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Subject: IPS: Japan Constitution Hinders Ties to Indonesia - Diplomat
Japan Constitution Hinders Ties to Indonesia - Diplomat
Tim Shorrock
WASHINGTON, Sep 17 (IPS) - Japan's commitment to help Indonesia train its
police and upgrade its sea defences may be compromised by Japan's constitutional
ban on participating in military actions overseas, according to a senior
Indonesian diplomat.
Specifically, Indonesia wants Japan to strengthen collective security in the
Malacca Straits by providing financial assistance to the Indonesian Coast Guard,
said Soemadi D M Brotodiningrat, Indonesia's ambassador to the United States.
Japan and Indonesia signed a broad agreement on fighting international
terrorism during a 2003 summit in Tokyo between Indonesian President Megawati
Sukarnoputri and Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi.
''Japan can't do anything'' for the Indonesian Coast Guard because it ''is
part of our armed forces,'' Brotodiningrat said. ''We need hardware assistance
from Japan, but it's restricted by their constitution,'' which limits its scope
to defensive activities to prevent aggression of the sort Tokyo had in the
thirties and forties.
He added that the ''rigidity of Japan'' on its military role overseas is ''an
obstacle'' in the fight against piracy, and has hampered bilateral
information-sharing about attacks on shipping.
Eighty percent of Japan's oil flows through the Malacca Straits, the narrow
waterway connecting the Indian Ocean to the South China Sea, making their
security essential to Japan's survival.
Otherwise, the ambassador, who previously served as Indonesia's envoy to
Japan, was extremely positive about the state of political and economic ties
between the two countries. ''Indonesia has always enjoyed good relations with
Japan,'' he said.
Brotodiningrat made his comments at a Washington seminar this week sponsored
by the Sasakawa Peace Foundation USA and the United States-Indonesia Society.
His remarks come two weeks after a deadly bombing outside the Australian
embassy in Jakarta that killed nine Indonesians. In October 2002, scores of
people, including 88 Australians, were killed in a nightclub combing in the
island of Bali.
Article Nine of Japan's 'Peace Constitution', which was drafted shortly after
World War II by the United States that occupied the country, renounces the use
of force and restricts Japan's military to the strict defence of Japan.
Any discussion of its abolition is controversial in Japan - and overseas,
many Asian neighbours look at this with worries of a return of a more
militaristic Japan. Over the past 15 years, however, the Japanese government has
stretched the language of Article Nine to allow Japanese ''peacekeepers'' to
participate in U.N. and internationally sanctioned relief projects abroad.
U.S. officials frequently argue that Japan cannot fulfill its international
duties until the constitution is changed.
In August, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell told Japan's 'Kyodo' news
service that Japanese membership in the U.N. Security Council might hinge on
expanding its role in overseas military operations.
''If Japan is going to play a full role on the world stage and become a full
active participating member of the Security Council, and have the kind of
obligations that it would pick up as a member of the Security Council, Article
Nine would have to be examined in that light,'' he said.
After the Sep. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, Japanese
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, who personally favours changing the peace
amendment, dispatched naval tankers to the Persian Gulf to assist U.S. forces in
Afghanistan.
Last year, Japan's parliament passed a law allowing Japanese troops to take
part in non-combat roles in Iraq.
One of Japan's largest overseas operations took place in 2002, when Tokyo
sent 680 members of the Self-Defence Forces (SDF) to East Timor after its
independence from Indonesia.
In their 2003 announcement, Megawati and Koizumi affirmed that Japan will
provide counter-terrorism assistance in areas from immigration control to police
and law enforcement and ''measures against terrorist financing'' and will
improve maritime and transport security, as well as the security of movement of
people.
Since the 1960s, Japan has been Indonesia's largest foreign investor and a
key trading partner. Unlike the United States, which sometimes distances itself
from Jakarta, Japan has consistently refused to criticise successive Indonesian
governments for their military actions, particularly in East Timor.
Indonesia invaded East Timor in 1975 and imposed on the former Portuguese
colony one of the most brutal occupations of a foreign land since World War II.
In 1999, militia groups supported by the Indonesian military killed hundreds
more in a weeks-long rampage that was widely condemned around the world.
In 2001, four prominent Japanese clerics decried Japan's support for
Indonesia when they announced their opposition to Japan's dispatch of SDF troops
in a letter to their counterparts in East Timor.
In 1999, the clerics said, Tokyo failed to acknowledge that the Indonesian
military ''was directly or indirectly involved in the violence in East Timor or
the fact that it is not only the militia which poses a threat to security in
East Timor, but the Indonesian military and police.''
They also noted that the Japanese government continues to claim ''that it was
a 'volunteer force', not Indonesian army troops, that invaded East Timor in
December 1975.''
Ambassador Brotodiningrat acknowledged that Japan and Indonesia had close
ties during the "old order" of Sukarno, the Indonesian nationalist
overthrown in a violent military coup in 1965.
This was also so, he said, throughout the ''new order'' of Suharto, the
general who led that coup and ruled Indonesia with an iron hand until his ouster
in 1998.
''I don't see any reason this won't continue with reformasi,'' he added,
referring to the political reforms being undertaken by the Megawati government.
He praised Japan to helping Indonesia reach a ''dignified solution to the
East Timor problem.'' Japan has ''respected and always been mindful of our
sensitivities'' in this area, he added.
Indonesia, he noted, maintains good relations with North Korea and recently
helped Japan bring Charles Jenkins, a U.S. army deserter married to a Japanese
citizen, out of North Korea. Jenkins traveled first to Jakarta and then flew to
Japan to be reunited with his family. (END/2004)
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