ASEAN Security Community vs Minimum Essential Force
Andi Widjajanto, Jakarta | Opinion | Thu, 11/24/2011 10:03 AM
There is an inconsistency between Indonesia’s defense and
foreign policies as a result of competing paradigms that serve as the
foundations of these policies.
To explore how these two
competing paradigms create a disintegrative national security policy, I
analyze two major goals of Indonesia’s national security policy: ASEAN
Security Community (ASC) 2015 and the Minimum Essential Force (MEF)
2024.
Currently, Indonesia’s defense policy is based on four
documents: Grand Strategy 2008, Defense Doctrine 2008, Defense
Intelligence Estimate 2008 and Defense Posture 2024.
These four
documents mark a significant shift in our defense policy from one that
focused on internal security operations during the Soeharto era to one
that tries to create a modern, integrated armed forces that is able to
anticipate security challenges in the 21st century.
Unlike the
defense policy that has published four legal documents, Indonesia’s
foreign policy is based on President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s doctrine
of “one thousand friends, zero enemies”, and Foreign Minister Marty
Natalegawa’s doctrine of “dynamic equilibrium”.
These two doctrines coexist with the midterm goal to create an ASEAN Community in 2015.
In
the realm of defense, the evolution of Indonesia’s defense policy was
initiated in 1999 when the country decided to start reforming its
military, making it into a professional organization by eliminating the
notions of a political- and business-oriented army.
Ideally,
this military reform will be followed by a defense transformation that
will try to close the strategic gap between the current force and future
force.
This gap will be closed by ini-tiating the program of
military reduction that tries to remove obsolete military technologies
from Indonesia’s weapons system as well as by implementing a military
modernization program aiming to create a Minimal Essential Force by
2024.
The MEF 2024 will serve as a transition force until
Indonesia is able to initiate a military innovation program that will
try to adopt the most advanced military technology to start a revolution
in military affairs that will transform TNI into an agile force of the
21st century.
In terms of force projection, the military sets up
two strategic plans. The first is strategic, planning to create MEF
2024, the second is strategic planning to establish a future force for
2050.
According to these two plans, theoretically, TNI will
adopt four different concepts of force ratio to project its
transformation until 2050.
The first projection utilizes the
concept of force-to-risk ration to create a force that will be able to
deal with security risks such as internal conflicts, border disputes,
terrorism and transnational security issues. This force will be
supported by 1 percent of GDP and is expected to be achieved in 2014.
The
second projection uses the concept of force to space ratio to create a
military that will be able to protect Indonesia’s vast territory.
This
force — although will rely on forward deployment especially of border
divisions, naval patrol, as well as air control — will mainly be
defensive in nature. This force is projected to be achieved in 2020 and
will be supported by 1.5-2 percent of GDP.
The third projection
uses the concept of force-to-force ratio to create a military that will
be able to employ a balancing strategy especially against neighboring
states that deploy offensive and provocative forces to Indonesia’s
border areas.
To achieve this force, Indonesia will allocate
2.5-3 percent of GDP each year until this force is established between
2024 and 2029.
The last projection uses the development of
military technology as the main component to create a future force of
21st century. This force will be established by integrating the latest
advancements in military technology in the military doctrine-strategy
and weapon systems.
The integration means Indonesia will implement long-term modernization and even arms acquisition programs.
To
support these programs, 3.5-4 percent of GDP will be allocated to
support the defense budget until this force is achieved in 2050. These
programs will transform Indonesia’s military to become an offensive
force that has a reliable deterrence strategy.
These programs
could result in an arms race in the region that will increase the
probability of regional conflict between states in Southeast Asia.
By
analyzing two policies of ASC 2015 and MEF 2024, we can find
significant differences between the trajectory of security goals
projected by the foreign and defense policies.
The foreign
policy has a more optimistic trajectory indicated by the establishment
of ASC in 2015 that will bring peace and stability in the region.
However, the defense policy has a more pessimistic and realistic
trajectory that projects a long-term evolution of military force.
The
trajectory also projects a long-term evolution of military changes that
consist of three main programs of military reform, defense
transformation and military innovation.
These competing
trajectories give clear indications of the existence of a disintegrative
national security policy: Our foreign policy is not coherent with our
defense policy.
The foreign policy projects the paradigm of
liberal institutionalism that relies on a strategy of
institutionalization of liberal norms in Southeast Asia.
The
concept of “one thousand friends, zero enemies”, “dynamic equilibrium”
or a “security community” resonate with how Indonesia’s foreign policy
is closer to a liberal institutionalist paradigm than a realist one. In
contrast, the defense policy represents the defense realism paradigm.
Since
the policy of band-wagoning will never be an option for Indonesia’s
military, the strategy of balancing will be continuously used and
modified to create future force suited for the 21st century.
This
paradigm guides the trajectory of Indonesia’s military to implement a
defense transformation and military innovation program to create a more
modern force that has a more advanced weapons system.
If
Indonesia manages to achieve both the ASC 2015 and MEF 2024, then there
will be a puzzling regional security architecture in Southeast Asia. We
may see the creation of a security community that coexists with an
offensive and provocative force deployment.
From: Jakarta Post
The writer is a lecturer at the Department of International Relations, University of Indonesia.
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