{"id":10879,"date":"2013-11-21T06:00:42","date_gmt":"2013-11-20T19:00:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=10879"},"modified":"2013-11-22T08:50:36","modified_gmt":"2013-11-21T21:50:36","slug":"a-new-bilateral-rupture","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/a-new-bilateral-rupture\/","title":{"rendered":"A new bilateral rupture?"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a>For nearly ten years as Indonesia\u2019s leader, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has presided over the most stable and productive era in the tumultuous diplomatic relationship between Jakarta and Canberra.<\/p>\n Australia\u2019s extraordinary $1 billion act of generosity in the wake of the 2004 tsunami helped recast the pattern of official engagement between these two utterly different neighbours. Since then, government-to-government links have deepened and widened and now include a web of agreements negotiated under the provisions of the 2006 Lombok Treaty agreed by President Yudhoyono and John Howard.<\/p>\n By March 2010 an historic high-point in bilateral relations had been reached, with Yudhoyono declaring to the Australian parliament that Indonesia and Australia had evolved a special relationship\u2019. The two countries weren\u2019t just neighbours and friends but \u2018strategic partners\u2019.<\/p>\n The result of that partnership has been a steady upswing in security cooperation between Canberra and Jakarta, ranging from counter-terrorism and military training to Australian Federal Police disruption of people-smuggling syndicates, and much closer intelligence sharing between government agencies.<\/p>\n As a senior military officer in the mid-1990s, then as a leading cabinet minister and finally President, Yudhoyono personally assisted the deepening of broader official ties. He knows Australia well and one of his sons was educated in Perth. Yudhoyono also understands, arguably better than any of his predecessors, the profound cultural divide that will forever separate Indonesia and Australia. This week\u2019s unprecedented leak of top secret documents detailing Australia\u2019s signals intelligence efforts in targeting of the mobile phones of Yudhoyono, his wife and his key leadership group in 2009 came as a slap in the face to the Indonesian leader.<\/p>\n Late yesterday came the predictable response from Jakarta in answer to Prime Minister Abbott\u2019s reluctance to clarify the 2009 efforts to listen to the Indonesia leader\u2019s mobile phone calls. Yudhoyono suspended defence, intelligence and security cooperation, including Indonesian military activities aimed at curbing people-smuggling pending a full explanation from Canberra.<\/p>\n This is the most serious rupture in bilateral relations since the East Timor crisis in 1999, which saw bilateral security cooperation terminated for several years and the abrogation by Jakarta of the security treaty agreed in 1995 by former president Suharto and Paul Keating.<\/p>\n Yudhoyono now seeks a fresh protocol on intelligence cooperation with Canberra. He has put his concerns in writing to Tony Abbott. Yudhoyono is well aware of the broad scope and long-standing nature of Australia\u2019s signals intelligence gathering against Indonesia. Sigint collection focused on Jakarta has been a priority task for the Australian Signals Directorate and its predecessors for more than 50 years.<\/p>\n Beginning with Konfrontasi in the early 1960s and continuing through Indonesia\u2019s invasion of East Timor in 1975 and successive crises in bilateral relations in the mid-1980s and over East Timor again in 1999, Australian intelligence agencies have regularly conducted signals intelligence operations across the archipelago.<\/p>\n But it’s the scale of targeted intrusion into personal communications within the Presidential palace by Australia, as revealed by Edward Snowden, that caused Yudhoyono to talk of a \u2018violation of the strategic partnership with Indonesia\u2019.<\/p>\n