As Indonesia’s outspoken
military (TNI) chief General Moeldoko nears his mandatory retirement age next
month, the conversation has moved on to who will be replacing him.
Selecting
a candidate is normally a fairly straightforward process. Candidates for the
top TNI post should be flag officers who have held the position of chief of
staff in one of the TNI’s three forces – the Army, the Navy or the Air Force.
The current officers would be Army chief of staff Gen. Gatot Nurmantyo, Navy
chief of staff Adm. Ade Supandi and Air Force chief of staff Air Chief Marshal
Agus Supriatna.
Furthermore,
since the end of the Suharto era, the post has been rotated in an
Army-Navy-Army-Air Force pattern which has held until today. For instance,
Moeldoko, who had been army chief of staff, took over in 2013 from Adm. Agus
Suhartono, who has been chief of staff of the Indonesian navy. Following this
pattern, since Moeldoko was from the Army, the next TNI chief should be from
the Air Force, which would suggest that Air Force chief of staff Air Chief
Marshal Agus Supriatna should be Indonesia’s next military chief.
But on
Wednesday, The Jakarta Post reported that Coordinating Political Legal
and Security Affairs Minister Tedjo Edhy Purdijatno had said that Indonesian
president Joko “Jokowi” Widodo had yet to make up his mind and that the next
TNI chief may not necessarily be from the air force.
“Yes,
there is an unwritten agreement that three branches of the TNI, namely the
Indonesian Army, Air Force and Navy, will take turns in taking the position of
the military commander. However, it is not set in stone and the President has
yet to decide,” Tedjo said on the sidelines of a
national cybersecurity symposium in Central Jakarta.
The
position itself is not a new one. Even though the post has rotated in that
fashion since 1999 with the appointment of the first non-Army TNI chief Adi
Sutjipto and has lasted through six TNI chiefs since then up to Moeldoko, the
appointment of the TNI chief is still the president’s prerogative.
Some
lawmakers are also urging Jokowi to make the decision soon. Moeldoko reaches
his mandatory retirement age of 58 in July, and his successor would ideally be
recommended and then subsequently confirmed by the House by then. But since the
House would be on recess from June 10 until early August, Jokowi would need to
submit his recommendation soon in order to ensure that a new TNI commander is
sworn in at least a few days before Moeldoko ends his term, notes one legislator who is a
member of House Commission I on information, defense and foreign affairs.
Whoever
he is, the new military chief will preside over an interesting time in
Indonesian defense policy. The country is striving to achieve a Minimum
Essential Force in 2024, and Jokowi and his advisers have been stressing
several changes over the past few months, including transforming the country’s
defense industry, increasing its military budget and the restructuring its
military. By Prashanth Parameswaran
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