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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australian government reinforces ties to Indonesian military
By Mike Head
9 June 1998
The Howard government in Australia has moved to reinforce its
already intimate ties with the military junta in Indonesia. Australian
Defence Minister Ian McLachlan has reaffirmed a commitment to
joint exercises and training under a treaty signed by the previous
Keating Labor Party government in 1995.
Speaking just weeks after the armed forces massacred students
and then supervised Suharto's replacement by Habibie, McLachlan
stated that "they've [the Indonesian military] done well".
He added: "We are very keen for defence cooperation to keep
going".
Under the Australian-Indonesian Defence Cooperation Program,
the two governments exchange sensitive intelligence information
and conduct exercises involving elite and highly secretive special
forces troops. At least 32 Indonesian military personnel are currently
at various staff and training colleges. Australian officers have
been posted to Bandung and Surabaya.
McLachlan said Canberra will this year go ahead with joint
exercises in both countries, including Trisetia '98, with the
green-beret Army Strategic Reserve (Kostrad) in Indonesia in November.
A series of top-level meetings are planned, culminating in one
between McLachlan and his counterpart, General Wiranto, in November.
McLachlan praised the Keating government for signing the highly
secretive Australia-Indonesia Agreement on Maintaining Security
in December 1995. In an unprecedented move, the treaty committed
Australia to consider joint military action in the event of "adverse
challenges" to the Suharto dictatorship. Normally, security
treaties refer to "external" threats only.
Under that treaty no less than one-third of the Australian
Navy was engaged in a joint exercise with the Indonesian armed
forces off the coast of Java at the height of the upheaval surrounding
Suharto's resignation last month. The warships were on standby
as up to 150,000 troops, accompanied by tanks and armoured personnel
carriers, patrolled the streets of nearby Jakarta.
The Howard government has in recent days warmly endorsed the
Habibie regime, with Foreign Minister Alexander Downer stating
that Habibie "has a very clear grasp of what he needs to
do". During last month's events, Downer and Howard said the
same of Suharto.
Their partnership with the Indonesian military shows the extent
to which ruling circles in Australia and internationally are,
above all, relying on the generals to protect their massive investments
in Indonesia and maintain a repressive grip over the impoverished
masses.
See Also:
The struggle for democracy
in Indonesia
What are the social and political tasks facing the masses?
[23 May 1998]
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