http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2009/02/2009218141954934503.html

Wednesday, February 18, 2009 
19:51 Mecca time, 16:51 GMT 

      Clinton seeks new US-Indonesia ties 
     
     
                 
                   Clinton visited the Asean headquarters in Jakarta [AFP]  
           
      Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, has declared relations with 
Indonesia critical to US efforts to mend ties with the Islamic world, after 
arriving in the country on her tour of east Asia.

      "Building a comprehensive partnership with Indonesia is a critical step 
on behalf of the United States commitment to smart power to ... speak to a 
country that has demonstrated that Islam and modernity can not only co-exist 
but thrive together," Clinton said.

      It was "no accident" that Indonesia had been picked for her trip, Clinton 
said, after arriving in Jakarta on Wednesday on the second leg of her tour.

      The US secretary of state is seeking to vitalise economic and diplomatic 
ties with the world's most populous Muslim nation as the US struggles with 
recession.

      'Bended knee'

      Karim Raslan, a political analyst, told Al Jazeera: "She comes on bended 
knee from the largest debtor nation in the world ... a supplicant visiting her 
country's largest creditors."

      But he said there was limited scope for economic co-operation between 
Indonesia and the US in the wake of the global slowdown.

      "The most important thing would be for a country like Indonesia to be 
raised to become a close economic ally of the US . and that is something the US 
should do for Indonesia," he said.

      He said Indonesia was a vital creditor for the US, as economic reports 
released by the US Federal Reserve on Wednesday showed the US economy was 
declining worse than expected.

      After talks with Hassan Wirajuda, Indonesia's foreign minister, Clinton 
said the two nations intended to co-operate in areas ranging from climate 
change to security and counter-terrorism.  

      Security tightened

      Security had been stepped up in Jakarta in advance of Clinton's arrival.

      Thousands of policemen were deployed across the Indonesian capital as 
officials prepared for any anti-US demonstrations.

      Indonesia has had a love-hate relationship with the US since the 1960s, 
marked by US support for Suharto, who was viewed by many as a military dictator 
and was ousted as president in 1998.

      Many Indonesians also oppose the "war on terror" launched by the previous 
US administration of George Bush.

      But analysts say Obama, who spent several years of his youth living in 
Jakarta, could be trying to capitalise on his emotional ties to Indonesia as he 
seeks to improve relations with the Muslim world.
     


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