Hari hari ini tigapuluhlima tahun lampau kondisi Timor Timur panas. Fretilin 
menyiapkan proklamasi kemerdekaan 28 November 1975 menyusul kudeta UDT Agustus 
1975, infitrasi RKAD di Balibo, dan dugaan kuat rencana invasi Indonesia. 
Seminggu kemudian, 7 Desember 1975, Indonesia melancarkan invasi. Lebih dari 
pada sekadar meminta dukungan, Soeharto sesungguhnya berhasil mengelabui 
Presiden AS Gerard Ford dan Menlu Henry-Real Politik-Kissinger. Sejak itu 
republik ini menjadi negara penjajah dengan menciderai konstitusinya sendiri 
dan solidaritas Asia-Afrika ..



  " .. The issue of Portuguese decolonization of East Timor was only raised as 
a final point. 'The only way (to solve it) is to integrate into Indonesia,' 
Soeharto said, promising 'Indonesia will not use force against other countries.'



http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2001/12/29/conspiracy-against-e-timor.html



Conspiracy against E. Timor

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sat, 12/29/2001 7:31 AM | Opinion



Aboeprijadi Santoso, Radio Netherlands, Amsterdam



U.S. documents on President Gerald Ford's endorsement for Indonesia's military 
takeover of the former Portuguese colony of East Timor, declassified on the 
25th anniversary of the invasion, are a fresh reminder of the human cost of a 
great political debacle.



For the Dec. 7, 1975 invasion was an aggression that directly led to the 
occupation of the territory for the next quarter century, much of which could 
only have been sustained by a force that resulted in human rights abuses on a 
massive scale.



The thrust of the ""Ford-Kissinger-Soeharto"" conspiracy might have been widely 
assumed, but now the details are published for all to see.








While then-president Ford and secretary of state Henry Kissinger did not regard 
the issue of East Timor as a particularly important one, president Soeharto on 
Dec. 6, 1975 wanted them to know that Jakarta had planned action, and sought 
their response.



Only days earlier, on Dec. 3, he had given the green light to his generals for 
the attack on East Timor. As the U.S. guests signaled their ""understanding,"" 
the invasion was delayed until they returned home, and began during the early 
morning hours of Dec. 7.



The first exchange took place amid cold war tension that accompanied the fall 
of Saigon at Camp David in the U.S. on July 5, 1975, with Ford and Kissinger 
confirming their commitment on detente with the Soviet Union.



But they were worried about the consequences of Vietnam's victory and concerned 
about keeping Indonesia as a strategic ally, while president Soeharto stressed 
the importance of U.S. economic aid for Jakarta to ensure stability in Asia.








The issue of Portuguese decolonization of East Timor was only raised as a final 
point. ""The only way (to solve it) is to integrate into Indonesia,"" Soeharto 
said, promising ""Indonesia will not use force against other countries.""



But, he added, ""those who want independence are communist-influenced 
(Fretilin) (so) the problem is how to manage the self-determination process 
with a majority wanting unity with Indonesia.""



By November, Kissinger had approved Indonesia's strategy to handle that 
problem. In a confidential memo to then-president Ford, he said, ""Jakarta has 
been maneuvering to absorb the colony through negotiations with Lisbon and 
covert military operation showing considerable restraint.""



""Actually, it's a kind of Lawrence of Arabia campaign,"" the operation 
commander, Lt. Gen. (ret.) Dading Kalbuadi, proudly told this writer in 1995, 
referring to the infamous British officer who attempted to win the heart and 
mind of the locals to win control of Arabia.



In reality, Jakarta had stimulated the open conflict among the Timorese parties 
-- which Kissinger described as just ""a small-scale civil war"" -- by public 
broadcast via Radio Kupang, political infiltration, local mobilization and 
military campaign from Atambua in a special operation using the local Raja's, 
spies and combat troops.



By mid-September, however, these efforts led to all-out war with heavy fighting 
in Maliana and Batugade, followed by another battle and the massacre of a 
handful of Australian journalists in Balibo.



That was Indonesia's first aggression against other country -- contradicting 
Soeharto's promise at Camp David in the form of a brutal violation of 
Indonesia's own 1945 Constitution.



Yet Kissinger concluded that ""a merger with Indonesia is probably the best 
solution if the inhabitants agree."" Since the U.S. took the position of 
eschewing any involvement in East Timor, its role was passive. All Kissinger, a 
German, worried about was that Jakarta would use U.S.-supplied weapons.



By Dec. 6, at the second summit in Jakarta, East Timor was again a minor issue 
for the U.S., but Soeharto argued that by now ""Indonesia found itself facing a 
fait d'accompli.""



With Portugal unable to control the situation, Fretilin prevailed and 
unilaterally declared independence, ending more than 400 years of occupation. 
So ""to establish peace and order,"" Soeharto urged, ""we want your 
understanding if we deem it necessary to take rapid or drastic action.""



Without inquiring about Jakarta's plan, Ford promptly responded by saying ""we 
will understand, and will not press you on the issue.""



Soeharto gave the U.S. leaders only the vaguest indication of his plans. By 
contrast, weeks earlier, his generals provided Canberra's diplomats with a 
barrage of more or less accurate information concerning Jakarta's covert 
operation from August to October 1975.



Australian documents released last year suggest it was a trick to make 
Australia appear complicit in Jakarta's aggression.



In any case, Soeharto had already met twice with then-PM Gough Whitlam, and 
found the Australians ready to accept Jakarta's preference for annexing East 
Timor into Indonesia; indeed, when the Australian journalists were murdered in 
Balibo, Canberra did not even raise a formal protest.



By early December, after Jakarta gained urgently needed clear consent from its 
most important Western allies, its army opened up a dark chapter in East 
Timor's history -- its most violent since the bloody purges of 1965-1966, as it 
turned out.



Fretilin's declaration of independence on Nov. 28, 1975 had actually taken 
Jakarta by surprise and triggered the invasion.



Timorese eyewitnesses, during interviews in Lisbon in 1993 and 1994, said the 
attacks were brutal and involved ""indiscriminate killings"" at Villa Verde and 
other parts of Dili.



Such was the nature of the war -- according to anonymous Indonesian officers in 
1995 -- that the army, facing a popular guerrilla insurgency campaign, was 
often unable to distinguish between people who were Fretilin, and those who 
were not.



As the war dragged on into the early 1980s, it was neither ""a small guerrilla 
war"" as Soeharto expected, nor the one in which Jakarta could ""succeed 
quickly,"" as Kissinger hoped. Kissinger, whom the Timorese acidly dubbed ""Dr. 
Death,"" has recently made reconciliation with the Timorese leaders Xanana 
Gusmao and Jose Ramos-Horta.





Soeharto's war according to Yayak, Koln, 2003



It should be noted here that then-foreign minister Adam Malik -- the only 
Indonesian politician who recognized East Timor's rights to independence -- did 
not seem actively involved in all key events. A freedom fighter in August 1945, 
Adam might have recognized that Jakarta's adventure in Timor contradicted much 
of the spirit of Indonesia's own struggle for national sovereignty against 
colonial aggression.



If Adam Malik deserves a tribute, Soeharto and the generals who continued the 
war after the invasion, should be held responsible for the human catastrophe 
that followed.



As people fled Dili and Baucau, the army attempted to pacify the rest of the 
country by force. In the end, more than 100,000 people perished in the Matebian 
hills from a combination of war and starvation when Indonesian troops encircled 
them during the late-1970s.



With the U.S. and Australian key documents brought to light, one can only 
wonder what took place on Dec. 3, 1975 when Soeharto met with his top officers 
-- Ali Moertopo, Yoga Sugama and Benny Moerdani -- and decided to invade East 
Timor. Given the consequences of the invasion, the four generals could be 
charged with war crimes.



Despite the human catastrophe caused by the invasion, the East Timorese 
resisted and, ultimately, chose independence. The experience should serve as a 
stark lesson for those leading military operations in Aceh today.



ends







[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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