This week, Australia’s army
chief Angus Campbell will meet Indonesia’s military leaders in Jakarta. Apart
from reaffirming the importance of a key bilateral security relationship, the
trip is also an opportunity to smooth over ties following a spat last month and
pave the way for even greater collaboration between the two sides.
As I have
noted previously, Indonesia and Australia, two neighboring, significant, and
highly-capable actors in the Indo-Pacific, have been strengthening their
defense relations over the past few years, with notable steps including the
inking of the Lombok Treaty in 2006 and the launching of the two-plus-two
dialogue in 2012 (See: “Why Do Australia-Indonesia Military Relations Matter?”). This
has occurred despite periodical tensions and crises that have rocked ties.
Though
the emergence of Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull in September 2015
had given a new boost to bilateral ties, in January, the rocky relationship hit
another snag when Indonesia’s military spokesman said bilateral cooperation had
been suspended temporarily due to concerns about some teaching materials at an
Army language training facility in Australia (See: “Indonesia-Australia Military Relations Hit Another Snag”).
While the extent of the fallout ended up being much more limited than initially
suggested and both sides quickly signaled their commitment to preserve ties, it
nonetheless once again revealed the fragile nature of a deepening defense
relationship between the two countries.
Campbell’s
trip would be one of a series of steps that would reaffirm the importance of
the military relationship. To be sure, functional cooperation has continued on
in spite of the hype about the latest snag, as evidenced by the convening of
the third meeting of the Australia-Indonesia Ministerial Council on Law and
Security last week which touched on topics including terrorism, cybersecurity,
and intelligence collaboration (See: “Old Shadows in New Australia-Indonesia Military Spat”). But
Campbell’s meetings will give him a chance to meet top defense officials
including Indonesian military chief Gatot Nurmantyo and army chief of staff
Mulyono.
More
specifically, Campbell’s trip is also an opportunity to smooth over ties
following the latest snag. Indonesian officials had subsequently clarified last
month that only cooperation related to the military’s Australia-based language
training program had been suspended, rather than the overall defense
relationship as was speculated previously. Nonetheless, the concerns about
teaching materials are far from minor; the allegedly offensive content ties
into broader issues like West Papua and East Timor which are sensitive for the
Indonesian military and have also roiled bilateral ties previously. Campbell’s
visit is an opportunity for both sides to manage that issue, including
discussing the findings of an ongoing investigation that Australia had already
opened.
Clearing
the air now would be additionally useful because it would patch things up ahead
of Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo’s trip to Australia in a few weeks
time. That much-anticipated trip was supposed to take place last November but
was postponed as Jokowi had to contend with the fallout from blasphemy
allegations against the Christian and ethnically Chinese governor of Jakarta,
popularly known as Ahok.
No comments:
Post a Comment