Against the grain: the East Timor intervention

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2003Subject(s): In: Survival Vol 43. No 1, Spring 2001, pp. 127-142 (106)Abstract: Modern Asia has been shaped by intervention, but the principle of non-interference is an integral part of the 'Asian Way'. Countries of the region have doggedly opposed any suggestion that state sovereignty should be softened by a new doctrine of 'humanitarian intervention' The participation of some of these countries in the 1999 intervention in East Timor - an action sanctioned by the United Nations for specifically humanitarian purposes - was thus out of character. This departure was a consequence of specific historical and political factors, most importantly, the fact that the UN had never accepted Indonesia's incorporation of the territory as legitimate. Once the United States adopted a more critical attitude, after Australia pressured Indonesia to test local opinion on East Timor's future, the internationalisation of the issue became inevitable. There are certainly lessons in the East Timor case for coalition operations and other interventions in the region. But the actions of the Australia-led coalition do not indicate a wider regional acceptance of the norm of humanitarian intervention.
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Journal Article Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals EAST TIMOR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 13715-1001

Entered on 04/APR/2003

Modern Asia has been shaped by intervention, but the principle of non-interference is an integral part of the 'Asian Way'. Countries of the region have doggedly opposed any suggestion that state sovereignty should be softened by a new doctrine of 'humanitarian intervention' The participation of some of these countries in the 1999 intervention in East Timor - an action sanctioned by the United Nations for specifically humanitarian purposes - was thus out of character. This departure was a consequence of specific historical and political factors, most importantly, the fact that the UN had never accepted Indonesia's incorporation of the territory as legitimate. Once the United States adopted a more critical attitude, after Australia pressured Indonesia to test local opinion on East Timor's future, the internationalisation of the issue became inevitable. There are certainly lessons in the East Timor case for coalition operations and other interventions in the region. But the actions of the Australia-led coalition do not indicate a wider regional acceptance of the norm of humanitarian intervention.

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