INSURING DICTATORSHIP
Progressive Magazine, May 1997
Editor's Note by Matthew Rothschild
When the Clinton fundraising scandal broke, rightwing pundits and
party hacks shed crocodile tears for the people of Indonesia and
East Timor. William Safire and Haley Barbour, who never had said
word one about Suharto's repression before, made themselves out to
be champions of the suffering people in that archipelago.
This hypocrisy is annoying enough. But more annoying still is the
way the media have presented the Lippo Group in isolation from U.S.
corporations.
The special issue of The Progressive this month is an effort to
set the record straight.
Eyal Press not only skewers Satire and Barbour, he demolishes the
claim that it was just the Lippo Group that was trying to distort
U.S. policy toward Indonesia. Along with Jennifer Washburn and Ben
Terrall, Press demonstrates that the real Suharto lobby consists in
large part of powerful U.S. corporations that see Indonesia as a
profit playground.
These corporations are worried that a handful of U.S.
activists--led by the East Timor Action Network and investigative
reporter Allan Nairn--will overturn the U.S. policy of constant
support for Suharto. Nairn and Amy Goodman were brutally beaten by
Indonesian soldiers in the November 1991 massacre in Dili, East
Timor. This massacre, which cost 250 lives, sparked protests that
led to a cut-off of U.S. military-training aid for Indonesia.
Indonesian and U.S. corporations were terrified of a change in
policy. And so these corporations ponied up resources to buy
insurance for their investments.
"They had to ensure U.S. support for Indonesia," Nairn says. "Lippo
was important, but more important was the role of U.S. corporations"
in making the Clinton Administration toe the Suharto line.
I'd like to thank the Fund for Investigative Journalism, Inc.,
for helping to underwrite the Indonesia stories in this issue.
THE SUHARTO LOBBY
By Eyal Press
(Eyal Press is a freelance writer in New York. He wrote "Jim
Bob's Indonesian Misadventure" in the June 1996 issue.)
On December 10, 1996, the day the Nobel Peace Prize was jointly
awarded to Bishop Carlos Ximenes Belo and Jose Ramos-Horta of East
Timor, the Indonesian government held a meeting at the National
Press Club in Washington. There, standing before a podium in a room
full of reporters, Arifin Siregar, the Indonesian ambassador to the
United States, delivered a smoothly worded address downplaying
Indonesia's human-rights abuses in East Timor and urging Americans
not to judge the Suharto regime by its past actions. "We learn from
our mistakes," he said.
Following the speech, an Australian reporter turned attention to
the question of lobbying, asking Siregar what role was being played
by a Washington-based group called the U.S.-Indonesia Society. There
was a moment's pause. Then Siregar responded, "It is not a lobbying
organization--not at all.... The primary purpose is to improve
relations."
Not five minutes later, the focus shifted to the back of the
room, where Paul Wolfowitz, a former U.S.
ambassador to Indonesia and now a trustee of the U.S.-Indonesia
Society, expounded on the importance of America's relationship to
the Suharto regime and the sensitivity of the East Timor question.
After Wolfowitz finished, the audience heard more of the same from
Edward Masters, another former U.S. ambassador to Indonesia, and
currently the president of the U.S.-Indonesia Society. "The best
thing to do," Masters explained, "is to work with [the Indonesians],
not confront them, and to try to find common ground."
As Siregar gazed contentedly at the audience, his message echoed
by the prestigious diplomats, it was evident that the meeting had
achieved its primary objective, which was to persuade American
reporters to go easy on the Suharto regime.
Ever since the Clinton fundraising scandal broke, the U.S. media
have flocked to uncover the details of Clinton's relationship to
James and Mochtar Riady of the Lippo Group, and John Huang, the
former Lippo executive, Commerce Department official, and Democratic
Party fundraiser. The speculation is that Lippo, the Riadys, and
Huang, through their massive donations and collections, altered U.S.
policy toward Indonesia, helping to mute the Administration's
concerns about human rights and labor abuses.
But Lippo, the Riadys, and Huang have hardly been acting alone.
U.S. corporations, former senior government officials, and Suharto
cronies have also played a role. One of their primary channels of
influence has been the U.S.-Indonesia Society, a group founded in
1994 by a collection of political and corporate heavyweights.
Sponsors of this Society include not only the Lippo Group, but U.S.
companies with investments in Indonesia such as Freeport-McMoRan,
Texaco, Mobil, Raytheon, Hughes Aircraft, and Merrill Lynch. In
addition to former ambassadors Wolfowitz and Masters, the Society's
membership list includes George Benson, who was once a U.S. military
attache in Indonesia, and President Reagan's Secretary of State,
George Shultz, who is the group's honorary co-chair. The
U.S.-Indonesia Society also includes Indonesian business leaders and
former ministers and generals with close ties to the Indonesian
military and to Suharto himself James Riady, for instance, is a
trustee.
This is the real Suharto lobby in Washington. It consists of
major multinational corporations, Suharto insiders, Indonesian
billionaires, and U.S. foreign-policy elites all working in harmony
to achieve two shared objectives: downplaying human-rights abuses,
and bolstering U.S. commercial, diplomatic, and military support for
Suharto.
The U.S.-Indonesia Society describes itself as a nonprofit
educational group. "We're here to educate Americans about
Indonesia," says Charlie Zenzie, a spokesman for the group. "There
is a glaring lack of understanding about the country." But the
actual mission is to counteract Suharto's increasingly vocal
human-rights critics in the United States. To Jakarta's alarm, these
have grown in recent years to encompass major labor unions
(including the AFL-CIO), church groups (both Protestant and Catholic
denominations), and grassroots organizations. In March, Peace
Action, the largest U.S. peace group, held a rousing demonstration
at the Indonesian embassy in Washington, where students from around
the country held white crosses and called out the names of
individuals killed in East Timor with U.S. weapons. Thirty people
were arrested.
To counteract these forces, the U.S.-Indonesia Society serves as
a sort of P.R. organ for the Suharto regime. Congress is a
particular target. The group tries to influence U.S. lawmakers by
distributing materials to them, holding occasional briefing sessions
on Capitol Hill, and taking Congressional staffers on trips to
Indonesia.
At the university level, the group arranges forums on Indonesia,
with panels tailored to its ideological agenda, co-funds the
prestigious Fulbright scholarship program, and sends college
students from across America on summer internships to the country.
Meanwhile, the Society is involved in a massive corporate
initiative--backed by Texaco, Freeport, Lippo Bank, and others--to
distribute materials on Indonesia to U.S. teenagers (see page 24).
On the Indonesian excursions, Congressional aides get acquainted
with high-ranking officials such as foreign minister Ali (who has
ascribed the genocide in East Timor to "cultural differences") and
minister of technology B.J. Habibi. Staff members also visit the
town of Lippo Karawici--built by the Lippo Group. The U.S.-Indonesia
Society hosts exclusive receptions, co-sponsored by U.S.
corporations, which are attended by the likes of J. Stapleton Roy,
current U.S. ambassador to Indonesia.
"We hope they come back with a favorable impression," former
ambassador Masters says of the trips. "I feel it's very important
that staffers who brief Congress see Indonesia first-hand." Masters
says the agenda for such trips is completely open. In a recent
Society newsletter, he even nods toward some of Indonesia's
problems, noting that Congressional visitors may be exposed to
"continued poverty, limited outlets for popular expression, East
Timor."
But the pro-Suharto message of the trips is clear. Masters has
long been an apologist for Suharto. Back in December of 1979, as
then-U.S. ambassador to Indonesia, Masters informed a U.S. House
Committee that the mass starvation in East Timor was a legacy of
Portuguese rule, not Indonesian occupation, a line he repeated when
interviewed.
"The people of East Timor were left in desperate poverty when the
Portuguese left," he explained. "So Indonesia moved in....
Economically, I think they've done very well."
Asked about the 200,000 people who have been killed in the
process, Masters replied sharply, "Nobody who knows anything about
East Timor would accept that figure." According to Masters, the
actual number is "perhaps 30,000, mostly from malnutrition and
starvation."
In fact, the most careful demographic analysis, performed by
James Dunn, former Australian consul general to Dili, concludes that
the figure 200,000--one-third of the population--is in the right
vicinity, though one Indonesian official told him it was too low.
Masters's relations to the Suharto regime--like those of many of
the U.S.-Indonesia Society's members--go way back. In 1965, when
Suharto came to power by massacring as many as 500,000 Indonesians
("one of the worst mass murders of the twentieth century," according
to the CIA) Masters was serving as head of the political section at
the U.S. embassy in Jakarta. He admitted in 1990 that the Embassy
supplied the names of thousands of communist leaders to the
Indonesian Army, which then hunted down and killed them. "Oh
sure.... We knew where the names were going," he told journalist
Kathy Kadane in an article that appeared in The Washington Post.
Today, Masters recants the testimony he gave to Kadane. "She put two
and two together to get sixteen," he says.
Other members of the U.S.-Indonesia Society have also lent
Suharto a hand. One of the group's chief financial sustainers and
trustees is Roy Huffington, a Texas oilman who made his fortune in
natural gas by teaming up with Pertamina, the Indonesian state oil
company, which is partially controlled by the Indonesian military.
Back in the early 1980s, Huffington's Texas oil company, Huffco,
made eight separate shipments of torture equipment--shock batons,
handcuffs, billy clubs, fingerprint kits--to the Suharto regime. The
shipments were illegal, and the Commerce Department gave Huffco a
$250,000 slap on the wrist.
On the board of trustees of the U.S.-Indonesia Society are
numerous Suharto cronies, including Sumitro Djojohadikusumo. For
years a minister in Suharto's cabinet, Sumitro is known as the
"grand old man" of the Indonesian economic community--a senior
architect of economic policy under Suharto who has, over the years,
used his family to erect an influential power bloc within the ruling
oligarchy. ("I have never met a person with so much natural
intelligence," he has said of Suharto.) Recently, with pro-democracy
riots spreading throughout Indonesia, Sumitro issued dire warnings
of a "crisis of authority," which he believes "can be resolved with
a strong show of political will."
Sumitro's own son, major general Prabowo Subianto, is well
positioned to carry out such a task. Trained in the United
States--he was first in his U.S. Special Forces officer class,
according to a profile in Jane's Intelligence Review--Prabowo is
married to one of Suharto's daughters and heads the Indonesian
army's notoriously brutal special forces, Kopassus. His specialty
has been putting down rebellions and directing combat units in
Indonesia's so-called hot spots, meaning Aceh, East Timor, and Irian
Jaya.
Another son of Sumitro, Hasim, is also a trustee of the
U.S.-Indonesia Society. Hasim heads a $3 billion business
conglomerate with interests in Indonesian energy, cement,
petrochemicals, and banking. And Sumitro's daughter Bianti
Djiwandono is a Society trustee; she is married to the governor of
the bank of Indonesia.
The U.S.-Indonesia Society held its inaugural ball in Jakarta on
November 1, 1995. The lavish affair was attended by 200 people,
including former ambassador Wolfowitz, Sumitro, and representatives
of numerous U.S. and Indonesian firms. "There was delicious food and
boilerplate speeches about the importance of what was being started
... with assurances that this was not a P.R. operation," says one
partygoer who wishes to remain anonymous.
The launching of the new group did not go unnoticed. The Jakarta
Post, which frequently echoes the Indonesian government's line,
printed a glowing editorial about the U.S.-Indonesia Society, noting
the group's importance "in view of the absence of a strong Indonesia
lobby in the United States."
The Clinton Administration has also welcomed the group. "The
United States-Indonesia Society can play an important role in
promoting the broad, informal mutual understanding that must
underpin long-term cooperation," Ambassador Roy said about a year
later at an exclusive Jakarta dinner in his honor. This one was
sponsored by the Lippo Group, Freeport-McMoRan, Mobil, and GE.
Lauding his hosts as "exceptionally knowledgeable and sympathetic,"
Roy explained that U.S. policy should "not become dominated by too
narrow viewpoints." Roy went on to congratulate the group for having
recently "sponsored its first Fulbright-USINDO scholar," saying he
hoped "American and Indonesian companies will do the same."
Ron Brown, former head of the Commerce Department, attended the
opening of the U.S.-Indonesia Society in 1994 in Washington. He was
joined by other American officials, including Winston Lord, who
until recently was the State Department's leading voice on Asia.
The U.S.-Indonesia Society claims to distribute information that
is "authoritative and nonpartisan." That's "outrageous," says Jeff
Winters, an Indonesia specialist at Northwestern University. "They
sent me the latest Indonesia Source Book produced by the NDIO
[Indonesia's National Development Information Office]. NDIO was
established back in the 1970s with [P.R. company] Hill & Knowlton,
and they wrote all the speeches in English for Indonesian ministers
to speak in front of people."
The 1996 NDIO Source Book contains a glowing overview of
Indonesia's economic performance, cleansed of references to endemic
corruption, inequality, and massive labor repression. A note on the
cover included a U.S.-Indonesia Society order form and a message
from Edward Masters, who said he was "pleased to forward" this
"useful" guide.
The guide is, in fact, "useful" for one very particular reason:
It bolsters the myth that Suharto has orchestrated an economic
miracle in Indonesia, modernizing the country while lifting the
masses out of poverty. This theme runs through the U.S.-Indonesia
Society's newsletters, the talks it sponsors, and the publications
it distributes.
One such booklet is called Economic Policy Under President
Suharto: Indonesia's Twenty-Five Year Record. It paints a bright
picture of the Indonesian economy, claiming that problems of
corruption and military rule are "exaggerated," and not mentioning
human-rights or labor abuses. In the preface, Masters comments on
the regime's economic record: "This has been a very human
endeavor--one that is almost as rare as a miracle."
To celebrate Indonesia's fiftieth year of independence, the group
helped sponsor a dinner in October 1995 in Washington. The dinner
was held at the CARE foundation, in honor of Suharto and in
celebration of a half century of progress. At that dinner, Freeport
CEO James ("Jim Bob") Moffett introduced Suharto. Masters published
an op-ed timed for the occasion in the Journal of Commerce. Under
Suharto's stewardship, wrote Masters, "the percentage of the
[Indonesian] population living below the poverty line has been
slashed from 60 percent thirty years ago to 14 percent today."
This assertion, repeated endlessly by the Suharto apologists and
the World Bank, is highly misleading. As the Far Eastern Economic
Review recently pointed out, "Jakarta's definition of poverty is
questioned by economists. For city dwellers, the poverty line is
fixed at a mere 930 rupiah [roughly forty cents] per capita per day;
in the countryside, it's 608 rupiah [twenty-five cents]."
Faisal Basri, an Indonesian economist, calculates that 82 percent
of Indonesians subsist on $30 per month or less. Professor Winters
also questions the official figures, in part because, back in 1990,
he was on hand when the Suharto regime handed them to the World
Bank. "The World Bank lowered its own estimate of the number of
Indonesian poor to 30 million (a number Suharto claimed in a speech)
so that Suharto would not be offended. The World Bank's original
figure was more than two times higher."
In 1994, Indonesia's industrial wages were the lowest in all of
Asia, according to a report produced by the investment bank Morgan
Stanley (though Vietnam may now lay claim to this distinction).
Indonesia keeps wages low by cracking down on labor. It is these low
wages, plus the country's abundant natural resources, that attract
the corporate leaders of the U.S.-Indonesia Society.
In late 1995, David Johnson of the Center for Defense
Information, a Washington-based research group, attended a forum on
Indonesia at the Carnegie International Center in Washington that
was co-sponsored by the U.S.-Indonesia Society. In attendance was
Ambassador Roy and former ambassador to Indonesia (under Reagan)
John Holdridge. Speakers included Karl Jackson, a former Defense
Department official now at Johns Hopkins, and Masters.
"The main theme of all speakers," Johnson recorded in a memo on
the event, "was that the U.S. government, the U.S. Congress, and the
U.S. media were all anti-Indonesia and that the tremendous
accomplishments of President Suharto had not been understood or
appreciated." No one said a critical word about Suharto, Johnson
noted. Former ambassador Holdridge did identify "one ray of hope:
that American businesses involved in Indonesia might be able to help
overcome the existing anti-Indonesia climate in the U.S."
They are doing their best. In March, a 100-strong delegation of
U.S. business leaders, headed by former U.S. Secretary of State
Alexander Haig, visited Jakarta to proclaim that the country's
recent political riots are "not a problem." "I'm very optimistic,"
Haig said of Indonesia.
One week later, on March 23, the Indonesian military cracked down
on peaceful protesters at the Mahkota Hotel in Dili, East Timor.
According to Amnesty International, which issued an emergency alert,
eleven youths were taken to a military hospital, and the security
forces detained at least forty-eight others. Protesters allege that
the military blocked their exits, beat them, and fired rubber
bullets at them.
THE RIGHT DISCOVERS EAST TIMOR
By Eyal Press
Never underestimate the power of partisanship to alter the
consciousness of America's pundits and policymakers. In the final
months of 1996, soon after the Clinton-Riady-Lippo scandal broke,
rightwingers throughout the media and political establishment
suddenly became champions of human rights for the people of East
Timor, whose plight had until then gone unnoticed in both official
Washington and among the punditocracy. For some, this meant breaking
twenty years of silence on the subject; for others, it required a
dose of amnesia to block out their own complicity.
Former Nixon speechwriter and New York Times columnist William
Safire may have experienced the greatest epiphany. On October 7,
1996, in his first-ever Times column on the subject, Safire
described East Timor as "a human-rights hellhole," this in the
context of discussing Webster Hubbell's visit to the island and the
Clinton Administration's financial ties to James and Mochtar Riady
of the Lippo Group.
"The Riadys gained much face in Indonesia in 1993, helping the
Clinton Administration lose interest in labor abuses in East Timor,"
Safire fumed. Having, like so many others, ignored the issue for
more than two decades, the normally well-versed Safire got the facts
wrong. The "labor abuses" condoned by the Clinton Administration had
been taking place in Indonesia, not East Timor (the latter is a
prison-island that barely has a labor market). Safire also referred
to "Indonesia's East Timor"--an unfortunate use of the possessive by
the master linguist and wordsmith, who may not be aware that
Indonesia's annexation of the island is illegal and still not
recognized by the United Nations.
In the weeks that followed, Safire turned again and again to the
human-rights situation in Indonesia, penning columns on October 14,
October 17, and November 28, and pointing once more to "labor abuses
in East Timor."
For all his indignation, the pundit has yet to connect East
Timor's deplorable condition to his friend and one-time colleague
Henry Kissinger, who back in 1975 gave Indonesia U.S. permission to
invade East Timor, and continues to nurture a relationship with the
Suharto dictatorship, earning hundreds of thousands as a consultant
to U.S. corporations with interests in the country. He also
regularly visits Indonesia.
Another sudden convert to East Timor's cause was that consummate
friend of democracy, Oliver North. On his own radio program and on a
CNN panel hosted by Larry King, North scolded the Clinton
Administration for arranging arms shipments to an abusive Third
World junta behind the American public's back.
North told CNN it was wrong for Clinton to be "taking money from
Indonesians, selling F-16 jets to a country that has human-rights
abuses writ large all over their record." North neglected to mention
that his hero and former employer, Ronald Reagan, supplied Suharto
in the same manner when he was in office (not to mention a certain
Ayatollah).
Even Crossfire co-host Robert Novak managed to work up some
indignation over abuses by the Suharto regime in East Timor. Unlike
North or Safire, though, Novak could not hide his distaste for the
task: "Bill," he chortled to his liberal CNN counterpart, Bill
Press, "as a good liberal I am sure you're very upset about this
brutal Indonesian regime's slaughter of hundreds of thousands of
people in East Timor."
No newspaper editorial board has taken up East Timor's cause more
avidly since the Clinton scandal broke than the Moonie-run
Washington Times. The paper has published nearly a dozen op-eds and
unsigned editorials in recent months excoriating Clinton for taking
Lippo's money and turning his back on human-rights abuses in East
Timor. Things were not always this way.
In November of 1994, in an editorial on Clinton's foreign policy,
the paper scoffed at the notion that, after Rwanda and Haiti, the
President would "next week" be preoccupied with "East Timor, which
may be a nasty place to live these days, but is not exactly a vital
U.S. interest." (To its credit, however, the paper's news section
did run an informative, detailed story on East Timor in the summer
of 1996, months before the Clinton fundraising scandal erupted.)
On NBC's Meet the Press, meanwhile, East Timor's cause was
embraced by Republican National Committee Chairman Haley Barbour.
"Now that all these millions have gone through [from Lippo to
Clinton]," Barbour railed, "Mickey Kantor stops the investigation on
human-rights abuses in East Timor, which has been taken over,
invaded, and captured by Indonesia, and a third of the population,
95 percent Roman Catholic ... has been exterminated." Not bad for a
quick review of the demographics, only Barbour had evidently been
reading Safire: Mickey Kantor halted an investigation of
human-rights abuses in Indonesia, not East Timor. Barbour said,
"There was a quid pro quo, and the quo is billions, F-16 fighters
for Indonesia ... billion dollars of contracts for the cronies of
all of these people ... genocide in East Timor." Barbour didn't add
that it was a Republican President, Gerald Ford, along with Henry
Kissinger, who gave the go-ahead to the invasion.
During the 1996 campaign, Bob Dole began discovering East Timor,
too. Dole campaign manager Scott Reed even issued press releases
instructing the media to scrutinize Clinton's "ties to the military
junta that has slaughtered hundreds of thousands in East Timor." It
was an act of true desperation, in that it begged the question of
what Dole himself had ever done for the East Timorese.
In fact, quite a bit. In 1994, the Senator helped kill
legislation barring the use of any U.S.-supplied weapons in East
Timor. Senator Russell Feingold, Democrat of Wisconsin, had helped
craft the provision Dole killed. "Senator Dole not only did nothing
to help us, he actively weighed in against the people of East Timor
when the votes were being counted," Feingold said. Undaunted, a Dole
campaign official in Orange County picked up the phone and rang the
East Timor Action Network to see if its members might want tickets
to an upcoming Clinton event. The Dole campaign said it had good
seats right in front of the cameras, ideal for signs and banners.
The group turned down the offer.
Newt Gingrich, for his part, held a press conference and declared
that "everything the Administration has said about ... Indonesia is
now suspect." Gingrich duly called for a suspension of the planned
sale of F-16 fighter planes to Indonesia, and, to his credit,
invited Nobel Peace Prize recipients Jose Ramos-Horta and Bishop
Belo to testify before Congress. But this marked a sudden change of
heart for Gingrich, too. He was at the height of his power as House
Speaker when Republicans pushed through a restoration of U.S.
military-training assistance to the Indonesian regime.
On the left, Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman have been writing
about East Timor for two decades. But in the mainstream media, with
the exception of Anthony Lewis, there has been next to nothing.
Even today, more than six months into the Indonesian financing
scandal, the media have neglected the story. Here are some of the
issues they've missed: the Ford-Kissinger role in the atrocities in
East Timor; the U.S. corporate connection to Suharto; the impact of
U.S. arms sales to the regime; the role of U.S. companies extracting
oil in the Timor Gap belonging to East Timor; the massive political
crackdown being carried out by the Indonesian government; the
jailing of independent labor leaders such as Muchtar Pakpahan; and
the stepped-up repression in East Timor since the awarding of the
Nobel Peace Prize to Bishop Belo and Jose Ramos-Horta.
Plenty of material for William Safire's next column.
LIPPO GOES TO HIGH SCHOOL
By Eyal Press
Check your kids' curriculum. For the past two years, students in
classrooms across America, grades seven through twelve, have been
learning about the wonders of Indonesia, courtesy of the Lippo Bank,
the U.S.-Indonesia Society, the Indonesian government, Mobil,
Texaco, and a host of prominent U.S. and foreign corporations with
intimate ties to the Suharto regime.
Introducing Indonesia is a bright, glossy teachers' guide
produced by these interests and distributed by Scholastic
Incorporated, one of the world's largest education publishers.
It has been sent to more than 77,000 social-studies teachers and
their more than ten million students.
The guide is replete with multicolored charts, maps, and
suggested lesson plans. It also comes with a full-size, fold-out
poster depicting Indonesia as a land of exotic animals, lush
rainforests, and modern satellites and industry. Both the poster and
the teachers' booklet are adorned with the corporate logos of Mobil,
Texaco, Chevron, and the Lippo Bank.
The Indonesian government describes the booklet as an important
"step toward international understanding."
Wayne Forrest, president of the American-Indonesian Chamber of
Commerce, says the guide will "increase understanding of a country
that has long been a solid friend of the United States and a nation
that offers a great number of opportunities for American business."
The guide offers teachers handy advice. "Point out to students
that some people fear the establishment of open trade between the
U.S. and Asia, where labor is so much cheaper than it is here. But a
recent Business Week editorial has said: 'Already some three million
Americans are employed as a result of U.S. exports to countries of
Asia and the Pacific Rim.' "
Teachers are next instructed to have students "look at household
and personal items (and inside their sneakers) for a MADE IN
INDONESIA label." Sneakers are produced in Indonesia, the booklet
explains, not because workers there are paid next to nothing, but on
account of another often overlooked comparative advantage--namely,
that a "crucial raw material used in manufacturing sneakers [i.e.,
rubber] is found in Indonesia."
Students also receive geography lessons. On page seven, a map of
Indonesia is situated directly above a map of the United States,
with all of Indonesia's provinces shaded one color. East Timor is
shown in the same color. The map gives no indication that the
territory is a separate country that has been illegally occupied for
more than two decades.
Another lesson focuses on Indonesia's "natural wonders,"
including "the world's second largest concentration of rainforests
... [that] host over 500 mammal species." The guidebook fails to
mention that one of its corporate sponsors, Freeport-McMoRan, a U.S.
mining company, recently had its U.S. government insurance revoked
because it "has degraded a large area of lowland rainforest" in the
Indonesian province of Irian Jaya, posing "unreasonable or major
environmental, health, or safety hazards with respect to ... the
surrounding terrestrial ecosystem, and the local inhabitants."
On the inside cover of the teachers' guide is an exuberant
thank-you note from Indonesia's minister for industry and trade,
Hartarto. He salutes "American and Indonesian private businesses"
for their much appreciated "gift to American students and their
teachers."
In small letters on page five, the guide expresses further
gratitude for advice, counsel, and sponsorship to Mobil, Hughes,
Freeport, Lippo, and various Indonesian ministers, including Arifin
Siregar, the current Indonesian ambassador to the United States. l
In a recent newsletter, the U.S.-Indonesia Society proudly
highlights a touching letter it received from Alex Bowe, a
third-grader in Maryland, who requested a copy of its materials.
He'll be getting a map in the mail, depicting Indonesia and East
Timor as one happily united territory, governed by a "just and
civilized humanity" that, as the teachers" guide promises,
guarantees "social justice for all."
Ernest Fleishman, a senior vice president for education at
Scholastic, says the company has recently decided to stop
distributing the material. "Our editorial standard requires us to
produce and present information which is factual, accurate, and
appropriate.... When you're trying to do sponsored materials, the
country's interest and our own conflict."
Maybe Scholastic should point that out to 77,000 classrooms full
of American kids.
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