G20 Summit a diplomatic minefield for host Indonesia
Russian leader’s insistence on attending Bali summit could cause most other
global leaders to boycott the event
By JOHN MCBETH <https://asiatimes.com/author/john-mcbeth/>APRIL 1, 2022
[image: Russian President Vladimir Putin (right) talks to Indonesian
President Joko Widodo at the Bocharov Ruchei state residence in Sochi on
May 18, 2016. Photo: AFP/Host Photo Agency]Russian President Vladimir
Putin, right, talks to Indonesian President Joko Widodo at the Bocharov
Ruchei state residence in Sochi on May 18, 2016. The current question is,
will the two meet in Bali? Photo: AFP

JAKARTA – Slammed the world over for his unprovoked invasion of Ukraine,
Russian President Vladimir Putin claims he still wants to attend what would
almost certainly be a hostile G20 Summit in Bali in October – a meeting
that may not happen anyway if his intended presence triggers a boycott
among most of the member states.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo is sticking to what critics complain is
his naïve belief he can convince the G20 leaders to set the Ukraine war
aside and focus solely on the economic issues that spawned the growth of
the organization in the first place in 1999.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said allowing Putin to take
his seat at the G20 would be a “step too far” after Russia’s ambassador to
Jakarta Lyudmila Vorobieva revealed Putin intended to accept Widodo’s
formal invitation, which he made last November at the Rome summit.

Widodo’s naivety extends to Indonesian politicians and even some academics
who have called on him to use his position as president of the G20 to
resolve the Ukrainian conflict instead of simply acting as what legislator
Effendi Simbolon referred to as an “event organizer.”

Analysts believe Putin will save Widodo further embarrassment by not
showing up for the summit, as he did last year by conveniently using the
Covid pandemic as an excuse in a year when he only traveled twice – to
Switzerland for a summit with President Joe Biden and to India.

His last overseas visit was to Beijing in early February, shortly before
the Ukraine invasion when he is believed to have told Chinese President Xi
Jinping of his plans. In 2019, he made 23 trips abroad but cut that to five
in 2020 as the pandemic took hold.

“Putin is not going to the G20,” one former senior US State Department
official told Asia Times. “It’s impossible. I just can’t imagine him
attending. It’s simply not going to happen.”

The tone of Indonesia’s response to the February 24 invasion was set with a
statement that avoided mentioning Russia, described the invasion as merely
“unacceptable” and urged the UN Security Council, where Russia has veto
power, “to take concrete steps to prevent the situation deteriorating.”

Insiders say with Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi in Europe, palace
officials called in former Indonesian ambassador to the United Kingdom
Rizal Sukma, now a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS), to help in drafting the official response.
Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi (L) and Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov in a file photo. Image: Tass

But that process was abandoned after Widodo reportedly intervened and
produced a watered-down draft of his own. According to one account, some of
his closest aides even suggested Indonesia join 35 other countries in
abstaining in the subsequent March 2 UN vote condemning Russian aggression.

In the end, Indonesia was among the 141 countries which voted for
the resolution, but ruled out imposing sanctions against Moscow. Six days
later, Marsudi called her Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, with what a
spokesman called a message of peace “so that all parties provide
opportunities for dialogue and diplomacy to work in this difficult
situation.”

Noting Indonesia’s adherence to a “free and active” foreign policy, which
avoids involvement in conflicts with major powers, analysts say Ukraine has
shown that while the dictum applies multilaterally, it is defined
differently at a bilateral level.

The government continues to avoid naming Russia and using the word
‘invasion’ in statements, unlike authoritarian Cambodian Prime Minister Hun
Sen, chairman of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) who
also supported the UN resolution, leaving Laos and Vietnam as the region’s
lone abstentions.

Widodo’s inexperience in foreign affairs and his desperation to salvage one
of the landmarks of his presidency are clearly one factor, but a former
Indonesian diplomat feels Jakarta’s position also stems from the surprising
number of Indonesians who have taken Russia’s side in the war.

Some academics blame it on broader anti-American and anti-West sentiments
among the Muslim majority, who see Washington treating Ukraine – and Jewish
President Volodymyr Zelensky – a lot differently than what they regard as
the red button issue of Palestine.

Rather than viewing the invasion as a brutal attack on another sovereign
state, social media commentators often have a very different view of Putin,
calling out Zelensky for provoking the Russian strongman by flirting with
the idea of joining an aggressive NATO.
Russia’s infantry in action in Ukraine. Photo: Tass

Ignoring the fact that Ukraine has been an independent state since it broke
away from the crumbling Soviet empire in 1991, there is also the
misperception that Russia is fighting a war against separatism, something
that resonates in a country with a history of separatist conflicts.

Meanwhile, foreign ministry officials are still trying to figure out
President Biden’s curious statement that if the US fails in its attempt to
expel Russia from the G20, then Indonesia should also invite Ukraine,
presumably as one of the guest nations it is permitted to add to the
gathering.

In Washington, it has been passed off as another of Biden’s missteps. “He
often makes statements without giving much thought to the issue at hand,”
noted one diplomatic observer. “It is a well-established penchant of his.
It’s hard to see a strategic rationale for taking that position.”

China opposes Russia’s expulsion, but the Kremlin has already dropped a
broad hint that Putin will stay away from Bali by asserting that “nothing
terrible will happen” if the US and its allies succeed because many G20
members are at economic war with Moscow anyway.

So far, Jakarta has invited Spain, the Netherlands, Singapore, the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) and the chairmen of the African Union (Congo), the
African Union Development Agency (Rwanda), the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (Cambodia), the Caribbean Community (Antigua and Barbuda) and
the Pacific Island Forum (Fiji).

It has also invited 10 international organizations, including the United
Nations, the World Health Organization (WHO), the World Bank, the Asian
Development Bank (ADB), the Islamic Development Bank and the International
Labor Organization (ILO).

Indonesia can add to the list, but inviting Ukraine would immediately turn
the summit into a political arena – something Widodo is trying to avoid –
instead of focusing on an agenda aimed at strengthening the global health
architecture, the digital economy and energy transition.

The G20 is usually run along two pillars of discussion – financial, and
what is known as the Sherpa Track, which addresses non-financial economic
and development issues. Aside from that, there are also 10 engagement
groups from various professional circles.
Vladimir Putin dines with other leaders at a G20 Summit in 2017. Photo:
WikiCommons

For all that, however, Ukraine will always be the elephant in the room, if
only because of sanctions and the rippling economic impact on global
trade. As the former diplomat predicted in an off-the-record conversation:
“More than ever political factors will dominate the G20. I think Indonesia
should expect that.”

The retired State Department official agreed. While he said he appreciates
the different cross-currents Indonesia is facing, “it is naïve in the
extreme to think Jokowi can restrict it to the economic issues when we are
witnessing the most important political event in decades.”

The Indonesian president was expected to have a bilateral session with
Biden at the annual US-ASEAN summit in Washington, originally scheduled for
March 28-29, where he presumably would have been expected to engage in a
substantial and unscripted discussion on Ukraine.

But the meeting has been postponed – at least until May – and Marsudi
instead went to Anhui, China, at the invitation of Chinese Foreign Minister
Wang Yi for dialogue among neighbors and other interested countries on
another still-warm hotspot – Afghanistan.
G20 Summit a diplomatic minefield for host Indonesia
Russian leader’s insistence on attending Bali summit could cause most other
global leaders to boycott the event
By JOHN MCBETH <https://asiatimes.com/author/john-mcbeth/>APRIL 1, 2022
[image: Russian President Vladimir Putin (right) talks to Indonesian
President Joko Widodo at the Bocharov Ruchei state residence in Sochi on
May 18, 2016. Photo: AFP/Host Photo Agency]Russian President Vladimir
Putin, right, talks to Indonesian President Joko Widodo at the Bocharov
Ruchei state residence in Sochi on May 18, 2016. The current question is,
will the two meet in Bali? Photo: AFP

JAKARTA – Slammed the world over for his unprovoked invasion of Ukraine,
Russian President Vladimir Putin claims he still wants to attend what would
almost certainly be a hostile G20 Summit in Bali in October – a meeting
that may not happen anyway if his intended presence triggers a boycott
among most of the member states.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo is sticking to what critics complain is
his naïve belief he can convince the G20 leaders to set the Ukraine war
aside and focus solely on the economic issues that spawned the growth of
the organization in the first place in 1999.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said allowing Putin to take
his seat at the G20 would be a “step too far” after Russia’s ambassador to
Jakarta Lyudmila Vorobieva revealed Putin intended to accept Widodo’s
formal invitation, which he made last November at the Rome summit.

Widodo’s naivety extends to Indonesian politicians and even some academics
who have called on him to use his position as president of the G20 to
resolve the Ukrainian conflict instead of simply acting as what legislator
Effendi Simbolon referred to as an “event organizer.”

Analysts believe Putin will save Widodo further embarrassment by not
showing up for the summit, as he did last year by conveniently using the
Covid pandemic as an excuse in a year when he only traveled twice – to
Switzerland for a summit with President Joe Biden and to India.

His last overseas visit was to Beijing in early February, shortly before
the Ukraine invasion when he is believed to have told Chinese President Xi
Jinping of his plans. In 2019, he made 23 trips abroad but cut that to five
in 2020 as the pandemic took hold.

“Putin is not going to the G20,” one former senior US State Department
official told Asia Times. “It’s impossible. I just can’t imagine him
attending. It’s simply not going to happen.”

The tone of Indonesia’s response to the February 24 invasion was set with a
statement that avoided mentioning Russia, described the invasion as merely
“unacceptable” and urged the UN Security Council, where Russia has veto
power, “to take concrete steps to prevent the situation deteriorating.”

Insiders say with Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi in Europe, palace
officials called in former Indonesian ambassador to the United Kingdom
Rizal Sukma, now a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS), to help in drafting the official response.
Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi (L) and Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov in a file photo. Image: Tass

But that process was abandoned after Widodo reportedly intervened and
produced a watered-down draft of his own. According to one account, some of
his closest aides even suggested Indonesia join 35 other countries in
abstaining in the subsequent March 2 UN vote condemning Russian aggression.

In the end, Indonesia was among the 141 countries which voted for
the resolution, but ruled out imposing sanctions against Moscow. Six days
later, Marsudi called her Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, with what a
spokesman called a message of peace “so that all parties provide
opportunities for dialogue and diplomacy to work in this difficult
situation.”

Noting Indonesia’s adherence to a “free and active” foreign policy, which
avoids involvement in conflicts with major powers, analysts say Ukraine has
shown that while the dictum applies multilaterally, it is defined
differently at a bilateral level.

The government continues to avoid naming Russia and using the word
‘invasion’ in statements, unlike authoritarian Cambodian Prime Minister Hun
Sen, chairman of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) who
also supported the UN resolution, leaving Laos and Vietnam as the region’s
lone abstentions.

Widodo’s inexperience in foreign affairs and his desperation to salvage one
of the landmarks of his presidency are clearly one factor, but a former
Indonesian diplomat feels Jakarta’s position also stems from the surprising
number of Indonesians who have taken Russia’s side in the war.

Some academics blame it on broader anti-American and anti-West sentiments
among the Muslim majority, who see Washington treating Ukraine – and Jewish
President Volodymyr Zelensky – a lot differently than what they regard as
the red button issue of Palestine.

Rather than viewing the invasion as a brutal attack on another sovereign
state, social media commentators often have a very different view of Putin,
calling out Zelensky for provoking the Russian strongman by flirting with
the idea of joining an aggressive NATO.
Russia’s infantry in action in Ukraine. Photo: Tass

Ignoring the fact that Ukraine has been an independent state since it broke
away from the crumbling Soviet empire in 1991, there is also the
misperception that Russia is fighting a war against separatism, something
that resonates in a country with a history of separatist conflicts.

Meanwhile, foreign ministry officials are still trying to figure out
President Biden’s curious statement that if the US fails in its attempt to
expel Russia from the G20, then Indonesia should also invite Ukraine,
presumably as one of the guest nations it is permitted to add to the
gathering.

In Washington, it has been passed off as another of Biden’s missteps. “He
often makes statements without giving much thought to the issue at hand,”
noted one diplomatic observer. “It is a well-established penchant of his.
It’s hard to see a strategic rationale for taking that position.”

China opposes Russia’s expulsion, but the Kremlin has already dropped a
broad hint that Putin will stay away from Bali by asserting that “nothing
terrible will happen” if the US and its allies succeed because many G20
members are at economic war with Moscow anyway.

So far, Jakarta has invited Spain, the Netherlands, Singapore, the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) and the chairmen of the African Union (Congo), the
African Union Development Agency (Rwanda), the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (Cambodia), the Caribbean Community (Antigua and Barbuda) and
the Pacific Island Forum (Fiji).

It has also invited 10 international organizations, including the United
Nations, the World Health Organization (WHO), the World Bank, the Asian
Development Bank (ADB), the Islamic Development Bank and the International
Labor Organization (ILO).

Indonesia can add to the list, but inviting Ukraine would immediately turn
the summit into a political arena – something Widodo is trying to avoid –
instead of focusing on an agenda aimed at strengthening the global health
architecture, the digital economy and energy transition.

The G20 is usually run along two pillars of discussion – financial, and
what is known as the Sherpa Track, which addresses non-financial economic
and development issues. Aside from that, there are also 10 engagement
groups from various professional circles.
Vladimir Putin dines with other leaders at a G20 Summit in 2017. Photo:
WikiCommons

For all that, however, Ukraine will always be the elephant in the room, if
only because of sanctions and the rippling economic impact on global
trade. As the former diplomat predicted in an off-the-record conversation:
“More than ever political factors will dominate the G20. I think Indonesia
should expect that.”

The retired State Department official agreed. While he said he appreciates
the different cross-currents Indonesia is facing, “it is naïve in the
extreme to think Jokowi can restrict it to the economic issues when we are
witnessing the most important political event in decades.”

The Indonesian president was expected to have a bilateral session with
Biden at the annual US-ASEAN summit in Washington, originally scheduled for
March 28-29, where he presumably would have been expected to engage in a
substantial and unscripted discussion on Ukraine.

But the meeting has been postponed – at least until May – and Marsudi
instead went to Anhui, China, at the invitation of Chinese Foreign Minister
Wang Yi for dialogue among neighbors and other interested countries on
another still-warm hotspot – Afghanistan.

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