{"id":43589,"date":"2018-11-15T11:09:02","date_gmt":"2018-11-15T00:09:02","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=43589"},"modified":"2018-11-15T17:13:36","modified_gmt":"2018-11-15T06:13:36","slug":"challenges-and-opportunities-for-indonesian-australian-maritime-cooperation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/challenges-and-opportunities-for-indonesian-australian-maritime-cooperation\/","title":{"rendered":"Challenges and opportunities for Indonesian\u2013Australian maritime cooperation"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Indonesia and Australia share one of the longest maritime boundaries in the world. They also share a unique bond as neighbours at the maritime crossroads of the Indian and Pacific Oceans. The relationship between the people of Indonesia and Australia started many centuries ago when Makassan seafearers and other Indonesian islanders began trading with the Aboriginal people of northern Australia. Our relationship strengthened when Australia supported the Indonesian struggle for independence in 1940s and was reinforced by the 2006 Lombok Treaty for addressing traditional and non-traditional security challenges.<\/p>\n

Recent agreements will further enhance maritime cooperation. During Indonesian president Joko Widodo\u2019s visit to Australia in February 2017, the leaders of both countries committed to boost maritime cooperation. The Joint Declaration on Maritime Cooperation was signed in the same month by the Indonesian and Australian foreign ministers. An implementation plan, the Maritime Cooperation Plan of Action, was signed in March this year. The plan of action sets an ambitious agenda to strengthen and expand maritime engagement between two countries.<\/p>\n

The visit of Scott Morrison to Indonesia in August, just a few days after he became prime minister, resulted in the Joint Declaration on a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between Australia and Indonesia. The joint declaration rests on five pillars.<\/p>\n

Importantly, the fourth pillar is maritime cooperation, under which both countries will seek to realise our shared vision of a peaceful, secure and stable maritime domain where people, commerce and the environment can flourish. Both countries will promote maritime trade and the sustainable development of the blue economy by:<\/p>\n