Friends,
How low can Obama go?
Kagiso,
Max
By John Pomfret
Wednesday, March 3, 2010; A08
As President Obama prepares to travel to Indonesia, his administration is seeking to reverse a 12-year-old ban on training an elite unit of the Indonesian military whose members have been convicted of beatings, kidnappings and other abuses.
The administration is floating a plan to test a training program for younger members of the Indonesian Komando Pasukan Khusus, or Kopassus. Four members of the force, including its commanding general, Maj. Gen. Lodewijk Paulus, are in
"The details are still being worked out," said a spokesman for the Indonesian Embassy. After a meeting with the chief of the
The Obama administration's move reflects a desire to improve ties with Indonesia and other countries in Southeast Asia as part of efforts to counter China's rise. When Obama attended a summit of Southeast Asian nations in
"It's a very good sign," Ernie Bower, an expert on
Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, is also a key partner in the fight against Islamist extremists. During George W. Bush's administration,
In seeking to strengthen ties with Kopassus, the Obama administration is going further than its predecessor, which attempted to resume training operations with Kopassus but was warned off by a State Department ruling in 2008.
Under a 1997 measure known as the Leahy Law, the
The Obama administration is seeking to thread that needle, sources said, by training and conducting joint exercises only with Kopassus soldiers who, because of their age, could not have been involved in the unit's earlier abuses. (Australian forces currently train Kopassus soldiers, in human rights issues among other things.)
There is some opposition to the new policy, though, from Obama's own party.
"We know there are some who favor resuming aid to Kopassus, but
Speaking about Obama's trip to
In a Feb. 4 letter to Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, Brad Adams, the Asia director for Human Rights Watch, said his organization was opposed to the administration's plan because, he contended,
"Unfortunately, human rights abusers continue to serve and be promoted through the ranks of [the Indonesian armed forces], notably in Kopassus,"
Adams cited the case of Lt. Gen. Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin, who was appointed deputy defense minister on Jan. 6, 2009, despite long-standing allegations of his involvement, as a senior Kopassus officer, in the disappearance in the late 1990s of pro-democracy student activists and in violence by Indonesian troops and militias around the time of East Timor's referendum on independence in 1999. The
Kopassus served as the muscle for Suharto's regime until he was forced to resign in 1998. Led for several years by Suharto's son-in-law, Maj. Gen. Prabowo Subianto, it has been linked to assassinations, the instigation of anti-Chinese riots and disappearances of government critics.
After Suharto's departure, Kopassus's leadership was changed, but apparently no sustained effort was made to prosecute human rights abuses. For example,
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1 comment:
For decades, the U.S. military provided training and other assistance to Kopassus knowing its human rights record and criminal activity, and despite the fact that this aid failed to improve its behavior. There is no reason to think it will be different now. Indeed, the Indonesian military's behavior was at its worst when the U.S. was most engaged with it.
East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN)has a petition opposing training for Kopassus here ttp://www.gopetition.com/online/29600.html
More info on ETAN's website http://www.etan.org
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