The Indonesian government has
confirmed that it will not suspend
military cooperation with Australia after a top general said earlier
in the week that ties between the two nations would be cut. The incident is
just the latest episode in a rocky relationship between the neighbors.
On January 4, Indonesian Military Chief
Gatot Nurmantyo declared the suspension of Indonesia-Australia military
cooperation, apparently because an Indonesian special forces commander trainer found materials at an Australian teaching facility
that were insulting to both the Indonesian military and the state’s ideology of
Pancasila.
Pancasila, from the Sanskrit word for for “five”, panca, and the Javanese
for “principles”, sila, is the name given to the official founding
principles of the Indonesian state. The principles are: “The one God system
(monotheism), just and civilised humanity, the unity of Indonesia, democracy
and social justice for all.”
The incident is part of the ups and downs
of the Indonesia-Australia diplomatic and military relationship
that dates back to 1945 when Indonesia first declared independence from both
Japan, which had occupied the country in 1942 and the Dutch, who
had colonised it in the 18th century.
Neighbourhood blues
In September 1945, Australian waterside workers
imposed “a black ban” on all Dutch ships destined for Indonesia in Australian
ports. Later, Australian government showed sympathy for its northern neighbour
in the Dutch-Indonesia conflict, even while officially
maintaining impartiality.
Since then, however, the relationship
between Australia and Indonesia has been rocky at times, depending on what
Australia has perceived to be in its national interest. Australian public
opinion opposed Indonesia’s desire to incorporate West Papua into the nation
in the 1950s, for instance, and a low-level separatist conflict continues in
the province.
Australia initially supported Indonesia’s invasion of East Timor,
but after the fall of president Suharto in 1998, then-Australian prime minister
John Howard proposed a referendum on the issue of independence for East Timor.
This led to the secession of East Timor from Indonesia. And the
violence that ensued led Australia to send troops to East Timor under the auspices of the United Nations’ INTERFET
(International Force East Timor).
Defence cooperation between Australia and
Indonesia has improved drastically since then: both countries need each other.
For Australia, Indonesia is an important nation for its security and economic objectives
as the country is its gateway to Asia.
Indonesia, on the other hand, needs
Australia as a strategic partner to modernize and further professionalize its military
forces. Every year, Indonesia sends more than a hundred officers to Australia for
training and education.
Yet the distrust engendered by Australia’s
intervention in East Timor lingers, and remains the root of current problems in
the nations’ relationship. It still hovers in the background despite
improvements in economic, military, and diplomatic relationship.
Hidden agendas?
General Gatot Nurmantyo is the perfect
embodiment of this lack of trust. In March 2015, for instance, he suggested
that Australia’s meddling in East Timor’s secession from Indonesia was part of a proxy war to secure oil.
In December 2016, he ominously warned of Australia’s desire to take over the Masela Oil Block,
which is close to Timor-Leste (as East Timor has been called since gaining
independence) and Darwin. He also noted that Indonesia is currently surrounded
by Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Malaysia, which all of which used to
have problems with Indonesia.
Many Indonesians share similar discomfort,
though it might not as extreme as General Nurmantyo’s. Despite assurances from both US President Obama and
Australia’s then-prime minister Julia Gillard that the goal of stationing 2,500 US troops in Darwin from 2017
was to counter China – and not to threaten Indonesia or the Southeast Asian
region generally – many Indonesians still believe there’s a hidden agenda
concerning both US and Australian interest in Indonesia’s abundant natural resources and Papua.
Given this background, it should be no
surprise that a homework assignment for an Indonesian Special Forces language
student to write an essay supporting the argument “Papua should have independence because it was part of
Melanesia” would touch a raw nerve.
It confirmed General Nurmantyo’s worst
expectations about Australia’s intentions, including that Indonesian officers training in Australia would be
indoctrinated and recruited as spies.
Contradictory messages
At the same time, General Nurmantyo’s
reaction caught other Indonesians completely off guard. Indonesian military’s
spokesman, Major General Wuryanto, for instance, stated that the reason for the
temporary freeze was technical matters (masalah teknis) and
not due to insulting Pancasila.
Even the normally nationalistic Indonesian
Defence Minister, Ryamizard Ryacudu, played down the incident, saying that it was an
isolated personal act that the Australian government had regretted. And he
noted that Australia had apologised for the incident, which actually happened in mid-December 2016.
To add to the confusion, a tweet from the
presidential staff office suggested that the temporary halting of the military
cooperation between Australia and Indonesia was only on joint training,
education, officer exchange, and official visits.
Later, however, in a letter that was
followed by a press conference by Wiranto, the Coordinating Ministry for
Politics, Law, and Security, stressed that the relationship freeze was limited only to language courses.
Work to do
It seems from the different responses of
several government ministers that General Nurmantyo’s decision to halt the
military cooperation was abrupt, and that it came without any warning or
coordination with other ministers – or even the military’s own spokesman.
The relationship between Australia and
Indonesia is clearly very important for the Indonesian government, given the
response to General Nurmantyo’s announcement. It would have been simple for
President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo and the rest of the cabinet to simply reaffirm
what General Nuryantyo had proclaimed. But they value Indonesian-Australian
military ties, and so Jokowi and the rest of the cabinet went into damage
control mode to limit the fallout.
Finally, the incident shows that trust
between Australia and Indonesia remains fragile, since a language class writing
assignment could cause such an outrage. Indonesia’s wounds from East Timor’s
secession are clearly still very raw.
Coupled with the uproar over revelations in 2013 that Australia wiretapped then-president
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in 2009, which led to suspension of cooperation
between the two countries, it shouldn’t be surprising that Indonesia remains
wary of Australia’s intentions.
Clearly, both the Australian and
Indonesian governments still have a lot of homework to do to build trust
between their nations.
Yohanes Sulaiman, Visting Lecturer in
International Relations and Political Science at Indonesian Defense University
& Lecturer, Universitas Jendral Achmad Yani
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