What
stands between Russia and close ties with Indonesia?
In March 2018, Indonesia
unexpectedly found itself in the crossfire of a US–Russia diplomatic spat
due to its decision to purchase 11 Russian Su-35 jet fighters. The deal has
stirred up discussions of what Russia’s game in Indonesia is and how it fits
into Indonesia’s defence posture. Although the deal is not huge in scale — the
cost is reported to be US$1.1 billion, offset by barter mostly in palm oil and
coffee — the move to buy the fourth-generation fighter jets breathes new life
into the Russia–Indonesia arms-trade relationship.
There is a
meaningful convergence of interests between Russia and Indonesia, strengthened
by current trends in East Asia. For Indonesia, a forward-looking defence
posture has been a key strategic goal. Indonesian President Joko Widodo
(Jokowi) has attempted to formulate a more proactive foreign and defence policy
that would leverage Indonesia’s strategic position between the Indian and
Pacific Oceans.
Even before
Jokowi, Indonesia began to turn its military into a ‘minimum essential force’.
A key element of this has been modernisation of obsolete weapons systems. An
even stronger ambition is to move towards self-reliance in military production.
To this end, Jokowi has pledged to include technology transfer clauses to arms
deals and increase funding for local production.
For Russia,
Indonesia has long been an underinvested asset in its eastward policy.
Since 2012, Russia has been visibly keen on developing deeper relations with
Asia. This accelerated as Moscow’s relations with the West deteriorated. Russia
is now seeking to diversify its strategy in Asia to include a better
relationship with Southeast Asian states and ASEAN. Still, among Southeast
Asian states Russia has enjoyed a particularly deep relationship only with
Vietnam, fuelled by a long history of Cold War alignment.
Indonesia
has been a particularly tough nut to crack for Russia, with bilateral trade in
2017 at a mere US$3.2 billion, with US$2.4 billion being Indonesian exports.
Russian companies have been aiming to build an oil refinery, a power plant and
a railway, but each high-level dialogue seems to produce more memoranda and not
much actual building.
Defence
cooperation is among the more interesting areas. Southeast Asia is a key market
for Russian arms exporters, and broader military-to-military cooperation is
attractive to Moscow as well. In December 2017, Russian Tu-95 Bear bombers
visited a runway in Indonesia, refuelling and then continuing on to patrol the
Southern Pacific. Russia’s new Ambassador to Jakarta — the experienced Lyudmila
Vorobieva — downplayed the power
projection move, though it was the first of its kind.
Russia is
aspiring to a visible presence in Southeast Asia and will have to get Indonesia
on board. President Vladimir Putin is reportedly
considering visiting Jakarta this year and may elevate the two countries’
relationship to a ‘strategic partnership’, a mostly symbolic but still
significant gesture.
But three
issues may hurt Russia’s attempt at strengthening strategic relations with
Indonesia.
First,
China’s growing assertiveness is pushing Southeast Asian states to hedge.
Russia is projecting an image as China’s closest partner. Moscow’s appeal to
Southeast Asia may suffer from this image, especially with how the Western
media portrays the Russia–China non-alliance.
Second, the
Trump administration is refurbishing the United States’ Asia policy
with the ‘free and open Indo-Pacific’ concept. Indonesia’s approach to the
Indo-Pacific idea has been more traditional in the sense that it focuses on
existing multilateral ASEAN-centred institutions. But at the same time it is open to incorporate new mechanisms as long
as they don’t undermine the old ones, meaning that Indonesia may well be
accommodative to US- and Japanese-led security
initiatives in the region.
An overly
welcoming attitude may cause irritation in Moscow, where there is inherent
mistrust of US-led initiatives. The ‘Indo-Pacific’ was already marked by the Russian Ministry of Foreign
Affairs as a case of American ‘geopolitical engineering’, harmful to regional
security.
Finally, if
US sanctions on Russia unfold in their harshest form, this may mean big trouble
for anyone willing to buy weapons systems from Russian producers. The current
US legislation allows for
sanctioning any country, organisation or individual that deals with Russian
entities on the sanctions list (which includes key arms sellers).
The Su-35
deal has shown that Russia’s relations with Indonesia and Southeast Asian
states depend heavily on whether Russia and the United States decide to keep
their differences at bay and take an issue-based approach. If the two choose to
counter each other wherever their interests cross and make it into a global
confrontation, we may all find ourselves in big trouble.
Anton
Tsvetov is an expert at the Center for Strategic Research (CSR), a Moscow-based
think tank. He tweets on Southeast Asian affairs and Russian foreign policy at @antsvetov.
The views expressed here are the author’s own and do not reflect those of CSR.
No comments:
Post a Comment