http://www.fpif.org/commentary/2004/0410indonesia.html

Balancing Security and Democracy:
Lessons from Indonesia
By Frida Berrigan | October 25, 2004
Editor: Miriam Pemberton, Institute for Policy Studies (IPS)

Foreign Policy In Focus www.fpif.org

The Bush administration heralds Indonesia as the world's largest Muslim 
democracy and a crucial ally in the war on terrorism. Since 9-11 it has 
pushed Congress to allow it to bolster the Indonesian military with weapons 
and military training. For many years, the United States was Indonesia's 
largest weapons source, equipping the country with everything from F-16 
fighter planes to M-16 combat rifles. But during the 90s the spectacle of 
how Indonesia was using these gifts--to repress and brutalize its own 
people--provoked an international outcry. The U.S. Congress responded by 
cutting most military ties with the Indonesia.

In recent years, pressure from human rights activists has kept members of 
Congress wary of the Bush administration's efforts to restore military aid 
and training assistance. In October 2004, 45 members of the House of 
Representatives wrote Secretary of State Colin Powell to oppose restoration 
of foreign military aid to Indonesia, citing "grave concerns over the 
prospects of real military reforms" in a "massively corrupt" institution 
riddled with "impunity." They call the administration's efforts "premature, 
unwarranted, and unwise."
The repression continued, and so did the efforts of the White House and the 
Pentagon to restore full military relations.

These efforts illustrate the tension between security and democracy in the 
"war" on terrorism. Washington needs Jakarta as a Muslim ally in this "war" 
and a source of intelligence on Islamic extremism, which means strengthening 
its military infrastructure. On the other hand, to uphold its image as a 
beacon of democracy and freedom, the U.S. must act to loosen the 
stranglehold of the Indonesian military over politics, justice, and culture. 
Washington cannot erect a security state and foster democracy at the same 
time. Rhetorically supporting and encouraging democracy in Indonesia while 
actually strengthening the anti-democratic tendencies within its military is 
a dangerous contradiction that is likely to create more of the very problems 
it seeks to solve.
Members of Congress who actively oppose resumption of military aid to 
Indonesia understand that security flows from vibrant democracy. Nations are 
more secure when human and civil rights are protected, laws are enforced 
equally for everyone (even those wearing uniforms), the political process is 
transparent, and military power is curtailed.

The administration behaves as if it does not understand this. In return for 
Jakarta's vowed cooperation in the war on terrorism, Washington is turning a 
blind eye to the Indonesian military's long track record of human rights 
abuses, brutal repression of independence movements, involvement in 
sectarian violence, and relationships with terrorist networks.

Thus, aid to Indonesia is on the upswing. For fiscal year 2005, President 
Bush is requesting $600,000 in military training, up from the $459,000 that 
was frozen in 2004. Even if Congress does not release these training funds, 
Indonesia is slated to receive $70 million in Economic Support Funds. This 
benign-sounding program is supposed to "promote economic and political 
stability" for infrastructure and development projects. While it is not 
intended for military expenditure, many recipient governments use it as a 
backdoor method of freeing up their own money for military programs.
An embargo on commercial sales of "non-lethal" weaponry has been lifted and 
contact between the two militaries is on the rise. Indonesia's military will 
participate as an observer in military exercises scheduled for this Fall, 
even though Congress had banned Indonesia from receiving U.S. military 
training.

In addition to the naval exercises, Indonesian security forces are getting 
other significant help under the aegis of the war on terrorism. Indonesia 
benefits from the Regional Defense Counter-terrorism Fellowship Program, a 
$17.9 million military training program for Asian militaries, and more is in 
the offing. Through the Anti-Terrorism Assistance program, Washington is 
arming and training SWAT-like police forces in Indonesia. With initial funds 
of $12 million, the program has funneled new high-tech weaponry and 
communications equipment into the country's arsenal. Indonesia hopes to have 
six units of 325 elite force members armed and trained by the end of 2005.
Background: A Legacy of Military Ties and Repression

The history of post-war U.S. support for the Indonesian military provides 
the "war" on terrorism with an important cautionary tale. In December 1975, 
Indonesia invaded neighboring East Timor, which had just declared itself 
independent from Portuguese colonizers. Over the next five years, the 
Indonesian military killed more than 200,000 people, one-third of the 
population. Declassified U.S. documents point to Washington giving 
Indonesian leader General Suharto the green light for invasion. In the 
months that followed the brutal takeover, the United States signaled its 
approval by doubling military aid to Indonesia and preventing the United 
Nations from taking effective action against Suharto.

>From 1975 through East Timor's referendum for independence in 1999, the 
United States continued its military support, transferring over a billion 
dollars worth of weaponry to Jakarta.
Washington was forced to break off military relations with Jakarta because 
of the military's abuse of power, violations of human rights, massacres, and 
extrajudicial killings. In 1992, Congress suspended military training aid 
after the Santa Cruz Massacre, in which Indonesian security officers fired 
into a peaceful crowd of protestors, killing 271 people. Classroom military 
training was restored in 1995. And then, in response to military and 
paramilitary violence after East Timor's vote for independence in 1999, 
Congress strengthened the ban, establishing a set of criteria Indonesia must 
meet before military ties can be resumed. To this day, none of the criteria, 
including the transparency in military budget and the prosecution of 
soldiers involved in human rights violations, have been fully met.
Congressional controls on U.S. origin weaponry and military know-how are 
crucially important, especially because the Indonesian military regularly 
rebukes international controls placed on the use of imported weaponry. As 
Indonesian General Endriartono Sutarto remarked when asked about his 
military's use of UK-origin Hawk fighters, "I am going to use what I have. 
After all, I have paid already."

U.S. Weapons Used to Crush Aceh
In May 2003, Indonesia launched a military campaign to "strike and paralyze" 
separatist rebels in the Aceh province. Soldiers parachuted onto the island 
from six C-130 Hercules transport aircraft manufactured by Lockheed Martin, 
the United States' largest defense contractor. As many as 45,000 Indonesian 
troops, backed up by warships, fighter planes, and other high-tech military 
equipment, invaded the island. Their adversary, the Free Aceh Movement 
(GAM), is thought to have about 5,000 guerillas armed with automatic 
weapons, mortars, and rocket-propelled grenades. For 27 years, Jakarta has 
been trying to squash GAM's quest for independence in a war that cost 12,000 
civilian lives and forced tens of thousands more to leave their homes.
The attack, which is Indonesia's biggest military campaign since its 
invasion and occupation of East Timor in 1975, followed the breakdown of 
five months of peace talks between GAM and the Indonesian government.

Two thousand Acehnese have been killed in this latest round of violence. 
President Megawati downgraded military power from imposition of martial law 
to responding to a "civil emergency" in May 2004. This is a shift in name 
only--the violence continues and 400 Acehnese have been killed since the 
"downgrade."

While Indonesian military officials claim to be targeting armed rebels, they 
are employing "drain the ocean to kill the fish" tactics, with brutality and 
indiscriminate killing. According to Amnesty International, the Indonesian 
military has engaged in extrajudicial executions of civilians--even 
children. The human rights group also charges that there is widespread 
"torture of detainees in both military and police custody."

The attacks are being carried out with U.S.-origin military hardware like 
the C-130 military transport aircraft and the OV-10 Bronco attack planes 
manufactured by Rockwell International.
With the aim of adding more C-130s, Broncos, and other weapons to the 
volatile mix in Indonesia, the White House is failing to balance the need 
for security with a commitment to democracy, thus jeopardizing both.

Arguments for resuming full military ties highlight Jakarta's contributions 
to the war on terrorism. As President Bush's request to Congress for 
military assistance notes, " Indonesia has demonstrated its resolve to fight 
terrorists and violent extremism." But John M. Miller, an activist with the 
East Timor Action Network, counters that the military there, "continues to 
terrorize Indonesia 's residents; the military's human rights record remains 
atrocious. Who are the real terrorists?"
Success in the war on terrorism depends on answering Miller's question 
honestly and crafting foreign policies that are based on the response.

(Frida Berrigan is a senior research associate with the Arms Trade Resource 
Center, a project of the World Policy Institute. She writes regularly for 
Foreign Policy In Focus (online at www.fpif.org).) 



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