'I Never Betrayed My
Country'
"Prabowo Subianto
is blamed for the violence surrounding the fall
of Indonesia's Suharto. Now the former general
tells his story"
By JOSE MANUEL TESORO.
Articles and Photos courtesy of Asiaweek
Magazine
At
night on May 21, 1998, the story goes, dozens
of soldiers took up positions around Jakarta's
Merdeka palace and the suburban home of B.J.
Habibie, who less than 24 hours before had become
the third president of Indonesia. The commander
of this force was the brutal Lt.-Gen. Prabowo
Subianto. A week before, he had marshaled the
dark forces at his call - special forces operatives,
inner-city gangsters, Muslim radicals - to murder,
burn, rape, loot and sow ethnic hatred in the
heart of Jakarta. His aim: to undermine his
rival, armed forces chief Gen. Wiranto, and
force his father-in-law, Suharto, to make him
leader of the armed forces - a step closer,
in a time of turmoil, to Prabowo himself becoming
president.
Suharto's premature resignation as president
frustrated Prabowo's ambitions. So he turned
his wrath on Habibie. Disaster for Indonesia
- and a nightmare for Southeast Asia - might
have followed, if not for an order from Wiranto
relieving the dangerously out-of-control general
of his command position. Enraged, Prabowo brought
his troops to the palace grounds and tried to
burst, armed, into Habibie's chambers. But he
was eventually outmaneuvered. His attempted
coup d'etat was the climax to the 10-day drama
surrounding the fall of Suharto, Indonesia's
leader for three decades.
The problem is that not all of it is true.
Maybe even none of it is.
The first to say that is Prabowo. "I never
threatened Habibie," he says. Did Prabowo
plan the May unrest against Indonesia's ethnic
Chinese to bring down Wiranto or Suharto? "I
was not behind the riots. That is a great lie,"
he responds firmly. "I never betrayed Pak
Harto. I never betrayed Habibie. I never betrayed
my country."
Prabowo, 48, is no saint. For 24 years, he
belonged to the Indonesian military, which loyally
followed the president's orders. He built up
its elite special forces, Kopassus, to combat
insurgency and internal terrorism. Prabowo was
also married to Suharto's second daughter and
enjoyed the wealth, power and freedom from accountability
the First Family afforded. He admits to abducting
in early 1998 nine activists, some of whom underwent
torture. About a dozen others believed kidnapped
in the same operation remain missing.
But is Prabowo a demon? In August 1998, a military
honor court found him guilty of misinterpreting
orders and recommended sanctions or a court-martial.
Prabowo was later discharged. In its October
1998 report, the government Joint Fact-Finding
Team (TGPF by its Indonesian initials) on the
May riots asked that he be investigated for
the unrest. Indonesian and foreign media have
since linked his name with words such as "scheming,"
"ruthless and reckless," "power-hungry
fanatic." Wrote one Asian paper: "He
is said to hate the Chinese." The belief
that he started the riots and failed to contain
them has already found its way into history
books. "I'm the monster behind everything,"
Prabowo says with undisguised irony.
Yet nearly two years after Suharto's resignation,
no evidence has surfaced connecting him to the
riots that triggered it. The complete picture
of those days remains obscured by conflicting
accounts and unnamed sources. In September 1998,
Marzuki Darusman, then TGPF chair and today
attorney-general, mused to reporters: "I
think there's more to it than just Prabowo.
I say he's a keeper of secrets. And he might
be predisposed to reveal a few if forced to."
Prabowo had been tried by public opinion and
found guilty. But he had never had the chance
to give his testimony. He now spends all his
time abroad, though local papers say he did
make a brief, discreet trip home in January,
the first time in 15 months. (His wife remains
in Indonesia, while their son is studying in
the U.S.)
Now, many thinking Indonesians are acknowledging
that Prabowo was perhaps the easy but not necessarily
right target. Says veteran journalist Aristedes
Katoppo: "He was made the fall guy for
a lot of mistakes not of his making. He may
have demanded things. But launching a coup?
That is wrong. It's disinformation." Prabowo
himself believes that his persecution has a
reason: "There was a certain group that
wanted to make me a scapegoat, maybe to hide
their involvement."
What emerges from Prabowo's own account, coupled
with this magazine's independent inquiry, is
a far different, more nuanced tale than the
accepted assessment that Suharto's fall stemmed
from a battle between good and evil - and that
Prabowo was the villain. This story is a report
from and about the highest reaches of Indonesian
politics, a revelation of its treacherously
shifting nature and the complexities of its
actors. It challenges what many accept about
the country: its military, its former ruling
family, its history. Whatever verdict you draw,
it is impossible to look at the fall of Suharto
in the past - or the personalities and conflicts
of the present - in the same way again.
THE RUN-UP
Many tales circulate in Jakarta about Prabowo.
In the popular narrative of Suharto's fall,
the former special forces officer is often cast
as its author: an evil genius who, if he cared
to explain, could show how the entire arc of
events he designed made up one clever yet suicidally
flawed conspiracy. But at the end of Suharto's
rule, he was not the only figure. There were
many actors, thus many motives and maneuvers.
Amid social unrest and economic collapse, it
had become clear long before May 1998 to Jakarta's
elite that the question was not if the president
would step down, but when. Most important to
them was to survive or even benefit. That meant
playing a difficult game: stay - or at least
seem to stay - unwaveringly loyal to Suharto
yet at the same time move into the best position
for a future without him.
The students and the popular oppositionists,
despite their high profile, were the least powerful
of the players. The real decisions were made
around the aging president. There were Suharto's
six children. There was his vice president,
Habibie. There were Suharto's ministers and
the chiefs of his parliament. And there were
his armed forces, and its two top generals,
Wiranto and Prabowo.
In the run-up to May, Prabowo was snug in the
center. In March 1998, he had been promoted
from chief of the special forces, Kopassus,
to head the army's key strategic reserve, Kostrad.
The new job made him a three-star general. His
Kopassus classmate Maj.-Gen. Syafrie Syamsuddin
had taken command of the Jakarta garrison in
September 1997. Prabowo's former Kopassus superior,
Gen. Subagyo Hadisiswoyo, was army chief of
staff. Other allies included new Kopassus boss
Maj.-Gen. Muchdi Purwopranjono.
The one general Prabowo did not get along with
was his superior, Wiranto. "There was not
good chemistry between us," says Prabowo.
"We never served in the same units. We
came from different backgrounds." Wiranto
grew up in traditional Central Java. Prabowo
grew up abroad in European and Asian capitals.
Where Prabowo's postings were field and combat
assignments, Wiranto spent time in staff jobs
and provincial commands. After four years as
Suharto's adjutant, Wiranto rose quickly from
Jakarta garrison commander to Kostrad chief.
In 1997, he became army chief of staff. In March
1998, Suharto made him both the armed forces
chief and the defense minister. (Asiaweek sent
Wiranto Prabowo's claims and comments as well
as questions appearing in this story. Wiranto's
aide replied that the general had chosen to
respond to Asiaweek in a later issue.)
Wiranto and Prabowo were equally balanced.
But in March, when the People's Consultative
Assembly (MPR) re-elected Suharto and appointed
Habibie vice president, Prabowo seemed to move
a notch higher. He was a longtime friend of
Habibie. They shared Western temperaments and
an optimistic idealism. "I liked his vision
of high technology," Prabowo says. "That
captured my heart. There was always this: We'll
show [that] Indonesia can be great." They
met often. To fellow generals, Prabowo was Habibie's
most ardent defender.
Given the shaky state of Suharto's health -
he had had a mild stroke in December 1997 -
Habibie's chances of succeeding him were better
than those of any previous vice president. For
Prabowo, Habibie's ascension meant a shot at
becoming the military's boss: "Several
times he mentioned: If I become president, you'll
be armed forces chief, you'll be four-star."
That is, if there were an orderly succession.
The collapse of the rupiah, which began in October
1997, had sent waves of social unrest throughout
the archipelago. The following January, a bomb
exploded in a Jakarta apartment occupied by
members of the banned leftist People's Democratic
Party (PRD). The military struggled to face
strident student demonstrations. Some activists
mysteriously went missing. On April 27, Pius
Lustrilanang testified to his kidnapping and
two-month imprisonment - the first of many accounts
by abducted activists. During his interrogation,
Lustrilanang said, he had received electric
shocks and been held under water. Despite Wiranto's
denials that kidnapping was policy, popular
suspicion fell on the military, and especially
on Kopassus, still identified with Prabowo though
he was no longer with the unit.
While he had a reputation for absolute loyalty
to Suharto, Prabowo also maintained friendships
with critics of the president's "New Order"
regime. These ranged from Suharto's disenchanted
contemporary Gen. Nasution to Adnan Buyung Nasution,
a lawyer who helped found the Indonesian Legal
Aid Foundation, which defended and fostered
anti-Suharto activists. Prabowo built relations
with Muslim figures, who perceived themselves
as both victimized by a Christian-influenced
military and government as well as isolated
in an ethnic Chinese-dominated economy. Among
these: Amien Rais, a Jogjakarta professor whose
attacks on Christian power and Chinese capital
were turning into open criticism of Suharto.
Prabowo's unconventional contacts, and closeness
to Habibie, set him apart from others around
the president.
THE RIOTS
The drama began on Tuesday, May 12, when Prabowo
received a phone call. Some students had been
shot during a demonstration at Trisakti University.
Prabowo's first instinct was to blame ill-disciplined
security forces: "Sometimes our police
and soldiers are so unprofessional. You get
some of these units - oh my God, this is stupid.
That was my first reaction."
Sensing an impending emergency, he went to
his headquarters on Merdeka Square, just beside
the Jakarta garrison. As chief of the strategic
reserve, Prabowo's job was to supply men and
materiel. "I alerted my troops, to rush
them in," he says. "These troops are
always under operational control of the garrison
commander. That's our system. I was basically
in an advising capacity. I did not have command."
He returned home well after midnight, but was
back at Kostrad HQ early the next morning, May
13. As marauding mobs began looting and burning
buildings, Prabowo spent the day figuring out
how to move in and barrack his battalions. Another
worry: Wiranto had been scheduled to preside
over an army ceremony the next morning, in Malang,
East Java - over 650 km from the troubled capital.
Throughout the 13th, Prabowo says he tried to
persuade Wiranto to cancel his appearance. "I
suggested that we call off the ceremony in Malang,"
he says. "The result: no, the ceremony
was on. [I] phoned back. It went back and forth
. . . Eight times I phoned his office. Eight
times I was told that the show must go on."
So at 6:00 a.m. on Thursday the 14th, Prabowo
arrived at Halim air base in East Jakarta. He
says he was surprised, given the tense situation,
to see most of the military's senior command
there. During the flight and the ceremony, he
says, Wiranto and he did not say much to each
other. They arrived back in the capital after
noon. Prabowo returned to Kostrad HQ, where
he bumped into Syafrie. The Jakarta garrison
commander was heading off to survey the western
part of the city by helicopter. Prabowo accepted
Syafrie's invitation to join him. As they watched
the second day of rioting from the smoky sky,
Prabowo remembers wondering to himself: "Why
are there so few troops around?"
At around 3:30 p.m., Prabowo left Kostrad to
see Habibie. The president had been away in
Cairo since May 9 to attend a summit. The vice
president and Prabowo talked about the possibility
of a succession. Under the Constitution, Prabowo
pointed out, Habibie was next in line. The subject
of the future chief of the military came up.
"I should have noticed the shift,"
says Prabowo. "He said: 'If your name comes
up, I will approve.' There's a big difference
there."
On the way back to Kostrad HQ, Prabowo noticed
that Jakarta's main business artery seemed unguarded.
He saw the garrison commander: "I said:
Syafrie, on Thamrin there are no troops. He
was convinced there were enough. He asked me
to come along, and we saw!" Prabowo suggested
taking half of the 16 armored personnel carriers
guarding the defense ministry and sending them
instead to Thamrin. This did take place.
As night fell, Prabowo got a call from his
secretary. Buyung Nasution and a motley collection
of figures from various groups wanted to see
him. (This May 14 meeting would become central
to the later investigation into the riots.)
"When I arrived at headquarters, they were
there," Prabowo says. "I did not call
them. They were asking: What's happening?"
Buyung Nasution demanded to know if there was
any truth to the spreading rumors that Prabowo
had planned the riots, the Trisakti shootings,
as well as the abductions. He also asked if
there was rivalry between him and Wiranto. Prabowo
denied everything. "How can there be rivalry?"
he explains now. "He's a four-star. I'm
a three-star. I was trying to step in line.
But after him I would be a good candidate, wouldn't
I?"
After a command briefing chaired by Wiranto
which ended late, Prabowo arrived at his next
appointment at nearly 1:00 a.m. Two close friends
from Abdurrahman Wahid's mass Muslim organization
Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) had suggested Prabowo see
the cleric, who was already asleep when the
general arrived. Wahid, a.k.a. Gus Dur, still
received Prabowo and asked about the chaotic
situation. "I said, we can get it under
control tomorrow," says Prabowo.
After a change of clothes, he headed for Halim
airbase, where Suharto was due to arrive before
dawn on May 15, Friday. Prabowo waited in his
jeep while Wiranto met Suharto. Then the three,
with most of the senior command, drove to Suharto's
home on Cendana Street in central Jakarta. Prabowo
says Suharto appeared cold toward him. By now,
Prabowo believes, Suharto thought his son-in-law
was plotting against him. Says Prabowo: "It
came out in the papers that Gen. Nasution, who
everyone knew was fond of me, said that Amien
Rais should talk to Gen. Prabowo [about] taking
care of the situation. This must have been sent
to Pak Harto."
At the end of his rule, Suharto had become
as dependent on the ministers, generals and
children who surrounded him as they were on
him. He was their leader, but, in a sense, he
was also their prisoner. "There's a thousand-year-old
art of palace intrigue," says Prabowo.
"You whisper something very delicately,
and poison someone's mind. I tried to give information,
but I was considered as meddling. There were
people poisoning his mind: that his son-in-law's
there only to grab power." This, Prabowo
now believes, contributed to his downfall.
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