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Our men in Jakarta

Source
The Nation - June 15/22, 1998

Allan Nairn – As the Suharto dictatorship collapsed, suddenly, on May 21, the Indonesian Armed Forces (ABRI), scrambled to safeguard their police state. Rather than have Suharto quit as a scheduled mass protest surged through the streets, the ABRI commander, General Wiranto, threatened the students with a "Tiananmen," and then persuaded Suharto to resign quietly.

Although many students did not seem to realize it, the ABRI leaders were frightened. They knew that if millions took to the streets and the army lost control, the question would become not just Suharto's rule but their own political survival. As it happened, ABRI dodged the bullet: Suharto left, and so did the students, pushed out of the parliament building they had held for five days.

Afterward, General Wiranto, consulting nonstop with the US Embassy, moved to cover some of ABRI's bloody tracks. He demoted Lieut. Gen. Prabowo, Suharto's hated son-in-law, and moved boldly to blame him for all ABRI offenses of recent months. The US government, through The Washington Post, announced on May 23 that it had discovered that Prabowo was behind recent "disappearances" of Indonesian activists. Two days earlier, on May 21, The Nation had released an article that named the ABRI units involved in the abductions – some of them under Prabowo's control but all of them under Wiranto's [see Nairn, "Indonesia's 'Disappeared,'" June 8 cover date]. In the Post piece, US officials professed shock and "anger" at Prabowo, and said the embassy had been working "to gain the activists' release."

This was in contrast to the actual US position. As one embassy official described it for me at the height of the disappearances: "Prabowo is our fair-haired boy; he's the one who can do no wrong." In fact, Prabowo's units that participated in the disappearances – particularly KOPASSUS Group 4, which US officials singled out for blame in the Post – were, from the start of the abductions, in close and friendly liaison with US intelligence. Reached at his Jakarta home the night after Prabowo was replaced, Colonel Chaiwaran, the Group 4 commander, confirmed to me that he deals with Col. Charles McFetridge, the Defense Intelligence Agency (D.I.A.) attachi at the US Embassy, with whom, he said, he speaks in Indonesian.

Although Chaiwaran denied it to me, other ABRI people say he has said that Group 4's men have been trained by US intelligence, a claim that US officials privately confirm. Last year, during the run-up to the staged elections, KOPASSUS, with US support, was expanded from 3,000 to 4,800 combat troops. According to an article by Col. John Haseman, formerly D.I.A. attachi in Jakarta, this was done "with an eye on potential domestic instability." The Pentagon built up KOPASSUS with more than twenty-four JCET training exercises and backed Prabowo's plan to obtain US helicopters. The United States openly lauded Prabowo after a 1996 hostage-rescue raid in West Papua in which, a knowledgeable official says, his men murdered eight civilians after alighting in a helicopter falsely (and illegally) marked with the Red Cross sign.

Although Prabowo's personal relish for atrocity is legendary (a Timorese man told me of having his leg and teeth broken by Prabowo), high-level US officials paraded him this year as the political crisis gathered steam. In January, Defense Secretary William Cohen praised the "very impressive...discipline" of KOPASSUS. Assistant Secretary of State Stanley Roth took Prabowo along twice when he went to prison meetings with Xanana Gusmao, the leader of the resistance in occupied East Timor, where Prabowo has done his most extensive killings.

No less consistent has been US support for Prabowo's professional rival, General Wiranto, whose units were also JCET trained and who has been hailed as "a man of integrity and a true Indonesian patriot" by Adm. Joseph Prueher, chief of the US Pacific Command. On March 4 Admiral Prueher told Congress that the US military was on alert for "early signs of instability" in East Asia, including "labor disputes." Five days later, the ABRI intelligence unit, BIA, which is under Wiranto's daily control, picked up nine labor activists who had called for an increase in the minimum wage. One US official told me some of the activists were tortured and noted that in previous weeks BIA had staged a series of break-ins and ransackings at the offices of labor, student and women's organizations. He added that in East Timor, BIA was using a new tactic: breaking the hips of prisoners.

On March 8 Lieut. Gen. Yunus Yosfiah, one of the key men of the Wiranto faction, told students that ABRI would not "tolerate any campaigns for drastic political reform." (Yosfiah, now Information Minister in the new government, has been implicated in the 1975 murder of five foreign journalists in East Timor.) The following night, a US official, speaking off the record in Jakarta, told me that ABRI was about to launch a thorough crackdown.

Even as we spoke, Haryanto Taslam, Megawati Sukarno's chief field organizer, had already been run off the road and taken to a torture center under the control of BIA, with participation from KOPASSUS Group 4. As abductions continued and as Wiranto's spokesman, Brig. Gen. Wahab Mokodongan, mocked the victims – "perhaps the people who are said to have disappeared are wandering around in the jungle" – knowledgeable officials told me that the activists' situation was thoroughly known to Colonel McFetridge of the D.I.A. and to the embassy C.I.A. station. Yet it was not until mid-April, after a crisis caused by public protest, that the State Department went to Prabowo and pushed for the release of some activists. Even after that, the Pentagon continued to provide new JCET training, and State kept pressing the democracy movement to back a new government formed around ABRI. Today, as Prabowo has been thrown over and the United States has thrown in with Wiranto, ABRI remains wary of the potential for mass upheaval and has started releasing some formally arrested political prisoners. But many dozens of "disappeared" remain missing in East Timor, as do at least five of the abducted Indonesian activists (Sonny, Rian, Herman, Bimo Petrus and Suyat).

The Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital in Jakarta reported this spring that unknown and mutilated bodies were turning up along railroad tracks. It is perhaps ominous for some of the missing that when Megawati – searching for Taslam – went to a top ABRI commander she was told an absurd but chilling tale. Some of the "disappeared," the general claimed, were actually BIA infiltrators who had penetrated the democracy movement and had now returned to base. The implication: Their associates should not expect to see them again.

Allan Nairn has reported frequently on Indonesia. Research support was provided by the Investigative Fund of The Nation Institute.

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