INDONESIA’S House of Representatives has
ratified defense agreements between Indonesia and the governments of China and
Germany, passing two bills into law
One
of the new laws ratifies a defense agreement previously made between the
administration of former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his Chinese
counterpart in Beijing in November 2007. In December 2013, as a follow-up to
the 2007 agreement, then defense minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro and Chinese
Defense Minister Chang Wanquan met to discuss defense-related matters. The
meeting concluded with an agreement that Indonesia and China would launch a
joint special forces exercise and that China would help Indonesia to strengthen
its defense capacity through a military technology transfer.
The other law ratified a memorandum of
understanding (MoU) on Indonesia-Germany defense cooperation signed in Berlin
by then deputy defense minister Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin and Germany’s then state
secretary at the defense ministry, Rüdiger Wolf, in February 2012.The defense
cooperation between Indonesia and Germany could include military training,
research and development, disaster management, military logistics, healthcare
and peacekeeping missions.
The ratification of the two defense
agreements has prompted high hopes for Indonesia as they are expected to help
improve the country’s military posture and strength.“With the approval of the
two bills, there is henceforth legal protection for the defense cooperation
between Indonesia and those two countries,” Defense Minister Ryamizad Ryacudu
said at the plenary meeting. The two defense agreements, which are different in
essence, are an answer to Indonesia’s dream of upgrading and modernizing its
military strength.
While the defense agreement with China
focuses on joint military exercises between Indonesia’s special forces and
China’s equivalent, as well the latter’s offer to help Indonesia with a
military modernization program, the agreement with Germany promotes military
cooperation in general terms, affecting a wide ranging of joint activities.
All in all, the two recently signed
defense agreements are in line with the government’s commitment to modernize
the military. Such a commitment was previously made in June 2014, when then
presidential candidate Joko “Jokowi” Widodo said during his election campaign
that he aimed to triple Indonesia’s defense and security budget to improve the
professionalism of the Indonesian Military (TNI) and the National Police.“If
Indonesia’s economic growth stands at least at 7 percent, to improve our national
security system, I aim to allocate up to 1.5 percent of GDP [gross domestic
product] for defense,” Jokowi said at that time.
The two defense agreements complement
each other in meeting Indonesia’s expectations for a modern military
organization, especially suffering a prolonged military embargo from Western
countries in the late 1990s until the early 2000s.However, the ratified defense
agreements are not without risks, as the country has experienced in the
past.One area of concern is the fact that such agreements are binding in
nature. The question is whether there is still room for Indonesia to negotiate
should the country need quality military equipment other than that offered by
the two partner countries.
Such a question is associated with the
consideration of the quality of the products on offer. It has become an open
secret that there are just a few dozen military-equipment producing countries
in the world, only a few of which produce sophisticated and top-quality
products. The rest are producers of less sophisticated or less competitive
military equipment.
Should the agreements turn out to be
rigid, Indonesia would not have any other options aside from procuring
equipment offered by China and Germany.
Another area of concern is the fact that
military procurement is no different from common business deals practiced
worldwide, where profits are always the main consideration. It remains to be
seen whether the two ratified defense agreements are purely meant to help
Indonesia modernize its military. Otherwise, it is likely that Indonesia would
not be in a position to procure its equipment of choice.
A major concern is the fact that
Indonesia had a bad experience in the past in regards to such military
procurement policies. Although it was not a standalone factor, a shift in
procurement policy cost Indonesia its unity and territorial integrity.
We could have been proud of our
achievements as one of the military strengths in Asia in the 1960s, resulting
from our shift in procurement policy. However, the impact was no less than
devastating as Indonesia became economically indebted to the producing country
and was pushed to the brink of bankruptcy.
Such a shift in procurement policy also
triggered political disturbances in Indonesia. People may still remember the repeated
separatist struggles in several parts of the country during the leadership of
founding president Sukarno. It was apparent, as stipulated in international
literature and the formerly classified documents of the CIA, that there had
been foreign involvement in all those struggles.
Similarly, the repeated assassination
attempts on president Sukarno were associated with foreign involvement in the
planning, financing and execution of the attempts.
Perhaps it is advisable for the country
— particularly policymakers and decisionmakers — to consider the noble
principle of free and active foreign policy as outlined by the country’s
founding vice president Mohammad Hatta.
Indeed, it is not perfect and to some extent
it has been disliked by many countries. But it helped Indonesia to pass through
the successive turbulent years
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