. She is running for the presidency on the Green Party
ticket. She has a long-history of supporting human rights, and has been
a supporter of justice and human rights in East Timor. She circulated
information about Indonesia and East Timor to her colleagues and signed
letters and co-sponsored resolutions and legislation
<http://www.etan.org/action/support.htm>  in support of human rights and
opposing military assistance to Indonesia.

During the 1990s McKinney worked to pass the Arms Transfer Code of
Conduct, which would have restricted weapons sales to regimes that
regularly violate human rights. In May 1998, she was the chief sponsor
of the Indonesian Human Rights Before Military Assistance Act, which
would have barred weapons and ammunition transfers to Indonesia pending
Presidential certification that "the Government of Indonesia has
been elected in free and fair elections, does not repress civilian
political expression, and has made substantial improvement in human
rights conditions in Indonesia, East Timor, and Irian Jaya (West
Papua)." In 2000 she co-sponsored the East Timor Transition to
Independence Act <http://www.etan.org/legislation/1063.htm> . In 2000
she supported resolution 395
<http://www.etan.org/legislation/HRes395.htm> , which condemned the
attack on UN aid workers in West Timor, condemned the role of Indonesia
in organizing the systematic violence that took place against the East
Timorese in 1999, and called for restrictions on U.S. military support
until Indonesia met human rights conditions. In 2002 she signed an
international letter from women's rights
<http://www.etan.org/news/2002a/02women.htm>  activists calling for an
international criminal tribunal for East Timor.

The Green Party platform <http://www.gp.org/platform/2004/>  says that
"our government to prohibit all arms sales to foreign nations and
likewise prohibit grants to impoverished and undemocratic nations unless
the money is targeted on domestic, non-military needs."

Ralph Nader (Independent)

During his presidential campaign in 2000, Nader was asked what is
foreign policy would look like. He explained, "We [would] basically
engage in a lot of preventive diplomacy, a lot of preventive defense.
Preventive diplomacy would have dealt with situations like Indonesia,
instead of the Kissinger diplomacy that led to East Timor and a lot of
other travails there. The same with Vietnam. We seem to always side with
the dictators and the oligarchs and never with the peasants and the
workers." Nader's campaign points out that, if elected, he
"would cut the military budget to a level needed to protect the
country."

Bob Barr (Libertarian Party)

Barr was a Republican representative from Georgia from 1995 until 2003.
He is running for President for the Libertarian Party. Barr's
position on foreign policy is that "[t]he American purpose is to
provide a strong national defense, not to engage in nation building or
to launch foreign crusades, no matter how seemingly
well-intentioned." The Libertarian Party is highly critical of
foreign aid. Its platform calls for an "end [to] the current U.S.
government policy of foreign intervention, including military and
economic aid." In a May 2007 article
<http://www.bobbarr2008.com/articles/55/dont-lower-flag-in-lieu-of-flowe\
rs/> , Barr wrote that President Bush stretched this authority beyond
reason in late 2004 when he ordered it lowered in remembrance of the
thousands killed by the Indian Ocean tsunami in Indonesia and other
countries.

Barr's campaign states that they have "no specific position"
on either U.S. military assistance to Indonesia, nor accountability for
crimes committed against the East Timorese by Indonesia.

Brian Moore (Socialist Party)

Moore calls for closing all U.S. military facilities that train foreign
military and paramilitary personnel and an end U.S. arms sales in the
world.

Updates and links to this posting can be found at
http://etan.org/news/2008/09President.htm
<http://etan.org/news/2008/09President.htm> .



John M. Miller         Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

48 Duffield St., Brooklyn, NY 11201 USA

Phone:               (718)596-7668          Mobile:              
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