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USIS Washington File

16 February 2000

Text: Assistant Secretary Roth Feb. 16 Testimony on Indonesia

(U.S. commitment to Indonesia democracy beyond rhetoric) (2900)
The U.S. commitment to seeing a successful democratic transition in
Indonesia goes beyond mere rhetoric, according to Assistant Secretary
of State Stanley Roth.
In testimony before the House International Relations Subcommittee on
Asia and the Pacific February 16, Roth said that -- in addition to
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright's identification of Indonesia as
one of the world's four priority emerging democracies -- President
Clinton welcomed Indonesian President Wahid to the Oval Office shortly
after Wahid assumed the Presidency, and UN Ambassador Holbrooke and
Secretary of Treasury Summers have both visited Indonesia since Wahid
took office.
U.S. bilateral assistance to Indonesia, Roth continued, is being
increased to $125 million for U.S. Fiscal Year 2000. "The bulk of this
assistance will likely be used to help strengthen Indonesia's nascent
democratic institutions," he said. "Helping the Indonesians build an
effective and just judicial system, promote civil society, spur
continued economic reform, and professionalize national and local
parliaments will be among our priority concerns."
Roth concluded by concurring with Committee Chairman Douglas
Bereuter's February 2 speech in which Bereuter observed that
"continuing levels of violence underscore how fragile and volatile the
situation is in Indonesia."
Indonesia's strategic location and size make its future important to
the United States, Roth said. "The success of its current efforts to
establish a secure, democratic and prosperous nation will have a
direct impact on stability and security in the entire region."
"With those challenges in mind," Roth said, "the United States must in
our own interest do what we can to help the current transition
succeed."
Following is the text of Roth's testimony, as prepared for delivery:
(begin text)
Testimony before
The House International Relations 
Asia Pacific Subcommittee
"Indonesia:  Confronting the Political and Economic Crises"
By Stanley O. Roth
Assistant Secretary of State 
For East Asian and Pacific Affairs
February 16, 2000
Mr. Chairman, last week I testified before you and Senator Thomas to
review the dramatic developments that have occurred regarding East
Timor over the past year. At the same time, Indonesia was going
through an equally remarkable transformation of great significance to
the United States' interests in peace and stability in the region.
I need not tell this committee how Indonesia's strategic location and
size make its future important to the United States. The success of
its current efforts to establish a secure, democratic and prosperous
nation will have a direct impact on stability and security in the
entire region. This afternoon, I would like to review for you what
Indonesia has accomplished, what remains to be done, and what the
Indonesian people and their government, the United States and other
interested parties are doing to meet the challenges ahead.
Progress To Date
The past twelve months have witnessed a decisive turning point in
Indonesia's transition from an authoritarian regime toward a
pluralistic, representative democracy. Successful parliamentary
elections in June and the selection of President Abdurrahman Wahid in
October were the two watershed events that enabled Indonesia's first
democratic government to take office since the 1950s.
Under new election and party laws, Indonesia held, in June, its first
free, fair, pluralistic, and competitive parliamentary campaigns and
elections in forty-four years, elections judged credible and
legitimate by international monitors. The government, to its credit,
encouraged international assistance and monitoring of the election and
permitted free assembly and association during the campaign period.
A new Parliament (DPR) and a new People's Consultative Assembly (MPR)
were installed on October 1. The MPR subsequently elected a new
president, Abdurrahman Wahid, and vice president, Megawati
Soekarnoputri, on October 20 and 21. The new government came into
office with the broad-based legitimacy necessary to begin to confront
Indonesia's daunting economic and political difficulties.
This is a remarkable accomplishment, one of which the Indonesian
people and their leaders can be justly proud. Nonetheless, the
challenges still facing the Indonesian people are as great as the
challenges they have already overcome. No one ever expected that
President Wahid or his new government would be able to resolve all of
Indonesia's problems in the first 100 days, or even 1000 days.
To note just a few of the most salient of these challenges and the
promising start the Government has made in responding:
-- President Wahid asserted civilian control of the military. He
placed the armed forces under a civilian defense minister for the
first time in 40 years and appointed an admiral rather than an army
general as the commander of the armed forces.
-- President Wahid released the full report on the Bank Bali scandal.
That was a positive signal that will hopefully mean he will work to
break through the web of influence and corruption, which threatened to
undermine Indonesia's economic recovery, and it cleared the way for
resuming programs with the IMF and the World Bank.
-- President Wahid's government signed a new memorandum of agreement
with the IMF on January 20, 2000, leading to IMF Board approval of the
program, the release of a new tranche of IMF funding, and coinciding
with renewed disbursements from the World Bank.
-- The Parliament, no longer a rubber stamp, has begun to act as a
co-equal partner in a government of checks and balances.
-- President Wahid freed virtually all the remaining political
prisoners from the Soeharto era by December 1999, a total of 196
prisoners.
-- In Aceh, the government undertook a complex negotiating process
with some of the many different factions demanding a new political
arrangement for that troubled province.
Significant Challenges Remain Ahead
-- Economic Reform
There is no more critical requirement for the stability of Indonesia
in the medium and long term than economic and financial reform. Since
the East Asian financial crisis, Indonesia has been far less
successful than other countries, such as Thailand and South Korea, in
resolving the weaknesses that helped drive them into the crisis.
Previous governments in Indonesia were unwilling to make the
structural reforms necessary to ensure recovery.
Now that Indonesia has a democratic government, it needs to make and
implement the tough choices to build a viable sustained recovery. My
colleague from Treasury will review these for you in a moment.
-- Civilian Control of the Military
One of the greatest challenges facing this government is the need to
institutionalize civilian supremacy over the military and to remove
the pervasive influence of the military throughout government and
society, which characterized the Soeharto years. As I have already
mentioned, President Wahid used the appointment process at the
creation of his new government to put those committed to reform in key
jobs. First, he appointed the first civilian Minister of Defense,
Juwono Sudarsono. Second, he appointed Navy Admiral Widodo to be the
chief of the Indonesian Military (TNI), the first chief of TNI,
denying the dominant service, the Army, the role of chief of TNI for
the first time in history. Last month, President Wahid announced that
active-duty military officers serving in the cabinet, including
General Wiranto, would be required to retire from the military
effective March 31.
Shortly after taking office, President Wahid faced down an overt
challenge to civilian authority when the military spokesman, Major
General Sudrajat repeatedly rejected government policy as stated by
the President. First, Sudrajat called for martial law to be imposed in
Aceh even though the President had made it clear that the Government
had decided against such a step. Later, he asserted the Government did
not have the authority to interfere in military affairs. As a result,
in December, President Wahid dismissed the military spokesman.
All this set the stage for the dramatic developments of the past two
weeks. On January 31, the National Human Rights Commission released
the report of its Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights Violations in
East Timor (KPP). This report detailed many of the brutal acts that
occurred in East Timor over the past year. In addition, it identified
33 specific individuals, including General Wiranto and other senior
TNI officers, whom it recommended the Attorney General investigate
further.
While still overseas, President Wahid announced that, in the wake of
the report's findings, General Wiranto should resign from the cabinet.
As you know, Wiranto refused to resign, insisting that he must meet
with the President upon his return to Jakarta this past Sunday,
February 13.
You all know the outcome of this dramatic test of wills, that General
Wiranto was suspended from the cabinet, and a replacement, Suryadi
Sudirdja, was sworn in. Though the sequence of events through which
this occurred was unsettling, it is important to note that there was
never any evidence of an organized threat by the military to the
regime, no evidence of any coup planning. The Indonesian public
overwhelmingly supported the decision by the President, as did a
number of key generals in the Indonesian military.
The U.S. position has been absolutely clear. We support the right of
the president to change his cabinet and, even more importantly, the
principle of civilian control of the military. UN Ambassador Holbrooke
stated this position emphatically in a press conference with
Indonesian media. Other senior U.S. officials have done the same.
-- Aceh
The new government got off to an uncertain start in responding to
instability in Aceh. While President Wahid's decision to become
personally involved in resolving the issue was welcome, his initial
call for a referendum raised expectations that there would be an
opportunity to vote on independence. In the face of overwhelming
opposition to independence for Aceh by the Parliament, the military
and a range of non-governmental figures across Indonesia, Wahid
subsequently indicated that this would not be an option. He indicated
that a referendum, if there were one, would be limited to the question
of whether to place Aceh under Islamic law. The U.S. and other key
countries, including ASEAN, made clear our support for Indonesia's
territorial integrity.
Since then, President Wahid has made considerable progress in moving
the future of Aceh away from the arena of armed struggle into the
arena of a political settlement. It opened a dialogue with a range of
groups in Aceh -- students, religious leaders, businessmen, and even
proponents of armed struggle -- through two negotiating tracks.
The first track was opened by President Wahid's Minister of State for
Human Rights, Hasballah Saad, himself an Acehnese who had previously
led an Acehnese NGO. Saad has been working with a number of groups to
pull together an All Aceh Congress in order to resolve one of the
fundamental problems facing the Government in Jakarta -- whom do you
negotiate with? President Wahid expressed his frustration to me
personally, asking "What's the address?" Thus far, it remains unclear
whether this effort will succeed or whether more than one congress
will emerge with a claim to represent Aceh.
The second track has been opened through an NGO in Geneva, the Henri
Dunant Center, which has been facilitating discussions between the
Government of Indonesia and representatives of different factions of
the Free Aceh Movement (Aceh Merdeka or GAM). In a potentially
significant breakthrough, Indonesia's Permanent Representative to the
UN in Geneva has met with two major GAM factions seeking to reach
agreement on a cease fire and conditions for providing humanitarian
assistance to the people of Aceh. Although no final agreement was
reached, the very fact of these meetings is a significant step
forward. Both sides have agreed to meet again later this month, and it
remains to be seen if a cease fire agreement can be reached. While not
a direct party to either of these tracks, the USG has been deeply
engaged with the GOI on the Aceh question. We have strongly supported
Wahid's efforts to focus on a political rather than a military
solution and provided technical assistance on "lessons learned" from
other cases in which autonomy problems have been handled successfully.
--  Sectarian Violence in Ambon and Lombok
The violence in Ambon and Lombok is a humanitarian tragedy and one
which poses very significant challenges to President Wahid's
government. First, the inability to control sectarian violence has
caused some to question the competence of the central government.
Second, the awful imagery of this violence, seen on TV screens across
the globe, has certainly undermined the government's efforts to
promote investor confidence (both foreign and domestic). Third, this
sectarian violence has provided an unfortunate propaganda bonanza to
some of the Islamic parties in Indonesia, which have sought to
increase their power base through inflammatory charges of massacres of
Muslims by Christians. The January 7 rally in Jakarta, at which the
Speaker of the Constituent Assembly, Amien Rais, participated, and
which featured numerous speakers who called for a "jihad", was the
most chilling manifestation of this phenomenon.
The origins of this conflict go back to the misguided policies of
previous governments. Once a model of Christian-Muslim harmony,
transmigration policies changed the balance between these two
communities and laid the ground for the present tragedy.
Unfortunately, there is no simple solution to the problem of sectarian
violence. Clearly the government needs to do a better job in
protecting its own citizens and preserving order. The government has
recognized this fact and moved, at least in part, to address this
problem by replacing officials (police and military) who were
ineffective at containing the violence. But, at the same time, the
government has been understandably reluctant to "unleash" the police
and military to engage in the kind of repressive practices that led to
the human rights abuses of the past. Furthermore, the Indonesian
police, severely undermanned and poorly trained, are ill equipped to
respond effectively to random violence, which can arise suddenly at
far flung points in the Indonesian archipelago. There is no simple
short-term fix to this difficult problem, which will have to be
addressed on multiple fronts.
--  Managing the End Game in East Timor 
Since I addressed the issue of East Timor at some length during our
hearing last week, I will not discuss this issue at any length today.
Nonetheless, the issue of East Timor has been of such consequence for
our relationship with Indonesia that it is appropriate to offer a few
observations today.
First, in East Timor itself, security has largely been reestablished.
135,000 of the refugees who fled or were forced to West Timor have
returned. The question now is reconstruction, the development of
democratic institutions and preparation for independence. This is not
to minimize in any way the scale of the challenge facing East Timor
and the international community effort there or the need for
substantial aid to support that effort.
Second, over 100,000 refugees remain in West Timor, and it is unclear
what portion of those wish to return to East Timor. The Government of
Indonesia must eliminate militia intimidation in the camps, enable
those wishing to return to East Timor to do so without fear of
intimidation, and assist the remaining refugees to resettle elsewhere
in Indonesia. So long as refugees do remain in the camps, we need to
ensure that basic humanitarian relief continues to get to them in West
Timor.
Third, while East Timor will increasingly become an issue to be
considered in its own right, separate from Indonesia, the issue of
accountability for past atrocities means that we will not be able to
fully separate the two for some time. U.S. military-to-military
relations with Indonesia were suspended by the President; and the
provision of certain types of military assistance was conditioned by
the Leahy conditions contained in section 589 of the Foreign
Operations Appropriation for FY 2000, as you know. Until these
conditions can be met, and it is my judgment that they cannot yet be
fully met, there will remain significant constraints on our ability to
have a full normal relationship with Indonesia.
The Role of the United States
The U.S. has a profound interest in seeing a successful democratic
transition in Indonesia -- a fact reflected in the Secretary having
identified Indonesia as one of the world's four priority emerging
democracies. Nor is our commitment merely rhetoric. The President
welcomed President Wahid to the Oval Office shortly after he assumed
the Presidency. UN Ambassador Holbrooke and Secretary of Treasury
Summers have both visited Indonesia since President Wahid took office.
In response to the urgency and importance of the need, U.S. bilateral
assistance to Indonesia is being increased to $125 million for FY
2000. The bulk of this assistance will likely be used to help
strengthen Indonesia's nascent democratic institutions. We are
awaiting the recommendations of an inter-agency team that visited
Indonesia in January to gauge how this U.S. investment can most
effectively accomplish this and other goals. Helping the Indonesians
build an effective and just judicial system, promote civil society,
spur continued economic reform, and professionalize national and local
parliaments will be among our priority concerns.
A Concluding Comment
Mr. Chairman, in your February 2 speech on U.S. Security Policy in
Asia you observed that President Wahid has "exceeded most reasonable
and informed international expectations," but "continuing levels of
violence underscore how fragile and volatile the situation is in
Indonesia." I completely concur. With those challenges in mind, the
United States must in our own interest do what we can to help the
current transition succeed.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: usinfo.state.gov)



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