|
US has ended lethal weapon sales ban RI Monday, 5 July 2010 The Jakarta Post
"The US embargo on the sale of any type of weapon to Indonesia ended
completely in 2005," Indonesian Defense Ministry spokesman I Wayan
Midhio said over the weekend. "After the embargo ended, there were no
more distinctions to bemade between lethal or non-lethal weapons sales,"
he said.
Indonesia can now purchase lethal weapons from the US and there is no
"partial prohibition" of arms sales to Indonesia, as was previously
reported, he added. Many observers - even those well-iniormed on
bilateral military relations - said they did not know if Indonesia could
buy lethal weapons from the US or not, even after military ties resumed
in 2005.
Indonesia recently proposed a plan to purchase American-made F-16 jet
fighters, which are categorized as lethal weapons, and C-130H Hercules
cargo jets, which are not considered lethal, if the US lifted its
embargo, as previously reported. Wayan said Defense Minister Purnomo
Yusgiantoro expressed the governments intent to buy the aircraft in a
bilateral meeting with US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.
The US Congress imposed an em-bargo that banned international military
education and training (IMET) and military equipment sales to Indonesia
almost two decades ago. The embargo was imposed in response to repeated
human rights abuses committed by the Indonesian Armys Special Forces (Kopassus)
in West Papua and Timor Leste (then East Timor), which killed more than
100 unarmed civilians, including two US citizens, and injured dozens.
Some experts maintain that the US encouraged Indonesias use of lethal
force against civilians in East Timor. Padjadjaran University
international relations expert Teuku Re-zasyah said history shows that
former US president Gerald Ford and former US secretary of state Henry
Kissinger gave the Indonesian government a "green light" to send
Kopassus to East Timor and ignored reports of violence during official
US government visits to Indonesia.
The US Congress said it would lift the ban entirely only if the US
government could ensure that Indonesia addressed human rights
violations. An Indonesian government delegation led by former president
Megawati Soekarnoputeri, visited the US in 2001 in an attempt to soften
the policy.
The meeting between Megawati and former US president George W. Bush
resulted in a US commitment to provide US$400,000 in extended IMET and
to lift the embargo on non-lethal military weapon sales. The US Congress
has not approved joint military training between Kopassus and the US
military due to alleged Kopassus human rights abuses. President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono is expected to raise the issue during US President
Barack Obamas planned visit to Indonesia in November.
|