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Washington Post, July 5, 2000

Indonesia Criticizes U.S. Arms Embargo
Defense Chief Cites Need To Quell Local Conflicts
By Rajiv Chandrasekaran
Washington Post Foreign Service

Wednesday, July 5, 2000; Page A15

JAKARTA, Indonesia, July 4-A U.S. embargo on the sale of
military equipment to Indonesia, imposed after widespread human
rights abuses by army-backed militias in East Timor last year,
is hindering the ability of the country's armed forces to quell
spreading sectarian violence in other parts of the Indonesian
archipelago, the nation's defense minister said today.

The embargo, which has prevented the Indonesian government from
buying spare parts for its U.S.-made aircraft and ships, has
forced the military to pull from service several cargo planes
and patrol boats that commanders had hoped to use in the
Moluccas Islands, where a bloody religious war has claimed more
than 3,000 lives in the past 18 months, Defense Minister Juwono
Sudarsono said in an interview.

"We are in a very tenuous situation now," Sudarsono said. "There
is a lot of equipment that we need that is not working." Among
the grounded planes are five of the country's eight C-130
Hercules cargo aircraft, which are used to ferry troops and
supplies.

"The United States should not look at military transport planes
only as a means of transporting troops to suppress dissent,"
Sudarsono said. "They have an important role in providing
supplies in emergency situations, whether it's a man-made or a
natural disaster."

The Indonesian government declared a state of emergency last
week in the Moluccas, the picturesque archipelago once known as
the Spice Islands, which has been wracked by fierce fighting
between Muslim and Christian gangs armed with lethal homemade
weapons. In the past two weeks, more than 200 people have been
killed in street battles and savage nighttime massacres. As many
as 480 others, many of them Christian refugees fleeing the
violence, are believed to have drowned when their overloaded
ferry capsized during a storm on Thursday.

The conflict has escalated in recent weeks largely because of
the arrival of several thousand heavily armed Muslim militants
from other parts of Indonesia who are committed to waging what
they believe is a holy war against Christians.

For months, government officials and religious leaders in the
Moluccas have accused the military of doing little to stop the
fighting and, in some cases, of taking sides in the battles. In
response to the criticism, the armed forces chief recently named
a Hindu colonel from Bali as regional commander and has pledged
to replace many local troops with others from different parts of
the country who would be more likely to intervene in an
impartial way.

But Sudarsono said such a troop replacement will be slowed by a
lack of transport aircraft. "Planes are important for immediate
relief," he said.

U.S. officials acknowledge that the embargo has had a
significant impact on the Indonesian military, which relies on
U.S. logistics support for 70 percent of its modern equipment,
but the officials contend that out-of-service aircraft and ships
are not preventing troops from taking basic steps to bring the
situation in the Moluccas under control.

"This is by no means the real issue in the Moluccas," said U.S.
Ambassador Robert S. Gelbard. "The real issue has been that over
the last six months, the government has been unwilling to take
strong, firm and clear action to stop the violence. This
includes stopping outsiders from going in and having security
forces go house to house to confiscate weapons."

The arms embargo and a suspension of military links with
Indonesia were mandated by Congress last fall after militias
backed by the Indonesian armed forces rampaged through East
Timor killing hundreds of people in response to the territory's
overwhelming vote for independence. Before the links and arms
sales can be resumed, Indonesia must fulfill several
requirements, including bringing military leaders responsible
for the Timor violence to trial and cracking down on militia
members who are preventing tens of thousands of East Timorese
refugees in Indonesian-controlled western Timor from returning
home.

Thus far, though, U.S. officials say the Indonesian government
has not taken strong steps to contain the militias. Last month,
militiamen armed with automatic weapons and hand grenades
crossed the border separating western Timor and East Timor to
attack Australian peacekeepers. Of particular concern to the
United States and to the U.N. officials who now govern East
Timor is a plan advanced by local Indonesian officials to allow
militia members to settle 20 miles from the border.

Sudarsono said that with the crisis in the Moluccas, along with
tense separatist movements in the provinces of Aceh and West
Papua, there is little political support in Jakarta for
committing additional troops or resources to western Timor. "My
ministry is over-stretched and undermanned and underfunded," he
said. "East Timor comes down at number four in the order of
priorities now."

Despite lack of progress on the Timor issue, officials at the
State Department and the Pentagon are quietly urging key members
of Congress to enact legislation that would give the White House
the ability to resume Indonesian arms sales and military ties
without having to obtain congressional approval.

Although Timor remains a sore point, U.S. officials have been
heartened by some of the military reforms taken by Indonesia's
democratically elected government, including removal of some of
the senior officers under investigation for the East Timor
massacres and imposing civilian control on the armed forces.

In what appears to be a step in the direction of resuming
military ties, the Defense Department invited Indonesian
observers to U.S. military exercises in Thailand in May. The
Pentagon also is planning to conduct small-scale joint exercises
with the Indonesian navy later this month.

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Didistribusikan tgl. 7 Jul 2000 jam 10:57:06 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
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