| Subject: IPS: Bush Uses Tsunami Aid to
Regain Foothold in Indonesia
January 18, 2005
Bush Uses Tsunami Aid to Regain Foothold in Indonesia by Jim Lobe
Besides improving Washington's image in South and Southeast Asia, the
administration of U.S. President George W. Bush is hoping to achieve
something more concrete from its aid efforts in the aftermath of the Dec.
26 tsunami that killed over 175,000 people along the coasts of the Indian
Ocean.
In particular, it is reviving its hopes of normalizing military ties
with Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, whose
strategically located archipelago, critical sea lanes, and historic
distrust of China have long made it an ideal partner for containing
Beijing.
Since early this month, U.S. sailors have been working with the
Indonesian armed forces (TNI), as well as national and international
humanitarian groups, to rush relief supplies to the hundreds of thousands
of people whose homes and livelihoods were destroyed in Aceh province.
Another 100,000 are believed to have been killed by the tsunami.
The site of a long-running secession movement, Jakarta closed off Aceh
to foreigners 18 months ago as part of a major counterinsurgency campaign.
But the disaster is now seen as having created the possibility for a
military rapprochement between the Indonesian and U.S. militaries, whose
ties were cut after the TNI and militias organized by it rampaged through
East Timor in 1999.
Despite reports of serious human rights abuses by the army in Aceh, the
Bush administration would clearly like to renew those ties, beginning with
training programs designed to restore the once-close personal and
professional relations between the two militaries.
"Cutting off contact with Indonesian officers only makes the
problem worse," said Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, who
served as U.S. ambassador to Jakarta in the 1980s, during a visit last
weekend.
He stressed that the advent of Indonesia's first directly elected
president, retired general Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who received
extensive U.S. military training himself, makes it a particularly
opportune moment.
The feeling is clearly mutual, particularly within the Indonesian
military. However, divisions also exist between reformists, who want to
make the institution more professional, and more traditional elements that
see the military as a means to gain political power and amass wealth.
Wolfowitz and his allies at the Pentagon depict Yudhoyono and his
civilian defense minister, Juwono Sudarsono, as reformists whose influence
on the TNI could be enhanced by the full restoration of relations.
"I think if we're interested in military reform here, and
certainly this Indonesian government is and our government is," he
told reporters in Jakarta Sunday, "I think we need to possibly
reconsider a bit where we are at this point in history going
forward."
But critics here find the administration's new drive to restore ties
both somewhat unseemly, in light of the tsunami disaster, and very
premature.
In addition to reports that some TNI units have not only been
lackadaisical about getting relief supplies to those who need them, but
may also be selling some of the emergency food aid that has been rushed to
the region, they point to renewed efforts over the past two weeks by
senior officers to reassert control over foreigners in the province as
evidence that the military cannot be reformed as presently constituted.
Rights activists here have also charged that the TNI has withheld food
and other relief from civilians suspected of supporting the secessionist
insurgency, the Free Aceh Movement (GAM).
Indeed, the government announced last week that soldiers must accompany
all international aid workers outside the capital, Banda Aceh, and
Meulaboh, the hardest-hit coastal city, to protect them from the rebels.
This despite the fact that GAM has guaranteed the security of all aid
workers, including U.S. and other foreign troops, working in areas where
the insurgency was active.
"The TNI is reverting to its usual behavior, partially reinstating
recently loosened restrictions on aid workers and journalists," said
John Miller, spokesperson for the East Timor Action Network (ETAN), which
has strongly opposed the restoration of military assistance to Indonesia
for more than a decade.
He also charged that the military had facilitated the entry into Aceh
of "Indonesian jihadists" whom Miller identified as the
Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) and Laskar Mujahedin under the guise of
providing emergency relief, a charge that is certain to make an impression
on a Congress that has proved surprisingly resistant to Bush's efforts to
get restrictions on U.S. military cooperation with the TNI lifted during
the president's first term.
Last week's declaration that all foreign troops should leave by March
26 was also seen as inspired by the more conservative and nationalistic
forces in the TNI. Although the civilian government distanced itself from
the deadline, the move was taken even by right-wingers in Congress here as
motivated by a still-powerful and resentful army that did not deserve
renewed U.S. military aid and cooperation.
The TNI's performance in Aceh to date, according to Dan Lev, an
Indonesia expert at the University of Washington in Seattle, has been less
than impressive and demonstrates that Yudhoyono, Sudarsono, and the new
army chief, Gen. Endriartono Sutarto, who is also seen as a professional,
"have a lot of work to do in reconstructing both the Indonesian state
and the TNI."
"On the ground," he said, "the U.S. servicemen are doing
what needs to be done," but Wolfowitz's and other U.S. officials'
public statements about renewing the relationship at this time have been
largely counterproductive in terms of Indonesian public opinion.
"It signals to Indonesians that this was a political response as
much as a humanitarian one, and shows them that the American government is
simply opportunistic," he told IPS. "Given the suspicion about
American purposes, the Bush administration really ought to shut up for
awhile."
As for restoring links with the TNI, Lev said Congress is right to
insist on the government first enacting thoroughgoing reforms, including
drastically reducing the size of the army, shedding its economic
interests, and ridding it of its territorial commands.
Washington should also work harder for a political settlement in Aceh
where "the military's efforts to resolve a political problem with
military force just makes things worse," according to Lev.
There has been some evidence in recent weeks that the government has
explored the possibility of resuming negotiations with the GAM that were
broken off in 2003, but the TNI is believed to oppose those efforts.
Congress first voted to restrict to restrict Indonesia from receiving
International Military Education and Training (IMET), a State
Department-administered program, in 1991 after a massacre of civilian
demonstrators in East Timor Indonesian troops. Ties were then severed
altogether in September 1999.
Despite lobbying by the administration, Congress extended a ban last
November both on IMED and on certain kinds of military sales to Indonesia
until a number of human rights conditions were met. In the early stages of
the humanitarian operations, the administration permitted the Indonesians
to buy previously banned spare parts for C-130 transport planes provided
they were used exclusively for humanitarian purposes.
Since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the administration has
opened new avenues to provide aid to the military, mainly through
"anti-terrorist" assistance, joint naval exercises, and some
military training programs not under the State Department's control.
But some critics in the U.S. mainstream media are now urging caution in
going any further than that.
"President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a former general himself,
needs to make sure his generals understand that they are accountable to
him as the democratically elected leader and that the human needs of
Aceh's people must be Indonesia's most compelling concern," the New
York Times said in an editorial Monday.
"Until that change is internalized, there can be no dropping of
America's limits on military ties with Indonesia."
(Inter Press Service)
http://www.antiwar.com/lobe/?articleid=4457
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