Was
the Indonesian Military Chief’s US Flight Incident a Political Stunt? Irrespective of what
actually occurred, the incident holds significance for the country’s domestic
politics
For months, Gatot
Nurmantyo, the Indonesian military chief, has been courted self-aggrandizing
controversy wherever he may find it, all designed, it seems, to make himself
more politically important than he is.
The
latest instance came when Nurmantyo was booked to fly to Washington to attend a
counterterrorism conference. He was reportedly invited by Joseph F. Dunford
Jr., chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, who happens to be a personal
friend, according to Nurmantyo. Before departing, however, he was told U.S.
Customs would deny his entry – along with his wife and four other officials –
and was not allowed to fly. American officials quickly offered apologies for
what the U.S. embassy in Jakarta said, on Wednesday, was
due to an administrative error.
Days
after the incident, however, it emerged, following a statement by the U.S.
Department of Homeland Affairs, that despite the initial flight ban, Nurmantyo
was quickly cleared to travel and booked onto another airplane leaving hours
after the original one. (He had also been warned before the original flights
that there might be some delays because of U.S. security protocols.)
But
Nurmantyo “chose not to travel” on the second flight, the statement says.
Nurmantyo, also speaking days after the incident, insinuated that he didn’t
board the second flight because he wasn’t ordered to. “Without [the order of
the president] I will not take any initiative,” he said. One doubts,
though, whether President Joko Widodo would’ve been too fussed over which
airplane Nurmantyo boarded.
Irrespective
of what actually occurred, he whole incident has also allowed nationalists of
all hues to obtrude into the incident. The Jakarta Post sensationally
described it in an editorial as a
“diplomatic scandal.” If it is a scandal then it is one enflamed by politicians
and the press, which have given it copious coverage, especially on Indonesian
television.
The
aforementioned Jakarta Post editorial suggested that “such carelessness
of the U.S. government may result in fallout in bilateral and defense military
ties,” while it added that the Nurmantyo flying schedule “still leave[s] us
agog at how the world’s biggest power could be so reckless”. But the fact that
U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis got involved and personally apologized to
his Indonesian counterpart shows America as more contrite than punitive. However,
so far, Washington has refused to say publicly whether there was anything more
to the incident than a simple error.
Though
details remain murky, incidents like these and the way they are frame matter
because of Nurmantyo’s role in Indonesia. Nurmantyo personifies the genuine
concern that military leaders are becoming more influential in Indonesian
politics. And it is abundantly clear that Nurmantyo has long seen his future in
politics and is now making a play given that he is due to retire in a few months’
time.
As early
as 2014, Damien Kingsbury, of Deakin University, wrote in the East
Asia Forum that “Nurmantyo’s breaking of over a decade of military silence
on domestic politics signals a potential alternative to Indonesia’s democratic
path.” To put this into context, Kingsbury added: “Democracy in developing
states tends to be vulnerable to reversal, particularly where the military
remains primarily focused on internal rather than external threats”.
Nurmantyo
is certainly no friend of democracy. Years ago, he described democracy
in Indonesia as “empty.” More recently, he has threatened to disturb the
peaceful balance between different security forces when he said that the
military could take action over the import of foreign-made weaponry. In a
speech to retired military officers last month, which was leaked to the media,
he said that he was
prepared to “attack” the police if they were given such weapons. He has
also been making repeated warnings about the return of the PKI, the Communist
Party of Indonesia, almost an irredentist pursuit by Nurmantyo.
Bhatara
Ibnu Reza, a senior researcher for Imparsial, the Indonesian Human Rights
Monitor, dubbed Nurmantyo a “political soldier” and the “enemy of democracy” in
a recent opinion piece
for the Jakarta Post. John McBeth, writing in the Asia
Times this month, said that Nurmantyo is a “one of a kind”, a remark that
sought to distinguish him from his military chief predecessor, Moeldoko, who’s
political ambitions have so far fallen flat; Moeldoko is only deputy chairman
of the People’s Conscience Party (Hanura).
“Not
since the birth of the democratic era has an Indonesian military commander” –
meaning Nurmantyo – “so blatantly displayed his political ambitions while still
in office. And never before has one so openly courted religious groups in the
hope of burnishing his electability,” McBeth wrote.
Though
Nurmantyo might not yet be a popular figure he may seek to be, the latest
incident will no doubt boost his profile. That matters because the ideology he
represents is gaining traction in Indonesia. What Nurmantyo calls for is the
rejuvenation of ethno-nationalism, tinged with religious exceptionalism, and
combined with a populist appeal to the classes brushed aside by economic
development: the sort of message that has been propagated by the radical
Islamic Defenders’ Front (FPI).
The
comparison isn’t trite. When giving a lecture in December, following Basuki
“Ahok” Purnama’s conviction for blasphemy, he said that the protests, led by
the FPI, against the then-Jakarta mayor came from the “hearts
of the Islamic community”. He also mentioned that he had spoken to Habib
Rezieq Shihab, the FPI’s leader.
Some
analysts think Nurmantyo aspires to become the running mate of Prabowo Subianto
in 2019’s presidential election. “His character and leadership are already
proven,” the deputy chairman of the Great Indonesia Movement Party (Gerindra) told local media last
month. All the more reason, then, to read the Nurmantyo flight incident more as
a political stunt rather than some sort of elaborate plot by Washington to
shame Jakarta or a crisis in U.S.-Indonesia relations.
The
Diplomat
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