The Australian (Australia),
June 14, 2007
Mark Dodd.
EAST Timor's Prime Minister has thumbed his nose at
Australia by announcing plans to give military chiefs
free rein to spend millions of dollars raised from oil
and gas fields to upgrade the country's defence force.
Just a week after Foreign Minister
Alexander Downer called on the impoverished nation to
spend money on infrastructure, not weapons, Prime Minister
Estanislau da Silva has endorsed pre-election military
spending and argued the armed forces should have more
autonomy on procurement.
While Mr Downer said last night he
was confident the plan would not proceed, Mr da Silva
has told East Timorese reporters that the Timor Defence
Force should manage its own finance and recruitment
and should pursue development of its assets.
This would weaken the current system,
under which parliament oversees defence procurement.
The news triggered a warning from defence expert Bob
Lowry that the tiny nation could descend into chaos
if it spent its scarce resources on weapons and allowed
the watering down of good governance standards.
The Australian revealed last week that
East Timor had produced the equivalent of a defence
white paper outlining a plan for big military spending.
Mr da Silva said: ''The head of the
Government agrees with F-FDTL (the defence force) on
the question of financial procurement, which should
be the responsibility of the defence ministry in order
to allow it to improve its work. To continue this program
(Force 2020), attention needs to be given to purchasing
new equipment, including a naval component allowing
the F-FDTL to operate in East Timorese waters.''
The
2020 report, prepared without the advice of Australian
defence officials or others helping keep security in
East Timor, recommended the purchase of several missile-equipped
corvette-class warships to enforce the country's vulnerable
maritime zone.
Last night, Mr Downer played down the
Prime Minister's remarks, linking them to electioneering
ahead of a national poll on June 30.
''I am confident Force 2020 will not
happen as East Timor does not have the resources to
deliver such a large military,'' he said. ''Australian
and international defence advisers are working with
their East Timorese counterparts on the 2007-2010 force
development plan to develop realistic capabilities.''
Mr Lowry, an expert consultant in Southeast
Asian politics and defence, warned the events pointed
to a real danger that East Timor's fragile democracy
could be derailed.
''Some people in the Australian defence
community over there (East Timor) are saying don't get
too worried, it's just an aspirational doctrine. But
the trouble with these sort of things (defence plans)
is, they do infiltrate themselves into the political
system.
''Anyone with half a brain would know
there is only one role for the (East Timor) military
-- if they decide to have one -- and that is to back
up the police."
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