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Saturday, October 1, 2011

What we could expect from Obama’s visit


This article was written two weeks before the scheduled visit by Obama to Indonesia. For those of you paying attention, he cancelled the visit because he had to salvage his Obamacare.

Interestingly, this article was quoted by Mr Peter J. Brown in his Asia Times Article that was published a week after this article. There's also a nice reaction from a blogger named Pundita, who elaborated parts of what I wrote (can't do that in a newspaper article, thanks to word limits.)


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What we could expect from Obama’s visit
Yohanes Sulaiman, Jakarta | Wed, 03/10/2010 9:05 AM
Barring any unforeseen trouble ahead, US President Barack Obama is scheduled to visit Indonesia and Australia in the second half of March.

For both President Obama and President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (SBY), the visit will be a welcome diversion from domestic political headaches that currently grip both leaders.

Of course, this will also be a great photo opportunity for both Presidents. Obama will be able to show the folks back home that he is still the most popular president on the face of the Earth and still commands respect and admiration from a country with the highest Muslim population in the world.

Meanwhile, SBY will relish the international spotlight while showing off Indonesia as one of the most beautiful and important countries in the world.

The million-dollar question is what Indonesia should expect from President Obama’s visit.

The bad news is that Indonesia should not expect too much from this visit. Aside from reaffirming Indonesia as one of the US’s major trading and security partners and his personal visit to his childhood “kampung” in Menteng, it is very unlikely that Obama will bring anything major to the table.

With the US congress is in uproar thanks to his healthcare mess and the US economy just starting its slow rebound, Obama’s options are limited.

On the other hand, in light of Indonesia’s recent successes in tackling radical Muslims (e.g. Noordin M. Top), considering Indonesia’s willingness to help the US over the past several years, and not to mention Obama’s personal attachment to Indonesia, SBY needs to capitalize on this occasion to press the US on several important aspects, notably on the issue of trade, security and education.

Trade, of course, will always be one of the most important aspects of this visit. Aside of course, hoping to increase US investment in Indonesia, President Yudhoyono should also focus on trying to increase Indonesia’s exports to the US.

Facing the flood of cheap Chinese goods, thanks to the implementation of the China-ASEAN Free Trade Agreement, Indonesian manufacturers need to increase exports, especially on high-quality or highly specialized goods in order to survive.

Regardless of the economic crisis and high unemployment rate, the US remains one of the richest countries and one of the largest markets in the world.

Its economy has also improved far better than those in Europe. As a result, Indonesia needs to try to increase its market share in the US.

The second important aspect is the military aspect. While the US had lifted its arms embargo on Indonesia, Indonesia still faces difficulties in procuring more arms from the US due to cost, bureaucratic hassle and congressional hostility. Of course, it can be argued the Indonesian military needs to undergo structural reform first.
Still, the fact remains the Indonesian military is vastly under-equipped and needs more equipment and spare parts to defend the huge expanses of Indonesian territory.

As US forces are stretched thin due to commitments in Iraq, Afghanistan and all over the world, the US needs a friendly Indonesia to maintain the stability of the region in the face of threats from a rising China and radical religious terrorists, not to mention criminal elements such as human traffickers or drug smugglers. It is only fair the US help Indonesia modernize and equip its military forces.

While the US Congress, especially the Democrats, are usually pretty hostile and critical toward the Indonesian military, Obama actually could persuade his Democrat party colleagues and more friendly Republican congressmen to back more military aid to Indonesia in order to improve regional security and stability.

The debate over the US policy on Afghanistan showed that Republicans were more than willing to support President Obama’s military buildup, so Obama just needs to convince his Democratic colleagues to support more military aid to Indonesia by arguing that it is in the interest of improving regional security.

The third important aspect is education, especially more opportunity for civilians and military officers to pursue higher education at American universities.

While the quality of Indonesian education is steadily improving, Indonesia still needs more capable civil and military scholars to help further improve its higher education institutions.

In addition, SBY should urge American universities to open branches in Indonesia, as they have in Singapore.

For the US, this is a win-win proposition, an increase in the number of Indonesian scholars studying there means that they will be immersed in American values and share them back in Indonesia when they return.

These scholars can help improve the image of the US and its reputation in Indonesia, which took major beatings under George W. Bush.

On military affairs, as Indonesian Army officers become more professional, they will help reform the Indonesian military and strengthen democracy in Indonesia.

In the end, while Indonesia should not expect much from Obama’s visit, SBY still needs to capitalize on it and push for more cooperation in trade, security and education.


Comments ( 6)

Bambang Jarot, Jakarta | Mon, 22/03/2010 - 09:03am
It's a good start
sofyan, jakarta | Mon, 15/03/2010 - 12:03pm
very good article indeed
Peter Link, jakarta | Sun, 14/03/2010 - 18:03pm
Expect "NOTHING". He can't look after his own country so how is he going to help Indonesia.
jack.udin, jakarta | Thu, 11/03/2010 - 08:03am
I hope both of presidents make some agreements related in trade, security, and education. One thing should not forgotten, Its about freedom of religion.. Nowdays there are many violance related on religion freedom.. Especially prohibition church service and church permission revoked.. I think no one mosque has permission in this country.. So why other religion must be...???
Mike Orgill, Washington D.C. | Thu, 11/03/2010 - 05:03am
Unfortunately Indonesia is not one of the U.S.' largest trading partners. It is my hope that Indonesians will ask Presidents SBY and Obama why it is that the world's 4th most populous nation is only the U.S.' 30th most important trading partner and that this visit will catalyze additional progress in the trade & investment relationship.
Tom Degan, Goshen, NY | Wed, 10/03/2010 - 21:03pm
Who wants to make a little wager that those moronic Democrats to mess this up? They have this positive genius for taking a plate of finely prepared caviar and turning it into Donkey dung. The Republicans are sounding the alarm: If the Dems pass health care reform, they will be slaughtered at the polls in November! It's a political ploy - passing major health care legislation is a no-braner and a sure winner - and yet a lot members of "the party of Franklin Delano Roosevelt" are falling for it hook, line and stinker. It's funny. Every time I forget why I left that worthless, joke-of-a-party twelve years ago, they always cheerfully remind me - and I appreciate that. I really do! Teddy Kennedy is dead and he's not coming back. http://www.tomdegan.blogspot.com/
 
Tom Degan Goshen, NY

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Sensitive issues call for a soft touch
By Peter J Brown
March 19, 2010

(Note: This article was written before United States President Barack Obama's visit to Indonesia was postponed until June)

The three days Barack Obama will spend in Indonesia no doubt constitute a nostalgic high-point of a trip that will also take in Guam and Australia. Yet the return to a boyhood city is also replete with significant geopolitical and economic challenges.

The Obama administration has gone to great pains from its start over a year ago to make it clear that it intends to be fully engaged in Southeast Asia.

It will be crucial for Obama to acknowledge Indonesia's key role in the region, "amidst China's growing assertiveness and influence" during this visit, according to Evan Laksmana, a researcher at the Department of Politics and International Relations at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Jakarta. Obama will visit Jakarta and Bali from March 23-25 before departing for Canberra.

Other objectives includes "fully normalizing and expanding relations with Indonesia by addressing thorny issues like the lifting of the ban on interaction with the Indonesian Army Special Forces, and further reaching out to the Muslim world and improving America's global standing by mending broken fences left in the wake of president [George W] Bush's policies," Laksmana said.

The ban Laksmana mentions involves a unit known as the Komando Pasukan Khusus, or Kopassus, and has been in place since the late 1990s. A high-ranking delegation of senior Indonesian military officers recently traveled to Washington for discussions on this situation.

Kopassus is not to be confused with "Detachment 88", which is an elite Indonesian counter-terrorism squad named after the 88 Australians killed in the Bali bombing attacks in 2002. This unit has received funds, training and equipment from the US since its creation seven years ago. [1]

This month, Yohanes Sulaiman, a lecturer at the Indonesian Defense University and the executive director of the Center for Democracy Integrated Peace and Security Studies, wrote in The Jakarta Post, "The US needs a friendly Indonesia to maintain the stability of the region in the face of threats from a rising China and radical religious terrorists, not to mention criminal elements such as human traffickers or drug smugglers."

"It is only fair the US help Indonesia modernize and equip its military forces," Sulaiman said. "While the US Congress, especially the Democrats, are usually pretty hostile and critical toward the Indonesian military, Obama actually could persuade his Democrat party colleagues and more friendly Republican congressmen to back more military aid to Indonesia in order to improve regional security and stability." [2]

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's administration needs a foreign policy triumph "amidst plummeting public approval and domestic political crises", according to Laksmana.

"Finally removing the last 'pebble in the shoe' in US-Indonesia military-to-military relations, ie the special forces ban, and even possibly providing new military hardware, would certainly endear the president in the eyes of the Indonesian military whose support is desperately needed by the embattled president," Laksmana said. "Finally, American investment and education initiatives, if expanded, certainly won't hurt as well."

In effect, this trip may require more careful navigating by Obama than has been previously acknowledged.

"[This ban] is still held up by congressional restrictions on certain types of aid because of the past human-rights abuses of Kopassus," said Josh Kurlantzick, a fellow for Southeast Asia at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York City. "It is unclear whether congress will move on this."

Domestic politics are causing considerable turmoil in Indonesia. Yudhoyono faces criticism from all sides as he tries to press ahead with a reformist agenda to liberalize trade and finance laws. He struggles with endemic corruption and his attempt to develop a more independent court system is a difficult task at best.

"Against him is Indonesia's populist tradition that is suspicious of the West and decisions they feel benefit the wealthy," said Abraham Denmark, a fellow at the Center for a New American Security in Washington, DC. "These forces may use Obama's visit as an opportunity to embarrass Yudhoyono and highlight their discontent. Obama will have to be careful to ensure that his proposals are carefully calibrated for Indonesia's complex domestic political environment."

The complexity of the situation is enormous. Laksmana identifies a number of sensitive issues that "Obama needs to look out for", including "the role of Islam in the state, the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, corruption and good governance, terrorism and security, as well as the normalization of mil-to-mil [military-to-military] relations."

"There are tricky issues that Obama would do well to speak about carefully," said Laksmana.

Among other things, Indonesia was the first Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) country to candidly express its reservations about the way in which the new China-ASEAN Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) might adversely impact the Indonesian economy. CAFTA may or may not come up and how Obama responds will be watched closely.

Kurlantzick doubts that Obama is going to spend any time on this trip talking about CAFTA with Indonesians. "It is a trade deal he is not party to, and there are many other important US-Indonesian bilateral issues to discuss," said Kurlantzick.

Denmark, on the other hand, describes Obama as an advocate for free trade and thus inclined to support CAFTA. "[Obama should] highlight the benefits it can bring to the regular people of Indonesia. A clear and convincing defense of free trade may help Yudhoyono and his reformist agenda," said Denmark.

What concerns Laksmana is the possibility that the debate over CAFTA might somehow be misconstrued as a manifestation of broad-based "anti-Chinese" sentiment.

Indonesia's stand on CAFTA is not in any way an indication of a willingness on the part of Indonesians to start waving an "anti-Chinese" banner, Laksmana said. ''The rejection was, despite some fringe voices, mainly economic. Unemployment and Chinese products dominating the local market are critical in this regard. So again, the rejection is not an anti-Chinese move per se."

Laksmana also cautions that if Obama says the wrong thing about CAFTA he might suddenly provide the opposition with an opportunity to embarrass him and cast the whole trip in a negative light.

"Obama should avoid discussing [CAFTA] or [commenting about] how Indonesia should deal with China or how Jakarta should have better prepared the Indonesia public for [CAFTA]," said Laksmana. "This can be easily spun by opposition leaders as meddling in Indonesia's internal affairs.”

That said, Laksmana doubts that during such a public and symbolic visit China would be a focal point of discussion between Obama and Yudhoyono. "There are enough problems to sort out between the countries anyway. In regards to ASEAN, meanwhile, Obama would probably do well to continue repeating his support for a future regional architecture where ASEAN would play a critical role," said Laksmana.

Still, while China's rise will certainly hover in the background for this visit, "The US is engaging Indonesia and Southeast Asia more broadly because of its own importance," said Denmark.

"In terms of potential dark clouds, Obama's discussion of the importance of Indonesia should be carefully calibrated to not offend the sensibilities of Indonesia's neighbors, many of whom are also friends of the US," said Denmark. "As the US looks to build a closer relationship with Indonesia, officials from other states in the region have privately expressed to me a twinge of concern that the US would be able to improve its relations with Jakarta without implicitly downgrading America's relationships with its other friends in the region, or ASEAN overall."

All the countries in the region, including Indonesia, "are trying to figure out how to balance the US and China, but China is far enough away from Indonesia that it is less of an issue for Jakarta than it would be for, say, Bangkok," Kurlantzick said.

"Indonesia definitely has competitiveness issues vis-a-vis China but the strategic concerns are much less, so any idea that the US could push Indonesia to play a kind of anti-China strategic role is pretty unlikely."

China's shadow may loom large, but Obama will most likely also have India in mind. India will certainly be a keen observer as Obama visits what is, in effect, India's extended neighborhood.

"In many ways Indonesia is a smaller version of India - a pluralist, multiethnic, multilingual society that also jealously guards its sovereignty and strategic autonomy," said Sourabh Gupta, senior research associate at Samuels International Associates in Washington, DC. "An expression of US support for Indonesia's rise in Asia as well as within global forums such as the G-20 [Group of 20] would be a reassuring signal of the US's interest in cultivating robust democratic societies in Asia that are proud and independent-minded."

This all about laying the groundwork for a new strategic partnership involving non-treaty allies of the US in Asia, while demonstrating an understanding of where exactly India fits in.

"Indian foreign policy managers have explicitly detailed the entire Indian Ocean rim stretching from Southeast Asia to Southern Africa as its 'extended neighborhood'. Indonesia is arguably the most important country - after the US presence - within this extended neighborhood as well as a valued geographic neighbor by way of a shared maritime boundary," said Gupta.

India already has a bilateral agreement with Jakarta and Bangkok for joint coordinated patrols by the three navies in the Bay of Bengal at the mouth of the Malacca Strait.

"US expression of support for enhanced capacity building, technical assistance and information-sharing with the Indonesian navy as well as coordinated, quadrilateral, sub-regional patrols by the four navies would be seen appreciatively in New Delhi," said Gupta.

Gupta labels this arrangement as "functionally more useful than that other grander 'quad' initiative" involving the US, India, Japan and Australia "which was seen to be lighter content-wise, appeared to be a close-ended arrangement excluding Indonesia and ASEAN, and was deemed to be more polarizing in its anti-China containment connotations".

In the context of ongoing US efforts to reach out to the Muslim community as a whole, expectations are probably enormous. Besides re-emphasizing the importance of Indonesia and Southeast Asia to American interests, and promoting Indonesia's long-term development and emergence as a pivotal state, Denmark identifies highlighting "the success of a democratic, pluralistic state with a majority Muslim population" as Obama's third major objective in Jakarta.

Indonesia's top two Islamic groups - Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) and Muhammadiyah - are urging Indonesian Muslims to welcome Obama.

"The Prophet [Mohammad] himself also had diplomatic ties with adherents of other faiths," said Hasyim Muzadi, the head of NU, while describing Obama as someone who "had shown good intentions in efforts to improve ties between the US and the Islamic world".

However, the welcome mat is not being extended by at least one conservative Islamic organization, Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia, after spokesman Muhamad Ismail Yusanto tied Obama's trip to the presence of US energy companies and stated, "The fact that Obama lived here as a child did not warrant special treatment." [3]
Denmark emphasizes that Indonesia is not a Muslim country, but a pluralistic democratic country that has a majority Muslim population. "That being said, Obama's outreach to the Muslim world, first in Egypt, then Turkey, and now Indonesia, is an important theme of his young presidency," said Denmark.

When it comes to ongoing US efforts to reach out to the Muslim world, Laksmana recommended that Obama speak directly to the people he is reaching out to. "Obama should stage town hall meetings and invite the 'fundamentalist' groups to engage in a public and frank discussion," said Laksmana. "This of course could risk giving credence to such fringe groups. Therefore, a safer bet would be for Obama to organize a public discussion involving the major Islamic organizations like NU or Muhammadiyah."

"Obama is probably going to cite Indonesia as an example of 'Muslim democracy' but many Indonesians do not really like to be viewed that way," said Kurlantzick.

According to Denmark, while Indonesia seeks to solidify its relationship with the last of the "big four" (China, India, Australia, the US - all of whom have affirmed a strategic partnership with Indonesia), this will also enable Jakarta to "highlight Indonesia's regional significance, promote reform and liberalization domestically".

"This is a long-term process that will likely cover several American administrations. Right now, Indonesia's domestic politics will prevent it from being the active and engaged partner that it may be in the future," said Denmark. "For now, the US should encourage Indonesia's democracy and liberalization, promote its emergence as a regional power with global influence, and help it carve a realistic niche for itself within the international system."

Notes
1. Martyrdom, Interrupted National Interest Online, March 3, 2010.
2. What we could expect from Obama's visit.
3. Obama is Welcome in Indonesia, Say Leading Muslim Groups Jakarta Globe, March 16, 2010.

Peter J Brown is a freelance writer from Maine USA.

(Copyright 2010 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)

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Indonesian police find Dulmatin and kill him. Oh happy coincidence!

March 5, 2010, Inter Press Service
The administration of President Barack Obama hopes to resume U.S. training of an elite Indonesian military unit whose members have been convicted of gross human rights abuses in East Timor and elsewhere in the sprawling archipelago.

The leadership of Indonesia’s controversial special forces division — the Komando Pasukan Khusus, or Kopassus — has been in Washington to discuss the proposal this week.

Its meetings here come ahead of President Barack Obama’s state visit to Indonesia later this month. The trip will launch "The U.S.-Indonesia Comprehensive Partnership" — a bilateral strategy to enhance security and economic cooperation between the two countries. [...]
March 10, 2010, Reuters
"Today I can announce to you that after a successful police raid against the [three] terrorists hiding out in Jakarta yesterday, we can confirm that one of those that was killed was Dulmatin, one of the top Southeast Asian terrorists," [Indonesia's president] Yudhoyono said in a speech in Australia's parliament house in Canberra.

The series of police raids that led to Dulmatin's death will be seen as a coup in Indonesia's fight against Islamist radicals ahead of President Barack Obama's visit March 20-22. [...]
Isn't this great news? Dulmatin was a very bad man and unfortunately a bright one; he was nicknamed "The Genius" for his skill at bomb making. He also had more lives than a cat; at one point in 2008 he was believed to be dead and buried in the Philippines.

I've heard a plausible explanation as to why Dulmatin might risk returning to Indonesia, even though he was on the country's Most Wanted list and knew that Yudhoyono was turning over every rock in Indonesia in the hunt for terrorists. A spectacular suicide bombing during President Obama's visit would be a great blow to Yudhoyono's government. And -- so the explanation goes -- Indonesia's government had taken out so many terrorists in recent years that there might not have been anyone left in the whole wide world of al Qaeda franchises who could have done the same bang-up job in Indonesia as Dulmatin.

As to how he was tracked down in Indonesia, there is a plausible explanation for that too; you can read about it in the Reuters report I linked to above.

For the types who get nervous when they see happy coincidences and plausible explanations pile up -- now, now! One must always make room for the alignment of the planets. When you combine a fortuitous arrangement of the stars with a little elbow grease and a military's crying need for aid money, training, and spare parts for military equipment, there is no limit to what can be accomplished.

Look at Pakistan. In the space of a few weeks the military there has found, captured or killed so many terrorists, and helped the U.S. military locate so many of the varmints in Afghanistan and Pakistan's badlands, that Foreign Policy had to put together a Cheat Sheet; this in the attempt to keep track of just the major kills. And there have been so many kills by recent "covert" UAV operations that Long War Journal has put up a handy graph and pie chart in the attempt to keep track of them. Yes indeed, terrorist corpses are now piling up faster than anyone can keep count.

Instead of thumbing their noses at all these happy coincidences, American cynics in particular should think about their responsibilities. If you don't know what your responsibilities are -- Yohanes Sulaiman, a lecturer at the Indonesian Defense University and the executive director of the Center for Democracy, Integrated Peace, and Security Studies, explained it all quite wonderfully last week for readers of the Jakarta Post:
While the US had lifted its arms embargo on Indonesia, Indonesia still faces difficulties in procuring more arms from the US due to cost, bureaucratic hassle and [American] congressional hostility. Of course, it can be argued the Indonesian military needs to undergo structural reform first.

Still, the fact remains the Indonesian military is vastly under-equipped and needs more equipment and spare parts to defend the huge expanses of Indonesian territory.

As US forces are stretched thin due to commitments in Iraq, Afghanistan and all over the world, the US needs a friendly Indonesia to maintain the stability of the region in the face of threats from a rising China and radical religious terrorists, not to mention criminal elements such as human traffickers or drug smugglers. It is only fair the US help Indonesia modernize and equip its military forces.
To which General Kayani, the Pakistan military's chief of staff, would add, 'Those are my lines!'

As to what Yohanes Sulaiman means, exactly, when he observes that "Of course, it can be argued the Indonesian military needs to undergo structural reform" -- ahhhh, it's complex. If you're game for plowing through a little complexity we'll return to Charles Fromm's March 5 report for Inter Press Service, which was snapped up by that curmudgeonly anti-war website, Anti-War. Ready?
[...] The Kopassus [Indonesia's special forces] have been notorious for employing brutal tactics since the 1970s, particularly in East Timor, Aceh, Papua and Java. Various human rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and the East Timor Action Network, have accused the unit of murder, torture and kidnapping among other egregious rights abuses.

The plan to resume U.S. training, however, proposes to limit participation to younger members of Kopassus, as their age would make it more likely that they had not participated in the group’s most notorious abuses.

The new efforts to engage the Indonesian military follow Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s comments last week at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee meeting that the administration hoped to expand its military partnership with Indonesia and enhance counterterrorism cooperation.

However, this policy is not without opposition. Critics argue that Kopassus continues to commit serious abuses with impunity and that restoring a cooperative relationship could actually prove counter-productive.

"U.S. military assistance harms reform and sets back human rights accountability in Indonesia," said John M. Miller, national coordinator of the East Timor Action Network (ETAN).

"The best way to prevent future violations is to hold accountable those responsible for the multitude of human rights crimes committed by the Indonesian military in East Timor, West Papua, and elsewhere. Many of these crimes occurred while the U.S. was most deeply engaged with the Indonesian military providing the bulk of its weapons and training," he added.

Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, sent an open letter to the White House late last month in which he called for Obama to "seize this opportunity to reaffirm that human rights and the rule of law are essential pillars of U.S. engagement in Indonesia."

Roth also asked him to "condition even limited re-engagement with Kopassus" on the firing "of any personnel previously convicted for human rights abuses," and the establishment of a tribunal to thoroughly investigate the disappearance of some two dozen student activists in 1997 and 1998. Rights groups have charged that Kopassus units were responsible.

He also called for wide-ranging structural reforms to enhance civilian control of the military in all realms, from the jurisdiction of military tribunals to the vast military-run businesses that exercise a major influence in the Indonesian economy, particularly in resource-rich regions, such as Papua.
Clear now on the meaning of "structural reform" for Indonesia's military?

Just remember it's all about choices and attitude. You can choose to go through your life bitter and morose at the thought you're being extorted by lying, corrupt, scoundrels who will eschew radical Islam only so long as their palms are greased. Or you can choose to look on the sunny side: think that your tax dollars are helping thousands of young men in less-privileged countries receive the very best training and weapons the U.S. military and American defense contractors can provide.

If you decide to go through life with a smile on your face, then join me in wishing on a star, dancing through clover, and celebrating happy coincidences.

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