| Subject: IPS: Washington Warms to
Indonesia's Unruly Army
POLITICS: Washington Warms to Indonesia's Unruly Army
Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON, Feb 7 (IPS) - As U.S. President George W. Bush last week
reiterated his strong support for spreading freedom abroad, his
administration was preparing to remove a major obstacle to restoring full
ties with Indonesia's armed forces (TNI), widely regarded as one of the
world's most abusive militaries.
According to Congressional offices contacted last week by Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice, the State Department will soon "certify"
that the TNI is cooperating fully in the investigation of the murder of
two U.S. schoolteachers in West Papua in 1982. The State Department
confirmed Monday that the question is under active review.
Once the certification takes place, Indonesia will be eligible to
receive 600,000 dollars to participate in the Department's International
Military Education and Training (IMET) programme, from which it has been
barred since 1992 after army troops massacred more than 100 peaceful
demonstrators in East Timor.
The move, long urged by the Pentagon for strategic reasons, will leave
in place only one sanction imposed by Congress against the TNI as a form
of pressure to improve its human rights performance and ensure its
subordination to Indonesia's civilian-led government: a 1999 ban on the
sale of lethal military equipment to the TNI imposed after the army and
TNI-backed militias killed hundreds of people in East Timor following a
plebiscite in which the population voted overwhelmingly for independence.
Human rights groups and activists, some of whom warned Monday against
Jakarta's plans to register and relocate up to 100,000 tsunami refugees in
conflict-wracked Aceh province to semi-permanent camps controlled by the
police military brigade (BRIMOB), are protesting the move as premature and
shortsighted.
"The amount of money for IMET may be small, but its symbolic value
is enormous," said John Miller, spokesperson for the East Timor
Action Network (ETAN). "The Indonesian military will view any
restoration of IMET as an endorsement of business as usual."
"Business as usual," he added, "has been nothing less
than brutal human rights violations and impunity for crimes against
humanity. In tsunami-stricken Aceh, the Indonesian military continues to
manipulate relief efforts and to attack civilians as part of their
counterinsurgency war."
Miller's fears were echoed by Edward McWilliams, a retired senior
foreign-service officer who headed the political section of the U.S.
embassy in Jakarta from 1996 to 1999. "I think the message that would
be derived from this is that the U.S. is no longer concerned about real
reform of the Indonesian military," he told IPS.
"I think that's a tragic mistake, both in terms of our
relationship with Indonesian military and with the people of
Indonesia," he added, noting that civil society groups in Indonesia
have welcomed the fact that Washington has withheld aid.
"I think they would feel themselves abandoned by this," said
McWilliams, who added that the IMET ban was "highly symbolic and thus
very important in the dialogue between Washington and the military."
The Bush administration has long wanted restore full military ties with
Indonesia. As the world's most populous Muslim nation, occupying an
enormous archipelago that controls some of the world's busiest and most
important sea lanes, it is seen as a major strategic asset, particularly
in the "war on terrorism" and as a possible counterweight to
China in Southeast Asia.
It has been constrained from doing so largely as a result of Congress'
insistence that the restoration of military aid and sales should be
conditioned on demonstrated improvement in the TNI's human-rights
performance.
This is particularly true in Aceh and West Papua, where it is also
challenged by a low-level insurgency, the prosecution of the perpetrators
of serious abuses, including those that occurred in East Timor in 1999,
its subordination to civilian control, and, most recently, cooperation
with a U.S. investigation of the 2002 ambush of schoolteachers and their
families near the giant Freeport McMohan gold mine on West Papua.
Since Sep. 11, 2001, however, the administration has persuaded Congress
to drop or water down most of the conditions, leaving only the last place.
At the same time, it has opened a variety of new aid channels designed to
circumvent the military ban.
For example, it has provided several million dollars in
"counter-terrorism" assistance and training; provided money for
the so-called E-IMET, or expanded IMET, programmes; and carried out dozens
of joint military exercises with the TNI.
After the Dec. 26 tsunami, it also facilitated Indonesia's purchase of
spare parts for C-130 transport planes to carry out relief operations in
Aceh, where some 220,000 people are believed to have been killed.
Washington took an active part in the relief operations in Aceh, and
cooperation between its forces and the TNI was cited by visiting Deputy
Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, who served as ambassador to Jakarta in
the early 1980s, as another reason to restore ties.
"Cutting off contact with Indonesian officers only makes the
problem worse," he said during his visit in mid-January. He also
stressed that the advent of Indonesia's first directly elected president,
ret. Gen. Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who received extensive military
training himself, made it a particularly opportune moment to revisit IMET.
Most critics, such as Dan Lev, an Indonesia specialist at the
University of Washington in Seattle, consider Yudhoyono and his civilian
defence minister, Juwono Sudarsono, as reformists who want to
professionalise the armed forces.
The problem, according to Lev and others, is that they cannot truly
control them, particularly the army, which has been the most powerful
institution in Indonesia since 1958, shortly after the U.S. first began
providing it with major support.
"There are professional officers, but they're just overwhelmed by
the political ones," Lev told IPS.
Juwono himself conceded in an interview with the New York Times that
the military "retains the real levers of power" in Indonesia.
While the Indonesian Air Force and Navy were reportedly particularly
helpful during the tsunami relief efforts, reports of army abuses,
including continuing its counter-insurgency campaign against secessionist
rebels who had declared a unilateral cease-fire, have persisted.
In a lengthy article Monday, the Times recounted abuses committed
against Acehnese activists who protested against the army's actions,
including hoarding or possibly diverting emergency assistance and forcing
displaced people into barracks or camps.
That concern provoked Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Human Rights First (HRF)
to warn Monday that the military may be preventing the displaced from
returning to their homes by moving them into camps without consulting
them.
"In the context of the war in Aceh," said Neil Hicks,
director of HRF's international programmes, "a military presence at
the camps can be a form of intimidation and abusive control."
As to the murder case on which the IMET is expressly conditioned,
critics do not see the cooperation that Rice says exists. While the U.S.
Justice Department has named one Papuan, Anthonius Wamang, as a gunman in
the case, witnesses have reported there were several others.
As pointed out by Sen. Patrick Leahy, one of the TNI's strongest
critics, Wamang, who has been indicted, "remains at large even though
his whereabouts are reportedly known to the TNI." According to other
reports, Wamang was armed by the TNI.
"Right now, the only leverage we have to ensure the FBI
investigation can go forward is the IMET ban," noted McWilliams.
"The notion they would give up this leverage now on the eve of a very
serious FBI effort is simply inexplicable." (END/2005)
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