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Analysis

How Israel secured diplomatic relations with Indonesia

The Abraham Accords opened the possibility of normalisation – and Israeli diplomacy then led to a breakthrough

April 11, 2024 15:07
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Students from Muhammadiyah University protest in Surabaya, East Java province on 7 November 2023, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestinian militants. (Photo by JUNI KRISWANTO/AFP via Getty Images)
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In September 2020, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco signed the Abraham Accords with Israel. But under the Trump’s administration’s original plan, there would have been a fifth signatory: Indonesia.

According to a source close to the negotiations, so keen was the US to have Indonesia – the world’s largest Muslim state by population – included that it offered up to $2 billion more in aid if Indonesia agreed to sign. The talks, I am told, were nearly successful, but in the end the Indonesians would not make the final push. When rumours that Indonesia was about to sign started to fly around the diplomatic world, Indonesian foreign minister Retno Marsudi said that Indonesia had “no intention to open diplomatic ties with Israel.” Three and a half years later that intention has clearly changed, as this week it became clear that Indonesia is indeed about to establish diplomatic ties with Israel.

The timing has come as a surprise to many, given that Indonesia has long been a strong supporter of the Palestinian cause, has been a vocal critic of the war in Gaza and even filed its own case against Israel at the ICJ in January. Indonesia’s highest clerical body, the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI), has repeatedly expressed its opposition to the existence of Israel, let alone recognition, saying for example that Indonesia “must remain consistent in its identity as a nation that rejects colonizers.” Indonesia also faces a growing threat from Islamist groups, such as the Islamic Defenders Front, and recognition of Israel is grist to their mill.

Just two weeks ago Ari Dwipayana, a key aide to Indonesian president Joko Widodo, was dismissing a report in Jewish Insider that Israel and Indonesia had planned to announce the establishment of diplomatic relations in October as “completely incorrect". According to the news outlet, a senior adviser to President Jokowi and Ronen Levy, the then director general of the Israeli Foreign Ministry, had met in Jerusalem the previous month with Dan Shapiro, then the State Department’s senior advisor for regional integration. This report – and a picture supposedly showing Indonesian officials in Israel - caused outrage in Indonesia as it is illegal for Indonesian officials to visit states not recognized by Indonesia.