| Subject: Security issues dominate RI,
Australia ties [+Collision course?]
Received from Joyo Indonesian News
also: Is Australia on collision course with Indonesia?
The Jakarta Post March 10, 2003
Security issues dominates RI, Australia ties
Berni K. Moestafa, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Security issues would likely dominate this week's consultation forum
meeting between Indonesia and Australia, the first such gathering for two
years and one which comes amid a rise in the terrorist threat and a
looming war in Iraq, foreign affairs analysts said.
Officially, the agenda is economics-heavy. Thirteen working groups met
Sunday to iron out the details of cooperation in the areas of agriculture,
fisheries, investment, tourism and education.
But how effective these economic cooperation initiatives would be is a
question of security, according to the analysts.
One example is Australia's travel advisory to its citizens against
visiting Indonesia.
"How can anybody expect economic or social cooperation if
Australians cannot even come to Indonesia," asked foreign affairs
analyst Dewi Fortuna Anwar of the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI)
on Sunday.
The consultation forum will bring together 14 ministers from both
countries. Indonesia and Australia have been holding consultation meetings
since 1992.
But the upcoming forum, which will start on Monday and end with a
ministerial meeting on Tuesday, is the first following a two-year break
due in part to the political upheaval surrounding the ouster of then
president Abdurrahman Wahid.
The last meeting was held in Canberra in December 2000. At that time,
Indonesia took particular issue with Australia's role in helping East
Timor secede in 1999, while Australia was concerned about its unstable
giant neighbor, brimming with hundreds of thousands of potential refugees.
These issues have since been overshadowed by the threat of terrorism.
Security cooperation between the two countries has improved since the Oct.
12 Bali bombings last year, which claimed 202 lives, 89 of them
Australians.
But the terrorist strike has dealt a blow in other areas of
cooperation. Canberra imposed the travel warning in response to the
attacks.
Tourism, one of the areas of cooperation to be discussed at the forum,
is the one most hurt by the travel warning. It has kept Australian
tourists away, helping prolong the slump in the tourism sector.
Bali accounts for about one third of total revenue in the tourism
sector, the country's biggest foreign exchange earner outside of oil and
gas.
LIPI analyst Dewi said other areas of cooperation outside security
would find it hard to develop if the travel warning was not lifted.
While Canberra praised Indonesia's progress in capturing the Bali bomb
suspects, this did little to convince the country to revoke the travel
advisory.
Indonesia has griped at this reluctance, suspecting that Australia
feared a backlash against its citizens here due to the latter's support
for a possible U.S.-led war in Iraq.
"It's more complex now, the interface between global problems,
regional problems and domestic problems is far more frequent,"
explained Dewi.
She said Indonesia's policy on Australia was moving on the right path.
Some of the pressing issues in their ties, like the travel warning, were
the consequence of Australia's position on the Iraqi issue, she said.
"I would say it is more up to Australia ... it is a matter of
choice."
Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) foreign affairs
analyst Rizal Sukma agreed, saying Indonesia was less concerned about
Australia than it was the other way around.
Australia, he said, saw itself positioned under an "arch of
instability" in the form of its northern neighbor Indonesia.
In that sense, he said, increasing security cooperation could do a
great deal to improve bilateral ties.
"There is much potential in cooperation on transnational crime
issues," he said.
Successful efforts in the past to reduce people-smuggling and the
progress made in the Bali bombing investigation could pave the way for
more cooperation, he suggested.
--------------------------------------------
The Jakarta Post March 10, 2003
Opinion
Is Australia on collision course with Indonesia?
Paulo Gorjao, Lecturer, Lusiada University, Portugal,
paulogorjao@yahoo.com
In February, with just a few weeks interval, Australia released a new
foreign policy white paper, Advancing the National Interest (ANI), and a
defense white paper update, Australia's National Security: A Defense
Update (ANS).
Both documents are highly welcome since they provide relevant and
useful information about Australia's official thinking in the fields of
foreign affairs and security. Yet, they raise more questions than answers.
ANI is a radically different document from the foreign affairs and trade
white paper of 1997, In the National Interest.
While the former was highly influenced by the prospects of Asia's
economic growth, which the Asian financial crisis rapidly shattered, the
later is deeply influenced by the new security challenges.
In the same way, the 2000 defense white paper, Our Future Defense
Force, was highly influenced by the Australian intervention in East Timor,
while the defense update is deeply influenced by the new security
challenges. Indeed, both ANI and ANS reflect recent developments
concerning the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and the
terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, in New York and Washington DC, and on
Oct. 12, 2002, in Bali.
Both documents identify the proliferation of WMD as a significant
security challenge and a real concern. In part, this is a consequence of
increasing globalization, with its expanded flows which make the
proliferation of WMD easier. Thus, according to ANS, a "layered
defense" must be adopted.
In the first place, this involves diplomatic efforts. However, when
diplomacy fails, Australia may contribute to coalition military
operations. But, as ANI admits, although states involved in the
proliferation of WMD must be challenged (otherwise others will attempt to
emulate them), nevertheless counter-proliferation efforts will "not
necessarily halt (the proliferation)".
This is why Canberra supports a third defense layer: the U.S. strategic
missile defense program.
Yet, how do we determine that diplomacy has failed and coalition
military operations should be pursued? What are the criteria? Moreover, as
North Korea has shown, not all cases have the same number of layers. If
diplomacy fails to disarm North Korea, a coalition military operation is
not an option. Indeed, North Korea receives surprisingly little attention
in both documents.
It is almost impossible not to feel that it is U.S. priorities that
will almost exclusively determine what Australia will do. The problem with
this is the fact that U.S. priorities might not be the same as
Australia's.
The Australian-led intervention in East Timor demonstrated this and
North Korea seems to be doing so once again. Will Canberra act against the
proliferation of WMD only as part of a U.S.-led military operation?
Certainly, some still recall Australia's willingness to act as the
"deputy sheriff" of the U.S., and neither document does anything
to change this perception.
The other challenge identified by the ANI and ANS is the fight against
terrorism. ANS perceives this as a long-term task, and ANI believes that
"countries in the region need to do more". The Bali bombings
confirmed that extremist organizations in Southeast Asia are no longer
focused exclusively on local issues.
Obviously, the existence of links between militant regional extremist
groups and global Islamic terrorism is a particularly disturbing
development to Australia. Unsurprisingly, the Bali bombings inflicted a
strong sense of vulnerability, not only because Australian citizens were
the direct targets, but also owing to the fact that it took place in
Australia's immediate neighborhood.
Therefore, Canberra is willing to "contribute to further efforts
on the war on terror", particularly regarding Southeast Asia and the
South Pacific. This is a direct consequence of Australia's perception of
its neighborhood as a "troubled region" with several potential
"failed states".
In the case of Indonesia, the situation is particularly complex and
troubling owing to poverty, unemployment, democratization, economic
recovery, corruption, governance and legal reform, as well as religious,
ethnic and separatist challenges.
Thus, Indonesia is considered "fertile ground for international
extremist Islamic influences", but also for nonterrorist related
security challenges such as people smuggling, illegal fishing, drug
trafficking and money laundering. Moreover, geography dictates that the
success of reform in Indonesia and its efforts to eradicate terrorism are
crucial to the future security of Australia.
Still, is Australia willing to intervene to counter terrorist threats
in Southeast Asia, even against the will of sovereign states such as
Indonesia? Is Australia prepared to take the lead in such situations if
necessary? Are preemptive strikes a real option?
While cooperation between Australia and Indonesia is much better than
it was prior to the Bali bombings, the odds seem to play against such
cooperation. Indeed, the commitment in both documents toward increasing
close cooperation with the United States implies certain difficulties
concerning Australia's engagement with Asia.
Moreover, Canberra's willingness to intervene militarily in its
immediate neighborhood makes it safe to assume that political friction
between Australia and Indonesia (as well as other countries) is likely to
occur in the next few years.
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