An internal Indonesian military cable
issued last month states the suspension of co-operation between the Australian
and Indonesian military only affected activities under one sub-committee,
suggesting Indonesia never intended to completely suspend military ties.
The December
29 cable, seen by Fairfax Media, was sent on behalf of military chief Gatot
Nurmantyo, and said activities under the joint operation and exercise sub
Indonesia backs down on
military tie cuts
The suspension of military
cooperation with Australia has been watered down is Indonesian President says
relations are "in good condition."
There are
four sub-committees under the Australia Indonesia High Level Committee, which
brings together the chiefs of both Australia and Indonesia's defence forces and
convened for the first time in April 2013.
Other
sub-committees include intelligence and logistics.
Commander-in-Chief of
the Indonesian National Defense Force General Gatot Nurmantyo and Chief of
Defence Force Air Marshal Mark Binskin in Canberra last year.
Indonesian
military spokesman Major-General Wuryanto confirmed to Fairfax Media that navy
joint patrols and co-operation between the two countries to combat people
smuggling had never been affected by the suspension.
For a
dramatic two days it appeared Australia and Indonesia were facing another bilateral crisis after
Indonesian newspaper Kompas broke the story that an Indonesian officer
had complained about material taught at Campbell Barracks, an Australian army
base in Perth.
The material
related to sensitive issues including East Timor, West Papuan independence and
Indonesia's state ideology, Pancasila.
After multiple and perplexing statements from the government
and military that seemed to indicate a suspension of all defence
ties, chief security minister Wiranto finally issued a statement on Thursday
evening saying that only activities involving language training in a special
unit in Australia had been suspended.
"This
does not mean the termination of defence co-operation as a whole, as has been
reported in the media lately," he said.
Defence
analyst Evan Laksmana from the Centre for Strategic and International Studies
in Indonesia said it was wrong to suggest Indonesia wanted a blanket ban on
defence co-operation with Australia and was now backing down.
"I have
seen the letter from our side of things in which from the beginning it was
always limited," he said.
"I
think there was confusion because there was at least 24 hours before there was
clarification from the parties concerned about the extent to which there is a
freeze."
"I
don't think it is true at all that ... we wanted a blanket freeze and now we
are backing down."
Mr Laksmana
also said there was no solid evidence that this was an individual attempt by
General Nurmantyo to suspend military co-operation because he didn't like Australia.
"I
think we need to be very careful with assigning personal motives to Gatot as to
the reason behind the suspension," he said.
The
executive director of the Institute for Defence, Security and Peace Studies in
Indonesia, Mufti Makarim, said the internal cable, which was sent to the
Indonesian infantry, navy and air force chiefs, only mentioned military
co-operation under the joint exercise and operations subcommittee.
"It was
not a postponement of all military cooperation between Indonesia and Australia,"
he said.
Australian
Defence Minister Marise Payne issued a carefully worded statement on Wednesday
saying that "some interaction between the two defence organisations had
been postponed" until the concerns raised by the Indonesian officer were
resolved.
"Co-operation
in other areas is continuing," she said in the statement.
President
Joko Widodo appeared to confirm the diplomatic rift the following day saying
that while it was an operational issue it was a matter of principle and
Australia and Indonesia had agreed to stay out of each other's internal
affairs.
However his
chief security minister later released the statement saying the suspension only
affected the language training program and the problem would not interfere with
bilateral relations.
President
Jokowi's press office later tweeted Mr Wiranto's statement with the comment:
"Clear and direct"
Indonesian
defence expert Natalie Sambhi, a research fellow at the Perth USAsia Centre,
believed some element of the suspension was certainly meant to be a reprimand
to Australia because of the sensitivity of West Papua.
"I'm
curious about why the messaging out of Indonesia was so messy, not only
between the agencies but also between Gatot's office and the navy," she
said.
"It
suggests to me that this was always intended to be limited, in hindsight, now
we think about it."
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