Allan Nairn (born 1956) is a U.S. investigative journalist. His writings have focused on the U.S. foreign policy in such countries as Haiti, Guatemala, Indonesia, and East Timor.
Nairn was born in Mobile, Alabama to a Puerto Rican mother. In high school, he got a job with Ralph Nader and worked for him for six years.
In 1980, Nairn visited Guatemala, in the middle of a campaign of assassination against student leaders. He interviewed US corporate executives there, who endorsed the death squads, and he decided to further investigave the death squads then active that country and El Salvador.
Subsequently, Nairn became interested in East Timor and helped found the East Timor Action Network (ETAN), which
was instrumental in bringing the independence movement in East Timor to international attention.
In 1991, covering developments in East Timor, Nairn and fellow journalist Amy Goodman were badly beaten were badly beaten by Indonesian soldiers after they witnessed a mass killing of Timorese demonstrators in what became known as the Dili Massacre. He was beaten with the butts of M-16 rifles and had his skull fractured in the melee. Nair was declared a "threat to national security" and banned from East Timor, but he re-entered several times illegally, and his subsequent reports helped convince the US Congress to cut off military aid to Jakarta in 1993. In a dispatch from in East Timor on March 30, 1998, Nairn disclosed the continuing US military training of Indonesian troops implicated in the torture and killing of civilians. In 1999, Nair was detained briefly by the Indonesian army.
In an article published in The Nation in 1994, Nairn broke the story of the US government's role in establishing and funding the Haitian paramilitary death squad, FRAPH (the Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti).
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- The United States has no monopoly on the abuse of power. But since I am an American this is where I have some influence and responsibility.[1]
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