Under SBY, Indonesia has boosted its
international presence.
What will his successor do?
After nearly ten years in office, President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono (widely known as SBY) will hand power this July to an elected
successor in competitive multi-party elections. His efforts to consolidate
Indonesia’s democracy and expand its economy have yielded tangible gains across
a variety of measures, with much more room to improve. His mark on Indonesian
foreign policy, while rooted in nonalignment and pragmatism, has been
noteworthy for its willingness to address values of democracy and human rights
head-on. What will this legacy mean for Indonesia’s potential as a leader for
other societies, particularly from the Muslim world?
Indonesia’s first directly elected president, SBY came to
power in 2004 with more than 60 percent of the vote; in 2009, he won
re-election in the first round by a similarly wide margin. After a tumultuous
transition following the 1998 downfall of the despot President Suharto, the
relative success of these two elections, and the country’s acceptance of the
results, propelled Indonesia’s rapid transformation into a flourishing
democracy and economic dynamo with a rapidly expanding middle class. Now, with
SBY unable to seek a third term due to constitutionally mandated term limits,
the race is on to succeed him.
Several figures have emerged at the forefront. Abdul Rizal
Bakrie, head of a successful business conglomerate, is the leading candidate
for the Golkar Party, the ruling party during General Suharto’s 32-year reign.
Prabowo Subianto, a former Special Forces commander under Suharto who ran
unsuccessfully for vice president in 2009, heads the Gerindra Party ticket.
Joko Widodo, the current governor of the capital city Jakarta, is most favored to
become the next president according to nationwide polls.
Unlike Bakrie and Prabowo, Jokowi (as he is known), is a
relatively new politician who made his name in the post-Suharto era. He has a
reputation for being an honest politician with a can-do attitude, detached from
the old political guard embodied by Bakrie and Prabowo. Although he is a
favorite to win, it remains unclear whether he will run if his party’s leader,
former President Megawati Sukarnoputri, chooses to make another claim for the
presidency. As the campaign heats up, one thing is certain: most of the
presidential hopefuls will focus on tackling domestic issues such as improving
infrastructure and curbing corruption. During the past year, SBY’s Democratic
Party has been marred by corruption scandals and his political image has taken
a hit.
While his domestic policy agenda may now be in jeopardy, it
seems that SBY’s foreign policy legacy will largely remain unscathed as his
term comes to an end. Much credit should be given to his administration for
guiding Indonesia to economic prosperity and international prominence in the
last ten years. He has worked to expand Indonesia’s clout on the international
stage mainly through its active leadership of the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN) and closer cooperation with India, Australia and China.
SBY’s administration has been eager to share its experiences on democratic
transition with other leaders of aspiring democracies, including Myanmar and
Egypt, and hosts an annual Asia-Pacific forum on democracy designed to lend
legitimacy to a political reform agenda. SBY also has chosen gradually to
increase Indonesia’s international profile by taking part in the G-20 summits
and co-chairing the UN Secretary General’s 27-member High Level Panel on the Post-2015 (Millennium
Development Goals) Development Agenda. Although this strategy has
elevated Indonesia’s standing in the international spotlight, doubts on its
rise as an influential global player persist, as SBY’s administration has
avoided major commitments that would compromise its historic preference for
neutrality and non-interference.
Benign Internationalism and Human
Rights
To understand Indonesia’s current foreign policy behavior,
one must delve into its recent history. Just like politicians in the United
States who channel its founding fathers, Indonesian leaders look to their
independence heroes for inspiration. After gaining independence in 1945,
Indonesia’s first president—Sukarno—pursued a “free and active” foreign policy strategy. The
strategy entailed protecting its own national interests, not aligning with
major world powers (i.e. the Soviet Union and the United States), and forming
strong bonds with other non-aligned countries such as India.
During this
period, Indonesia became one of the leading members of the Non-Aligned
Movement, which grew out of the group’s founding conference hosted by Indonesia
in Bandung in 1955. After General Suharto came to power (1967-98), however,
Indonesia kept a lower international profile and cultivated close relations
with Washington and other Western economic powers in order to develop its
economy.
What we see in Indonesia’s current foreign policy stance is
a blending of these two strategies. It is engaging with the international
milieu of both major and minor powers, but still holding back on making
significant commitments that could challenge its preference of remaining
relatively neutral in international disputes. In a country obsessed with
Facebook and other social media, SBY used his 2009 inaugural address to describe the strategic
outlook of Indonesia’s current foreign policy this way:
“Indonesia is facing a strategic environment where no
country perceives Indonesia as an enemy and there is no country which Indonesia
considers an enemy. Thus Indonesia can exercise its foreign policy freely in
all directions, having a million friends and zero enemies.”
For Indonesia, having “a million friends and zero enemies”
does much to help sustain its impressive growth in foreign trade and investment.
It also helps explain its reluctance to take hard human rights positions that
might upset major economic partners that have poor human rights records, such
as China. Furthermore, Indonesia is generally timid in making strong
commitments to uphold human rights at the international level because it
continues to struggle with its own human rights issues. Recently, for example,
Indonesia has seen a significant uptick in religious intolerance and government
infringement on civil rights and liberties. As the Muslim world’s
largest democracy, such troubling internal human rights issues pose a real
threat to the credibility of its leaders’ claim to be a beacon of democracy for
other fragile democracies.
Indonesia’s longstanding preference for non-intervention and
opposition to external attempts to meddle in others’ internal affairs align
conveniently with its desire to avoid international criticism of its own
domestic agenda. This is one motivation behind Indonesia’s failure to ratify
the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC). Amid calls from the
DPR (House of Representatives) to ratify the Statute, Defense Minister Purnomo
Yusgiantoro stated:
“We’ve already got a law on human rights, a law on human
rights tribunals and the Constitution, all of which govern the rights and
responsibilities of all citizens. All of them cover the issue of human rights.
So even without ratifying [the Rome Statute], we’re already complying with the
principles enshrined in it.”
Although Indonesia is generally complying with the Rome
Statute, it has not officially ratified it for fear of compromising its
independence to handle sensitive issues on its own. Ratifying the statute could
open Indonesia to unwanted attention by the ICC and limit its options if crimes
against humanity were to occur within its borders. While Indonesia is not high
on anyone’s list for ICC scrutiny, religious intolerance is growing (most
notably the destruction of homes belonging to the Shias of the Sampang Regency
at the hands of their Sunni neighbors), and a culture of impunity prevails
amongst the country’s security forces. Its elite counterterrorism unit—Densus
88—has been implicated in killings of suspected terrorists and last March,
members of Kopassus—the Indonesian Special Forces—stormed Cebongan prison and executed four detainees suspected of murdering a
Kopassus sergeant.
Unfortunately, this culture of impunity amongst members of
the armed forces is nothing new. During Indonesia’s 24-year occupation of East
Timor, its military committed atrocities against the East Timorese—most notably
the 1991 Santa Cruz Massacre and the spate of killings after the East Timorese
independence referendum in 1999. The Santa Cruz tragedy occurred when Indonesian
troops opened fire on a memorial procession at the Santa Cruz Cemetery in the
East Timor capital of Dili. The East Timorese independence referendum of 1999
saw at least 1,200 East Timorese slaughtered by anti-independence
militias backed by the Indonesian army.
Efforts
to seek justice for the atrocities in East Timor bore no fruit. A makeshift
human rights court set up by Indonesia and the UN Special Panels in East Timor
tried 18 individuals for abuses committed during 1999, but all were acquitted.
The CAVR, which ran from February 2002 to October 2005, accused Wiranto, Chief
of the Armed Forces during 1998-99, of being complicit in the abuses committed in East Timor.
The Serious Crimes Unit—a prosecutorial body within the UN Mission in East
Timor—issued a warrant for Gen. (ret) Wiranto’s arrest in 2004, but the East
Timorese government never forwarded it to Interpol. East Timor’s leaders have
opted for a reconciliatory approach with Indonesia, rather than seeking
punishment. Former East Timor President Jose Ramos-Horta spoke on the issue in 2006: By Ted Piccone and
Bimo Yusman for ‘The Diplomat’
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