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At home in Indonesia, Obama reaches out to Muslims
By BEN FELLER, AP White House Correspondent Ben Feller, Ap White House 
Correspondent 48 mins ago 

JAKARTA, Indonesia - From the most Muslim nation on earth, President Barack 
Obama is reaching out to the Islamic world, declaring that efforts to build 
trust and peace are showing promise but are still clearly "incomplete."

Obama on Wednesday will deliver one of the most personal and potentially 
consequential speeches of his presidency, reflecting on his own years of 
upbringing in Indonesia and giving an update on America's "new beginning" with 
Muslims that he promised last year in Cairo.

At the same time, the path to lasting peace in the Middle East was hardly 
looking smoother. A reminder of that difficult road was waiting for Obama when 
he landed here Tuesday on a steamy afternoon in southeast Asia. Israel's 
decision to build more apartments in east Jerusalem, a disputed territory 
claimed by Palestinians, had already earned a rebuke from American diplomats 
before a tired, traveling president weighed in himself.

"This kind of activity is never helpful when it comes to peace negotiations," 
Obama said when questioned at a news conference alongside Indonesia's 
president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. "I'm concerned that we're not seeing each 
side make the extra effort involved to get a breakthrough. ... Each of these 
incremental steps can end up breaking down trust."

Heavily invested and eager for Mideast stability, Obama insisted: "We're going 
to keep on working on it."

Obama's criticism came during a cherished, fleeting and twice-delayed 
homecoming in Indonesia. Obama was born and first raised in Hawaii and finished 
high school there, but he lived for years in between in Jakarta after his 
mother remarried an Indonesian man. He canceled plans to come earlier this year 
because of domestic troubles, and now he's dodging a big cloud of volcanic ash.

India's most volatile volcano, Mount Merapi, has erupted with deadly force for 
days. The White House determined Air Force One could fly in as scheduled to 
Jakarta but that Obama should shorten his stay given the flow of airborne ash. 
That meant Obama would be in Indonesia for just 19 hours, still long enough to 
visit a famous mosque and deliver his speech.

The president, who is Christian, is eager to hold up Indonesia as a model: an 
overwhelmingly Muslim nation where other religions are respected freely and an 
evolving democracy is gaining strength despite a legacy of corruption.

He will revisit themes of his famous 2009 Cairo speech, one in which he called 
for mutual respect: from the United States for Muslims in a post-Sept. 11 
world, and also from Muslims for the United States for its diversity and 
compassion. That speech also essentially set up an Obama scorecard on Iraq, 
Iran and efforts to combat Islamic extremists.

Obama is also giving substantial attention to the new partnerships his 
government has reached with Indonesia's. And he is talking freely about his 
time here, from age 6 to 10, when he was running around as a boy named Barry.

The personal touches began coming out as Obama, looking weary on his fourth day 
in Asia, reflected Tuesday on how Jakarta has changed since he lived here. His 
only real look came during a couple of motorcade rides.

"I feel great affection for the people here," Obama said. "And obviously I have 
a sister who's half Indonesian. My mother lived and worked here for a long 
time. And so the sights and the sounds and the memories all feel very familiar."

The president drew smiles from the gathered dignitaries by speaking a little 
Indonesian at times.

"We have been waiting for so long," said Yudhoyono to Obama at a press event 
shoved inside by rain.

The two presidents touted a deal that will have both countries cooperating on 
energy, education, the environment and many other subjects. More broadly, 
Indonesia offers the United States one more strategic, democratic voice in a 
continent of emerging powers and lucrative markets, while U.S. support can help 
Indonesia's own economy and regional security.

Both leaders pushed back on the thesis that Obama's efforts aim, at least in 
part, to counter China's rise. Obama insisted he wanted China to grow and 
prosper, and he said that "we're not interested in containing that process." 
Yudhoyono said he didn't think of one power counterbalancing another, but he 
added that there must be an "equilibrium" in the region.

Obama also pointedly noted that the global economy is out of whack, saying, "We 
have seen some countries run up very big surpluses and intervening 
significantly in the currency markets to maintain their advantage." The U.S. 
contends China's undervalued currency gives Beijing an unfair trade boost in 
the selling of its goods.

The president's stop in Indonesia came after he spent three days in India - the 
most attention any foreign country has received from him. Obama leaves 
Wednesday night for global economic meetings in South Korea, and then more in 
Japan. 

Obama credited his own outreach effort as he described the joint efforts of the 
United States and Indonesia, saying they were "direct results of my call in 
Cairo for a new beginning between the United States and Muslim communities." 

Overall, he said progress has been mixed. 

"Or efforts have been earnest, sustained," he said. "We don't expect that we 
are going to completely eliminate some of the misunderstandings and mistrust 
that have developed ... but we do think that we're on the right path." 

Indonesians all over this country of more than 17,000 islands gathered around 
television sets in their houses, coffee shops and office buildings as Obama's 
plane touched down. He was to deliver his speech at the University of Indonesia 
to an indoor crowd of about 6,000 people. An outdoor event was ruled out by 
concern over weather and the expected overwhelming crowd. 

___ 

Associated Press writers Erica Werner, Niniek Karmini, Robin McDowell and Sarah 
DiLorenzo contributed to this story.

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