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Jul - Sept 2002
Aceh Is The Military’s Stepping Stone Back To Power
David Bourchier
In the years since Suharto, Acehnese resolve has done
much to push forward the national agenda on human
rights and regional autonomy. Decades of military
repression gave Acehnese demands for reparation of
past wrongs a special legitimacy and intensity. Yet
the Indonesian military has consistently opposed
concessions to the Acehnese and is now using the
ongoing resistance there as a stepping stone back to
power. There is no more tangible symbol of this
process than the establishment in February 2002 of the
Aceh regional military command, known as Kodam
Iskandar Muda. On one level, the new regional military
command (Kodam) changes little. After all, there is no
territory in Indonesia that is not covered by one or
another Kodam.
Kodam Iskandar Muda had itself existed prior to 1985
when it was absorbed into the larger Kodam Bukit
Barisan, a Medan-based command that covered most of
northern and western Sumatra. But a closer look at the
dynamics behind the formation of Kodam Iskandar Muda
reveals a worrying picture. Kodams are the key units
in the military’s so-called territorial apparatus, an
intricate hierarchy that shadows the government’s
civilian administration from the national to the
village level. Following the fall of Suharto, when
anti-military sentiment was at its height, several
pro-democracy groups called for this entire apparatus
to be disbanded. Their calls had some support among
reformers within the military who saw the involvement
of territorial officers in local politics, business
and criminal activities as detrimental to the
military's image.
Expansion Plans
Hardliners in the mainstream military, however,
scoffed at the idea of abolishing the territorial
apparatus. They used the outbreak of communal violence
in several parts of Indonesia in 1999 and 2000 to
argue instead for its expansion. Away from the gaze of
Indonesia’s newly empowered parliamentarians, planners
in armed forces headquarters hatched a scheme in 1999
to increase the number of Kodams from the existing ten
to seventeen. The idea here was to resurrect the
system of smaller Kodams that armed forces commander
General Benny Murdani had rationalised in 1985.
The first move came on 15 May 1999 with the creation
of the Pattimura Kodam in strife-torn Ambon, splitting
the large Trikora military command that had covered
West Papua and the Moluccas. The Pattimura Kodam was
named Kodam XVI while the shrunken West Papua command
began to be referred to as Kodam XVII. The use of this
pre-1985 numbering system left observers in little
doubt that the military intended to push ahead with
its controversial expansion plan. This was confirmed
when armed forces commander Wiranto announced to a
bemused parliamentary commission in June 1999 a
ten-year schedule for increasing the number of Kodams
to seventeen, starting with the Moluccas, Aceh, West
Kalimantan and Central/ South Kalimantan. If Wiranto
encountered little opposition to his plan from
parliament, the same was not true of the Acehnese.
From the moment they got wind of the plan in late
1998, there was strong opposition from student, human
rights and community groups. Arguments put by Aceh’s
then governor, Syamsuddin Mahmud, that the
resurrection of ‘our own’ Banda Aceh-based Kodam would
lead to a more culturally sensitive military were
quickly howled down. The military was deeply unpopular
in Aceh. Intense local opposition appears to have been
a crucial factor in delaying the plan. Presidents
Habibie and Abdurrahman Wahid both understood that the
deep resentment against the military in Aceh could
easily translate into support for independence.
In August 1999 Habibie announced an end to Aceh’s
status as a so-called military operations zone (DOM)
and ordered Wiranto to apologise for past abuses by
the security forces there. Abdurrahman Wahid went
further, engaging representatives of the Free Aceh
Movement (GAM) in negotiations aimed at a peaceful
resolution of the long-running conflict. On the
ground, however, military actions went on regardless.
Local commanders viewed Wahid’s negotiated
‘humanitarian pause’ with contempt. By April 2001 the
central command had succeeded in pressuring Wahid into
allowing a formal resumption of hostilities. This led
immediately to the formation of a new combat command
for Aceh called Kolakops, under the effective command
of Brigadier-General Zamroni, former deputy chief of
the feared Special Forces (Kopassus). Zamroni brought
with him an elite force of about 2,000 troops trained
by Kopassus. He was also put in command of all
territorial troops in the province as well as all
other outside forces including Kopassus and Strategic
Reserve (Kostrad) troops, giving him control over at
least 12,000 troops. Kolakops coordinated its actions
– at least in theory – with the 20,000 police
stationed in Aceh. Kolakops forces launched a major
offensive against AGAM, the armed wing of the
liberation movement. Given the extent of support for
GAM in the towns and villages of Aceh, however, troops
under Zamroni’s command frequently targeted civilians
and only succeeded in further alienating the
population. According to the Legal Aid Foundation, an
average of seven people was killed every day in 2001.
Megawati’s ascension further cemented the military’s
political power.
Sukarno’s daughter was far more simplistic in her
approach to regional problems than Wahid had been, and
far more friendly to the military. She made her
attitude quite clear in December 2001 when she told
her military audience: 'Suddenly we are aware of the
need for a force to protect our beloved nation and
motherland from breaking up…. Guided by the soldier’s
oath and existing laws, carry out your duties and
responsibilities in the best possible manner without
worrying about being involved in human rights abuses….
Do your job without hesitation.' Soon the plans for a
new Kodam were on again. This time the opposition was
even more widespread, triggered in part by the killing
of guerrilla leader Abdullah Syafi’ie by Indonesian
forces on 22 January. A range of academics, NGOs and
public figures spoke against the plans, warning of an
escalation of conflict and an increase in predatory
activities by territorial soldiers.
In mid-January a three-day strike against the new
Kodam reportedly succeeded in crippling two-thirds of
businesses in Aceh. There was also muted opposition
from within Megawati’s government. Speaking to
reporters last January, Indonesian Foreign Affairs
Minister Hassan Wirayuda expressed his scepticism
about the plan, stressing the need for dialogue with
GAM. This reflected the long-standing frustration in
Indonesia’s foreign affairs establishment with the
military’s repeated undermining of its attempts to
negotiate a peaceful solution. Local parliamentarians,
however, had an interest in promoting the idea, with
the new governor, Abdullah Puteh, one of its strongest
supporters. By this time the position of Kolakops
commander had been taken over by Brigadier-General
Muhammad Djali Yusuf.
New Faces
On 5 February Kodam Iskandar Muda was officially
reinstated, with Djali Yusuf becoming Kodam commander.
Much was made of the fact that he was Acehnese. Like
most Kodam commanders across Indonesia today, Yusuf
graduated from the military academy in Magelang,
Central Java, in 1972. Between 1996 and 1997 he was
responsible for operations in the Udayana military
command that included East Timor. After serving for
two years in East Kalimantan he became Zamroni’s
deputy in Kolakops in Aceh. He has repeatedly
indicated that he endorses a hard-line solution to the
Aceh conflict. Yusuf’s chief of staff is Colonel
Syarifudin Tippe, the Buginese combat engineer who
until April 2001 commanded Korem 012, the Banda Aceh-based
military district that covers the northern and western
half of Aceh. When Tippe was first appointed to his
position as Korem commander he spoke of 'slaughtering
enemies of the state.' After a time, however, he began
to make conciliatory statements and even recommended
negotiating with GAM. He wrote at least two books on
Aceh that tackle the question of Acehnese nationalism
and the reasons for the military’s unpopularity. At
the same time, he opposed the humanitarian pause and
now appears committed to follow the same path as his
new commander.
For military purposes, Aceh is divided into two
district commands (Korem) and eight smaller military
districts (Kodim). The latter correspond to civilian
regencies (kabupaten). The current commander of Korem
012 is Colonel Gerhan Lentara, who had a long history
of combat in East Timor. In Dili in November 1991 as
deputy commander of Battalion 700, he was the officer
whose slashing was followed by the Santa Cruz
massacre. Meanwhile Colonel Azmyn Yusri Nasution, a
48-year old Kostrad officer with experience in many
areas including Aceh, now commands Korem 011 covering
eastern and southern Aceh. His most recent appointment
was Operations Assistant at Kostrad headquarters in
Jakarta. Whether the new Kodam will replace the
Kolakops structure is as yet unclear. If East Timor is
any guide, the combat command will continue to exist
alongside the territorial apparatus. This would leave
ample scope for confused lines of command and friction
between territorial and non-territorial forces. But as
we saw in East Timor, such confusion is useful because
it allows maximum deniability when things go wrong.
The formation of the Aceh Kodam bodes ill for peace in
Aceh and for reform in Indonesia. It suggests that
Jakarta is now fully committed to a military solution.
Aceh is already reliving the nightmare of being a
bloody combat zone. It is also a sign of growing
military assertiveness at the national level. Weak
resistance from national parliamentarians is another
nail in the coffin of reformasi. With this success
under their belt, the military is likely to push ahead
with its plan to increase its influence by
establishing more military commands throughout the
country.
David Bourchier (davidb@arts.uwa.edu.au <mailto:davidb@arts.uwa.edu.au>)
teaches at the University of Western Australia. |