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[also Timor War...]
| State |
Entry |
Exit |
Combat Forces |
Population |
Losses |
| Indonesia |
1975 |
1987 |
278000 |
161000000 |
125000 |
| Timor |
1975 |
1987 |
30000 |
12000000 |
6000 |
***** East Timor and the small enclave of Oecusse on the north coast of the island
of Timor were poor and neglected corners of Portugal's overseas empire when
officers of Portugal's Armed Forces Movement, led by General António de Spínola,
seized power in Lisbon in April 1974. Convinced that his country's continued
occupation of overseas territories, especially in Africa, was excessively costly
and ultimately futile, Spínola initiated a hasty "decolonization"
process. In Portuguese Timor, local political groups responded: the Timor
Democratic Union (UDT) favored a continued association with Lisbon, the
Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor (Fretilin), demanded full independence, and the Popular Democratic Association of
Timor (Apodeti) favored integration with Indonesia.
Although Indonesia's minister of foreign affairs, Adam
Malik, assured
Portugal's foreign minister on his visit to Jakarta that Indonesia would adhere
to the principle of self-determination for all peoples, attitudes had apparently
changed by the summer of 1974. Fretilin's leftist rhetoric was disquieting, and
Jakarta began actively supporting Fretilin's opponent, Apodeti. Fears grew that
an independent East Timor under Fretilin could become a beachhead for communist
subversion. At a meeting between Suharto and Australian prime minister Gough
Whitlam in September 1974, the latter acknowledged that it might be best for
East Timor to join Indonesia but that the Australian public would not stand for
the use of force. This acknowledgment seemed to open the way for a more forward
policy. External factors relating to the communist subversion theme were the
conquest of South Vietnam by communist North Vietnam in May 1975 and the
possibility of a Chinese takeover of the Portuguese colony of Macao.
Fretilin had become the dominant political force inside East Timor by
mid-1975, and its troops seized the bulk of the colonial armory as the
Portuguese hastened to disengage themselves from the territory. An abortive coup
d'état by UDT supporters on August 10, 1975, led to a civil war between
Fretilin and an anticommunist coalition of UDT and Apodeti. Fretilin occupied
most of the territory by September, causing Jakarta to give the UDT and Apodeti
clandestine military support. On November 25, 1975, Fretilin proclaimed the
Democratic Republic of East Timor. Jakarta responded immediately. On December 7,
Indonesian "volunteer" forces landed at Dili, the capital, and Baukau.
By April 1976, there were an estimated 30,000 to 35,000 Indonesian troops in the
territory. On July 15, 1976, East Timor was made Indonesia's twenty-seventh
province: Timor Timur.
Indonesian troops carried out a harsh campaign of pacification that inflicted
grave suffering on local populations. Through the late 1970s and 1980s, accounts
of military repression, mass starvation, and disease focused international
attention on Indonesia as a major violator of human rights. An undetermined
number--from 100,000 to 250,000--of East Timor's approximately 650,000
inhabitants died as a result of the armed occupation. However, by the mid-1980s,
most of the armed members of Fretilin had been defeated, and in 1989 the
province was declared open to free domestic and foreign travel.
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