http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/LG24Ae01.html

June 24, 2010


US, Indonesia retie a controversial knot 
By Jim Lobe 


WASHINGTON - Thursday's announcement in Jakarta that Washington will resume 
training for the Indonesian military's controversial special forces unit 
Kopassus has been denounced by human-rights groups and two key lawmakers here. 

The announcement - which lifts a ban on cooperation with Kopassus dating back 
to 1999 - was made by visiting Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, who has 
continued efforts launched by the administration of president George W Bush to 
restore full bilateral military ties between the two nations. 

"I was pleased to be able to tell the president that as a result of Indonesian 
military reforms over the past decade, the ongoing professionalization of the 
TNI [Indonesian Armed Forces], and recent actions by the Ministry of Defense to 
address human-rights issues, the United States will begin a gradual, limited 
program of security cooperation activities with the Indonesian Army Special 
Forces," Gates told reporters after meeting with President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono. 

"I noted to the president that these initial steps will take place within the 
limits of US law and do not signal any lessening of the importance we place on 
human rights and accountability," he went on. "What's more, our ability to 
expand upon these initial steps will depend upon continued implementation of 
reforms within Kopassus and TNI as a whole." 

That caveat, however, did not appease rights groups that have long regarded 
Kopassus, including some of its highest-ranking officers, as responsible for 
some of the most notorious mass killings, assassinations, disappearances and 
other serious abuses committed in Southeast Asia's most populous nation - 
notably in the former East Timor, Papua and Aceh, over the past 20 years. 

"Amnesty International is disappointed by the decision that US forces will 
train the Kopassus unit," said T Kumar, the director for international advocacy 
of the US branch of Amnesty International (AIUSA). "It sends the wrong message 
in a country where mass and severe human-rights violations have taken place in 
an atmosphere of impunity." 

"The [Barack] Obama administration has just failed a key test," said Sophie 
Richardson, Asia director at New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW). "This is 
not the way to encourage reform with a military that has yet to demonstrate a 
genuine commitment to accountability for serious human-rights abuses." 

"This decision rewards Kopassus for its intransigence over abuses and 
effectively betrays those in Indonesia who have fought for decades for 
accountability and justice," she noted, adding that Jakarta had not only failed 
to remove the very few Kopassus soldiers who had been convicted of serious 
rights violations from the military, but had also recently promoted officers 
linked by credible evidence to past abuses to top Kopassus positions. 

The announcement was also denounced as "premature" by the Senator Russell 
Feingold, the former chair of the senate's Asia sub-committee and as "deeply 
regret[able]" by Senator Patrick Leahy, who wrote the law banning US aid and 
training for any foreign military unit credibly suspected of major abuses. 

"Although the Indonesian Ministry of Defense has taken some positive steps, 
numerous problems remain, including allegations of recent abuses," Feingold 
said in a statement. "Further actions are needed before we can be reasonably 
satisfied that Kopassus, and the Indonesian armed forces more broadly, have 
become a reformed institution accountable to international human-rights 
standards and the rule of law." 

"The 'gradual, limited program of security cooperation activities' described by 
Secretary Gates should certainly not be seen as wiping the slate clean for 
Kopassus - that is something that only a full accounting of the past can do," 
Feingold added. 

Brutally effective
Thursday's announcement constitutes the latest development in what has been a 
gradual rapprochement between the Pentagon and the TNI. Washington first began 
heavily supporting Indonesia's military in the late 1950s. 

Between then and the period that followed the fall of president Suharto in 
1998, the army was seen, especially by the Pentagon, as the one effective - if 
corrupt and often brutal - national institution in an archipelago that spreads 
across thousands of kilometers and straddles key sea lanes and shipping 
"chokepoints". 

After a massacre by Indonesian troops of more than 100 peaceful demonstrators 
in East Timor in 1991, the US Congress cut off Indonesia's access for certain 
kinds of US military training and "lethal" equipment. 

When the TNI, Kopassus and their local auxiliaries rampaged through East Timor 
after its electorate voted to secede from Indonesia in 1999, then-president 
Bill Clinton severed all remaining ties with the TNI, but then quietly restored 
contacts the following year. Some 1,400 civilians died in that mayhem for which 
no soldier has ever been tried or convicted. 

After the 9/11 terrorist attacks on New York City and the Pentagon, the George 
W Bush administration tried to circumvent congressionally imposed restrictions 
by providing some assistance, although not to Kopassus, through a 
counter-terrorism program. 

By highlighting the operations of al-Qaeda operatives - responsible for a 2002 
bombing in Bali that killed nearly 200 people - in Indonesia, the 
administration made slow but steady progress in restoring ties over the 
following years, including by lifting the arms embargo. 

Amid growing concern about China's influence and increasing naval strength in 
the region, however, the Pentagon has pushed hard to restore full military ties 
with Jakarta, including with Kopassus. But it has reportedly received some 
resistance from Indonesia specialists in the US State Department and the 
National Security Council. 

The latter, like the rights groups, argued that Kopassus continued to commit 
serious abuses, especially in Papua, and remained largely unaccountable to 
civilian authority. In response to US demands over the past few months, Jakarta 
shifted at least three Kopassus officers previously convicted by military 
courts of abuses to other positions within the TNI. 

In addition, the defense minister told an English-language newspaper that 
soldiers found by a military tribunal to have committed genocide or crimes 
against humanity would be tried by a civilian court. 

"The US government appears to have considered these steps satisfactory to 
ensure future accountability," HRW complained on Thursday, adding that "the 
decision to start training Kopassus now risks undermining the limited progress 
towards professionalism that the Indonesian military has made thus far". 

Indeed, in April this year, Colonel Nugroho Widyo Utomo, who in 1998 reportedly 
played a key role in creating and arming the militias that later carried out 
much of the violence in East Timor the following year, was appointed deputy 
commander of Kopassus. Pentagon officials told reporters in Washington that 
initial contacts with Kopassus would be quite limited and that, in any event, 
the State Department would vet any members of the force before they could 
receive training. 

Leahy said he expected Gates to follow through on his pledge to condition 
Washington's cooperation with Kopassus on the implementation of real reforms, 
including prosecuting "past and future crimes" committed by its members. "I 
deeply regret that before starting down the road of re-engagement, our country 
did not obtain and Kopassus did not accept the necessary reforms we have long 
sought. But a conditional toe in the water is wiser at this stage than diving 
in." 

"The United States and Indonesia share important interests, and I have sought a 
way forward that is consistent with our interests and our values. I hope that 
will become possible," Leahy said. 

But rights activists remain doubtful. "For years, the US provided military 
training and other assistance to Kopassus, and when the US was most involved, 
Kopassus crimes were at their worst," said John Miller, national coordinator of 
the East Timor Action Network. "While this assistance improved the Indonesian 
military's deadly skills, it did nothing to improve its behavior." 

Jim Lobe's blog on US foreign policy can be read at www.lobelog.com . 

(Inter Press Servic

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