Indonesia is facing an increase
in violence because of religious and ethnic unrest that have both resisted
permanent solution
The religious problems are all about JAD (Jemaah
Ansharut Daulah), an Indonesian Islamic terror group that had affiliated itself
with ISIL (Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant). JAD took credit for a series
of attacks against Christian churches and other targets in East Java over
several days in May. These attacks triggered a massive police and public
backlash that quickly led to numerous arrests of known or suspected ISIL
supporters. Since these attacks police have arrested at least 120 suspects and
killed another 17 who resisted arrest violently. Interrogations and captured
documents indicated a larger membership of JAD then previously believed. There
was also proof that Aman Abdurrahman, the cleric that played a key role forming
JAD, encouraged the recent attacks even though he has been imprisoned since
2009. Abdurrahman was put on trial again and condemned to death. The date of
the execution (by firing squad) has not been set but the police made it clear
that they have more than a hundred JAD suspects under surveillance all and all
of them would be arrested just before the execution of Abdurrahman. This is
meant to cripple any plans JAD might have to carry out revenge attacks. Some
known JAD leaders are still at large and being sought. New laws were passed
making it easier to arrest terrorism suspects and hold them longer for
interrogation.
At the same time there has been
another flare up of ethnic violence in Papua, which has been less of a problem,
and a more distant one than Islamic terrorism. In late June there was an attack
at a rural airport by separatist gunmen, which left three dead and two wounded.
Police and soldiers in Papua responded, but their actions were not immediately
reported because in Papua the police restrict the media and much of the
violence takes place in isolated settlements. Eventually the truth gets out but
that only shows that police have been using terror tactics for at least a
decade, killing a separatist every month or two and calling the incident one
involving criminal, not political (separatists) activity. The West Papua
National Liberation Army took credit for this latest attack and made it clear
the targets were Malays from the Moslem majority of Indonesia coming to settle
in a remote are and provide information for police about what native Papuans
are up to.
Despite government efforts to
make it appear otherwise, separatist unrest continues in Papua. This is a large
area that is thinly populated by over 300 Melanesian tribes. It is the poorest
part of Indonesia, with some thirty percent of the population being extremely
poor. The Papuans, who were ruled as a Dutch colony for centuries, were granted
independence by the Dutch in 1961, but a year later Indonesia invaded and no
one went to the aid of the Papuans. The UN called for a referendum to determine
what the Papuans wanted, but Indonesia never allowed that to happen. The UN has
continued to protest and pressure Indonesia, but nothing has changed, except
for growing separatist violence. The government has responded by arresting and
prosecuting anyone who openly demonstrates support for separatism. This has
provided the incentive for more Papuans to join the non-violent and violent
separatist groups.
Most Indonesians do not want
Papua (the western half of New Guinea, the fourth largest island in the world)
to be independent. In addition to lots of valuable natural resources, there's
lots of unused land that can be occupied by Moslem migrants from crowded parts
of the country. But that causes friction, because the native Papuans are
Melanesian, who look quite different from the majority Malays. Moreover, the
Melanesians tend to be Christian while the Malays are almost all Moslems. The
Malays are better educated and run the government and police. The Malays are
also very corrupt and have done little to improve the lives of native Papuans
over the last half century. There are a lot of Melanesians outside of Papua,
and they are increasingly subject to violence by Malay Islamic radicals.
The Neighborhood Islamic Terrorist
Meanwhile Islamic terrorism
continues to be a threat that is closer to where most Indonesians live and
easier to report on. Despite that ISIL leaders had apparently deluded
themselves into believing that they could gain a lot of local support by
carrying out several horrific attacks during a short period of time. Al Qaeda
had tried this over a decade earlier in Indonesia and failed spectacularly.
ISIL failed to note how the al Qaeda Indonesia fail developed because ISIL, as
a more radical offshoot of al Qaeda, believed they were immune to past
realities. They were not and that may provide other Moslem nations with another
example of how a Moslem majority country can tolerate Islamic conservatives
while also being able to crush Islamic terrorism.
Most of the recent Indonesian
attackers were known supporters of ISIL who had travelled to Syria to live in
(and fight for) the caliphate and then returned when the caliphate collapsed.
Most of the Indonesians who went to Syria did not come back. Even many of those
who were not killed believed they were safer outside of Indonesia.
The 500 or so known returnees
underwent screening and extensive warnings to not support Islamic terrorist
activity while back in Indonesia. Even before these attacks the government was
trying to get the counter-terrorism laws changed to deal with the way ISIL
operated (indoctrinating entire families and advising them to conceal their
religious fanaticism). In 2017 the government admitted that the popularity of
ISIL had led to counter-terrorism forces detecting small groups of ISIL
supporters in all but a few of the 33 Indonesian provinces. The May 13-14
attackers belonged to JAD, which had ordered its members to make attacks like
these after a May 8th incident at a high-security prison for convicted Islamic
terrorists, including some senior JAD leaders. Five prison guards died while
preventing 156 prisoners from breaking out. After that the failed prison break
there was an incident on the 10th where a policeman, standing guard
in front of a West Java police hospital was stabbed by a man who turned out to
be an Islamic terrorist. The attacker was shot dead by other police but was
identified. Police has intercepted and arrested or shot dead (if resistance was
encountered) several armed men intercepted as they sought to get close to the
prison where the escape attempt was being suppressed. This did not indicate
that ISIL was planning a larger series of attacks. So the JAD attacks came as a
surprise.
The first five May attacks were
carried out over two days and began with three separate attacks against
churches in Surabaya, in East Java. All three attacks were carried out by six
members of a Moslem family that had returned from Syria and pretended to be no
longer radicalized. In reality the parents managed to obtain or build explosive
vests and vehicle bombs and carried out a plan to make simultaneous bomb
attacks on the three churches. The mother and her two daughters (nine and
twelve years old) wore explosive vests while the father and the two sons (16
and 18 years old) use a car and two motorcycles carrying larger bombs. All six
attackers died along with seven people at the churches. More than 40 were
wounded. Late on the 13th in the nearby city of Sidoarjo police, alerted
by neighbors, raided an apartment and the three adults detonated the bombs they
were preparing, killing themselves. Three children in the apartment survived.
After the May 13th
incidents there was another attack against a police compound in Surabaya. The
two days of Islamic terrorist violence left 26 dead, including 13 suicide
bombers. There were many more wounded. When police raided the home of the men
who attacked the police compound they found a bomb building workshop and 54
completed pipe bombs.
There was one last attack on the
16th when five men attacked a police compound in eastern Sumatra
(Riau province). The attackers were in a van that crashed through the front
gate. Four of the men got out and, brandishing long swords, attempted to attack
policemen. These four swordsmen were quickly shot but the driver of the van
backed up the vehicle, running over and a killing a policeman and injuring two
reporters. The van then drove away and the driver later abandoned the vehicle
and escaped on foot. One of the swordsmen apparently survived his gunshot
wounds and was interrogated to obtain details of this operation and JAD
operations in general. By the end of May the Islamic terrorism and the response
had left 53 dead (31 of them terrorists, the rest civilians or police). Another
fifty people were wounded. This was the largest one month Islamic terrorism
death toll since 2002 (when over 200 died).
Within a few days police,
especially Detachment 88 were allowed to arrest dozens of people they had been
watching but could not touch because ISIL had, until then, purposely not been
violent inside Indonesia. Now the entire country was on high alert and the
government quickly obtained the new anti-terrorism law they had been seeking.
The new law gives the police and military the power to arrest “potential
terrorists.” This kind of power is unpopular with many Indonesians who remember
the decades of military dictatorship that used similar powers to suppress any
critics. The military leaders insist they will not abuse the new law and that
may well be true if the military is constantly watched for misuse of the new
arrest powers. The Indonesian remains relatively free and unrestricted.
Meanwhile the government called
for all Indonesians, especially those active on the Internet, to report any
suspicious activity. That has worked in the past after a major attack (like the
one in 2002) and worked again. Police were soon getting lots of tips and
detailed information about what turned out to be JAD/ISIL members trying to hide
in plain sight. The problem is this ISIL stealth mode does not stand up to a
lot of scrutiny, especially by neighbors. The counter-terrorism intelligence
experts quickly reconstructed the “how to” manual Indonesian ISIL supporters
created to avoid police attention. Suddenly the local ISIL threat was a lot
larger than believed. On the plus side many of these ISIL members were still
going through training and preparations for major attacks and could be jailed
before they were ready.
What had the most impact on
Indonesians was the use of children as suicide bombers. During the first attack
there were survivors who described how the mother triggered the vest her nine
year old daughter was wearing before setting off her own. Indonesian Moslems
knew this sort of thing took place elsewhere, like in Syria, Iraq and Nigeria.
But to have it happen in Indonesia, the most populous (264 million people)
Moslem (87 percent of the population) nation was horrific. Indonesia had always
practiced a less fanatic form of Islam, in large part because Indonesia was not
converted via conquest but gradually via contact with Arab merchants and
seamen. The foreign Moslems attracted converts via personal example, not
aggressive preaching and threats of physical harm.
But that made it easier for more
conservative clerics to attract some Indonesian Moslems who were willing to
“defend Islam” against the “heresy” rampant throughout Indonesia. Another
target was the large non-Moslem minorities of Indonesia. The government tried
to placate the Islamic radicals and that seemed to work for a while until it
didn’t. Now is another of those “they have gone too far” moments for the
Islamic radicals and a growing number of Indonesians are becoming less tolerant
of intolerant Islamic conservatives. Some of this shift in attitude is in
self-defense. As Islam spread peacefully through Indonesia (until Christianity
showed up and provided some competition) only some local Hindus, Buddhists and
so on proved able to resist the conversion trend. That conversion was helped by
the fact that most of the conversions were carried out by Indonesian Moslems
who were tolerant of those seeking to keep some of their traditional (and
ancient) practices. This is something Christian missionaries had learned to do,
with great success. But Islam was different because back in Arabia and Egypt
(where the most authoritative Islamic scholars tended to live) the word was
that no such modifications were tolerable. But Indonesia was far away and no
one ever seriously proposed a military expedition to rectify this incorrect
thought.
Then came the Arabian oil wealth
in the 1950s and soon there were Arab Islamic scholars opening up madrassas
(Islamic religious schools) and building new mosques all over the world, paid
for by powerful, pious and now petroleum rich Arabs who sought to protest
Islam. All this was to make it clear that a true Moslem did not keep any old
religious practices around. Most Indonesians ignored this, but a small minority
became believers and by the end of the 1990s there were millions of Indonesians
who favored this stricter Islam. Politicians found that the Islamic parties
could deliver votes reliably as long as you supported the new lifestyle laws
they wanted. So far the Islamic parties, for all their fanaticism, are very
much a minority and the majority of Moslem politicians do not want to outlaw
“traditional Indonesian Islam” (which tolerates alcohol, night clubs, education
and modern fashions for the women and a lot of other stuff that makes the
country prosper and brings in the tourists. Extreme groups like ISIL are
forcing Indonesia to decide how tolerant it will be of an intolerant form of
Islam.
This recent and quite major
outbreak of ISIL violence was not unexpected, but ISIL did manage to gain the
element of surprise. There had not been much Islamic terrorist violence in
2018, even though a lot of Indonesian ISIL members were coming back from Syria
and other places where ISIL had been crushed. In February there was an attack
on a church in Java. The attack consisted of an attacker armed with a sword. He
was subdued but not before he wounded several people. That attack did not set
off calls for a major crackdown because it was apparently a “lone wolf”
operation. It was the high security prison breakout attempt on May 8th
that did get the attention of counter-terrorism experts. The prison contained
dozens of key Islamic terrorist leaders and technical experts. Such an effort
to get them out of a heavily guarded prison indicated that may of the returned
ISIL members had been busy, and discreet. Four days later the attacks on
Christians showed that the local ISIL activists were desperate, determined but
not prepared for a major effort.
Indonesia has established a
remarkable record of suppressing Islamic terrorist violence within its own
borders but that has resulted in most Indonesian Islamic terrorists fleeing the
country and showing up elsewhere. This approach to suppressing Islamic
terrorist activity required continuous and active measures to detect and arrest
Islamic terrorists. But ISIL was different, even though most Indonesian ISIL
recruits also fled the country. Until recently there was no indication that
something big was coming.
While the war against ISIL in
Syria and Iraq was raging during 2016 Indonesian counter-terrorism forces
crippled ISIL efforts to expand into Indonesia. Counter-terror forces crushed
MIT (Mujahadeen Indonesia Timur, or Mujahadeen of Eastern Indonesia), the last
of the older Islamic terrorist organizations still active in the country. MIT
was long led by Santoso (single names are common in this region), who openly
declared MIT part of ISIL in 2014. In 2016 a series of raids and arrests left
Santoso dead and MIT reduced to fewer than ten active members. MIT carried out
some attacks before 2017 but suffered heavy losses in the process. Since 2014
MIT concentrated most of its efforts on recruiting and setting up trained cells
of terrorists in other parts of the country.
MIT failed because Indonesian
counter-terror forces are among the best in the region, most Indonesians are
hostile to groups like ISIL and many MIT members left the country to join ISIL
in areas like Syria and Libya where ISIL was a less of a disadvantage than in
Indonesia. There was only one known MIT attack in Indonesia during 2017 and MIT
had never recovered from the loss of its senior leaders and had quietly been
displaced by other new ISIL groups like JAD.
After late 2014, with the Islamic
state established in eastern Syria and western Iraq Indonesia cooperated in
identifying its citizens suspected of going overseas to work with Islamic
terrorist organizations. Thus hundreds of Indonesians were arrested overseas
(usually in Turkey) and deported to Indonesia to face prosecution or, at the
very least, constant surveillance. This is because many Indonesians remember what
happened when several dozen Indonesians who went to fight in with al Qaeda in
Afghanistan during the 1980s. Many of these men returned to Indonesia and
formed Islamic terrorist groups that, after 2001, carried out several
spectacular attacks, including one in 2002 that killed nearly 200 foreign
tourists. This resulted in a major counter-terrorism campaign that eventually
killed or drove into exile nearly all the active Indonesian Islamic terrorists.
There was a real fear that some of those ISIL members returning from Syria will
try to emulate what the Afghan veterans did. In 2015 police revealed that they
were monitoring returning ISIL men and would act against any suspected of
engaging in terrorist activities in Indonesia. Many arrests since then are apparently
a result of that surveillance program. ISIL responded by urging members to
conceal their Islamic radicalism as much as possible.
There were some forms of Islamic
terrorism that were more acceptable with Indonesians and ISIL became active in
attacking non-Moslems. That had already led to increased counter-terror
activity each year on Java and Sumatra before Christmas. Police make numerous
arrests and seized bombs or bomb components intended for attacks on Shia and
Christian communities. Christians are ten percent of the population while Shia
are less than a half percent of Indonesian Moslems. These minorities are not
evenly distributed so there are areas that are all Moslem and easier for
Islamic terrorist groups to recruit and survive. The Christian islands used to
be almost entirely Christian, but since the 1980s the government has encouraged
(with laws, money and land) Moslems from overpopulated areas to move to less
populated Christian territories. This has created frictions on islands like
Sulawesi that are not entirely religious. Islamic terrorist groups began
forming in the late 1990s and concentrated their attacks on non-Moslems, both
local and foreign (tourists). Since 2013 small ISIL type (or affiliated) groups
gave been appearing and single out Shia Moslems as well as Christians and other
non-Moslems (or Moslem sects ISIL does not approve of). Islamic conservatives
in the government (especially parliament and the judicial system) deliberately
target Christians by accusing them of anti-Islamic acts. These accusations are
almost always false but because of the way politics works in democracies with a
Moslem majority, such accusations mobilize many Moslems who are willing to
demonstrate, often violently, in support of “defending Islam.”
That explains why Islamic
terrorism continues to survive in Indonesia. The government does not want to
offend the many Islamic conservatives out there. The Islamic conservative
politicians use religion as a tool to get what they want, which often has
nothing to do with religion or the “infidel (non-Moslem) threat.” Islamic
political parties are unable to gain wide popularity but together they have
gained control over 10-20 percent of the seats in parliament. The percentage
varies depending on how active Islamic terrorists have been.
But there is something else
unique about Indonesia, the nation with the largest Moslem population in the
world. Islam is not the state religion of Indonesia as it is in most other
Moslem majority nations. Indonesia officially recognizes five religions; Islam,
Roman Catholicism, Protestant Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism and
Confucianism. The founders of the Indonesian state (formerly a Dutch colonial
government) found the Dutch approach to religion (deliberately allowing
multiple religions and prohibiting religion based persecution) could work in
Indonesia because they Dutch has demonstrated that. So Islamic political
parties face a formidable number of constitutional and cultural challenges to
gaining control of the government. Most Indonesians are fine with letting the
Islamic parties operate openly as long as they observe the laws and
constitution. So far that has worked.
The recent ISIL attacks,
especially those using young children, puts the Islamic politicians on the
defensive for a while. The major Islamic party, the PKS (Prosperous Justice
Party) has, since 2004, managed attract and keep about eight million voters.
The next elections are in 2019 PKS is expected to once more escape any blowback
from the outbreak of ISIL violence. While PKS is led by Moslem clerics it has
managed to hold onto it voters by playing down Islamic lifestyle rules and
concentrating on reducing corruption and promoting what Westerners would see as
a socialist economic platform. PKS also encourages more foreign investment and
economic expansion. Yet lurking in the background is the fact that Islamic
scripture (depending on who is interpreting it) approves of and encourages
violence against non-Moslems and Moslem heretics. Islam is the only major
religion to be burdened by that and it is a persistent problem that no one has
found a permanent fix for. Indonesia, however, is the only Moslem majority
nation that deliberately prohibits Islam from dominating the nation. No
Indonesian ruler ever invoked “defending Islam” to justify his rule. Indonesia
does allow a lot of experimentation. For example the province of Aceh (the
first part of Indonesia to be converted to Islam centuries ago) was allowed to
implement Islamic law as part of a deal to end a separatist rebellion. Aceh is
still subject to federal laws and the use of Islamic (sharia) law does not
appear to have made life better for the people of Aceh. Most Indonesians expect
Islamic terrorism to be similarly tamed. So far Islamic terrorism is still
around, regenerating each time it is crushed.
“The Strategy Page”
Read "Rockefeller and the Demise of Ibu Pertiwi" online and in bookstores, eBook formats
ReplyDeleteIndonesians are an easy going lot; they didn't dream up Islamic bigotry and hatred by themselves. It is not possible to understand religious bigotry (both in favor and against Islam) without considering the outside forces driving "strategies of tension". e.g. The Saud family (close USraeli allies) spends billions on Wahabist procelysing throughout the Muslim populations of Asia. Look up Nafeez Ahmed; he explains how terrorism is used as an instrument of Strategy of Tension, which in turn is a subset of a larger Hegelian Dialect.
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