Sam Profile picture
Dec 4, 2023 25 tweets 9 min read Read on X
UNVEILING THE SILENT HEROES - Indonesian Pak. Soeripto's Return From Mount Igman

What transpired in the aftermath of the heroic Indonesian Intelligence mission to deliver weapons to the Bosnian army during the most difficult period of the war?

MUST READ [thread] PART 2/2 Image
After successfully completing the mission and delivering weapons to the Bosnian Army on Mount Igman, Soeripto's next challenge was to go to Budapest and take the money to pay the dealer for the weapons. He had to take 2,5 million Deutschemarks from the then-Indonesian Ambassador.
Image
Image
It was a very dangerous task because it had to be kept secret, even from the Indonesian Embassy itself, which was accredited to Bosnia. Despite the risk, they managed to complete the transaction in secret, and Ambassador Soelaeman Pringgodigdo dropped him off at the Hilton hotel. Image
Carrying a bag full of money, he took a taxi from Budapest to Zagreb. Right before entering Croatia, the taxi driver, fearing potential snipers there, became very nervous. After some negotiating, as per Soeripto, the driver only agreed to take him to a safe hotel instead. Image
However, within 5 minutes of Soeripto's entering his room, some woman kept persistently knocking on his door. Annoyed, he asked the hotel manager to remove her, but the manager stated that "after nightfall the Russian mafia was in control there" (the location was never revealed).
Despite feeling anxious, Ripto saw it as a test, yet nothing happened. In the morning he took a bus to Zagreb where he delivered the money to the dealer, thus successfully completing his mission - which had been a secret for many years and for which the Indonesians must be proud. Image
Interestingly, as we know is that Soeharto himself also visited Bosnia when the country was still in conflict. Pak. Harto planned his visit to Bosnia even though it was on March 11, 1995, two days before the plane carrying UN Special Envoy Yasushi Akashi was shot at while flying. Image
Before the plane took off, the Indonesian group of officials, including the President Soeharto, was asked to fill out a risk statement form. The form stated that the UN would not be responsible for any incidents that would happen to Suharto and his entourage during the visit. Image
Soeharto's bodyguards at that time were only two people, namely Colonel Inf. Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin and the Commander of the Presidential Personal Guard Detachment, Major CPM Unggul K. Yudoyono. About half an hour before landing, there were instructions saying: Image
"We will enter an area that requires security, passengers are asked to wear helmets and vests", all the plane passengers took vests and helmets except Soeharto himself who refused. Without a bulletproof vest and helmet, The President, along with the delegation, arrived in Bosnia.
In fact, when the group arrived in Sarajevo, at one point Colonel Inf. Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin, who was a commander of the Presidential Security Forces (Paspampres Group A) saw a 12.7 mm weapon which was usually used to bring down airplanes. Image
It was rotating continuously following the direction of the plane of Soeharto. To protect the president, Sjafrie ultimately decided to borrow a journalist's helmet and hide his vest under the overcoat he was wearing. This was done to make him look like Suharto to trick snipers. Image
Colonel Inf. Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin was an experienced military officer who had great relations with Prabowo, who had a great influence in Indonesia, both then & now, and who according to Soeripto helped secure finances for the mission. Sjafrie was the main bodyguard of Soeharto.
Image
Image
After passing through the @SniperAlleyPhot - which during the Siege of Sarajevo was exposed to Serb sniper fire, and as such became infamous as a dangerous place for the movement - Soeharto eventually arrived to the Bosnian Presidential Palace, where President Alija welcomed him. Image
Sjafrie described the situation there as very worrying. They didn't even have a clean water supply in the palace. He also asked Soeharto why he could dare to risk his life by visiting a country that was at war directly on which he answered that if they can't help much with money,
at least they can boost the moral of the people who are fighting for their freedom. "Seeing Pak. Harto so calm, our morals and self-confidence as his bodyguards also became strong, calm and steady. The president is brave, why should we be nervous", regardless of nearby shelling. Image
"The sentences he uttered contained a valuable example for anyone who wants to lead" wrote Sjafrie in his book 'Pak Harto The Untold Stories' published by PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama in 2011. Another story is that upon their arrival President Izetbegović thanked Soeharto by saying:
"That kind of assistance is what we need, Your Majesty", "Weapons, not just clothes, food and medicine." Immediately, State Secretary Moerdiono got shocked and asked President Soeharto, 'Mr. President, when did we send weapons to Bosnia?'
Image
Image
Soeharto replied to Moerdiono in Javanese, saying, "Wis. Wis, meneng bae!" (Quiet, quiet, just calm down!). This mission had been a top-secret operation, and even many of Soeharto's ministers were unaware of it, but Pak Soeripto said that he is sure that Soeharto was aware of it.
Soeharto's visit to Bosnia may not have succeeded in bringing a solution to end the war as planned. However, the visit inspired the President to give a notable gift (beautiful Istiklal Mosque in Sarajevo) to the Muslims of Bosnia right after the war.

However, regarding Soeripto, during the interview (which I attached in my bio, Indonesians should watch it), he was asked about any missions that had a lasting impact on him after Bosnia and his today's intelligence activism.
To this, Soeripto replied, "I can't answer that. It's confidential—top secret. Currently, I'm engaged in organizing aid for Palestine (as per interview from March 2023), this mission continues. It goes beyond mere charity; it's a special task for me even at the age of 87." Image
When the interviewer pressed him about the source of these special tasks, Soeripto replied, "I receive them from the Indonesian and Palestinian fighters". However, he chose not to disclose their specific identities. Image
All in all, at the end of this wonderful story, let's make dua for Ust. Hilmi Aminuddin rahimahullah, the teacher of Soeripto, and ask Allah swt to have mercy upon his soul and reward him, as Hilmi was the improviser of this idea which could not have been possible without him. Image
THE END 🇧🇦🇮🇩: I would especially like to thank and give credits to my brothers and sisters from Indonesia who directly or indirectly helped me in researching this story, may Allah reward them all. Ameen.

@AnIndonesianGuy @nuggetpedaz @discernia @breadunderscore @afathngantuk

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Sam

Sam Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @dynaresam

Dec 3, 2023
UNVEILING THE SILENT HEROES - Indonesia's Invisible Bravery in the Heart of Bosnia's Struggle

How did Indonesians carry out an under-the-radar mission to help Bosnia during the most difficult period of the war amidst an internationally imposed embargo?

MUST READ [thread] PART 1 Image
During the breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s, Bosnia, upon declaring independence, confronted brutal aggression from all directions, making its defense nearly unimaginable. Bosniaks faced an existential threat as a result of widespread ethnic cleansing across the country.
The United Nations Security Council considered the conflict as a civil war and imposed an arms embargo on the entire territory of ex-Yugoslavia. However, the Bosnian side, which possessed the fewest weapons at that moment, suffered the most from the embargo. Image
Read 26 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(