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Subject: CSM: US Plan To Train Indonesia's Special Forces Sets Off
Alarm
The Christian Science Monitor
March 5, 2010
US Plan To Train Indonesia's Special Forces Sets Off Alarm
The Obama administration wants to strengthen ties with Indonesia,
including training for its special forces. But Indonesia’s elite
military unit has been investigated for beatings, disappearances, and
assassinations.
By Howard LaFranchi Staff writer / March 5, 2010 Washington
* photo: Special forces: Indonesian Army Chief Agustadi Sasongko
Purnomo (l.) makes Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (r.) an
honorary member of the elite Kopassus Special Force Command during a
ceremony in Jakarta last August. Newscom
President Obama wants to signal a continued strengthening in US-
Indonesia ties when he travels to the world’s largest Muslim country
later this month.
But an administration proposal to further deepen post-9/11 military
ties by resuming US training of Indonesia’s special forces is running
afoul of human rights advocates.
Mr. Obama is keen to showcase Indonesia as a stable, democratic
partner, a regional counterweight to China that is working shoulder-to-
shoulder with the US to fight Islamic extremism. Extremists have struck
Indonesia with bombings since the 9/11 attacks. (Monitor analysis: Jakarta
attack may show evolution of Islamist terror group.) Weighing security
interests and human rights
But human rights activists say the US interest in rights and a foreign
partner’s accountability to its own people should not be sacrificed for
security interests.
The US military has been barred by law since 1997 from training
Indonesia’s Komando Pasukan Khusus, better known as Kopassus.
The elite unit served as the strong arm of the Suharto regime that fell
in 1998, but has been investigated since then for beatings,
disappearances, and, assassinations. Officers linked to past abuses have
not only remained in the unit but have been promoted, human rights
investigations have found.
The Obama plan for skirting the congressional prohibition on ties to
military units whose abusive members have not been brought to justice is
to limit US training to younger Kopassus soldiers who entered the unit
after the most high-profile abuse cases.
While some Asia experts hail the proposal as a positive reflection of
Obama’s commitment to closer ties with Indonesia, human-rights experts
say the move sends the wrong signal.
I don’t know how young these soldiers [who would be eligible for
training] are supposed to be, because the last documented cases of abuse
are from last year,” says John Miller, national coordinator of the East
Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN) in New York. Investigating past
abuses
Mr. Miller says the intent of the so-called Leahy law of 1997 (authored
by Sen. Patrick Leahy) was not primarily to prevent future abuses or the
training of rights abusers, but to encourage the investigation and
resolution of past abuses something he says has not been systematically
done.
Now if we simply circumvent this law, it will be like saying, ‘You
haven’t held past abusers accountable, so we’re going to go ahead and
reward you,’ ” he says.
But others say that the US has benefited from closer ties to Indonesia,
including its military, in recent years, and that the Obama administration
is right to seek a way to work with Kopassus. (Indonesia: How will it
adapt counterterrorism strategy? Monitor report here.)
It is in America’s interest to enable as full a range of options as
necessary for Indonesia to be able to respond effectively to terrorism at
home,” writes Walter Lohman, director of the Heritage Foundation’s
Asian Studies Center, in a recent commentary about Obama’s upcoming
trip. Ties with Kopassus can be reestablished in a way to “provide
tailor-made training opportunities for Indonesians with fully vetted human
rights records,” he adds.
Several Kopassus officers have been in Washington recently to try to
work out a training deal that Obama could announce during his visit, which
begins March 20.
ETAN’s Miller says he expects the administration is pressing for
commitments” from Indonesia on human rights measures that Obama could
announce along with any resumed training. But he says he’s not
optimistic about how binding any commitments might be.
They have resisted that kind of overt commitment in the past,” he
says, “I don’t see what’s changed to make them more open to such
restraints now.”
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