Dear cj, I'm curious as to what kind of reactions you've been having to the East Timor situation, and the media coverage - comments invited. In particular, I'm curious as to whether our discussions about events in Yugoslavia have helped any of you to notice things about this latest episode, or to ask questions, that might not have occurred to you previously. Below are two articles. The first, from "Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting", reminds us of the US role in actively supporting two decades of genocidal repression in East Timor. The second, from the "Asian Human Rights Commission", is an all-too-predictable appeal to the UN to send in 'peace-keeping' troops. "Manufacturing Consent", which exists both as a film documentary and a book(by Noam Chomsky), uses East Timor as an example of 'non coverage' by the media. It makes the point that on a per-population basis, the East Timor genocide was worse than that in Cambodia, with its killing fields and all. And while we were all hearing about Cambodia - with horror - the US was at the same time giving military assistance to the Jakarta regime and nary a word showed up in the media about what was happening in East Timor. First, let's look at the plain facts of this case. The US government has played an active, willing, knowing role in creating the situation in East Timor, and the corporate-controlled media has been an active, willing particpant in hiding the whole thing from the world's people. Now all at once oppression has been 'discovered', the Jakarta regime has been identified as the evildoer, and the media is guiding us to the clear conclusion that the time has come for another 'humanitarian intervention'. Given these circumstance, can any of you really believe this change in policy is motivated by humanitarian concerns? In this regard, the situation is much more clear-cut than it was in the case of Yugoslavia. In that case, there were years of 'outrage coverage' - and one could almost believe that humanitarian concern had 'finally' motivated the West to respond. One needed to dig down a bit into the history before the hypocrisy of the Western response became apparent. In the case of East Timor, I suggest, the hypocrisy is much closer to the surface and easier to see. Perhaps you are thinking that our corporatist rulers have had a recent change-of-heart... although they understandably want to hide their role in creating the problem, they now, belatedly, want to 'do the right thing' and 'make things better' for the East Timorese. As I see it, that is a very unlikely explanation. The oppression has been ongoing in East Timor, the US government has been in very close touch with the situation all along, and all the events leading up to the UN election have been entirely predictable. If the US had a change of heart any time over the past several months, all they would have needed to do is issue a strong public statement to Jakarta: "Either you maintain order and respect UN intentions, or we will take strong and decisive action". The propaganda machine could have been started up at any time to support such a position, and events in Yugolavia would have made it clear to all parties that the US proclamation was to be taken in dead earnest. The Jakarta leadership doesn't have the delusions of grandeur of a Saddam, and there is little reason to expect they would have tried to resist strong pressure from the US - who is a major trading partner, their main arms supplier, and an important source of investment. But even now, at least in the coverage I've seen, pressure on Jakarta seems to play very little role in the scenario. All the talk is about the local situation in East Timor, and about how quickly the Western troops can be sent in. We are told that connaivance between the Jakarta military and the militias is making things worse, but that's more or less dismissed as being an unfortunate and unavoidable 'circumstance'. It seems to me that humanitarianism can be dismissed entirely as a motivating factor. In addition, I suggest, the goal is not to clean up the situation in East Timor - even if for hypocritcal reasons - because that could have been accomplished at any time in a much easier way. Intervention _might have still been required, but it could have come much sooner, preventing the current wave of violence - and it would have made a lot more sense with Jakarta being put on firm notice beforehand. In order to understand what's really going on, and why the scenario is being played out as it is, I suggest that we compare this scenario with that of Iraq and of Yugoslavia. There are strong parallels between all three, and much that is unique to each. Taken all together, a clear progression emerges... we are witnessing the _systematic deployment of the New World Order regime. In fact the intitial deployments go back further - to Grenada and Panama. Each stage in this process has accomplished identifiable deployment goals: overcoming the US 'Vietnam syndrome', preparing Euopean public opinion for blitzkrieg interventions, field-testing hi-tech weaponry and wag-the-dog propaganda, turning 'humanitarianism' into an ideology of intervention, etc. --- First some of the parallels. In all three cases, the US (along with some other Western powers) was a central participant in creating the conditions leading up to the crisis. The US, UK, Germany, and others supplied Saddam with military assistance and the materials for 'weapons of mass destruction' for a decade prior to Desert Storm - all of which time he was the very same dictator we are all now supposed to hate. The US and Germany intentionally facilitated the destablization of Yugoslavia, secretly supplied arms to the region, and repeatedly encouraged Milosevic in his escapades. As mentioned above, this co-perpetrator pattern continues in East Timor. Another parallel. In all three cases, the US (and collaborators/allies) intentionally fed fuel to the flames of conflict, bringing it to such a crisis proportion that overwhelming public sentiment could be generated for 'doing almost anything'. The US literally _invited Saddam to invade Kuwait, with a direct communication from the Secretary of State. The US and Germany trained and coordinated a terrorist group (the KLA), sent them in to force a response from Yugoslavia, and directly precipitated the crisis in Kosovo. In the case of East Timor, the whole UN election thing was set up as a public specatacle, without adequate security preparations, and the US governemnt knew full well that brutal suppression would be the dramatic outcome. More parallels. In all three cases, media coverage and government actions (and non-actions) were carefully coordinated so as to build up public outrage. Then offical pronouncements and media coverage carefully limited the options under consideration... only the option which furthered the development of the NWO interventionist regime was given serious consideration. Desert Storm bombing was launched at the earliest possible moment, out of fear that a Russian-backed peace initiative might succeed. The Ramboiullet document presented Yugoslavia with conditions they could not possibly accept - conditions that were dropped after the bombing had been accomplished. Iterventionism itself - or more particularly its 'legitimization' - has apparently been the primary goal in every scenario. This is not at all surprising. As the sovereignty of Western nations is being signed over to a centralized WTO bureuacracy, and media is being concentrated into the hands of a few conglomerates, it is only appropriate that military power be concentrated into a similar, centralized, elite-controlled bureucracy (Pentagon + NATO). --- There are also clear differences between each of our scenarios, and in those differences once can trace the deployment of the NWO regime. In Iraq, the engineered 'crisis incident' involved a cross-border invasion, and nonetheless it took many months for the propaganda machine to produce the UN authorization which was to 'legitimize' the long-planned bombing of Iraq. With that precedent established as a 'successful and acceptable operation', and with many years of propaganda preparation of public opinion, the bombing of Yugoslavia was launched _without a UN authorization, and _without the provocation of an invasion across international borders. These last two may seem like minor points, but in fact they represent a major shift in de-facto international law. These precedents were the primary strategic 'advance' made by the NWO regime in Yugoslavia. Clinton wasted no time in pointing out the significance of these precedents - announcing that henceforth we could expect interventions whenever our elite leaders decide to point the camera at one of the many human-rights violators at large today, most of them armed and supported by the US and other Western powers. Four months after the Yugoslav bombing - with still no real security for Kosovo civilians - we are now presented with the next phase of the interventionist project. Then main distinction of the East Timor scenario, in contrast with the earlier ones, is the shortness of the propaganda prelude. It now takes only a few weeks to introduce a new trouble spot to the television audience, and to rouse the Western mobs to a thirst for military force. Blitzkrieg propaganda is now to be the hearald of blitzkrieg warfare. Orwell showed us where this leads... eventually we'll learn of invasions on the same day we're introduced to the name and face of the enemy. --- Secondary to this legitimization program, there have been other objectives - always unannounced - in each of our scenarios. Pulverizing Iraq, which was modernizing contrary to the US formula for that region - and taking Iraqi oil off a glutted market - were obvious objectives in that case. In Yuglslavia the apparent objectives were the re-balkanazation of the Balkans and the ethnic cleansing of the resulting entities (according to SP Huntington's kultur-kampf forumula) - and the destruction of the Yugoslavian economy. In East Timor, it isn't clear what the secondary objectives are going to turn out to be. If they bomb Indonesia back to the stone age, then the pattern would be the same as in Iraq and Yugoslavia - demonize a regime so you can destroy a nation. Somehow I don't think this is what's going to happen, partly because of how cooperative Indonesia has been with the globalist system, and partly because the demonization focus hasn't been on what's-his-name in Jakarta the way it was on Saddam and Milosevic. Based on the evidence I've looked at I would predict two outcomes from East Timor, one secondary, and one primary - related to the legitimization of arbitrarty Western interventions. The secondary outcome would be a regime in East Timor a bit reminiscent of that in South Africa. On the surface it looks representative, but it's agenda is one of kow-towing to the IMF and facilitating the globalization process. This was also Jakarta's agenda in East Timor, but a resistance movement sprang up. That was Jakarta's sin - the failure to keep down the uprising. The new regime won't help the people substantially, but it will have lots of 'liberation' promises, and the people will be fooled into thinking they 'won'. No doubt there will be a pile of investment money made available, meaning only that the absentee slaveowners of the East Timoreze will be Western rather than Indonesian. The primary outcome, strategically, would be the _routinization of the NWO intervention process. A 'problem' is brought to our attention, an 'intervention solution' is promplty deployed, and - assuming no major bombing of Indonesia - there is little fuss. All neat and tidy. With Iraq still under genocidal sanctions, and Yugoslavia still in rubble, the Jakarta regime is unlikely to do anything but stew in their own juice while the Marines are landing in East Timor. The NWO regime has advanced to the point where the implicit threat of force is enough to serve as 'cover fire' - Saddam and Milosevic have served their purpose as 'examples'. --- This is all happening in the August-September timeframe. The word on the street is that a major bombing of Iraq is next on the agenda, perhaps to test out some new weapons, and surely to make it even more 'perfectly clear' to everyone everywhere that arbitrary interventions are routine, normal, and 'legitimate'. It's a new world order, and you love it, don't you? Clint Eastwood is getting all the bad guys by his own rules; dictators everywhere are 'making our day'; Sylvester Stallone is wreaking righteous havoc on his hi-tech rocket sled; the bugle is sounding and the cavalry is riding to the rescue. Isn't it great to be alive during such a resurgance of humanitarian concen? It is very important to keep in mind that with all of these scenarios, the timing has been entirely at the discretion of our elite leaders. They could have launched an Iraq bombing anytime they wanted to write up an explanatory press release; they could have brought the Yugoslavian pot to a boil almost anytime in the past ten years; they could have 'discovered' genocide in East Timor any time in the past two decades. Since they control the schedule, we should take into account the pace and timing of their incidents, in understanding their game plan. Allow me to remind you of the posting of July 26, "cj#776> NWO / Dept of Final Solutions / The China Card". It ended this way, noting that October 1 may be the climactic date to which all the rest of this has been building up: ----------------------------------------------------------- Do you see what I mean about 'accelerated consolidation' of the NWO regime? '99 was ushered in by a carefully worded statement, dutifully memorized by quick-study Clinton, which managed to destabilize a 50-year old forumula of 'two China' fragile stability. As we pass mid-year, events have progressed to a war-threatening flashpoint, and Clinton continues to pour gasoline on the smoldering potential conflagration. China and Taiwan are locked in an inward-looking deadly embrace, unaware (as was Saddam) that they are but pawns in a higher-level game. Is this then our timeframe for the final, world-conquering conflagration? The opening move to occur by October 1 and the endgame to be completed by December 31? In such a scenario, is there any possiblity that Russia would not be drawn in, and be summarily dealt with as a side-theater? What's the alternative? Is Taiwan going to recant its independence? Will the People's Republic mark its fiftieth anniversary by a humiliating sacrifice of its claims to the island? Will Washington reverse its policies, take a firm stand against Chinese expansionism, and risk upsetting its carefully laid trap? Keep these questions in mind as the China situation develops - or doesn't - in the media. If the story doesn't develop, expect the worst. If it does develop, read between the lines for nuances which relate to the strategic context. I'll let you know if more information crosses my desk, and you're welcome to send in whatever you notice. ----------------------------------------------------------- It seems to me that the China story _hasn't been developing, that we haven't been hearing much about it. Nonetheless, in various reports I've read, the latent crisis is continuing to mount, China's credibility continues threatened over its claims to Taiwaan - and the symbolic October 1st date is rapidly approaching. As in our previous scenarios, the US, by failing to take a firm position, and by sending out ambiguous and conflicting signals, is encouraging the development of a crisis situation. I say again... expect the worst. A mid or late-September anti-Iraq mobilization could well be a cover for the mobilization for an October action against China. I wouldn't be surprised if a 'conincidental' fleet exercise in the Pacific might be soon noted in the back pages of our newspapers. yours, rkm ============================================================================ Date: Tue, 07 Sep 1999 05:36:13 -0500 To: •••@••.••• From: Mark Douglas Whitaker <•••@••.•••> Subject: [FAIR-L] ALERT: U.S. Role Missing From East Timor Coverage FAIR-L Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting Media analysis, critiques and news reports FAIR-L Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting Media analysis, critiques and news reports ACTION ALERT: U.S. ROLE MISSING FROM EAST TIMOR COVERAGE September 1, 1999 The ongoing story of East Timor's referendum on independence has received a moderate amount of coverage in the mainstream media. But news outlets have frequently failed to put the Timor story in a full and accurate context. For example, in reports from East Timor's capital, the Associated Press and some other news outlets continue to use the dateline "Dili, Indonesia," implying that Indonesia has a legitimate claim over East Timor. This formulation is comparable to a dateline of "Kuwait City, Iraq" in the months following Iraq's illegal annexation of Kuwait. The Washington Post (8/31/99) reported that Timorese were voting on "whether to remain a part of Indonesia." More importantly, many stories fail to note two crucial facts about East Timor's nearly 25-year struggle against Indonesian occupation. First, the Indonesian occupation has been extraordinarily bloody, resulting in the deaths of more than 200,000 Timorese, out of a pre-invasion population of approximately 600,000. A recent AP story noted that an "estimated 2,000 Indonesian troops have died fighting separatist guerrillas since Indonesia invaded East Timor in 1975," but failed to note the massive numbers of Timorese who have perished. Others seemed to confuse the deaths caused by the occupation with those caused by the resistance movement. ABC News' Charles Gibson said that "It's been an extraordinary violent independence movement there with hundreds of thousands of people killed" (Good Morning America, 8/31/99). Secondly, news consumers are not informed that the U.S. backed Indonesia's invasion of East Timor. President Gerald Ford and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger visited the Indonesian capital of Jakarta in December 1975, just before the invasion was launched, where they were told of Suharto's plans to attack the island (Washington Post, 11/9/79). The following month, a State Department official told a major Australian newspaper (The Australian, 1/22/76) that "in terms of the bilateral relations between the U.S. and Indonesia, we are more or less condoning the incursion into East Timor... The United States wants to keep its relations with Indonesia close and friendly. We regard Indonesia as a friendly, non-aligned nation--a nation we do a lot of business with." Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who was then the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations wrote in his memoirs (A Dangerous Place) that "the Department of State desired that the United Nations prove utterly ineffective in whatever measures it undertook" to reverse the invasion. "This task was given to me and I carried it forward with no inconsiderable success," Moynihan reported. Finally, according to the State Department, 90 percent of the weapons used in the invasion came from the United States. Two years later, as the atrocities in East Timor were reaching a peak, President Jimmy Carter authorized an addition $112 million in weapons sales to Indonesia. ACTION: Please call on local and national news outlets to stop treating East Timor as a legitimate part of Indonesia. And ask them to include the facts about the consequences of the Indonesian invasion, as well as the role the U.S. has played in supporting the illegal occupation. To contact the Associated Press, write to: Associated Press Thomas Kent-- International Editor (212) 621-1655 mailto:•••@••.••• Also, read FAIR's previous coverage of East Timor and Indonesia at: http://www.fair.org/international/east-timor.html ---------- Feel free to respond to FAIR ( •••@••.••• ). We can't reply to everything, but we will look at each message. We especially appreciate documented example of media bias or censorship. All messages to the 'FAIR-L' list will be forwarded to the editor of the list. Also, please send copies of email correspondence, including any responses, to us at: •••@••.••• . Feel free to spread this message around. Put it on conferences where it is appropriate. We depend on word of mouth to get our message out, so please let others know about FAIR and this mailing list. Don't miss a single e-mail from FAIR-L. You can subscribe to FAIR-L at our web site: http://www.fair.org/emaillist.html Or, you can send a "subscribe FAIR-L enter your full name" command to •••@••.•••. The subscriber list is kept confidential, so no need to worry about spammers. You may leave the list at any time by sending a "SIGNOFF FAIR-L" command to •••@••.•••. Please support FAIR by becoming a member. You will receive FAIR's magazine, EXTRA! and its newsletter, EXTRA! Update. You can become a member by calling 1-800-847-3993 from 9 to 5 Eastern Time (be sure to tell them you got the information on-line) or by sending $19 with your name and address to: FAIR/EXTRA! Subscription Service P.O. Box 170 Congers, NY 10920-9930 FAIR (212) 633-6700 http://www.fair.org/ E-mail: •••@••.••• list administrators: •••@••.••• ---------- Feel free to respond to FAIR ( •••@••.••• ). We can't reply to everything, but we will look at each message. We especially appreciate documented example of media bias or censorship. All messages to the 'FAIR-L' list will be forwarded to the editor of the list. Also, please send copies of email correspondence, including any responses, to us at: •••@••.••• . Feel free to spread this message around. Put it on conferences where it is appropriate. We depend on word of mouth to get our message out, so please let others know about FAIR and this mailing list. Don't miss a single e-mail from FAIR-L. You can subscribe to FAIR-L at our web site: http://www.fair.org/emaillist.html Or, you can send a "subscribe FAIR-L enter your full name" command to •••@••.•••. The subscriber list is kept confidential, so no need to worry about spammers. You may leave the list at any time by sending a "SIGNOFF FAIR-L" command to •••@••.•••. Please support FAIR by becoming a member. You will receive FAIR's magazine, EXTRA! and its newsletter, EXTRA! Update. You can become a member by calling 1-800-847-3993 from 9 to 5 Eastern Time (be sure to tell them you got the information on-line) or by sending $19 with your name and address to: FAIR/EXTRA! Subscription Service P.O. Box 170 Congers, NY 10920-9930 FAIR (212) 633-6700 http://www.fair.org/ E-mail: •••@••.••• list administrators: •••@••.••• ============================================================================ Delivered-To: •••@••.••• Date: Wed, 8 Sep 1999 00:45:20 +0800 (HKT) To: •••@••.••• From: AHRC Urgent Appeal <•••@••.•••> Subject: AHRC Petition to the United Nations Secretary-General and the Security Council ASEAN LEGAL RESOURCE CENTRE [ALRC] has ECOSOC consultation status ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION [AHRC] URGENT APPEAL PROGRAMME UA Index:070999 ****************************************************************** Independence for East Timor 7 September 1999 EAST TIMOR: AN URGENT CALL TO SECRETARY GENERAL AND SECURITY COUNCIL OF THE UNITED NATIONS ****************************************************************** To: ALL PARTICIPANTS OF THE URGENT APPEAL NETWORK Due to the gravely serious situation in East Timor we call upon each of you to send a message to the United National Secretary General and the Security Council. You are suggested to use a similar format as the one suggested below. Kindly share this message with as many people as possible. DO NOT FAIL THE EAST TIMORESE PEOPLE AT THE HOUR OF THEIR GRAVEST DANGER!!! RECOMMENDED ACTION: PLEASE SEND IMMEDIATE BY EMAIL AND FAXES MESSAGES TO THE UN SECRETARY GENERAL AND THE SECURITY COUNCIL ========================= SUGGESTED LETTER ============================== Honourable Mr. Kofi Annan United Nations Secretary-General New York, NY 10017 USA Fax to: 1-212-963-2155 Email: <•••@••.•••>, <•••@••.•••> Dear Mr. Kofi Annan, re: AN URGENT CALL TO SECRETARY GENERAL AND SECURITY COUNCIL OF THE UNITED NATIONS The Asian Human Rights Commission call upon the Secretary General of the United Nations and the Security Council to ACT NOW, without delay to save the lives of the people of East Timor. TO ACT NOW means sending peace keeping troops. Nothing else or nothing less would suffice. That a carnage is taking place has been accepted by all. That sections of Indonesian military are conniving withthe militia elements is clear without dispute. Thus delay means loss of more lives. To make international intervention conditional upon Indonesian willingness make no sense. The failure to act now is unforgivable. Be assured of our utmost support for immediate action. ======================================================================== SEND APPEALS TO: 1. Honourable Mr. Kofi Annan United Nations Secretary-General New York, NY 10017 USA Fax to: 1-212-963-2155 Email: <•••@••.•••>, <•••@••.•••> 2. H.E. Peter van Walsum Chairperson Security Council United Nations CO Permanent Mission of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to the United Nations 235 East, 45th Street, 16th Floor New York, N.Y. 10017 Tel. (212) 697 5547 Fax. (212) 370 1954 E-mail: •••@••.••• Email: <•••@••.•••> CC 1. President B.J. Habibie, Office of the President Presidential Palace, Jakarta, Indonesia Fax: 62 21 360 517, 62 21 345 4438 Email: President B.J. Habibie <•••@••.•••> 2. Mr. Severino, ASEAN Secretary-General The Asean Secretariat, 70A Jl. Sissingamangaraja Jakarta 12110, Indonesia Fax: 62-21 - 7398234, 7243504 Email: Mr.Severino Secretary-General<•••@••.•••>, <•••@••.•••> Please a copy of your appeal to: •••@••.••• *********************************************************************** Sinapan Samydorai, Programme Coorindator Urgent Appeal Programme Tel: (852)-2698-6339 Asian Human Rights Commission Fax:+(852)-2698-6367 Unit D, 7 Floor, 16 Argyle Str. Email: •••@••.••• Mongkok Commercial Centre http://www.hk.super.net/~ahrchk Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR CHINA *********************************************************************** Visit the Asian Human Rights Commission's Campaign For Recognition of State-sponsored Disappearances as a Crime Against Humanity website: <http://www.disappearances.org/>http://www.disappearances.org ======================================================================== •••@••.••• a political discussion forum. crafted in Ireland by rkm (Richard K. Moore) To subscribe, send any message to •••@••.••• A public service of Citizens for a Democratic Renaissance •••@••.••• http://cyberjournal.org) **--> Non-commercial reposting is encouraged, but please include the sig up through this paragraph and retain any internal credits and copyright notices. Copyrighted materials are posted under "fair-use". 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