Subject: Congress Maintains Restrictions on US-Indonesian Military Relations
Also KY: Bush, Yudhoyono agree to expand military ties
Congress Maintains Restrictions on US-Indonesian Military Relations
By Al Pessin Pentagon
17 November 2005
Indonesian Police forensic team investigates the house where gunfight
between police and terrorist suspects occured on Wednesday The U.S. Congress
has voted to maintain restrictions on U.S. military aid to Indonesia, in an
effort to force the country to take further steps to improve its army's
respect for human rights. The decision ran counter to a request from the
Bush administration to eliminate the restrictions, but pleased activists who
say Indonesia's reforms have not gone nearly far enough.
The House of Representatives was willing to remove the restrictions, but
the Senate was not, and when members of the two bodies met to negotiate a
compromise, the Senate's view prevailed.
"The House has a sense that things are going in a very constructive
direction and that there is a case for exchanges at a professional level
that can be beneficial to both societies," said Representative Jim Leach, a
Republican, who is chairman of the House subcommittee on East Asia and the
Pacific.
He says the compromise that became law earlier this month imposes only
slightly easier conditions for expanding U.S. military aid to Indonesia.
"I think it represents a step forward, although perhaps not as great a
step forward as might be warranted at this time," he added.
Senator Lisa Murkowski disagrees. She is also a Republican and is
Representative Leach's counterpart as chairwoman of the Senate's
subcommittee on East Asia and the Pacific. She says Indonesia's new
president has only made initial steps toward reforming the military and
holding people accountable for past human rights violations in East Timor
and elsewhere.
"With the right leadership and a strong leadership, I think that he can
move them in the right direction," she said. "Am I convinced that they're
there yet? Probably not."
This year's Foreign Operations budget sets three conditions Indonesia
must meet before limits on U.S. sales of military equipment can be lifted
and the U.S. Defense Department can provide financial help for Indonesia's
military purchases. Last year there were four conditions, and they were
slightly different.
"As seen from what we had last year, I believe there is an improvement,"
said Suhardjono Sastromihardjo, Minister Counselor for Political Affairs at
the Indonesian embassy in Washington.
The thrust of the congressional requirements is for Indonesia to
prosecute soldiers who committed human rights violations in East Timor in
1999, cooperate with international investigations of what happened in East
Timor and improve civilian control of the military. A requirement for help
in the global war on terrorism has been dropped, and the country's police
force is generally praised in that regard.
The law says Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice must confirm to Congress
that the conditions have been met. Until then, Indonesia can only buy
"non-lethal" military equipment from the United States. But the law also
gives the secretary of state the option of waiving the conditions if she
asserts that U.S. national security interests are at stake.
"We hope that, in this case, the secretary of state could use the wavier
so that we can buy not only the non-lethal military hardware, but also the
lethal ones," said Suhardjono Sastromihardjo.
But U.S. and Indonesian human rights activists hope that does not happen.
At the East Timor and Indonesia Action Network, national coordinator Karen
Orenstein says Indonesia is mostly only talking about military reform and
will never actually take the necessary steps unless the United States keeps
the pressure on by maintaining the conditions on military sales.
"Well, they should be maintained because there hasn't been an adequate
level of military reform," she said. "There's been little, if any, actual
reform. If the Indonesian military and government want those conditions to
be entirely lifted and want a totally normalized relationship with the U.S.
government in terms of security systems, then they simply have to comply
with what's expected of any professional military and uphold protections for
human rights, and hold their members accountable for violations."
Minister Sastromihardjo says Indonesia is working on reforms, but he
acknowledges the country cannot yet meet the congressional conditions.
"I cannot blame those critics who [say] Indonesia has not done enough,
but please understand that it takes time to really change everything,
because we are dealing not only with the military issue, we are dealing with
the social issue, political issue, economic issue," he added.
The Indonesian diplomat says the country's military wants to improve what
he calls its "firepower" by buying new fighter aircraft, warships and
ammunition, and by upgrading its aging U.S. weapons and radar systems.
Whether that will happen is now in the hands of Secretary Rice. She and
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld had written to Congress before the vote
asking for the restrictions to be removed. The Bush administration says
Indonesia's military has made noteworthy progress on human rights, and the
best way to promote more progress is to help its modernization effort.
A Pentagon official familiar with the issue says the administration
believes it does not need legal restrictions to conduct a responsible arms
sales policy. But that same official, who requested anonymity, acknowledges
that Indonesia has not met the congressional conditions as of now. So in the
short term a wavier, which would likely draw considerable criticism from
Congress and activists, is the only way Indonesia can possibly get what it
wants from its military relationship with the United States.
see
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-11-17-voa83.cfm For links to Audio
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Bush, Yudhoyono agree to expand military ties
11/19/2005 06:08:20 AM EST
Japan Economic Newswire
OSAN, South Korea, Nov. 19_(Kyodo) _ U.S. President George W. Bush and
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono agreed Saturday to work toward
expanding bilateral military ties, a senior U.S. administration official
said.
Bush "is looking forward to finding ways to expand contact and
cooperation with Indonesia on all fronts, including military-to-military,
and the two presidents talked about how to move forward on that," said
Michael Green, senior director for Asian affairs on the White House National
Security Council.
The two leaders met on the sidelines of the two-day summit of the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum that just ended in Busan, South
Korea. Bush later flew to the U.S. Air Force Osan Air Base outside Seoul to
deliver a speech before heading to Beijing.
Briefing reporters en route to Osan, Green said Yudhoyono "made it clear
that with more engagement between the militaries, he would be able to bring
up more officers like himself, officers who study in the United States and
are advocates of change, reform and democracy."
The Indonesian president took part in a training program in the United
States during his military service.
Bush told Yudhoyono, "We're going to try to move forward on that, based
on full consultation with the Congress," Green said.
The United States has been stepping up engagement with Indonesia, which
has the world's largest Muslim population, gradually resuming military
cooperation severed in reaction to the Indonesian military's alleged
involvement in human rights abuses during the process of East Timor's
independence in 1999.
Green said the two presidents also talked about cooperation in fighting
terrorism, dealing with bird flu, energy and ways to strengthen Indonesia's
investment environment.
Yudhoyono gave a "full detailed description" of his efforts for peace in
Aceh and Papua, and Bush praised him as "doing a great job" and conveyed his
support for "building democracy and fighting terror and strengthening the
economy in Indonesia," Green said.
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