The gulf between rhetoric and evidence is wide
Greg Fealy
Indonesia has frequently been cast as a
country with a serious international terrorism problem. The US,
Singapore and Malaysia claim to have evidence of terrorists being based
in Indonesia or of Indonesians leading offshore terrorist groups.
Singaporean senior minister Lee Kwan Yew declared that Indonesia was a
�hotbed of terrorism�. The claims have been used by the Bush
administration to pressure Indonesia to take strong action against them.
A close look at the �evidence� suggests,
however, that the terrorist threat has been overstated and that foreign
officials and the media have been alarmist in their claims. The
emphatic anti-terrorism policy pursued by the US and some of its allies
towards Indonesia is misguided.
Among many alleged instances, I shall
restrict this present discussion to the two most prominent and
instructive cases. These are that: (1) al-Qaeda fighters received
terrorist training in the Poso region of Central Sulawesi; and (2)
Indonesian Muslims played a leading role in the Kumpulan Mujahidin
Malaysia (KMM) and Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) �terrorist groups� in Malaysia
and Singapore respectively, both of which have been linked to Osama bin
Laden�s network.
The claims of terrorist training bases in
Sulawesi emerged originally in testimony given to a Spanish judge by
eight al-Qaeda activists. They claimed 200-300 fighters had trained in
Poso and mentioned an Indonesian, Parlindungan Siregar, as a pivotal
figure. The claims were soon taken up by Hendropriyono, the head of
Indonesia�s State Intelligence Agency (BIN), who stated publicly in
mid-December 2001 that his officers had found evidence of foreigners
training near Poso. The US press also began carrying stories,
presumably based on briefings from Bush administration officials, that
high-resolution satellite imagery had confirmed the existence of the
camps and their foreign personnel.
Much of this �evidence�, however, was soon
shown to be equivocal. Key allies of the United States regarded the
satellite photographs as inconclusive, because they failed to show who
might have been using the base. A number of Western missions in Jakarta
sent their own teams to Poso but found nothing to support the �foreign
base� claim.
Hendropriyono�s statements were also
contradicted by senior Indonesian police and military officials, who
admitted that, while there were certainly Indonesian paramilitary
training bases in Poso, they had no evidence of outsiders training
there. Finally, there was the general question of how the training of
several hundred foreign Muslims could go unnoticed by the large
Christian community around Poso or by local security officials.
The KMM and JI allegations surfaced
following a series of arrests in Malaysia and Singapore between
mid-2001 and early 2002. Officials in both countries claimed there were
links between the two organisations. They said that testimony given by
the detainees pointed to three Indonesians as having a leading role in
KMM and JI. The three were Abubakar Ba�asyir, a fiery Islamic preacher
from Central Java and supposed spiritual leader of both organisations,
Riduan Isamuddin (commonly known as Hambali) who was credited with the
daily management of JI, and Mohammad Iqbal. Iqbal was captured by
Malaysian authorities in late 2001 and has not been seen in public
since; Ba�asyir has returned to Indonesia where he maintains a high
public profile; and Hambali went to ground after Indonesian police
issued a warrant for his arrest. Malaysia and Singapore have pressed
the Indonesian government to arrest Ba�asyir but have been told there
is no case against him. This has led to highly critical reporting in
the international press of Indonesia�s �soft stance� on terrorism.
The JI-Indonesia connection received further
coverage when Philippines officials arrested an Indonesian, Fathur
Rohim al-Ghozi in January 2002, on charges of importing explosives.
Al-Ghozi, a former student at Ba�asyir�s boarding school, was soon
identified as JI�s bomb expert and accused of involvement in various
bombings across the region. This was followed in mid-March by the
detention of another three Indonesian Muslims � Tamsil Linrung, Abdul
Jamal Balfas and Agus Dwikarna � in Manila on charges of smuggling C4
explosive in their luggage. Philippines authorities claimed the men
were linked to JI and other terrorist organisations. Tamsil and Balfas
were eventually released in mid-April for lack of evidence but Dwikarna
remains in detention, reportedly at the request of BIN.
Sweeping claims
The KMM-JI connection has been frequently
cited by foreign officials and the media in sweeping claims about
Indonesia�s terrorism problem, but the available evidence only warrants
a narrower interpretation. In the case of JI, the Singaporean
government has released substantial documentary and video evidence to
back its claim that this was a genuine terrorist group, and there
appears little reason to doubt this information. The case against
al-Ghozi is also strong. Much of the original JI testimony that led to
his arrest has proven accurate and al-Ghozi has admitted his
involvement in terrorist training and bombings. He was found guilty in
the Philippines in mid-April and sentenced to a minimum ten years�
jail. But the Singaporeans have failed to present evidence proving that
Ba�asyir, Hambali and Iqbal had a role in JI�s terrorism.
The KMM case is far less credible. The
Malaysian government has offered the public almost no evidence to back
its assertion that KMM is a terrorist group. Indeed, so flimsy is the
government�s case that a number of analysts have queried whether KMM
even exists. The Mahathir administration has clear political and
diplomatic motives in playing up the terrorism issue. It has sought to
discredit its main political foe, the Islamist PAS, by alleging links
between PAS and the KMM. It has also curried US favour by appearing
pro-actively anti-terrorist. As with the Singaporeans, the Malaysian
government has not revealed evidence showing the complicity of
Ba�asyir, Hambali and Iqbal in KMM�s terrorism. Indonesian police who
have examined the testimony of the KMM detainees claim that, while it
clearly shows that Ba�asyir and Hambali were militant preachers, it
does not indicate any terrorist intent.
Also dubious is the case against Tamsil,
Balfas and Dwikarna. Almost from the outset, their arrest showed signs
of being a frame-up. Tamsil told the Indonesian press that he and his
two associates had been the only passengers searched from their flight
and that they had seen Filipino officials plant the explosives in one
of their suitcases. Filipino police had later told them that their
arrest had been ordered by Hendropriyono and that a senior BIN official
had travelled to Manila to oversee the operation. Meanwhile the
Filipino police refused to allow a visiting Indonesian police team
access to the �smuggled� explosive. The role played by Hendropriyono
and BIN has attracted strong criticism from Islamic groups, the press
and parliamentarians.
Misinformation
A number of conclusions can now be drawn.
The first is that there is little basis for asserting that Indonesia is
a proven base for terrorist groups. While a small number of Indonesians
can reasonably be assumed to have engaged in terrorism, the data
regarding bases and cells is, at best, inconclusive. This is not to say
that Indonesia has no terrorists, but rather, that those who assert it
has a serious international terrorist problem lack sufficient evidence
or are not placing what they know on the public record (I suspect the
former).
A second conclusion is that US and Malaysian
officials as well as Hendropriyono appear to be engaging in deliberate
misinformation over the terrorism issue, apparently for domestic
political and diplomatic purposes.
The Indonesian government and Islamic
community have grounds for scepticism over foreign claims of terrorists
within its borders. It is in part true, as outsiders often point out,
that Megawati is wary of arousing Muslim sentiment. But the point
remains that those doing the accusing have failed to provide compelling
reasons for Indonesian law enforcement authorities to act. Rather than
excoriate Jakarta, the international community should commend it for
upholding the principle of presumption of innocence and not arresting
citizens without evidence of guilt.
The above conclusions call into question the
wisdom of the current US policy towards Indonesia, which entails
pressuring it to step up action against terrorists. Indonesia�s
intelligence services, for example, have a notorious reputation of
fabricating evidence and abusing human rights. The greater the US
pressure, the greater the risk that these services will act in an
unprofessional if not illegal way.
It seems that the Bush administration is
planning to give a leading role to Hendropriyono and BIN as part of its
�anti-terrorism solution� for Indonesia. In so doing, they appear
willing to overlook the lamentable record of Hendropriyono and the
organisation he leads. Apart from bungling the issue of al-Qaeda bases
in Poso and arousing controversy over his role in the arrest of Tamsil,
Balfas and Dwikarna, Hendropriyono has been accused of involvement in
the massacre of more than a hundred Muslim villagers in Talangsari,
Lampung, in 1989, when he was the local military commander. More
recently he has attracted adverse press attention over his extensive
business interests and for his suspected complicity in the
assassination of Papuan leader Theys Eluay.
BIN�s record under his leadership is little
better. It has been publicly ridiculed for its inaccurate and often
politically loaded reporting. In early 2002, it was derided by
ministers and senior politicians when it emerged that BIN had written
separate and contradictory reports on the economy for cabinet ministers
and a parliamentary committee. BIN also prepared an error-filled
briefing for parliament�s Foreign Affairs and Security Commission prior
to John Howard�s visit to Indonesia in February. Among other things, it
alleged that Australia�s Lt-Gen Peter Cosgrove had written an
autobiography denigrating Indonesia�s role in East Timor. It also
asserted that the Howard government had formed a secret twelve-person
committee to engineer Papua�s secession from Indonesia.
The cornerstone of any US anti-terrorism
policy in Indonesia should be to win the confidence of the Islamic
community. Cooperation from Muslims is critical if terrorists are to be
exposed. This is only possible if the US and Indonesia�s security
officials and ASEAN partners provide reliable information to a
community where anti-Western sentiment is already high.
Dr Greg Fealy (greg.fealy@anu.edu.au) is a research fellow in Indonesian politics at the Australian National University in Canberra.
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