http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/BG1720.cfm

The War on Terrorism in Southeast Asia: Developing Law Enforcement
by Dana R. Dillon
Backgrounder #1720
January 22, 2004 | |




It is a little-publicized fact that police have arrested more terrorists
than military operations have captured or killed. Police in more than 100
countries have arrested more than 3,000 suspects linked to al-Qaeda,1 while
the military has captured some 650 enemy combatants.2
In Asia, police forces have detained far more terrorists than the military
forces have detained, but most U.S. security aid is given in the form of
military assistance. For example, in 2003, the United States provided $20
million of military assistance to the Philippines while giving only $2
million for law enforcement development.
This disparity is a direct result of Section 660 of the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961, which was amended in 1973 to prohibit the use of foreign
assistance funds to train police.3 (See Appendix.) Various U.S. agencies
train police and law enforcement officers, but only after Congress grants an
exception. The consequence is that counterterrorism efforts in Southeast
Asia lack clear policy on the role of the American assistance, clearly
defined program objectives, unity of effort, and a means to evaluate the
successes of individual programs.4
To improve the effectiveness of U.S. counterterrorism efforts, Congress and
the President should take the following actions:4
Congress should repeal the prohibition on training foreign law enforcement
agencies and offer guidelines to address human rights and democracy building
concerns. 
The President should issue a directive giving one agency the responsibility
of coordinating all foreign law enforcement development. 
Congress should focus aid on law enforcement training and reform. 
The Changing Terrorist Situation
Despite the many successes of the two-year war, terrorism remains a potent
threat to international security. The U.S. Department of State has a list of
over 100,000 names worldwide of suspected terrorists or people with contact
with terrorists.5 Before the al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan were shut down,
al-Qaeda trained at least 70,000 people and possibly tens of thousands
more.6 Jemaah Islamiyah, a terrorist group linked to al-Qaeda, is estimated
to have 3,000 members across Southeast Asia and is still growing.7
American intelligence continues to receive, with varying degrees of
credibility and specificity, information highlighting possible terrorist
targets. Terrorists continue to target and threaten businesses and public
sites deemed Western, such as the Marriott Hotel in Jakarta. In addition,
Indonesia, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan--all Muslim countries--have
suffered terrorist attacks directed against their own citizens.
The newest terrorist target may be global shipping. Southeast Asia, where
the rate of maritime piracy is already the worst in the world, is
particularly vulnerable to maritime terrorism. Lloyd's List reported that
terrorists might be training maritime pilots in the 600-mile-long Malacca
Straits in order to capture a ship, pilot it into a port or chokepoint, and
detonate it.8 Reports of missing tugboats have only aggravated these fears.
The Need for Law Enforcement Development
The U.S. Department of Justice emphasizes that effective law enforcement
development means training not just police, but also the entire judicial
system from police to judges to prisons.
The reason for the disparity between military and police efficacy in
anti-terrorist operations is not military incompetence, but rather that
police are the more appropriate instrument for fighting terrorists in most
circumstances in Southeast Asia. With the exception of the Philippine
terrorist organization Abu Sayyaf, none of the terrorist groups that concern
Americans are fighting from jungle hideouts. Rather, Jemaah Islamiyah (JI),
the largest and deadliest group operating in the region, operates
underground. Many JI members reside in urban centers and rural religious
schools. They are not being captured in military operations, but through
police investigations.
Despite these promising successes, weak law enforcement has been the source
of some of Southeast Asia's most spectacular counterterrorism
embarrassments. On July 14, 2003, while Prime Minister John Howard of
Australia was visiting Manila to discuss counterterrorism with President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, Farthur Rahman Ghozi, an Indonesian explosives
expert and prominent JI member linked to a series of bombings since December
2000, walked away from his top-security Philippine prison cell along with
two of his cell mates. After eluding an intense manhunt for three months,
Ghozi was killed by Philippine police on October 12, 2003.
Also in July, Indonesian and Australian police raided JI safe houses in the
Indonesian cities of Jakarta and Semarang, arresting nine JI members and
seizing a considerable amount of explosives. Unknown to their Australian
counterparts, the Indonesian police also recovered a meter-high pile of
documents identifying politicians targeted for assassination and areas to be
bombed, including the Marriott Hotel in Jakarta. Although the Indonesian
police were warned that such an attack might occur, the Marriot Hotel in
Jakarta was bombed a month later, killing 12 people. Neither the Australian
nor the American government was aware of the captured documents until the
Indonesian police revealed their existence in press interviews following the
bombing.
In another incident in August 2003, Abu Bakar Bashir, spiritual and accused
operational leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, was convicted for his role in the
Bali bombing but received only a four-year sentence, which on appeal was
reduced to three years. Although Indonesia's judiciary comes under frequent
criticism for corruption, in this case, the light sentence is attributed to
poor prosecution rather than judicial malfeasance.
The same law enforcement weaknesses exist in combating piracy and, by
extension, maritime terrorism. According to the International Maritime
Bureau, there were 344 maritime piracy attacks in the first nine months of
2003, compared to 277 in all of 2002, a jump of 19 percent.9 The pirates
operate from ordinary ports and shores where statutory responsibility lies
with the maritime law enforcement authorities (coast guard, marine police,
and port police).10 Nevertheless, it is difficult to find any report of the
Indonesian or regional police arresting pirates, and there is no sign that
they have taken substantive steps to secure ports and seaways. This
vulnerability to piracy is an open invitation to terrorists looking for an
easy yet spectacular target.
What Should be Done
To assist law enforcement agencies in the region to fight terrorism more
efficiently, the United States should add law enforcement assistance to its
counterterrorism strategy. In many Southeast Asian countries, police forces
are poorly trained and paid. Emphasis should be placed on establishing
professional and accountable police forces, but law enforcement reforms
should include more than equipping and training police. They should also
include creating indigenous police intelligence units; sharing intelligence
across national boundaries; reforming and training the judiciary; making
treasury, customs, and immigration officials ac-countable; and establishing
secure prisons.
Because of self-imposed obstacles in training and working with foreign
police, the U.S. government has been delinquent in providing coordinated
assistance to the region's law enforcement agencies. The biggest restriction
is Section 660 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as amended, which
prohibits the use of U.S. government foreign-assistance funds for training
police and related programs.11
In the late 1960s and 1970s, America was spending $60 million a year to
train police in 34 countries, but Congress became concerned about the lack
of policy guidance and worried that some of the training was supporting
repressive regimes.12 Since then, safeguards and procedures for vetting
training candidates have been put in place, but Section 660 is still law.
Over the years, Congress has recognized that this prohibition is too broad
and has granted many exemptions, but this policy of making piecemeal
exceptions has fractured and distorted U.S. efforts to support foreign
police forces on counterterrorism. As one U.S. Department of Justice
official lamented, "To develop policies and programs under a prohibition is
impossible. We have to ask Congress for an exception to every change
in circumstances."13
Section 660 also discourages accountability and leadership. Currently, at
least five separate U.S. departments--Justice, Defense, State, Treasury, and
Transportation--have some kind of exempted foreign-police training program.
No agency has been singled out to lead or coordinate the efforts.
Consequently, training is often duplicated or inappropriate for the police
in a particular country. Because of the lack of national guidance, most law
enforcement training is coordinated at the embassy level, without clear
national guidelines. National policies on law enforcement assistance would
ensure that the programs meet national objectives.
To deal with these ongoing problems and improve the effectiveness of U.S.
counterterrorism efforts, Congress and the President should therefore take
the following actions:
Congress should repeal the prohibition on training law enforcement agencies.
In the 2004 budget, Congress is again amending the prohibition on training
police to grant the State Department greater flexibility, but that amendment
does not end the ban. Congress should completely repeal the police training
prohibition and instead issue guidelines that address human rights and
democracy building concerns. 
The President should issue a presidential decision directive on foreign law
enforcement reform and training. Under the current circumstances, law
enforcement training may meet the needs of an individual agency or
congressional constituency but still not meet American national security
goals. The President needs to appoint one agency, probably the Department of
State, to lead the law enforcement development effort. 
Congress should refocus aid from military assistance to law enforcemen t.
Anti-terrorist funding must focus on the security organizations actually
fighting terrorism. Military aid to Southeast Asia may have political or
operational objectives, but as long as the primary objective is combating
terrorists, security assistance to Southeast Asia should focus on law
enforcement development. 
Conclusion
The war against terrorism has had its successes, but it is far from over.
Al-Qaeda and its affiliate terrorist groups, such as Jemaah Islamiyah and
Abu Sayyaf, are still at large and still dangerous.
The world's governments have taken actions aimed at severely crippling the
terrorists, but much more needs to be done. Improving law enforcement and
reforming judicial systems, if fully implemented, can change the face of the
war and help lead to the end of terrorism as a major international problem.
Dana R. Dillon is Senior Policy Analyst for Southeast Asia in the Asian
Studies Center at The Heritage Foundation.
Appendix
Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, Section 660, as amended--Prohibiting Police
Training
a) On and after July 1, 1975, none of the funds made available to carry out
this Act, and none of the local currencies generated under this Act, shall
be used to provide training or advice, or provide any financial support, for
police, prisons, or other law enforcement forces for any foreign government
or any program of internal intelligence or surveillance on behalf of any
foreign government within the United States or abroad.
b) Subsection (a) of this section shall not apply--
with respect to assistance rendered under section 515 (c) of the Omnibus
Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 with respect to any authority of
the Drug Enforcement Administration or the Federal Bureau of Investigation
which relates to crimes of the nature which are unlawful under the laws
under section 482 of this Act; 
to any contract entered into prior to the date of enactment of this section
with any person, organization, or agency of the United States Government to
provide personnel to conduct, or assist in conducting, any such program; 
with respect to assistance, including training, in maritime law enforcement
and other maritime skill; 
with respect to assistance provided to police forces in connection with
their participation in the regional security system of the Eastern Caribbean
states; or 
with respect to assistance, including training, relating to sanctions
monitoring and enforcement; 
with respect to assistance provided to reconstituted civilian police
authority and capability in the post-conflict restoration of host nation
infrastructure for the purposes of supporting a nation emerging from
instability, and the provision of professional public safety training, to
include training in internationally recognized standards of human rights,
the rule of law, anti-corruption, and the promotion of civilian police roles
that support democracy; 
with respect to assistance provided to customs authorities and personnel,
including training, technical assistance and equipment, for customs law
enforcement and the improvement of customs laws, systems, and procedures. 
Notwithstanding clause (2), subsection (a) shall apply to any renewal or
extension of any contract referred to in such paragraph entered into on or
after such date of enactment.
c) Subsection (a) shall not apply with respect to a country which has a long
standing democratic tradition, does not have standing armed forces, and does
not engage in a consistent pattern of gross violations of internationally
recognized human rights.
d) Notwithstanding the prohibition contained in subsection (a), assistance
may be provided to Honduras or El Salvador for fiscal years 1986 and 1987
if, at least 30 days before providing assistance, the President notifies the
Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives and the
Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate, in accordance with the
procedures applicable to reprogramming notifications pursuant to section
634A of this Act, that he has determined that the government of the
recipient country has made significant progress, during the preceding six
months, in eliminating any human rights violations including torture,
incommunicado detention, detention of persons solely for the non-violent
expression of their political views, or prolonged detention without trial.
Any such notification shall include a full description of the assistance
which is proposed to be provided and of the purposes to which it is to be
directed.



 
1. Peter Slevin, "U.S. Pledges Not to Torture Terror Suspects," The
Washington Post, June 27, 2003, p. A1.
2. Francis Taylor, "Transcript: State Dept Official Says War Against
Terrorism Continues," June 9, 2003, at
usembassy.state.gov/tokyo/wwwh20030611a6.html.
3. Public Law 93-189.
4. See U.S. General Accounting Office, Foreign Aid: Police Training and
Assistance, GAO/NSAID-92-118, March 1992, at
archive.gao.gov/t2pbat7/145909.pdf.
5. Eric Lichtblau, "Administration Creates Center for Master Terror `Watch
List,'" The New York Times, September 17, 2003.
6. Senator Bob Graham (D-FL) was quoted as saying that "al-Qaeda has trained
between 70,000 and 120,000 persons in the skills and arts of terrorism." Bob
Graham, interview, Meet the Press, NBC, July 13, 2003.
7. Terence Hunt, "Bush Shows Resolve by Visiting Bali," Chicago Sun-Times,
October 22, 2003, p. 36.
8. Lloyd's List International, "Asia Pirates Training for Terrorist Attack,"
October 15, 2003.
9. Andrew Guest, "Piracy Attacks Hit New High," Trade Winds, October 29,
2003.
10. Mark J. Valencia, "International Co-Operation in Anti-Piracy Efforts in
Asia: Some Considerations," East-West Center, Asia-Pacific Area Network,
February 20, 2001.
11. See U.S. General Accounting Office, Foreign Aid: Police Training and
Assistance.
12. Ibid.
13. Interview with the author, August 6, 2003.



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