Appeasing Jakarta: Australia's Complicity in the East: Quarterly Essay 2
By (Author) John Birmingham
Black Inc.
Quarterly Essay
1st June 2001
2nd edition
Australia
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
327.940598
Paperback
130
Width 168mm, Height 235mm, Spine 9mm
212g
In the second Quarterly Essay, John Birmingham takes apart the folly of twenty-five years of Australian policy on East Timor. How did Gough Whitlam and Richard Woolcott in 1975 saddle this country with a policy that was bound to lead to the intervention of 1999 Why were shrewder voices ignored and why did we persist with an unworkable model Where does this leave us with an Indonesia still dominated by the old power elites And what was the tragedy like for the people of East Timor John Birmingham has written a passionate narrative history of the East Timor question which never turns away from the slaughter and sorrow of the people who suffered it. 'Appeasing Jakarta is an analysis of what happened in 1975 when we condoned Indonesia's intervention and what happened in 1999 when we stood against it ...John Birmingham is deadly in his disdain for the way a defunct paradigm...was clung to like a dogma...but this is also an essay about the human cost...written in flowing colours with a strong narrative streak and a swashbuckling power of dispatch...' -Peter Craven, Introduction 'It was a policy of wilful blindness, made possible only because we were always somewhere else when the trigger was pulled.' -John Birmingham, Appeasing Jakarta
John Birmingham is the author of He Died with a Felafel in His Hand, Leviathan- The Unauthorised Biography of Sydney, three popular fiction series and two Quarterly Essays.