No Timetable for US-Indonesia Military Deal, Says White House
March 16, 2010
"There is a certain history that needs to be overcome" before resuming full US-Indonesia military ties, said an Obama aide. Related articles
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The United States said Monday it could not predict when it would resume full military ties with Indonesia, as it laid out the details of President Barack Obama's trip to Jakarta and Bali next week.
Obama spent four years as a boy in Indonesia
with his late mother, but the trip is more geared to business, focusing
on trade, security and diplomacy rather than his biography or his
childhood haunts.
In the run-up to the visit, the administration
has been preparing the way to resume training an elite Indonesian
military unit as part of growing counter-insurgency and intelligence
cooperation with Jakarta.
But the move would be controversial as
the Kopassus unit is implicated in past human rights abuses, including
in East Timor, and some key players in Congress oppose embracing the
force before it has accounted for past behavior. It remains unclear whether the dispute over Kopassus will be resolved in time for Obama's visit which begins on March 23.
Officers
from Kopassus were in Washington only last week in a bid to secure
resumed US support for the unit, which was cut off in 1997.
"It
would be good if we could move to full cooperation, fuller cooperation
to include the special forces, the counterterrorism capabilities within
the special forces of Kopassus," said Jeffrey Bader, Obama's senior
director for Asian affairs, briefing reporters on Obama's trip. "There is a certain history that needs to be overcome. There were human rights violations in the 1990s in former East Timor.
"We
hope to be able at some point to move past and resolve those concerns
(but) I can't predict at this point when that day might arrive."
US officials have been complimentary on the growing security cooperation between Washington and Jakarta.
Last week, Indonesia
confirmed that a major suspect of the 2002 Bali bombing, known as
Dulmatin, an Al-Qaeda trained bomb specialist with a 10 million US
dollar bounty on his head, had been killed by police.
Obama will
arrive in Jakarta on Tuesday, March 23 and have a meeting and a press
conference with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, before being
honored at a state dinner.
The next day, Obama is likely to make his most expressive reference to his childhood years in Indonesia, in a major speech also intended to build on his address to the Muslim world in Cairo last June.
"He'll
be able to speak to some of the progress that's been made and that
needs to be made on the issues that he spoke to in Cairo," said Ben
Rhodes, Obama's deputy national security advisor for strategic
communications.
Obama will then meet with local business leaders
and make some so far unspecified stops, but the White House has already
said he will not visit the school he once attended in Jakarta, or the
house where he lived.
The president will then head to the resort island of Bali where he will hold an event with civil society groups to showcase Indonesia's democratic progress in recent years, before heading to Canberra, Australia.
Obama's departure for Indonesia,
which US officials see as an increasingly important player in East
Asia, was delayed by three days until Sunday, March 21, allowing him to
remain in Washington for the endgame of his health reform drive.
AFP
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