*https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzGmvfTvSdmSCPrcpQLsrFTNgjGh
<https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzGmvfTvSdmSCPrcpQLsrFTNgjGh>*
Indonesia and G20: Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxNkl2PojAUhn-N3ElKWxAuejFZY1YdmOjOrs4VKfSAVSgsLSL8-imaTTZpe9L3fCXnOTk3UDbdyNpGG2d-UjO2wBQMugJjoHN6DV0qBfNpiDyEHMGo8EI_dKROiw6g5rJipuvBafuskjk3slFzAiYRoc6FCUR5wYXnA_ejYiUACCKkwMInUYEieLXlvZCgcmBwh25sFDgVuxjT6gV5W-CNPcMwuFxLrkEZqaBy86a2cmuvVMJmWN-yxGhpdanKpZBKQbcgG9PcQC3IGsadl-M_4xlXt-218ZJ1OcSfb8P7j92QkQT90-P1jSbX3P_4NUh-2iCrPZLrgcafX1P8eZhsfJuTWH7I3SBOWxNfYz-eDtLqk_0_9bne-3lXfZ0SxE9Rv1XITYbsXFzodnsM9hpNv71jHdRQ6uz4CPTydvmb3vu93D9-3rUjGUYYI4IpJsinyMVuhP0o8FEBKBAiFJnbUlTfr5NYWFtiV_eZNjy_zXNxOiarGuyoSugaG1DOmJ4eSym1tu6VNGMKimcViBdA81qDJ9K0BDs9ux4i5YZ5AQ29gHiUrCzTJ7B5JVAUBqsocmxr0dgsxf4H9A2Hn82m>
Vlad
looks forward to Bali

*Mar 24*
*By: the Asia Sentinel staff*

*The remark by Russia’s ambassador to Indonesia that Russian President
Vladimir Putin intends to attend a G20 summit hosted by Indonesia later
this year dumps Jakarta into a dilemma that it really wants nothing to do
with and appears unprepared to deal with. *

*When Indonesia sought to lead the Group of 20 most economically important
nations in more halcyon days last year, it was a satisfying signal that the
country of 270 million strong and the biggest economy in Southeast Asia had
arrived on the international scene. Now that it has attained that position,
it appears paralyzed in the face of a nearly unprecedented crisis, the
biggest invasion of a sovereign European nation since World War II.*

*But President Joko Widodo, who aspires to be an international figure
representing a huge and also democratic nation, seems to have little idea
how to go about making his mark. Retno Lestari Priansari Marsudi, the
60-year-old Minister for Foreign Affairs, seems equally at sea.*

*Indonesia was looking at the upside of a diminishing Covid-19 crisis and
at the opportunity to take the leadership in transforming what officials
looked forward to: the Global Health Architecture, Sustainable Energy
Transition, and Digital Transformation. Now that is secondary. While the
G20 may be focused on economic and not political issues, Russia’s actions,
with its brutal invasion of its neighbor Ukraine, are threatening at least
as much global economic damage as the Covid-19 pandemic.*

*Having Putin, an international pariah, show up in Bali presents Jokowi, as
the president is known, with the unenviable duty of throwing him out – or
not, and risking global scorn.*

*“So far, Indonesia seems reluctant to denounce the Russian invasion, other
than voting for the General Assembly resolution (condemning it),” said a
western political analyst. “This is a bit sticky. This would be an
opportunity for Indonesia to take the lead on that and show some balls on
an international issue but so far it seems to be following China's lead and
trying to stay out of it.”*

*If Indonesia wants to be a global power, then it has to act like it, said
a Jakarta-based western businessman. “Ukraine is just the latest case but
if Jakarta is going to hide its head in the sand while it’s in the
president's chair of the G20, it speaks volumes about its inability to take
a serious role in world and even Asian affairs." *

*So far, Indonesia has made no attempt to use its position to rally the
majority of G20 members to take a stand. Policymakers need to understand
that being a big country sometimes means having to make uncomfortable
choices in international affairs. The attitude of trying to be nice to
everyone simply does not make sense whether in approaching the Ukraine
situation, let alone in protecting its own seas and exclusive economic zone
resources from another expansionist power.*

*For a long time, Indonesia has coasted along seeing itself as the de facto
leader of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations simply on account of
its size and role in the group’s formation in 1967. The fact that
the regional grouping is a spent force
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxNkN1uwyAMhZ-m3DUiQBK44GLS1NeISHAzVgIZP42yp5_T3kzCWDK2D-ebTYElpkNvMRdyXmM5NtAB9uyhFEikZkijs7oTkraUEquFbWUnicvjPQGsxnldUgWy1cm72RQXwznAuOKCfGkJkwDJB6ME6wYApsDAzOjA2pYKy9-yploHYQYNT0hHDEC8_iplyxf-cWE3PPu-NyY7kyEUF8A3c1yxvGHURzJYut5dgis2mHCNwR_X_FPBPHDFDeNzJ04zyhjlTDBOO0Eb1ijWqb6jd6C9tdJOzSbo-vz-tRfMC2tynXIx8-NUI0k7vwJ-YIEUsWE5zb9e0PuIea3BlWOEYCYP9o2lvOG-QI0LBEgI3Y6m6LYXsu15K_iApF4YTtBUyX5QiqC0jTgV9H_bf9BCk40>
in
international affairs is at least in part due to Indonesia’s reticence.*

*Now that Jakarta is at the world’s top table, the only member from
Southeast Asia with 600 million people, nations mostly highly dependent on
international trade and hence of international rules, it has a duty to act
accordingly. Otherwise, its claims of importance are no more than a tourist
brochure.*

*While some other countries in Asia, notably India and Vietnam, have been
reluctant to criticize Russian aggression whether because of historical
links or their dependence on Russian arms, Indonesia faces no such
conflict. Its military has little Russian equipment, and Russia is
insignificant in trade and investment.*

*As a large but non-nuclear state, Indonesia has a role in isolating the
aggression of a big, nuclear-armed nation against a smaller one which
traded its nuclear weapons for international promises of security. If the
Russians play this game, China could seize its smaller, non-nuclear
neighbors anytime it wants. Meanwhile, the Ukraine example will surely lead
to more small and medium powers seeing nuclear weapons as their best
defense. Non-proliferation will be dead.*

*Non-alignment today doesn’t mean non-involvement just as it didn’t mean
doing nothing in the 1960s and 70s in the face of imperialism of various
kinds. The future of the world should lie with what are now middle powers,
not old empires trying to survive or re-create themselves. Ukraine’s desire
to pursue its own path of relationships rather than accept Russian hegemony
is precisely what countries such as Indonesia need to defend, not as
support for the EU and NATO but as end in itself.*

*Indonesia is doubly well-equipped to use its G20 position to represent
broad Asian and also non-nuclear middle power interests as well as the
principles of world order. It is able to do so because it has a president
who was elected and, whatever his faults, is neither a megalomaniac,
kleptomaniac, nor owes his position to his parents. Indeed, he has some
things in common with Ukraine’s embattled President Zelenskyy.*

*As we reported earlier, Indonesia has not always had such an insignificant
role on the global stage. President Sukarno, ably assisted by foreign
minister Subandrio and Ruslan Abdulgani, organized the 1955 Bandung
Conference of Afro-Asian nations, which saw the birth of the non-aligned
movement whose leaders included Yugoslavia’s (Communist) President Tito, as
much an opponent of Soviet Russian imperialism as was Sukarno of European
imperialism.*

*That was followed in 1957 by Indonesia’s then-revolutionary Declaration of
Sovereignty over the seas connecting its islands eventually led after
decades of effort to the acceptance of the archipelagic principle now
enshrined in the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.*

*That owed much to the efforts of two foreign ministry officials, Hasjim
Djalal and Mochtar Kusumaatmadja, the latter foreign minister for a decade
under Suharto. It is time for Indonesia today to stop hiding behind Mr.
Nice Guy platitudes and follow such bold examples. Jokowi has been given a
place on the world stage at a crucial time.*

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