http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/KA28Ae01.html

Jan 28, 2009 

SPEAKING FREELY
Rethink needed on US arms to Indonesia
By Ed McWilliams 

Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to 
have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing. 

During the Cold War, the United States built alliances with notoriously 
corrupt, abusive regimes, including that of Suharto in Indonesia. Since 
September 11, 2001, a policy of strengthening relationships with disreputable 
militaries has re-emerged in the name of fighting terrorism. President Barack 
Obama should re-evaluate the partnership his predecessor established with the 
Indonesian military. 

The US once again is providing material and training assistance to the 
Indonesian military (TNI). While democracy has made significant gains since the 
1998 overthrow of Suharto, Indonesia's military remains much as it was during 
the three decades of the Suharto era: corrupt, unaccountable, beyond civilian 
control and a notorious violator of human rights. 

The US-Indonesian military relationship is a longstanding and troubled one. In 
1991, the Indonesian military murdered more than 270 East Timorese students 
engaged in a peaceful demonstration. That atrocity prompted the US Congress to 
impose restrictions on military assistance. 

Although the Indonesian military remained an unreformed force, it curtailed 
some of its most abusive actions. But in 1999, following the East Timor's 
overwhelming vote for independence, the Indonesian military and its militias 
murdered more than 1,400 civilians and destroyed most of East Timor's 
infrastructure. 

In response, the US suspended all military assistance. For the first time, 
there was modest military reform in Indonesia. The military agreed to pull its 
unelected members out of parliament; the police and military were separated; 
and 18 people, including some senior military officers, were indicted for the 
1999 atrocities in East Timor. In 2004, the administration of newly-elected 
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono passed legislation mandating divestment of 
the TNI's business empire by October 2009. 

The requirement that the military divest itself of legal businesses could be a 
vital step in Indonesia's democratic reform. The TNI's empire of legal and 
illegal businesses has allowed it to operate outside of civilian scrutiny and 
control. Indonesian human rights advocates fear that the military will disrupt 
upcoming elections and ignore the 2009 divestment deadline. They have urged the 
US to use its leverage to encourage TNI reform. 

Washington's pursuit of the TNI as a "partner" in the fight against terrorism 
raises other fundamental issues. American assistance to and cooperation with 
the TNI ignores the reality that it is the Indonesian police and not the 
military that are responsible for fighting terrorism. (The latest Department of 
State "Country Reports on Terrorism" praises civilian efforts and does not 
mention the TNI.) 

In November 2005, the George W Bush administration issued a "national security 
waiver" to eliminate congressionally mandated restrictions on aid to the TNI. 
At the time, former secretary of state Condoleezza Rice pledged that US 
military cooperation would be "carefully calibrated" to the pace of reform and 
accountability. 

However, there was no calibration and reform has stopped. Specifically, TNI 
business divestment is dead in the water. The government has yet to release a 
long-completed inventory of TNI businesses despite the Defense Minister's 
repeated promises that he would do so. Reportedly, assets have been stripped 
from TNI-owned firms. The US State Department's annual human rights report 
describes TNI prostitution rings in Papua, while illegal logging and extortion 
of foreign and domestic firms continues there and elsewhere. 

The TNI remains unaccountable for its crimes in East Timor, West Papua and 
elsewhere. None of those tried in Indonesia for crimes in East Timor in 1999 
were convicted. Many of the officers indicted by the UN-backed judicial process 
in East Timor received military training in the US. All remain free in 
Indonesia, often receiving promotions or retiring to lucrative careers in 
business or politics. 

The organizers of the 2004 assassination of Indonesia's leading human-rights 
advocate, Munir Said Thalib, have yet to be successfully prosecuted. Evidence 
points to retired senior military officials. On taking office, Yudhoyono called 
bringing to justice the killers of Munir a test for his administration. Thus 
far, it has failed the test. 

Despite declarations of neutrality, the TNI has already interfered in upcoming 
elections. Senior officials expressed a strong preference among the senior 
retired officers running for governor in Central Java. Its "territorial command 
system" will allow the TNI to exert direct influence on voters down to district 
and sub-district levels. The TNI-backed fundamentalist Islamic Defenders Front 
has been intimidating smaller parties and individuals critical of the military. 

The record is clear. In the decades prior to 1991, broad US engagement with the 
Indonesian military enabled its worst excesses. Only after aid restrictions and 
a full cut-off were instituted, did any real reform occur. Since the US 
re-engaged with the TNI, reform has stalled and accountability for past 
violations has faltered. A resumption of restrictions on aid is essential to 
military reform. 

An unreformed Indonesian military is a threat to democratic progress in 
Indonesia. Its ties to Islamist militias and drug and people trafficking, make 
the TNI a threat to regional stability. Moreover, US support for the abusive, 
corrupt and unaccountable military damages the US's reputation in Indonesia. 

Obama should break from his predecessor's failed policies by again conditioning 
military assistance to Indonesia. 

Ed McWilliams is a retired US diplomat. He worked as political counselor in 
Jakarta and received the American Foreign Service Association's Christian 
Herter Award for creative dissent by a senior foreign service official. 

Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to 
have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing. 

(Copyright Ed McWilliams 2009

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