Det danske Fredsakademi
Kronologi over fredssagen og international politik 24. januar
2006 / Time Line January 24, 2006
Version 3.5
23. Januar 2006, 25. Januar 2006
01/24/2006
East Timor truth commission finds U.S. "political and military
support were fundamental to the Indonesian invasion and
occupation"
Report estimates 100-180,000 Timorese killed or starved
1975-1999
"Responsibility" chapter published on Web by National Security
Archive
National Security Archive Update, January 24, 2006
Washington D.C., January 24, 2006 - The final report of East
Timor's landmark Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation
(CAVR) has found that U.S. "political and military support were
fundamental to the Indonesian invasion and occupation" of East
Timor from 1975 to 1999, according to the "Responsibility" chapter
of the report posted today on the Web by the National Security
Archive, which assisted the Commission with extensive
documentation.
The Commission report, entitled "Chega!" ("Enough" in Portuguese),
estimates that up to 180,000 East Timorese were killed by
Indonesian troops or died of enforced starvation and other causes
resulting from the occupation between 1975 and 1999. The
"Responsibility" chapter details the primary role of the Indonesian
military and security forces, as well as the supporting roles
played by Australia, Portugal, the United States, the United
Nations, the United Kingdom, and France.
The report (p. 92) finds that "U.S. supplied weaponry was crucial
to Indonesia's capacity to intensify military operations from 1977
in its massive campaigns to destroy the Resistance in which
aircraft supplied by the United States played a crucial role."
Moreover, "U.S. Administration officials refused to admit that the
primary reason that East Timorese were dying in their thousands was
the security policies of the Indonesian military."
The CAVR used more than 1,000 formerly secret U.S. documents
provided by the National Security Archive's Indonesia and East
Timor Documentation Project, which published on the Web in November
2005 several of the key documents detailing U.S. support for the
invasion and occupation of East Timor across five U.S.
administrations.
The report (p. 92) notes that "In response to the massive
violations that occurred in Timor-Leste in September 1999 President
Clinton threw the considerable influence of the United States
behind efforts to press the Indonesian Government to accept the
deployment of an international force in the territory,
demonstrating the considerable leverage that it could have exerted
earlier had the will been there."
The National Security Archive obtained a copy of the chapter of the
CAVR report titled "Responsibility and Accountability" from copies
circulating in the international press, and posted the chapter
today because East Timor's government has not yet put the full text
of the truth commission report in the public domain or published
its contents online, despite having delivered the report to the
Timorese parliament in November and to the United Nations on
January 20.
The CAVR's final report strongly criticizes the role of the
international community in supporting Indonesia's invasion and
occupation of East Timor, and recommends reparations from the
governments of Indonesia, the U.S. and United Kingdom and from
Western arms manufacturers who played crucial roles in supporting
Indonesia's actions.
01/24/2006
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