Blair Poor Choice as Director of Intelligence
Adm. Blair Poor Choice as Director of National Intelligence, Says Rights Group
Blair's History with Indonesia and East Timor Raises Questions about Likely Nominee
Contact: John
M. Miller, +1-718-596-7668, +1-917-690-4391
Ed
McWilliams, +1-703-899-5285
January 7 - The East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN) called Adm. Dennis Blair "a poor choice for intelligence director." The group urged President-elect Obama to reconsider the nomination, and make a break from past policies that have undermined human rights worldwide.
"During his years as Pacific Commander, Blair downplayed human rights concerns. He actively worked to reinstate military assistance and deepen ties with Indonesia's military despite its ongoing rights violations in East Timor and consistent record of impunity," said John M. Miller, National Coordinator of ETAN.
"Admiral Blair undermined U.S. policy in the months preceding the U.S.-supported and UN-sponsored referendum in East Timor in 1999," said Ed McWilliams, a senior U.S. embassy official in Jakarta at the time. "While senior State Department officials were pressing the Indonesian military to end the escalating violence and its support for militia intimidation of voters, Blair took a distinctly different line with his military counterparts. As Pacific Commander, his influence could have caused the military to rein in its militias. Instead, his virtual silence on the issue in meetings with the Indonesian generals led them and their militias to escalate their attacks on the Timorese."
"Blair's actions in 1999 demonstrated the failure of engagement to temper the Indonesian military's behavior; his actions helped to reinforce impunity for senior Indonesian officials that continues to this day," added Miller.
"The extraordinarily brutal Indonesian retaliation against the East Timorese and the UN teams in East Timor following the Timorese vote for independence from Indonesia transpired in part because of Blair's failure to press U.S. Government concerns in meetings with the Indonesian general," said McWilliams.
In April 1999, just days after Indonesian security forces and their militia proxies carried out a brutal churchyard massacre, Adm. Blair delivered a message of 'business-as-usual' to Indonesian General Wiranto, then Commander of the Indonesian armed forces. Following East Timor's pro-independence vote, Blair sought the quickest possible restoration of military assistance, despite Indonesia's highly destructive exit from the territory.
Background
As Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Pacific Command from February 1999 to May 2002, Blair was the highest ranking U.S. military official in the region during the final period of Indonesia's violent occupation of East Timor. During that time he undermined the Clinton administration's belated efforts to support human rights and self-determination in the Indonesian-occupied territory and opposed congressional efforts to limit military assistance.
In April 1999, Blair met in Jakarta with General Wiranto, then the Defense Minister and the commander of Indonesian forces, just two day after dozens of refugees in a Catholic church in the town of Liquica, East Timor were hacked to death with machetes by militia members backed by the military (including Kopassus) and Brimob troops.
Instead
of pressuring Wiranto to shut down the militias, Blair
promised new military assistance, which the Indonesian
military "took as a green light to proceed with the militia
operation," according to Nairn
reported that a classified cable summarizing the meeting
said that Admiral Blair "told the armed forces chief that he
looks forward to the time when [the army will] resume its
proper role as a leader in the region. He invited General
Wiranto to come to Hawaii as his guest... [Blair] expects
that approval will be granted to send a small team to
provide technical assistance to... selected TNI [Indonesian
military] personnel on crowd control measures." Nairn writes
that the last offer was "quite significant, because it would
be the first new U.S. training program for the Indonesian
military since 1992." Princeton University's In the bloody aftermath of East Timor's
independence vote, "Blair and other U.S. military officials
took a forgiving view of the violence surrounding the
referendum in East Timor. Given the country's history, they
argued, it could have been worse," reported the U.S.-trained Indonesian military
officers were among those allegedly involved in crimes
against humanity in East Timor. "But at no point, Blair
acknowledges, did he or his subordinates reach out to the
Indonesian contacts trained through IMET or JCET
[U.S.-funded programs] to try to stop the brewing crisis,"
wrote Priest. "It is fairly rare that the personal relations
made through an IMET course can come into play in resolving
a future crisis," he told her. Despite Blair's repeated
overtures and forgiving attitude to Indonesia's military
elite, they were of no help in his post-military role as
chair of the Indonesia Commission at the influential Council
on Foreign Relations. In 2002, Blair headed a delegation of
observers who intended to visit West Papua. The government
refused to let them in, with the Foreign Minister declaring
that "there is no need for them to come to Papua." The
reason was clear: West Papua has become the new focus of
Indonesian military and militia brutality and outside
observers are not welcome. Though Blair's dream of renewed
military engagement with Indonesia has been realized under
the Bush administration, the Indonesian military's human
rights violations continue, as does impunity for its senior
officers. ETAN was formed in
1991. The U.S.-based organization advocates for democracy,
justice and human rights for Timor-Leste and Indonesia. ETAN
was a major participant in the International Federation for
East Timor's (IFET) observer mission for the 1999
referendum. For more information see ETAN's web site: ENDS.