| Subject: PR Watch: Winning Friends and
Influencing U.S. Foreign Policy
Winning Friends and Influencing U.S. Foreign Policy
By Diane Farsetta PR Watch. Posted February 7, 2005.
A litany of well-documented human rights concerns has isolated the
Indonesian military on the world stage. To help clean up its image, the
Indonesian government has turned to U.S.-based PR and lobbying firms.
"I hope that, as a result of our efforts, as a result of our
helicopter pilots' being seen by the citizens of Indonesia helping them,
that value system of ours will be reinforced," said Colin Powell, one
week after the tsunami wrought havoc across South and Southeast Asia.
Contemplating the public relations benefits of aid efforts following so
many deaths may seem callous, but the United States wasn't the only
country hoping to benefit from images of uniform-clad do-gooders
distributing food and water to traumatized villagers.
The Indonesian province of Aceh, "Ground Zero" for the
tsunami, has been under declared or de facto martial law since mid-2003
(and through most of the 1990's before that). In May 2003, the Indonesian
military launched its largest offensive in nearly 30 years, in Aceh. Weeks
later, Indonesian Communications and Information Minister Syamsul Muarif
complained that the news from Aceh focused on "soldiers dragging
corpses" instead of efforts to rehabilitate schools. "We are
weak in international public relations, and because of that, reports by
foreign media are often damaging," he explained.
Most observers say it's a well-deserved bad rap.
Indonesia insists its Aceh offensive is targeted at armed
pro-independence forces (the Free Aceh Movement, known by its Indonesian
acronym, GAM). However, the organization Human Rights Watch found "extrajudicial
killings, disappearances, arbitrary arrests, and torture" of young
men the military believes, "often without evidence, to be members or
supporters of GAM." Amnesty International documented "human
rights abuses so pervasive that there is virtually no part of life in the
province which remains untouched." They concluded, "The
Indonesian security forces bear primary responsibility for these human
rights violations, although GAM has also committed serious human rights
abuses."
Over the years, a litany of well-documented human rights concerns has
increasingly isolated the Indonesian military on the world stage. To help
clean up its image, the Indonesian government has turned to U.S.-based PR
and lobbying firms.
Hill & Knowlton and White & Case contributed to Indonesia's
lobbying bill for mid-1991 through 1992, which totaled $6.8 million. Based
on a 1991 communications plan commissioned from the Robinson Lake Sawyer
Miller firm, Indonesia "gave foreign journalists information kits,
with T-shirts and calendars, which try to explain its side of 'negative
stories,'" reported the Australian. Following the Indonesian
military's 1991 massacre of hundreds of peaceful protesters in East Timor,
the government paid Burson-Marsteller $5 million, "to help improve
the country's human rights and environmental image," according to the
Far Eastern Economic Review. In 1996, Indonesia signed another $5 million
contract with Burson-Marsteller
In early 2001, Indonesia's Sekar Mahoni Sakti Foundation hired
Advantage Associates, "to create a positive view of Indonesia with
the U.S. Congress, Administration, and Department of Defense,"
according to U.S. Foreign Agents Registration Act filings. One goal was
"to lift an embargo on spare parts for the C-130 military
aircraft."
More recently, the war on terror has been Indonesia's PR theme.
Then-Indonesian president Megawati Sukarnoputri was the first foreign
leader to visit the United States after September 11, 2001, arriving one
week after the attacks. "Jakarta had considered postponing the
trip," Stanford professor Donald Emmerson told a Congressional
hearing. "In the end, the American side decided it wanted to proceed,
knowing the public relations value of early and visible support by the
ruler of the world's largest Muslim population."
Indonesia also realized the PR potential. The government retained APCO
Worldwide in 2003, to pitch its importance as a "front-line state in
the war on terrorism," wrote the PR trade publication O'Dwyer's. The
deal included media outreach and legislative meetings. In 2004, Alston
& Bird contracted with an Indonesian logging magnate to
"position" the country "as a solid ally in President Bush's
war on terror and one that is committed to democracy and human
rights." In addition to policymakers and reporters, Alston & Bird
was directed to sway other U.S. "opinion-shapers," including
"think tanks and academia."
Indonesia's most influential ally may be former U.S. Senator and
current Alston & Bird special counsel Bob Dole. In January 2004,
the Far Eastern Economic Review reported that Indonesia had hired Dole as
a lobbyist. "Among the issues Dole might address is the restoration
of a program to train Indonesian military officers in the United
States," according to National Journal's CongressDaily.
Shortly afterwards, Indonesia denied having a "blanket
contract" with Dole. Government spokesperson Marty Natalegawa said,
"There is an expression of readiness from the gentleman to help
Indonesia on a case-by-case basis."
Other U.S. image assistance followed. In December 2004, six U.S.
Pacific Command officers led a three-day discussion for Indonesian Army,
Navy and Air Force members, on "how to present information and news
to the press." The Jakarta Post reported, "The officers shared
experiences in dealing with the media." One U.S. officer "hailed
the Indonesian military program to embed journalists during the operation
to crush rebels in Aceh." He remarked, "We did the same in
Iraq."
Yet the payoff has been slow in coming. A ban on U.S. military
assistance for Indonesia, enacted after the military's post-referendum
devastation of East Timor in 1999, remains mostly intact, although it has
come under increasing attack from the Bush administration and some members
of Congress.
Then came the tsunami. While the Indonesian military's involvement in
humanitarian efforts is necessary and normal, local and international
observers have complained of aid obstruction and continued operations
against supposed GAM rebels. Australian journalists who witnessed a
military attack were told by an Indonesian commander, "Your duties
here are to observe the disaster, not the conflict."
In a PR faux pas, Indonesia's first head of relief operations in Aceh
was Major General Adam Damiri, who has been indicted by a United
Nations-backed tribunal for war crimes in East Timor. After he was
replaced, the Washington Post remarked, "Damiri's continued role at
the air base could have complicated U.S. efforts to provide humanitarian
assistance."
Now, the momentum might be on the Indonesian military's side.
In January 2005, Powell offered Indonesia spare parts for C-130
military aircraft. U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, long a
proponent of close military ties, declared during a mid-January visit to
the country, "Everybody loses a great deal ... when you cut off
[Indonesia's] contact with [our] military." Reports in influential
media like the New York Times wrongly claim, "Even proponents of the
[Indonesian military] sanctions ... acknowledge that the best hope for
developing an army whose conduct fits a democracy is to train officers in
the United States."
"The tsunami must not be used as an excuse to sweep away U.S.
military restrictions on Indonesia," warned the East Timor Action
Network's John Miller. But if that happens, many U.S. PR firms share the
blame.
Diane Farsetta is senior researcher at the Center for Media and
Democracy.
http://www.alternet.org/story/21188/
also published on CommonDreams
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