{"id":20059,"date":"2015-04-29T15:04:44","date_gmt":"2015-04-29T05:04:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=20059"},"modified":"2015-05-11T13:30:53","modified_gmt":"2015-05-11T03:30:53","slug":"australia-and-indonesia-will-it-always-be-like-this","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/australia-and-indonesia-will-it-always-be-like-this\/","title":{"rendered":"Australia and Indonesia: will it always be like this?"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n Following the executions of Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran last night, it doesn\u2019t pay to let hurt or anger drive one\u2019s thinking about Australia\u2013Indonesia ties. Those who care about the relationship\u2014mostly politicians and officials, not too many \u2018average\u2019 citizens in either country\u2014must despair for future prospects. Is it always going to be like this?<\/p>\n A succession of spats and public differences over live cattle trade, spying allegations, turning back the boats and executions have meant that, for half a decade, the relationship has faced repeated crises. Looking further back, it\u2019s clear that our relations since Indonesia\u2019s independence in 1945 have been marked by even deeper problems. Australia spent much of the 1950s and early \u201860s deeply worried about Indonesian susceptibility to Communism. Konfrontasi<\/em> in the 1960s saw us fighting a counterinsurgency war against Jakarta over Malaysia\u2019s independence. Indonesia\u2019s incorporation of West Papua in 1962 and East Timor in 1975 created deep and lasting instabilities in our nearer region.<\/p>\n Under Suharto, systemic corruption inhibited the development of deep government-to-government relations. The best Paul Dibb\u2019s 1986 Review of Australia\u2019s Defence Capabilities<\/em> could publicly say<\/a> about Indonesia was that it was the area \u2018from or through which a military threat to Australia could most easily be posed\u2019. Dibb was making a point about geography, but there was little warmth in the political relationship to offset that hard strategic reality. The Timor crisis of 1999 again put Canberra\u2013Jakarta relations into the deep-freeze. It took the 2004 tsunami and the leadership skills of John Howard and Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to steer relations to a better place. We may look back on that period of warmth as one of the truly \u00a0positive periods in an otherwise difficult partnership.<\/p>\n