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Subject: Obama’s Indonesia question
Inside Indonesia 95: Jan-Mar 2009
Obama's Indonesia question
Will the US president continue unrestricted aid to Indonesia's
military?
John M Miller
President Barack Obama's childhood ties to Indonesia were a
much-discussed aspect of his campaign. In an effort to further mark Obama
as 'exotic', his opponents played up the four years he spent in Indonesia
as a child and his Indonesian Muslim stepfather. Obama himself preferred
to emphasise the Kansas roots of his mother, but acknowledged the
influence of his diverse background and the years he spent in Indonesia.
While Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's recent visit showed that
some Indonesians are still excited about Obama and the promise of stronger
US - Indonesia ties, it is not clear how long the honeymoon will last.
Obama's eventual policy towards engagement with Indonesia's military could
play a large part in determining the relationship.
A chequered history
The United States was the Indonesian military's largest weapons
supplier well into the 1990s, during some of the most repressive years of
Suharto's regime. Indonesian officers enjoyed prestige and promotions
drawn from training with the US military. Some, including future President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, participated in training courses on United
States military bases.
The issue of military assistance was largely off the radar until the 11
November 1991 Santa Cruz massacre, when Indonesian troops, some armed with
US-supplied weapons, killed hundreds of unarmed East Timorese civilians
engaged in protest. Ensuing pressure by activists and the general public
was enough to force the US government to suspend many of its assistance
programs. The International Military Education and Training (IMET)
program, which provides US training to foreign militaries, was the first
military assistance program to Indonesia that Congress restricted. As the
Indonesian military and militia rampaged through East Timor after its
independence referendum, the Clinton Administration belatedly cut all ties
to the Indonesian military. Part of the ban was enforced by Congress.
The Bush re-engagement strategy has not ended the entrenched impunity
of Indonesia's security forces
After the September 11 attacks in the US, the Bush administration muted
human rights criticisms as it looked to Indonesia as a partner in its
proclaimed 'War on Terror'. The Regional Defense Counterterrorism
Fellowship Program was started soon after the September 11 attacks to
train Indonesian and other militaries restricted from receiving IMET,
effectively circumventing the expressed will of Congress. The US and
Indonesian military participated in joint exercises covering
counterinsurgency and counterterrorism. By 2005, the government had
reinstated nearly all military assistance programs and even added a few
new ones.
Troublingly, in the last years of the Bush administration, some
officials sought US training for members of Kopassus, Indonesia's Special
Forces unit. The US Senators Patrick Leahy and Russ Feingold, both leaders
in human rights issues, actively opposed engaging the notorious unit,
which has been responsible for some of the worst human rights violations
in East Timor, West Papua, Aceh, and elsewhere. They argue that an
existing law, named after Senator Leahy, forbids the training of military
units credibly accused of human rights crimes. For now, US assistance for
Kopassus training is on hold.
In 2008, the Indonesian Air Force sought to purchase F-16 fighters and
C-130 Hercules transport planes from the US However, for the time being,
Indonesia's current budget constraints and lingering wariness bred of past
restrictions on assistance have limited Indonesia's appetite for new US
weapons.
Now that Indonesia is eligible for unrestricted aid, its military can
assume human rights issues no longer matter to their once and future
patron
US military assistance to Indonesia has yet to reach the levels of the
Suharto years. However, the number of Indonesian students in the IMET
program is growing. And in 2008, US foreign military finance (FMF)
funding, another aid program, jumped to US$15.7 million (A$23.1 million)
from only one million dollars just two years earlier. In the end, the
exact amount of any US military assistance may not matter. In the 1990s,
the United States had restricted aid as a means to pressure for human
rights accountability and reform. Now that Indonesia is eligible for
unrestricted aid, its military can assume those issues no longer matter to
their once and future patron.
Human rights pressure
Obama is certainly aware of the problems of the Indonesian military. In
his book The Audacity of Hope, published in late 2006, Obama wrote that
'for the past 60 years the fate of [Indonesia] has been directly tied to
US foreign policy,' which included 'the tolerance and occasional
encouragement of tyranny, corruption, and environmental degradation when
it served our interests.'
The Bush re-engagement strategy has not ended the entrenched impunity
of Indonesia's security forces for crimes against humanity and other
serious violations committed in East Timor and elsewhere. The military
continues to resist civilian control and emphasise internal security. The
TNI's 'territorial command' system remains intact. Efforts to implement a
law ending the military's involvement in business have degenerated into
farce, and its units remain involved in a variety of illegal enterprises,
including logging and narcotics trade. The State Department's Country
Reports on Terrorism credits the Indonesian police for 'major successes in
breaking up terrorist cells linked to ... violent Islamic extremist
organisations.' Its military goes unmentioned.
After Suharto was driven from office, the military relinquished a few
perks, including its seats in parliament. While Indonesian domestic
factors were important in the stalling of the reform process since that
time, the US government's decision to incrementally reinstate military
assistance beginning in 2002 certainly didn't help.
The victims of US-supported military abuses are clear about the need to
leverage military assistance. East Timor's official Commission for
Reception, Truth and Reconciliation, called on countries to make military
assistance to Indonesia 'totally conditional on progress towards full
democratisation, the subordination of the military to the rule of law and
civilian government, and strict adherence with international human
rights.' This is not a call that the current government of Timor-Leste has
echoed. It has decided not to press for trials of Indonesians indicted by
the UN-backed Serious Crimes process, believing that Timor is too weak to
challenge its dominating neighbour without international support.
Looking forward
One of Obama's new cabinet choices already raises questions. Admiral
Dennis Blair is the newly appointed director of national intelligence. The
former head of the Pacific Command, Blair reportedly offered the
Indonesian military increased assistance as its troops and militias
wrought havoc in East Timor. At his confirmation hearing, Admiral Dennis
Blair defended his actions in 1999. Despite praise of Blair from some
committee members as someone who 'thinks outside the box', his actions in
1999 reflect longstanding thinking among US officials which values
maintaining a good relationship with the TNI, regardless of results.
Obama has written that 'for the past 60 years the fate of [Indonesia]
has been directly tied to US foreign policy'
While some in Congress are looking to reinstate conditions on security
assistance that would require progress on military reform, including the
final divestment of military businesses, access to West Papua for
diplomats and international humanitarian and human rights organisations,
and credible trials for those accused of past human rights crimes in East
Timor, West Papua and elsewhere, it is not clear if the new Obama
administration will go along.
Expectations are high in Indonesia. Advocates have called on Obama and
the US Congress to pressure Indonesia's government to respect human
rights. Rafendi Djamin, coordinator of the Human Rights Watch Working
Group, told the Jakarta Post, 'We are now expecting Obama to put more
pressure on Indonesia to resolve unfinished human rights cases by directly
questioning the government about them and by addressing their importance.'
The US should 'reinstate its military embargo against us' another
Indonesian activist said, 'if Indonesia does not respond positively to US
pressure.'
This February, Secretary Clinton made Indonesia one of her first
foreign stops since taking office. Obama, too, has signalled his interest
in visiting Indonesia - in late November, he reportedly told President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono that Indonesia will be his first visit to a
Muslim-majority country. What human rights and reform message he will
deliver when he goes is an open question. ii
John M Miller (john@etan.org) is the national coordinator of the
US-based East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN).
Inside Indonesia 95: Jan-Mar 2009
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