https://www.thejakartapost.com/academia/2019/09/02/ties-that-bind-indonesia-and-australia.html
*Ties that bind Indonesia and Australia*

   Luke Gosli

   Darwin, Australia   /   Mon, September 2, 2019   /   09:43 am

   Last week, I joined the leader of the opposition in the Australian
   parliament, Anthony Albanese, and shadow foreign minister Penny Wong on
   another visit to Jakarta to continue discussions with Indonesian colleagues
   and friends on the future of our bilateral relationship.

   It was far from our first working visit. In 2012, then-minister Albanese
   played a key role in achieving concrete outcomes between our transportation
   sectors. For her part, shadow minister Wong visited Jakarta for her first
   overseas visit in this role, signaling our party’s enduring commitment to
   the relationship. And, I was personally glad to be back in Jakarta over a
   year ago leading a delegation to discuss deepening engagement and bilateral
   trade.

   Australian governments of all stripes have long shared a firm commitment
   to deepening our important relationship with Indonesia.

   As The Jakarta Post senior editor Kornelius Purba wrote in these pages,
   our bilateral relationship is enjoying a “second honeymoon”
   
<https://www.thejakartapost.com/academia/2019/03/06/a-second-honeymoon-for-indonesia-and-australia.html>.
   He ascribes the first honeymoon to the trusting relationship between
   Indonesian president Soeharto and Australia’s prime minister Paul Keating.

   Kornelius recalled the role which Australian port workers played in 1945
   by refusing to load Dutch ships carrying arms to repress Indonesian
   independence. He also expressed Indonesians’ gratitude for the sacrifice of
   nine Australian personnel during Australia’s relief efforts to the terrible
   2004 tsunami.

   I would add that many Australians remember that brave Indonesians fought
   alongside our soldiers to try to defend Ambon Island in 1942, the strategic
   foothold which then enabled the Japanese to bomb Darwin several weeks
   later. History has taught us the vital lesson that the defense of both of
   our countries is inter-twined by geography.

   Nor will we forget the radio broadcast of Indonesia’s first prime
   minister Sutan Sjahrir who thanked his friends in Australia; Australian
   dock workers and soldiers in the Pacific War. Sjahrir declared that in
   future conflicts a strong and independent Indonesia would “defend your
   freedom too, you will be able to keep your sons at home”.

   And we do not forget how critical Indonesia remains to securing
   Australia’s borders.

   Of course, there are still occasional obstacles to deepening bilateral
   relations. For one, the Australian Labor Party laments the lack of
   Indonesian language and Asia literacy in Australia, which have atrophied
   due to chronic underinvestment.

   Outdated stereotypes also persist on both sides of the Timor and Arafura
   Seas, which we must tackle together by strengthening people-to-people links
   at all levels of governments, the private sector and among civil society
   actors.

   We must also acknowledge the legacy of a trust deficit resulting from
   sometimes difficult chapters in our history. It is in our shared interest
   to overcome the pains of the past as we seek to protect the common public
   goods of a free, open and inclusive Indo-Pacific Region.

   Australia will increasingly look to Indonesia’s leadership in Southeast
   Asia and globally to address threats to international peace and security..
   Indonesia has already demonstrated its confidence and capacity as a
   regional leader, including as ASEAN chair in 2011. And there is no doubt
   that a stronger and more trusting bilateral relationship with Australia
   will also be of significant advantage to Indonesia for a number of reasons.

   First, deepening our defense cooperation, including through Indo-Pacific
   Endeavour exercises, will increase our interoperability and preparedness to
   deal with regional contingencies, be they related to humanitarian, natural
   disasters, climate change or security. Building on our 2018 Defense
   Cooperation Agreement is a simple first step.

   Second, Indonesia’s space sector stands to benefit from the development
   of a space port in the Northern Territory. A satellite launch facility in
   northern Australia will open up fruitful partnership opportunities with
   Indonesia’s space industry, which previously launched satellites from India
   and South and North America. This could help Indonesia to save on costs,
   accelerate research and relieve its West Java launch site.

   Third, we could be doing more to develop better air services and
   economic, tourism, investment and cultural ties between Indonesia’s eastern
   provinces and northern Australia. I had the opportunity to meet with East
   Nusa Tenggara Deputy Governor Josef Nae Soi in Kupang. We discussed the
   great potential for closer cooperation as near neighbors and I look forward
   to our regions working together into the future.

   I believe the Australian Labor Party will play a major role, as has been
   its historic and enduring position. But we all need to contribute to what
   will be a major, intergenerational effort to elevate our comprehensive
   strategic partnership to something much deeper and broader.

   Strategic trust must be founded on the geographical reality that our
   freedom, sovereignty and defense are inseparable, as your prime minister
   Sjahrir eloquently suggested. But to thrive, our partnership will need to
   trickle down to the collective imaginary of both of our societies.

   Indonesians and Australians will need their leaders to set out
   convincingly why they are not only fated to need each other strategically,
   but to integrate economically in a more comprehensive way. Within
   Australia’s Labor Party, I will be making the case that Indonesia-Australia
   Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (IA-CEPA) will have a big part
   to play, but it must only be a start.

   ***

   *Federal member of the parliament of Australia for Solomon and chairman
   of the Asia-Pacific trade task force.*

   *Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are those of the
   author and do not reflect the official stance of The Jakarta Post.*

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