and he was there at some personal risk and sometimes illegally. In 1992, he testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee about his experiences. Nairn is sometimes simply the only outside voice we have regarding what happened
US Complicity in Timor
By Allan Nairn
This article appeared in the September 27, 1999 edition of The Nation.
September 9, 1999
... Although State Department officials had been assured in writing that only police and no soldiers would be part of this training, Blair told Wiranto that, yes, soldiers could be included. So although Blair was sent in with the mission of telling Wiranto to shut the militias down, he did the opposite. Indonesian officers I spoke to said Wiranto was delighted by the meeting. They took this as a green light to proceed with the militia operation. The only reference in the classified cable to the militias was the following: "Wiranto was emphatic: as long as East Timor is an integral part of the territory of Indonesia, Armed Forces have responsibility to maintain peace and stability in the region. Wiranto said the military will take steps to disarm FALINTIL pro-independence group concurrently with the WANRA militia force. Admiral Blair reminded Wiranto that fairly or unfairly the international community looks at East Timor as a barometer of progress for Indonesian reform. Most importantly, the process of change in East Timor could proceed peacefully, he said" ...
http://www.thenation.com/doc/19990927/nairn September 16, 1999
East Timor: Journalist Allan Nairn Faces Ten Years Imprisonment by the Indonesian Military
... While in Timor on assignment for The New Yorker magazine, Allan Nairn was injured while attempting to stop the November 12, 1991 Santa Cruz massacre. His skull was fractured by Indonesian troops wielding U.S. M-16 rifles. After the massacre, Nairn (together with Amy Goodman of WBAI/Pacifica Radio) was banned from Indonesia and occupied Timor as “a threat to national security.” The ban has since been personally reaffirmed by the TNI commander, General Wiranto. Nairn returned to East Timor without the knowledge of the Indonesian armed forces in 1994 and 1998. Earlier this year, in defiance of the ban, Nairn again entered Indonesia. He has been in occupied East Timor since August ...
http://i4.democracynow.org/1999/9/16/east_timor_journalist_allan_nairn_facesThe Case Against Henry Kissinger
Part Two: Crimes against humanity
by Christopher Hitchens
Harpers magazine, March 2001
... ALLAN NAIRN: Mr. Kissinger, my name is Allan Nairn. I'm a journalist in the United States. I'm one of the Americans who survived the massacre in East Timor on November 12, 1991, a massacre during which Indonesian troops armed with American M-16s gunned down at least 271 Timorese civilians in front of the Santa Cruz Catholic cemetery as they were gathered in the act of peaceful mourning and protest. Now you just said that in your meeting with Suharto on the afternoon of December 6, 1975, you did not discuss Timor, you did not discuss it until you came to the airport. Well, I have here the official State Department transcript of your and President Ford's conversation with General Suharto, the dictator of Indonesia ... It has been edited under the Freedom of Information Act, so the whole text isn't there. It's clear from the portion of the text that is here that in fact you did discuss the impending invasion of Timor with Suharto, a fact which was confirmed to me by President Ford himself in an interview I had with him. President Ford told me that in fact you discussed the impending invasion of Timor with Suharto and that you gave the U.S. ...
... My question, Mr. Kissinger, my question, Dr. Kissinger, is twofold: First, will you give a waiver under the Privacy Act to support full declassification of this memo so we can see exactly what you and President Ford said to Suharto? Secondly, would you support the convening of an international war-crimes tribunal under U.N. supervision on the subject of East Timor, and would you agree to abide by its verdict in regard to your own conduct?
KISSINGER: I mean, uh, really, this sort of comment is one of the reasons why the conduct of foreign policy is becoming nearly impossible under these conditions. Here is a fellow who's got one obsession ... he collects a bunch of documents, you don't know what is in these documents ...
NAIRN: I invite your audience to read them ...
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Kissinger/CaseAgainst2_Hitchens.htmlCovering East Timor
Danny Schechter interviews Alan Nairn
... DS: Finally, What advice would you have to the media in terms of future coverage?
AN: My advice would be: Don't let Washington set your agenda. Don't let any national government set your agenda. Go to the places where the worst abuses, the worst mass killings are taking place, convey to the public the facts in their correct proportion—as big and dramatic as they are—and also talk about the accomplices. If those committing the crimes are getting support from anyone else—including foreign governments—if that's where their weapons and their training and their political sustenance comes from, talk about that. Put it on the front page. Make it a theme so people can decide if they want to be accomplices to these kinds of terrors ...
http://www.mediachannel.org/video/nairn.shtml