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A US President Whose Unique Story Can Help Reshape Bilateral Relations
November 10, 2010


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Aki-Amani
9:35am Nov 10, 2010

The Constitution of the USA, designed to protect fundamental human rights and eugenic social values, provided a framework that has given a long and, until recently, prosperous life to the country. Today, the seeds of rebellion sown in the '60s, especially among many adolescents (rock concert nudity, "free" sex, drugs, disregard for the law, anti-patriotism and anti-God attitudes) has produced a generation that also accepts both the death penalty for the unborn and homosexual abominations. It is no wonder that an effete population sector characterized by too much physical weight and too little real-world cognizance has enough power to elect one similarly unequipped and unprepared to the office of President. Obama's agenda has evinced little respect for national values and little capability to set things right. Recent election results indicate that many others share this observation. A Washington watchword for the President is, "When in trouble, travel." He is here. And his Office is worthy of honor. However, the opinion of this native born, nigh-octogenarian citizen of the USA is that the present occupant, uniquely, is not.


mauriceg
9:26am Nov 9, 2010

@Dr.Biz,I'm only speaking for myself, but I'm sickened when people start whining about NATO soldiers killing Muslims. Just for a perspective, the Taliban in Afghanistan slaughter men, women & children daily without blinking; Sunnis murder Shias; Shias murder Sunnis; there is Muslim-Muslim genocide in Africa; suicide bombers in Iraq and elsewhere etc.

Given the religion of peace and love's seeming hatred of non-Muslims (apparently discounting the billions of dollars those Westerners and non-Muslims contribute for the relief of victims of disasters all over the world), the Muslim predilection for violence and Muslim terrorists' desire to obtain weapons of mass destruction to murder thousands of innocents, all that is ignored by people such as you.

It's only when the silent Muslim majority wake up, totally repudiate and stop supporting the terrorists, even tacitly, that they will get more respect.


Dr.Biz
7:43am Nov 9, 2010

What is so good about Obama,except that he is Black? He sends extra troops to Afghanistan and kill Muslim people.Are Indonesians so blind? and deaf?

How come none of the media emphasised White background of sen. McCain during the election? if they did so they would have been accused of racism. Its is ok to say :'Vote for First Black President' BUT its not ok to say;' Vote for McCain-He is white!!!'Crazy World......


Ronen
10:15pm Nov 8, 2010

I'm another US citizen who live in Indonesia just 3.5 years. This is maybe the reason why human rights are still part of my personal views.

I did not read the whole article, but I searched for the words: human rights, Papua, torture, atrocities, KOPASUS, Accountability, corruption, and I did not find any of them. Well, I hope I will not live here 33 years, if it can cause Americans to forget the American values... Please do not laugh... I am sarcastic...


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As an American who has been living in Indonesia for 33 years, I am delighted about President Barack Obama’s visit. While Indonesia-US relations basically have been very good for a long time and President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono also had an excellent relationship with Obama’s predecessor, George W. Bush, no American president has been as warmly received into the minds and hearts of the average Indonesian as Obama.

This puts him in a unique position to broaden, deepen and elevate a relationship that has often performed at subpar levels since the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis dramatically reduced the American business presence here.

The two-day visit will be full of practical, pragmatic politics and vivid symbolism.

One of the most important aspects of the visit is that it will provide a strong, public demonstration that relations between our two countries are much deeper and broader than the antiterrorism cooperation that tends to dominate the headlines in today’s troubled world.

This desire for deeper engagement and fuller cooperation is being brought under the broad umbrella o f what is called the Comprehensive Partnership, which was first suggested by Yudhoyono more than a year ago.

The pact gives formal structure to a relationship that has been steady and multifaceted for decades, but sometimes seems too random and unfocused to achieve maximum impact.

The Comprehensive Partnership highlights a number of priority areas of cooperation: higher education, climate change, maritime security, trade and investment, and counterterrorism.

In specific terms, on the business front the US Export-Import Bank has already announced a $1 billion credit facility partnership with 11 Indonesian banks to assist with bilateral trade deals and there is talk that an announcement will be made of a several-hundred-million-dollar program to meet the challenges posed by rapid climate change.

To help Yudhoyono meet his G-20 pledge to reduce Indonesia’s greenhouse gas emissions by up to 40 percent by 2020, the United States is committing $136 million as part of a three-year program of Environment and Climate Change cooperation.

The two presidents are also expected to take specific steps to increase educational exchanges between the two countries.

These vital intellectual bridges have languished over the past decade due to tighter visa restrictions brought on in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, a lack of funding and more competitive programs available here in the region.

According to some estimates, the number of Indonesians studying in the United States has dropped from about 14,000 20 years ago to around 7,000 today. And the flow of American students coming to Indonesia has slowed to a trickle.

Both countries have pledged to reverse this disturbing trend.

Under the Partnership, six US universities are being paired with Indonesian institutions as part of the US-Indonesia Partnership Program for Study Abroad Capacity.

This program should be a welcome addition to the Fulbright – American-Indonesian Exchange Foundation that has carried much of the bilateral education program on its poorly funded shoulders for the past 20 years.

These are just a few examples of actual programs that provide the muscle and sinew that are necessary to bind countries together in lasting, mutually beneficial relationships.

Beyond all of these important programs, there is the dramatic symbolism of the visit.

This goes beyond the fact that we have an American president who has lived in Indonesia, as important as that is in ensuring that Obama will receive an especially warm welcome here.

Obama is the first multicultural, biracial president in American history.

The young men and women of my generation came to political awareness during America’s civil rights struggle in the 1960s.

We were thrilled and excited by the speeches of Martin Luther King and John F. Kennedy.

Surely we were also frightened and intimidated by the passions and crimes that were laid bare in those turbulent days.

In the short space of 40 years, America moved from a place where blacks were not allowed to vote, to a place where a man with a black father and a white mother could be elected president.

This seems to capture not just something special about America, but about the human condition. Fundamental change really is still possible.

In today’ s world, it is easy to despair of bridging the gaps between countries and religions.

The oppression and the prejudices that are destroying the hopes of so many people — in Palestine, Israel, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Burma — seem immutable and unyielding.

But are the divisions that tear countries and people apart deeper and more fundamental than the prejudice and bigotry between black and white that existed in America just 50 years ago?

Are they that much harder to confront and overcome?

The larger meaning of Barack Obama is that our deepest fears and hatreds can be overcome. Yes we can.


James Castle is the president of Castle Asia and is a past president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Indonesia.




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