http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/KC25Ae01.html

Mar 25, 2009 

Indonesia's Obama, Washington's Indonesia
By Donald K Emmerson 


JAKARTA - "When will he come?" Again and again in this city I have been asked 
when US President Barack Hussein will visit Indonesia. I cannot remember a 
time, since my first trip here in 1967, when Indonesians have looked forward 
more eagerly to hosting an American president. 

Hillary Clinton's visit in February not only stoked local hopes of welcoming 
her boss. It was a big success in its own right. Never before had an American 
secretary of state traveled to Jakarta so soon after taking office. Long 
accustomed to being overlooked by Washington, Indonesians were flattered. 

Clinton voiced admiration for Indonesia's ability to combine Islam with 
democracy and modernity. Her host liked that. Indonesian Foreign Minister 
Hassan Wirajuda spoke warmly of a new "partnership" with the United States. His 
guest liked that. 

President Barack Hussein Obama, when he comes, will bring with him his memories 
of childhood in Jakarta, his accent-free facility in Indonesian, his 
Muslim-sounding name, and his willingness to reach out to the world in a way 
that his predecessor in the White House never could. Indonesians like him. 

Unlike then-president George W Bush in Baghdad in December, Hillary did not 
have to dodge thrown shoes. An Indonesian official laughed at the very idea 
that it might have been necessary to warn local journalists to keep their 
footwear to themselves. 

As for Obama, during the US presidential campaign, a BBC poll had Indonesians 
preferring him to his rival Senator John McCain by a margin of more than four 
to one. Across 22,000-plus respondents in Asian or Pacific countries, only 
Australians were more pro-Obama. Indonesian photographer Ilham Anas' uncanny 
resemblance to the US president was enough to make Anas an instant celebrity 
here. 

When I reverse their question by asking Indonesians "When should Obama come?" 
they nearly always say "Soon!" It is I, not they, who caution against an 
American president dropping by at such an intensely political time in their 
country. 

Thousands upon thousands of candidates from more than three dozen parties are 
campaigning for some 16,000 legislative seats at provincial, district and city 
levels, 550 seats in the national legislature, and 132 seats in the country's 
upper house. On April 9, up to 170 million eligible voters will mark ballots to 
refill these bodies. On July 8 and again, if needed, in a run-off election on 
September 8, millions of Indonesians will return to the polls to choose a 
president and a vice president for the next five years. 

November is nice
Obama should not come to Indonesia now. Not in the middle of this Year of 
Politicking Vigorously. Incumbent President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, popularly 
known as SBY, is campaigning hard for re-election. The stakes are as high as 
the competition is fierce. Hosting the leader of the world's most powerful 
country would arouse SBY's opponents to accuse Washington of interfering in 
domestic Indonesian politics. One hardline Islamist group has already slammed 
SBY as "America's pet". 

It was once thought that Obama might visit Indonesia early in his presidency. 
He plans instead to travel, in April, to Turkey. The most appropriate window 
for his trip to Indonesia will open in November, either before or after he 
attends the summit of leaders of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) 
forum in Singapore in the middle of that month. Singapore is only slightly more 
than an hour by air from Jakarta. 

By November, Indonesia's electoral cycle will be over, partisan tempers should 
have cooled, and a new government will be in place to receive and host Obama. 
On the US side, insofar as recession-weary Americans may expect their president 
to be focused on economic matters, the "E" in APEC will help the White House 
justify his trip. 

Forging a "new" American-Indonesian "partnership" is likely to be a theme of 
Obama's visit to Jakarta. Good relations with Indonesia are hardly new. The US 
has long been, and remains, widely engaged in Southeast Asia. But if engagement 
between people augurs the would-be permanence of marriage, engagement between 
countries is contingent and requires constant reassurance. 

Indonesia's need for reassurance is heightened when the other party is a 
distant and globally committed superpower prone to fits of distraction by 
crises and concerns elsewhere. Jakarta's need is further intensified when 
another big and powerful country - China - is permanently nearby, not far out 
of sight and never out of mind. Traditionally among foreign-policy realists 
here, Washington's indifference has helped sustain a kind of low-level anxiety 
over long-run Chinese dominance and Indonesian dependence. 

Obama's ascent has already reduced this concern, and his actual arrival will 
shrink it further. Policymakers in this city are not so naive as to think that 
the US president's childhood years here have made him wholly or forever 
pro-Indonesian. But in local eyes, the fact of Hillary Clinton's visit and the 
prospect of Obama's are clear and welcome signals of Washington's desire to 
upgrade its ties with Jakarta. 

On March 8, Chinese vessels harassed an American intelligence-gathering ship in 
disputed waters south of China's naval base on Hainan island. I asked a panel 
of Indonesian defense-policy analysts and officials whether they supported 
Beijing's or Washington's view of the incident. Publicly, they were 
noncommittal. Others in Indonesia's defense establishment, however, implied 
privately that regional security was being served, not undermined, by American 
monitoring of Chinese submarines. It is not widely realized that US and 
Indonesian personnel take part in more than 100 instances of defense and 
security cooperation every year. 

Beyond photo ops
There are differences between Jakarta and Washington as to how their ties 
should be improved. The Indonesian side wants a "comprehensive partnership" to 
be announced in a joint statement by the two presidents, SBY and Obama. The 
statement's details would then be filled in by mid-level officials in Jakarta 
and Washington. In contrast to this top-down approach, the American side is 
more comfortable negotiating upward - deciding on the details first and then 
treating them as building blocks of enhanced bilateral engagement. 

The planning and timing of the partnership will be affected by the results of 
this year's elections in Indonesia. The presidency is SBY's to lose. 
Conventional wisdom views him as a shoo-in for re-election, perhaps even in the 
first round of voting for president and vice president in July. Between now and 
then, however, the global economic crisis could damage Indonesia enough to 
boost his rivals' chances. In the months to come, the less likely SBY's 
continuation in office appears to be, the more tentatively will Jakarta and/or 
Washington approach their proposed partnership. 

There is, in any case, still time and opportunity to reach agreement by 
November on both the principles and the specifics of cooperation. SBY and Obama 
will meet at the Group of 20 summit in London in early April, and bilateral 
advisory discussions are planned for mid-April in Washington. 

As these conversations begin, some things are already clear regarding the US 
president's trip. Thoughtful Indonesians are not interested in merely serving 
as extras in news footage of Obama smiling and waving to cheering crowds. They 
want the partnership to have substance. Development assistance, including 
especially cooperation on education, figures high on the list of Indonesian 
priorities. So does the Middle East. Makers and analysts of foreign policy join 
moderate Islamist politicians here in hoping that, before coming to Jakarta, 
Obama will have taken concrete steps, however modest, toward an eventual 
two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. 

That said, the symbolism of Obama's visit will matter. Indonesian enthusiasm 
for him is real and widespread. But his meteoric rise in local esteem reflects 
in part just how low America's image sank under his predecessor. 
Indonesian-language books on sale here that focus on America as opposed to 
Obama are overwhelmingly, even polemically, critical of US actions and motives. 
In Goodbye, Bush! the Iraqi journalist who threw his shoes at Obama's 
predecessor in Baghdad is praised for standing up to "American arrogance and 
hegemony". 

Another paperback exalts Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad as a courageous 
David braving the savage megalomania of the American Goliath. Deadly Mist 
claims Washington purposely engineered deadly epidemics such as AIDS, SARS and 
avian flu. Anti-Semitic literature that demonizes Israel as an attack dog of 
Washington in its putative war on the Muslim world is also available for sale. 

Yet these titles are outnumbered by a raft of short, quickie books that laud 
Obama, while a smaller genre specializes in celebrating his wife Michelle. 
Typical of these hagiographies is Obama: American President and Child of 
Menteng. (Menteng is the Jakarta neighborhood where he lived from 1967 to 1971, 
between the ages of six and 10.) Among the admiring "facts" about Obama listed 
on Obama's cover are that he "was once an Indonesian citizen" and that, as 
president, he "will stop the policies and actions that have destroyed the moral 
authority of America". 

Wishful seeing
It is not entirely facetious to suggest that observers of Obama's run for the 
White House in 2008 and SBY's campaigns for the State Palace in 2004 and 2009 
should be forgiven if at times they forgot which country they were in. 

The Democratic Party of Obama is nearly identical in name to the Democrat Party 
of SBY. On American television last November, the states that voted for Obama 
were colored blue to distinguish them from the red states that went for 
Republican McCain. SBY's chosen campaign color is blue, in contrast to the red 
posters, flags and t-shirts preferred by his chief competitor for the 
presidency, Megawati Sukarnoputri. Obama's campaign slogan in 2008 was "Yes We 
Can!" SBY's 2004 presidential campaign motto was "Together We Can!" (SBY's 
current slogan is no less vague, just more urgent: "We Must Be Able To!") 

Such parallels drove one leader of SBY's party, Anas Urbaningrum, to hope that 
the Democratic Party's "blue victory in America in 2008 will, Allah willing, be 
followed by a victory for the Democrat Party in Indonesia". Not to be outdone, 
SBY's rival Megawati said she was driven by her own "Obama spirit" to "do the 
best for the Indonesian people". 

Indonesians are well aware that Obama is the first American president with, as 
they put it, "black skin", and this breakthrough, too, has inspired local 
analysts to draw local lessons. SBY is Javanese. Javanese are the country's 
largest but by no means its only ethnic group. Traditionally their political 
influence has been more or less comparable to that of Caucasians in America. 
Political scientist Mohammad Qodari has gone so far as to argue that Obama's 
success and popularity in the US have helped Indonesians to rethink and abandon 
the prejudicial notion that their own president has to be a Javanese. 

The subjective appropriation of Obama's iconic image and success to serve 
domestic Indonesian uses stands in dramatic contrast to the invisibility of the 
world's fourth-most populous country to most Americans. Nevertheless, inside 
the Beltway that encircles Washington DC, SBY's Indonesia is being used by 
policy influentials to justify hopes and allay fears that are distinctively 
American in character. 

When American public figures praise Indonesia as a "moderate Muslim democracy", 
or use other words to that effect, they are satisfying a characteristically 
American need for reassurances: that Islam really is a moderate religion; that 
Islam and democracy are compatible; and that the one country with more Muslims 
than any other is now an apparently stable and successful democracy. 
If Indonesians have embraced Obama as a not-Bush, Indonesia is to Americans a 
not-Iraq - or, insofar as the locus of quagmire may have shifted from Baghdad 
to Kabul, a not-Afghanistan. If Obama's success serves Indonesian purposes, 
Indonesia's success serves American ones. Appropriation turns out to be a 
two-way street. 

One may even discern in this symbolic American cooptation of SBY's Indonesia an 
echo of the American appropriation of an earlier Indonesia - the one ruled for 
more than three decades by president Suharto. That regime was autocratic and 
corrupt, but it was also politically stable, economically dynamic and notably 
anti-communist. For those in Washington who supported and prosecuted the war on 
communism in Southeast Asia, Indonesia became a reassuring not-Vietnam. 
Indonesia was even used to justify the Vietnam War with the self-serving and 
solipsistic argument that, absent the American effort to crush communism in 
Indochina, Suharto would not have been emboldened to do so in Indonesia. 

Objectively, Indonesia and America differ greatly. When it comes to 
subjectivity, however, each one tends to see in the other what, for its own 
home-grown reasons, it would like to see. This is normal and, in principle, 
helpful; there is nothing wrong with reassurance. In the months to come, 
however, if and as Indonesian and American negotiators proceed to shape a 
"comprehensive partnership" between their two countries, they would do well to 
monitor and limit the distance between what one partner really is and what the 
other partner wishes it to be. 

Donald K Emmerson heads the Southeast Asia Forum at Stanford University. He is 
a co-author of Islamism: Contested Perspectives on Political Islam (Stanford 
University Press, November 2009) and Hard Choices: Security, Democracy, and 
Regionalism in Southeast Asia (Stanford/ISEAS, 2008). 

(Copyright 2009 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please 
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