THE NEW YORK TIMES, Wednesday, May 8, 2002
Op-Ed
The War on What?
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
JAKARTA, Indonesia - Spend a few days in Indonesia and you'll find many people
asking you a question you weren't prepared for: Is America's war on terrorism going to
become a war against democracy?
As Indonesians see it, for decades after World War II America sided with dictators,
like their own President Suharto, because of its war on Communism. With the fall of
the Berlin Wall, America began to press more vigorously for democracy and human
rights in countries like Indonesia, as the U.S. shifted from containing Communism to
enlarging the sphere of democratic states. Indonesians were listening, and in 1998
they toppled Mr. Suharto and erected their first electoral democracy.
Today Indonesians are still listening, and they're worried they're hearing America shift
again — from a war for democracy to a war on terrorism, in which the U.S. will judge
which nations are with it or against it not by the integrity of their elections or the
justice of their courts, but by the vigor with which their army and police combat Al
Qaeda. For Indonesia, where democracy is still a fragile flower, anything that
encourages a comeback by the long-feared, but now slightly defanged, army and
police — the tools of Mr. Suharto's long repression — is not good news.
"Indonesian democrats have always depended on America as a point of reference that
we could count on to support us," said the prominent Indonesian commentator Wimar
Witoelar. "If we see you waffling, whom do we turn to? It is like the sun disappearing
from the sky and everything starts to freeze here again."
There is a broad feeling among Indonesian elites that while some of their more
authoritarian neighbors, like Malaysia or Pakistan, have suddenly become the new
darlings of Washington as a result of the war on terrorism, Indonesia is being
orphaned because it is a messy, but real, democracy.
"We sometimes fear that America's democratization agenda also got blown up with
the World Trade Center," says the Indonesian writer Andreas Harsono. "Since Sept.
11 there have been so many free riders on this American antiterrorism campaign,
countries that want to use it to suppress their media and press freedom and turn back
the clock. Indonesia, instead of being seen as a weak democracy that needs support,
gets looked at as a weak country that protects terrorists, and Malaysia is seen as
superior because it arrests more terrorists than we do."
Indeed, many people here believe that retrograde elements in the army and police
have helped stir up recent sectarian clashes in Aceh and the Maluku islands to spur
Parliament to give the security services some of their old powers back.
Says Jusuf Wanandi, who heads a key strategic studies center here: "I just spoke
with some senior military people who said to me: `Why doesn't the government give
up all this human rights stuff and leave [the problem] to us?' They said the Americans
should normalize relations again [with the Indonesian Army] `and we'll do the job for
them.' That is not the right approach, because we do not trust yet that the reforms of
the military here have been adequate."
In fairness, the Bush team has kept aid for Indonesia at $130 million and made it the
official policy in all diplomatic contacts that Indonesia should continue fighting its war
for democracy, while contributing what it can to the war on terrorism. (It's not clear if
there are any Qaeda cells here.)
Nevertheless, some top Pentagon officials are definitely pushing to let the Indonesian
military make a comeback and to restore ties with the Indonesian military that were
suspended after the army ran amok in East Timor in 1999. Indonesia is just beginning
to try military officers involved in those killings. If there is any hope of senior army
officers being held accountable for East Timor, it will certainly be lost if America
signals that all it cares about now is that the new antiterrorism laws being debated by
the Indonesian Parliament give the army anything it wants.
America needs to be aware of how its war on terrorism is read in other countries,
especially those in transition. Indonesia is the world's biggest Muslim country. Its
greatest contribution to us would be to show the Arab Muslim states that it is
possible to develop a successful Muslim democracy, with a modern economy and a
moderate religious outlook. Setting that example is a lot more in America's long-term
interest than arresting a few stray Qaeda fighters in the jungles of Borneo.
Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company
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