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Subject: US and Kopassus Training: Strategic and Legal Aspects
ipcs.org/article/military/us-and-kopassus-training-strategic-and-legal-aspects-3113.html
<http://www.ipcs.org/>The Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies
(IPCS)
#3113, 5 May 2010
US and Kopassus Training: Strategic and Legal Aspects
Chloe Choquier
Research Intern, IPCS
email: chloe_choquier@yahoo.fr
Kopassus commander Major General Lodewijk Paulus and several
high-ranking Indonesian officers recently visited Washington DC to discuss
lifting the ban on US training for the elite army special forces – the
Komando Pasukan Khusus, known as Kopassus. Since the 1970s, Kopassus has
been notorious for its brutal tactics in East Timor, Aceh, Papua and Java
and is accused of murder, torture and kidnapping, among other humanitarian
law violations. As international and Indonesian human rights advocacy
groups argue that the unit continues to commit abuses in Papua and
persecute former Aceh rebels, Indonesia sees the training as a foundation
of the US-Indonesia Comprehensive Partnership to be signed by President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and President Barack Obama during his visit to
Jakarta, rescheduled in June 2010. What would this re-engagement mean for
US external policy? Can Washington push for an improvement of the state of
human rights in the archipelago?
During the Cold War, Washington largely supported the Suharto regime’s
military policies and the Ford administration fully backed Indonesia’s
invasion of East Timor in 1975. But the US cut off International Military
Education and Training assistance to Indonesia after the November 1991
Dili massacre in which 273 people were murdered by the Tentara Nasional
Indonesia (TNI) – Indonesian military. The 1997 Leahy Law then banned
the provision of training to any foreign military unit in case of
'credible evidence' that it has committed 'gross violations of human
rights'. This influence of humanitarian ideals on US foreign policy was
later surrendered with the 2005 State Department’s waiver of the
Congress Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs
Appropriations Act 2006 restricting military assistance to Indonesia.
Three years later, the Bush Administration proposed restarting U.S.
training of Kopassus. The growing terrorist threat and the importance of
regional stability for US trade were the cornerstone of this policy
turnaround. In the aftermath of 9/11 and the 2002 Bali bombings,
Washington had released funds for training a limited number of TNI
officers but the ban on Kopassus remained effective. The recklessness of
Australia, which resumed counter-terrorism training with Kopassus in 2006,
offered a new argument in favor of US re-engagement.
Proponents of this new cooperation promote the opportunity to teach
Indonesian military a lesson about respect for human rights. But the 2005
national security waiver had unsurprisingly resulted in a pause in the
reforms within TNI. The contact with rights-respecting foreign forces has
actually never proved relevant to improve Kopassus behavior. “Many of
these crimes occurred while the US was most deeply engaged with the
Indonesian military, providing the bulk of its weapons and training,”
said John M Miller, national coordinator of the East Timor Action Network
to the Asia Times in March. Moreover, the US’ questionable human rights
record gives Indonesians the bitter feeling of a double standard being
applied in US foreign policy.
What can Washington ask from Jakarta at this point? Since none of the
previous requirements have been achieved, a re-engagement would mark the
official comeback of Realpolitik to the detriment of human rights
promotion in US foreign policy. Until now, US preconditions were firstly
based on accountability for past abuses. According to Human Rights Watch’s
recommendations, any military personnel previously convicted for
human-rights violations should be discharged. First, a tribunal to
investigate the disappearance of two dozen student activists in 1997 and
1998 should also be established, as Indonesia's House of Representatives
recommended to the Ministry of Defence in September 2009. The absence of
such mechanisms allows the existence of ambiguous situations, such as the
nomination of Kopassus-trained Sjafrie Sjamsuddin, who was the Military
Commander at the time of the 1997/98 disappearances, as deputy Minister of
Defence. Second, Washington had required from Indonesia the implementation
of structural reforms to enhance civilian control of the military. As of
now, Indonesia's military justice system has exclusive jurisdiction over
military personnel implicated in criminal offenses against civilians.
Third, the re-engagement of the US would also be limited to nonlethal
counter-terrorism training through Kopassus’ counter-terror force, known
as Unit 81, and only include younger officers who were not part of the
unit at the time of major human rights abuses. But the much-praised
counter-terrorism efforts of Indonesia in recent years were almost
entirely the work of the police forces, especially the already US-funded
counter-terrorism police unit, Detachment 88. If US funding to the
military would improve this already successful police initiative, remains
an unanswered question.
Washington does not have much leeway anyway, as the Chinese
non-interference policy represents a severe competitor on the subject. The
likelihood of 'playing the Chinese card' is more and more plausible since
Sino-Indonesia military-security ties were initiated in 2005, as the US
limitation on arms sales already pushed Indonesia towards Beijing.
Indonesia’s “behavior in the coming months and years will function as
an indicator of the relative strength of the United States and China in
the region,” recently affirmed Matthew Omolesky in the American
Spectator. In a nutshell, as Indonesians are not eager to compromise and
Washington still pushes for reforms, an agreement, if reached in June,
would be for Indonesians, East Timorese and Americans, a no-win situation.
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