Bush praises Megawati, offers condolences
Bush praises Megawati, offers condolences
Olivier Knox
Los Cabos, Mexico
United States President George W. Bush told Indonesian President
Megawati Soekarnoputri on Saturday that he will consider
increased U.S. aid to help Jakarta battle militants tied to
global terrorism, U.S. officials said.
Meeting on the sidelines of the 21-nation Asia Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum, Bush praised Megawati's
crackdown on terrorism but said she still has "a ways to go,"
said a senior official who declined to be named.
He also "expressed his condolences for the loss of the many
innocent lives in the savage attack on Bali," referring to the
Oct. bombing that turned a packed nightclub into a killing ground
for hundreds, the official said.
The U.S. president said that the car blast "showed the reach"
of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network, which has claimed
responsibility for the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon.
Bush said Jakarta must now arrest terrorists, try them fairly,
and convict the guilty, said the official, who told reporters
that the U.S. leader promised Megawati: "We will be there to help
you to the extent possible."
"He did say that, if Indonesia had concrete requests, that we
would consider them," said the official.
Another senior administration official, who also requested
anonymity, said Bush reacted cautiously when Megawati had raised
the prospects for beefed-up U.S. assistance to Indonesia's
military and law-enforcement.
"Our position is that if there are any formal requests, we'll
certainly, as with all requests, look at them, with several
things in mind including the issue of human rights," the second
official said.
Two months before the Bali attacks, Washington pledged over
US$50 million in aid to buttress Indonesia's counter-terrorism
efforts, which it has frequently criticized in the past.
The sum, to be disbursed over several years, includes $4
million in counterterrorism training for military officials and
another $47 million for the national police.
Washington hopes to gradually beef up the spending program to
train the Indonesian military once concerns about human rights
and about accountability for the 1999 carnage in East Timor.
Rather than criticize Megawati's efforts to eradicate
terrorism, Bush "did express appreciation for the difficulties
she has faced up to now in trying to crack down," said the first
U.S. official.
Characterizing Islam in Indonesia as largely moderate, the
first U.S. official said there is "a small minority of the
population that is fairly extreme" and later added that the
government that knows it must target that small group.
Washington has praised the Indonesian leader for the arrest of
a Muslim cleric, Abu Bakar Bashir, thought to be the spiritual
leader of a Southeast Asian radical Islamic group.
U.S. officials also point to the passage of a tough security
decree following the car-bomb massacre on Bali -- Southeast
Asia's own version of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United
States.