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Thread: Senate Vetoes Arms Sales to Indonesia

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    A Self Important Senior Contributor troung's Avatar
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    Senate Vetoes Arms Sales to Indonesia

    Senate Vetoes Arms Sales to Indonesia


    Congress Maintains Restrictions on US-Indonesian Military Relations


    (Source: Voice of America news; issued Nov. 17, 2005)


    The U.S. Congress has voted to maintain restrictions on U.S. military aid to Indonesia, in an effort to force the country to take further steps to improve its army's respect for human rights. The decision ran counter to a request from the Bush administration to eliminate the restrictions, but pleased activists who say Indonesia's reforms have not gone nearly far enough.

    The House of Representatives was willing to remove the restrictions, but the Senate was not, and when members of the two bodies met to negotiate a compromise, the Senate's view prevailed.

    "The House has a sense that things are going in a very constructive direction and that there is a case for exchanges at a professional level that can be beneficial to both societies," said Representative Jim Leach, a Republican, who is chairman of the House subcommittee on East Asia and the Pacific.

    He says the compromise that became law earlier this month imposes only slightly easier conditions for expanding U.S. military aid to Indonesia.

    "I think it represents a step forward, although perhaps not as great a step forward as might be warranted at this time," he added.

    Senator Lisa Murkowski disagrees. She is also a Republican and is Representative Leach's counterpart as chairwoman of the Senate's subcommittee on East Asia and the Pacific. She says Indonesia's new president has only made initial steps toward reforming the military and holding people accountable for past human rights violations in East Timor and elsewhere.

    "With the right leadership and a strong leadership, I think that he can move them in the right direction," she said. "Am I convinced that they're there yet? Probably not."

    This year's Foreign Operations budget sets three conditions Indonesia must meet before limits on U.S. sales of military equipment can be lifted and the U.S. Defense Department can provide financial help for Indonesia's military purchases. Last year there were four conditions, and they were slightly different.

    "As seen from what we had last year, I believe there is an improvement," said Suhardjono Sastromihardjo, Minister Counselor for Political Affairs at the Indonesian embassy in Washington.

    The thrust of the congressional requirements is for Indonesia to prosecute soldiers who committed human rights violations in East Timor in 1999, cooperate with international investigations of what happened in East Timor and improve civilian control of the military. A requirement for help in the global war on terrorism has been dropped, and the country's police force is generally praised in that regard.

    The law says Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice must confirm to Congress that the conditions have been met. Until then, Indonesia can only buy "non-lethal" military equipment from the United States. But the law also gives the secretary of state the option of waiving the conditions if she asserts that U.S. national security interests are at stake.

    "We hope that, in this case, the secretary of state could use the wavier so that we can buy not only the non-lethal military hardware, but also the lethal ones," said Suhardjono Sastromihardjo.

    But U.S. and Indonesian human rights activists hope that does not happen. At the East Timor and Indonesia Action Network, national coordinator Karen Orenstein says Indonesia is mostly only talking about military reform and will never actually take the necessary steps unless the United States keeps the pressure on by maintaining the conditions on military sales.

    "Well, they should be maintained because there hasn't been an adequate level of military reform," she said. "There's been little, if any, actual reform. If the Indonesian military and government want those conditions to be entirely lifted and want a totally normalized relationship with the U.S. government in terms of security systems, then they simply have to comply with what's expected of any professional military and uphold protections for human rights, and hold their members accountable for violations."

    Minister Sastromihardjo says Indonesia is working on reforms, but he acknowledges the country cannot yet meet the congressional conditions.

    "I cannot blame those critics who [say] Indonesia has not done enough, but please understand that it takes time to really change everything, because we are dealing not only with the military issue, we are dealing with the social issue, political issue, economic issue," he added.

    The Indonesian diplomat says the country's military wants to improve what he calls its "firepower" by buying new fighter aircraft, warships and ammunition, and by upgrading its aging U.S. weapons and radar systems.

    Whether that will happen is now in the hands of Secretary Rice. She and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld had written to Congress before the vote asking for the restrictions to be removed. The Bush administration says Indonesia's military has made noteworthy progress on human rights, and the best way to promote more progress is to help its modernization effort.

    A Pentagon official familiar with the issue says the administration believes it does not need legal restrictions to conduct a responsible arms sales policy. But that same official, who requested anonymity, acknowledges that Indonesia has not met the congressional conditions as of now. So in the short term a wavier, which would likely draw considerable criticism from Congress and activists, is the only way Indonesia can possibly get what it wants from its military relationship with the United States.

    -ends-

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    A Self Important Senior Contributor troung's Avatar
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    US to Resume Sales of Lethal Weapons to Indonesia


    (Source: Voice of America news; issued Nov. 23, 2005)


    WASHINGTON --- The United States has decided to resume the sale of lethal military hardware to Indonesia. The State Department announced Tuesday that in the interest of U.S. national security it has exercised its authority under a law passed earlier this month to waive conditions on U.S. military relations with Indonesia.

    The State Department statement says "Indonesia has made significant progress in advancing its democratic institutions and practices in a relatively short time." As a result, the department has decided to waive conditions placed on the sale of lethal military equipment to Indonesia and on U.S. financing of Indonesian military purchases.

    A State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity, says there is no specific sale planned. And he noted that the official statement says U.S. military exports to Indonesia will focus on modernizing the country's military and providing further incentives for reform, as well as pursuing common security objectives, including counterterrorism, maritime security and disaster relief.

    The statement also says U.S. military aid to Indonesia "will continue to be guided by Indonesia's progress on democratic reform and accountability." And it says the Bush Administration remains committed to pursuing accountability for past human rights abuses.

    Congress maintained the restrictions on military sales to Indonesia in the 2006 Foreign Operations Act in an effort to continue to pressure the country to improve civilian control of its military and to hold soldiers accountable for human rights abuses in East Timor and elsewhere. But the law also gave the secretary of state the authority to either confirm that the conditions have been met, or to waive the restrictions if she determines it is in the national security interest of the United States. The statement issued Tuesday says her under-secretary for political affairs, Nicholas Burns, issued the wavier while she was traveling outside the country earlier this week.

    This is the third time this year that the State Department has expanded U.S. military relations with Indonesia. It allowed the resumption of training and educational exchanges between the U.S. and Indonesian militaries in February, and approved renewed sales of non-lethal military equipment to Indonesia in May.

    "Also in May, the U.S. and Indonesian presidents promised to work toward re-establishing normal military relations between their countries when they met in Washington," he said.

    A leading U.S. human rights group concerned with Indonesian issues criticized the wavier late Tuesday. Karen Orenstein is the national coordinator of the East Timor and Indonesia Action Network. "The East Timor and Indonesia Action condemns in the strongest term possible the issuance of this national security wavier. This is just a clear abuse of executive power. You can't press for military reform and human rights and accountability when you have no leverage to do so. We've just given away the store," he said.

    At the Indonesian Embassy in Washington, the charge d'affaires, Andri Hadi, was pleased with the announcement. "We welcome that initiative because it is very important for us to have defense equipment from the United States," he said.

    Mr. Hadi says Indonesia's top priority is to buy parts for its F-16 fighter jets, some of which can not fly due to mechanical problems. And he says the easing of restrictions on U.S.-Indonesian military sales and exchanges will provide more opportunities for the United States to press for human rights improvements.

    "It also gives the opportunity for (the) U.S. government to have frank and mutual dialogue on the human rights issues, so it doesn't mean the U.S. lost its leverage on Indonesia because human rights is not (just a) U.S. concern, but also our own concern," he said.

    The U.S. secretaries of state and defense had urged Congress not to re-impose the conditions on military relations with Indonesia this year. Officials say the best way to improve the Indonesian military's respect for human rights is to be involved in its modernization process. There was also concern that Indonesia might turn to other countries, such as Russia and China, if the United States continued to limit its military dealings with the country.

    Congress was divided on the issue, with the House of Representatives voting to remove the restrictions, while the Senate voted to maintain them. The Senate's view was adopted as part of a broader compromise that enabled the law to be passed.

    Tuesday's State Department statement notes that Indonesia is the world's most populous mostly Muslim nation, and praises the country as "a voice of moderation in the Islamic world." It also says Indonesia "plays a key role in guaranteeing security in the strategic sea lanes in Asia." (ends)


    U.S. To Resume Select Military Assistance to Indonesia


    (Source: US State Department; issued Nov. 22, 2005)


    The United States will resume Foreign Military Financing (FMF) for Indonesia in selected areas of military assistance, the State Department announced November 22.

    FMF will cover specific military programs and units that will help modernize Indonesia's military as well as support U.S. and Indonesian joint objectives such as counterterrorism and maritime security, according to the State Department.

    The United States also resumed International Military Education and Training (IMET) for Indonesia in February. The program had been restricted due to insufficient cooperation from the Indonesian military in investigating the August 2002 murders of two American citizens in Papua province. Nonlethal foreign military sales (FMS) were resumed in May.

    "The U.S. remains committed to pressing for accountability for past human rights abuses, and U.S. assistance will continue to be guided by Indonesia's progress on democratic reform and accountability," the statement says.

    Following is the text of the statement:


    U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
    Office of the Spokesman
    November 22, 2005

    Under authority delegated by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who is traveling outside of the United States, Under Secretary for Political Affairs R. Nicholas Burns has determined that it is in the national security interests of the United States to waive conditionality pertaining to Foreign Military Financing (FMF) and defense exports to Indonesia, in accordance with Section 599F(b) of the FY 2006 Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act (P.L. 109-102).

    The decision will allow the United States to resume selected areas of military assistance for Indonesia. It continues the process of military reengagement with Indonesia that included the Secretary's decision to resume International Military Education and Training (IMET) in February, and her decision to resume non-lethal Foreign Military Sales (FMS) in May.

    The Administration considers the relationship between the United States and Indonesia, the world's third largest democracy, to be of the utmost importance. Indonesia plays a unique strategic role in Southeast Asia. As the world's most populous majority-Muslim nation, Indonesia is a voice of moderation in the Islamic world. It also plays a key role in guaranteeing security in the strategic sea lanes in Asia and is a leading member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Indonesia has made significant progress in advancing its democratic institutions and practices in a relatively short time.

    In resuming Foreign Military Financing, the Administration plans to provide assistance for specific military programs and units that will help modernize the Indonesian military, provide further incentives for reform of the Indonesian military, and support U.S. and Indonesian security objectives, including counterterrorism, maritime security and disaster relief. The U.S. remains committed to pressing for accountability for past human rights abuses, and U.S. assistance will continue to be guided by Indonesia's progress on democratic reform and accountability.

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