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Indonesian Aftermath
Martin Sieff
The run-up to Indonesia's presidential run-off election
in September may see its moderate-left president join
forces with an extremist reactionary general against
their pro-American rival.
For incumbent President Megawati Sukarnoputri may play
the anti-American card as her best hope of toppling her
own former Security Minister Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono,
the weaker-than-expected frontrunner after the July 5
first round.
"Yudhoyono has been transformed into a rare political
breed: front-running underdog. That's a highly
endangered species," analyst Gary LaMoshi wrote in the
Asia Times after the first returns from Monday's
voting came in.
Incredibly, Megawati's long-time arch political enemy,
former Defense Minister Wiranto, whom she beat into
third place in Monday's first round of voting, may even
join her.
Megawati and Wiranto have absolutely nothing in common,
except steely political ambition and the same obstacle
to their goals: Yodhoyono.
Megawati, the daughter of Indonesia's fiery radical
founding father, President Sukarno, has been a decent,
moderate liberal democrat much along the lines of U.S.
President Bill Clinton or British Prime Minister Tony
Blair's "Third Way" in her domestic politics. She has
proven Indonesia's most successful leader since its
chaotic transition to democracy only six years ago.
Megawati has done far better than expected in bringing
the country's ruined economy back from the brink after
it was devastated by the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis
and three decades of corrupt, shameless greed and theft
under old President Suharto.
Wiranto by contrast is the heir of all of Suharto's
policies and his most merciless repression as well.
Megawati remaining as president is the best hope for
Indonesia's democracy to thrive and survive, but, if
Wiranto finally won the power he has craved for so long,
it would likely be rapidly extinguished.
However, Yudhoyono stands in the way of both of them.
And ironically he has served as both their deputies.
Yudhoyono, like Wiranto, is a product of the Javanese
aristocracy that has long held the real power in
Indonesia by its dominance of the Army, by far the most
powerful force in TNI, the Armed Forces of Indonesia.
But he joined hands with Megawati to serve quite
effectively as her security minister for most of her
three year of presidency.
Megawati desperately needed a general she could trust –
at least half the time – to prevent the other intriguing
generals, most of all Wiranto, from fomenting ethnic
violence and clashes with the army across Indonesia's
vast archipelago: it comprises 13,000 inhabited islands
stretched across an area comparable to the continental
United States.
Failure to rein in the Army, especially its special
forces with their strong dynastic-type loyalties to
Wiranto and the Suharto family had doomed the previous,
brief highly unsuccessful presidencies of B.J. Habibie
and Abdurrahman Wahid.
Yudhoyono could not completely rein in or repress the
military cliques, but, in general, he did a good job of
holding them in check, especially compared with what
went before.
He did such a good job that he became the popular focus
of frustration with Megawati, especially over the
nation's continued wretched poverty levels. And after he
went into politics on his own account, he emerged in
April 5's parliamentary elections as the new hot
property expected to sweep the presidential election.
However, it is not quite working out that way. With just
over two-thirds of the more than 120 million votes
counted from the third largest democracy in the world –
after India and the United States – Yudhoyono only leads
with a far from commanding 34 percent of the vote and
Megawati came in a stronger-than-expected second with 27
percent.
Wiranto has been eliminated from the two-person
presidential second round run-off vote on September 20,
as he is back in third place with around 22 percent and
it looks impossible for him to catch up.
Ordinarily, Wiranto's voters would be likely to flock to
Yudhoyono rather than Megawati. Having voted for one
tough old TNI general in the first round, they are far
more likely to prefer another one in the second round to
the liberal-democratic Megawati with her long, flowery
public speeches.
But Wiranto knows that if Yudhoyono becomes president,
he can say goodbye to his dreams of leading Indonesia.
However, if Yudhoyono is defeated, and Megawati wins,
then Wiranto can at least dream of becoming the
military-reactionary focus of opposition to her in her
second term.
And there is one issue that could unite Wiranto and
Megawati: it is resentment of the United States.
Wiranto still seethes that the United States under
President Bill Clinton joined in pressuring Indonesia to
leave East
Timor in
1999-2000 after the fall of Suharto.
The Bush Administration has repeatedly made clear it is
embarrassed by Wiranto, who was accused of massive human
rights violations in the reign of terror by Indonesian
irregular forces that preceded the East Timor pull-out.
Megawati too never had particularly close relations with
the Bush team. She carried the name although not the
policies of her revered and famously anti-American
father for one thing. And then U.S. diplomats and
security officials seemed to go out of their way in
Jakarta's eyes to scapegoat her after the Al-Qaeda
terrorist attacks in Bali killed around 200 Western
holidaymakers last year.
By contrast, the U.S.-educated Yudhoyono is seen
throughout Indonesia as the man Washington wants to win
come September 20. That could prove the biggest reason
he might still lose.
There is another reason: Wiranto enjoys the backing of
most of Suharto's old ruling Golkar Party which enjoyed
an impressive comeback in the April 5 parliamentary
elections to again become the biggest party in
parliament. Both Golkar and Megawati's own Democratic
Party of Indonesia-Struggle enjoy vast, impressive
grassroots organizations throughout Indonesia that
helped them get out the vote. Yudhoyono now must try and
persuade Golkar chiefs to back him come September. His
own fledgling Democratic Party party has nothing like
that clout.
Politics makes strange bedfellows everywhere, but none
would be stranger than Megawati and Wiranto – the
figures who over the past decade have embodied
Indonesia's brightest hopes and its darkest nightmares.
Yudhoyono, who has tried to steer a middle course
between their ambitions, may soon find himself caught in
the middle.
Martin Sieff is chief
news analyst for United Press International. This
adapted piece is used with the permission of UPI.
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