Assalamu`alaikum wr.wb

berikut berita originalnya dari the international herald tribune
tentang pernyataan SBY waktu menjabat menko polkam: I love ...

Wassalamu`alaikum wr.wb
Yuli Setyo Indartono

International Herald Tribune
Washington--Friday, August 8, 2003 

Indonesia's progress will continue
Despite the bombing 

JAKARTA--This country," my Indonesian host said to me, "is a gold 
mine in a mine field. Avoid the mines and you will reap the reward." 
Just days later, one of those mines exploded down the street - at 
the Marriott Hotel in the terrorist attack Tuesday that killed at 
least 10 people and wounded more than 150.

Can the government of President Megawati Sukarnoputri navigate the 
dangerous terrain ahead and prevail against the Islamic extremists 
within Indonesian society? Will Indonesia - and the world - reap the 
rewards that would follow if the country with the largest Muslim 
population succeeds in its bold experiment in democracy?

My discussions with political, business and military leaders shortly 
before the attack suggest that while many land mines litter the 
landscape, the gold mine of a peaceful, prosperous Indonesia is 
closer than many Western observers believe.

To be sure, the capital has been on high alert since Islamic 
terrorists killed more than 200 people in Bali last October. In 
recent months, explosions ripped through the Jakarta airport and 
Parliament. Luxury Western hotels have installed metal detectors. 
Encircled by barbed wire and concrete barriers, the U.S. Embassy 
resembles Fort Apache. Foreign tourists and investors are taking 
their money elsewhere.

Yet for all the uncertainty, Indonesia continues its slow march to 
becoming the world's third largest democracy. Economically, the 
country appears poised to recover from the 1997 Asian meltdown. 
Rampant corruption, nepotism and poverty persist. But money from the 
ethnic Chinese community, which fled the murderous riots of 1998, is 
returning. The rupiah has firmed up against the dollar. Gross 
domestic product is up. Inflation and interest rates are down. 
Privatization of state-controlled companies continues. The Jakarta 
stock market is bullish.

Politically, this former dictatorship inches closer to genuine 
democracy. A free press and independent political parties flourish. 
Ideologues who would impose Islamic law remain, as always, divided 
and disorganized. Asked who will win the presidential election next 
year, Jusuf Kalla, the coordinating minister for people's welfare, 
tells me, "Whoever wins the most votes." For the first time, the 
Indonesian people will choose their president in a direct election.

In terms of security, the Bali bombings finally roused Jakarta to 
the terrorist threat within its porous borders. Authorities have 
aggressively pursued Jemaah Islamiyah, the extremist group linked to 
Al Qaeda that is suspected in the Marriott and Bali attacks, and 
have put on trial the Bali bombers and their spiritual leader, Abu 
Bakar Bashir. The guilty verdict delivered Thursday for Amrozi, 
accused of helping to plan and carry out the Bali bombings, is a 
sign that the Indonesian judiciary will not be intimidated.

Indeed, the massacre at the Marriott, apparently intended to thwart 
the government's crackdown, will probably achieve the opposite, 
generating a renewed determination in Jakarta to combat terrorism 
and to deepen U.S.-Indonesian cooperation, discreet though it may be.

Paradoxically, the biggest land mine on the way to a stable 
Indonesia may be the one institution capable of preserving its 
territorial integrity - the military.

Determined to avoid the disintegration of her ethnically diverse 
country, Megawati has given the army a free hand in the rebellious 
provinces of Aceh and Papua and has installed former generals as 
governors across Indonesia. Its appetite whetted, the military 
proposed controversial legislation granting itself authority to take 
action in times of national emergency without prior presidential 
approval.

So what is Washington doing to increase its influence with this 
powerful institution? Nothing. Congress � and now apparently the 
White House � continue to raise barriers to resuming the 
International Military and Education Training program, or IMET, 
suspended in 1992, under which more than 3,000 Indonesian officers 
expanded their views on democracy and human rights while learning 
how to handle insurgencies and terrorism.

The murder of two Americans in Papua last year, apparently by 
renegade soldiers, must be fully investigated, as Congress insists. 
And by all accounts, Jakarta is cooperating with the FBI. Yet 
discussions with two members of the last IMET class illustrate how 
resuming the program would enhance American influence.

Lieutenant General Agus Widjojo fondly recalls training with the 
U.S. Army Rangers, whom he describes as "warriors with a respect for 
human rights." Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a retired general who is 
now coordinating minister of security and political affairs, speaks 
of America in glowing terms. "I love the United States, with all its 
faults. I consider it my second country."

As it wages a global campaign to win Muslim hearts and minds, 
Washington needs as many Widjojos and Yudhoyonos as it can get. And 
as Jakarta wades through the dangerous terrain ahead, it needs as 
much help combating terrorism as it can get.

>From the charred wreckage of the Marriott comes a lesson for 
Indonesia and America: If these two natural partners can work 
together to deftly sidestep the political and economic mines that 
remain, a treasure awaits both in the form of a peaceful, prosperous 
and democratic Indonesia.



--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Tangkisan Letug <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Bambang Yudhoyono: 
> "I love the United States, with all its faults. I
> consider it my second country."
> 
> Al Jazeera:
> Features 
> Profile: Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono




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