Facilitated by a largely unquestioning media, Indonesian President Joko Widodo’s government has become a master at the game of smoke and mirrors, which in its simplistic form is all about convincing the public that things are happening when they really aren’t.
The protracted negotiations with US mining giant Freeport McMoran Copper & Gold are a good example, but going back to the presidency of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono the deceptive game-playing has covered everything from beef to natural resources to infrastructure.
While not new, the official obfuscation and embellishment of the truth has become more apparent as the 2019 legislative and presidential elections approach and Widodo and his palace spin doctors perceive the need to display his accomplishments.

Yudhoyono played this game back in mid-2011 when the Australian government suspended live cattle exports to Indonesia over animal welfare issues, and Jakarta decided some payback was in order by ordering a ban of its own.
Over the next two years, it slashed cattle imports by half and sought to convince consumers that the local industry could fill the gap when rising prices – and one of the lowest per capita beef consumption rates in Asia — clearly showed it could not.
Fast forward to the much-vaunted China-backed US$5.8 billion Jakarta-Bandung fast-rail project, once seen as the showcase of Widodo’s ambitious infrastructure program and now stalled over land acquisition issues that should have been foreseen.

Getting it started hasn’t been for the want of trying. Widodo attended a ground-breaking ceremony in January 2016, only to see Transport Minister Jonan Ignasius call a halt to the project five days later because of several “unresolved issues.”
Widodo and the Chinese weren’t amused. In July, the same month the construction permit for the project was finally issued, Ignasius — the former, highly successful chief executive of state-run railway Kareta Api — was unceremoniously sacked.
The president should have already learnt his lesson. In mid-2015, he had presided over the ground-breaking of the US$4 billion, Japan-funded Batang power station in Central Java, only to discover local farmers were still refusing to sell a key patch of land.
The courts finally resolved that one, but the railway still isn’t going anywhere despite the efforts of State Enterprise Minister Rini Soemarno, who showed up last July for yet another ground-breaking event – this one a tunnel.
It takes a lot to beat the whole Freeport saga, though, starting with last year’s framework agreement which was hailed at the time as a major victory for the Widodo government in forcing the company to agree to divest 51% of its shares in its local subsidiary.
Maybe so, but no-one seemed to notice that the devil was in the small print. In fact, the Indonesia media failed to point out at the time that the crucial questions of valuation and management control had yet to be settled.

Little surprise then that the negotiations continue, interspersed on frequent occasions with reassuring pronouncements by senior government officials that a final, final deal is just around the corner. It has been a long corner.
So far, there have been at least four government-imposed deadlines, all based on the extension of Freeport’s permit allowing it to continue exporting copper concentrate from its high-altitude Grasberg mine in Papua’s Central Highlands. The next one is in June.
Refusing the permit would clearly hurt the company’s profits, but it would also cut deeply into government revenues and, perhaps more importantly, lead to worker lay-offs that could spark unrest in the country’s already volatile Papua region.
In the latest show-and-tell, the government last week ceremonially signed a memorandum of understanding under which it will hand over 10% of the Freeport Indonesia shares it still needs to acquire to the Papua provincial administration.
The government spin machine has also recently turned to eastern Indonesia’s Marsela natural gas project, which for reasons even some senior Indonesian politicians can’t figure, Widodo wants to be developed on a remote, sparsely-inhabited island.

Joint venture partners Inpex and Shell have been dragging their feet, arguing that only an offshore facility makes sense, given the undersea terrain and a lack of existing infrastructure.
With the project seemingly in limbo, the government announced earlier this month that the partners were working on detailed plans for an onshore plant that would be finished by the end of this year. Tellingly, there was no word from either company.
“The officials are talking on behalf of the company, without the company knowing anything about it,” says one Indonesian oil veteran. “That’s politics, but for me as an industrialist it is very troubling.”
The French oil giant Total has maintained a similarly stoic silence since the state-run Pertamina oil company claimed the firm wanted back into the Mahakham gas field, which it had to leave when its contract expired last December.
In fact, with little money to maintain the Mahakham, it is the government that has been offering Total a slightly higher 39% participating interest to entice it to return as a partner in the field it ran for more than 40 years.
Widodo also adopted Yudhoyono’s cattle chicanery, part of an economic self-sufficiency program in which, with little planning and a lot of wishful thinking, Indonesia was hoping to produce all its own beef, rice, sugar, corn and soybeans.

In 2015, it was proudly announced that the proportion of beef imports to total consumption had dropped from 31% to 24%, without anyone noting that Indonesians were eating just 2.7 kilograms a year, the lowest per capita rate in the region.
A year later, that figure had shot back up again to 32% and last year it increased yet again to 41% with the price of beef at US$10 a kilogram and officials acknowledging the obvious: that Widodo’s five-year self-sufficiency target was now unattainable.
Again, that has a familiar ring to it. By importing rice, seen as almost a crime in some nationalistic quarters, past governments have often been forced to admit (if anyone is listening) that Indonesia’s supposed self-sufficiency in rice is nothing but a myth.
That would have former President Suharto, who did achieve rice self-sufficiency back in the early 1980s with careful planning and a slew of coordinated programs, rolling over in his grave.
Sooner or later, the smoke and the mirrors will inevitably lift to reveal hard realities.

halah halah…
iki claim dia nggak menguntungkan "teman2" politiknya… coba di lihat lagi mas/mbak.
Long term policy nya itu apa yang menguntungkan Indonesia?
ah sampeyan aja yang baru bangun, padahal orang2 yang kritikal terhadap pemerintah sama itu2 aja…
hanya presiden ini perlu "pejuang" cyber seperti anda…
1. How was the rice self sufficiency a joke in Suharto’s era???
2. How Prabowo anti chinese and anti western??
Wisnu Arista Haeriyoko hahahaha… ok so your neighborhood is better than before, how big is your neighborhood?
INDONESIA’s population in 2014 hits 275 millions.
This president is better than Megawati, fully agree!!
But can you please substantiate your claim…
HOW Much Better??? What indicator do you use?
Arie Bagus Prasetyo well, then substantiate your claim… in what way?
ah masak seh… yang bener????
270 juta rakyat Indonesia…
Muhammad Shalahuddin: don’t forget to mention honggo wedratno, miryam "gadis ahok", sunny are another examples of jokowi-ahok corruptors allies.
Yeay, let we support jokowi so he can support his corruptors friends
Smart? really?
Glad that this article are written by foreigner, otherwise you bigot logic will directly make they to think that the writer is either FPI, HTI or any of you guys call as extremist ????
Dean Ramadhan:
Gladly this article are written by foreigner, otherwise you guys bigot logic will directly make you think that the writer is either FPI, HTI or any of you guys call as islamic extremists ????
Herlina W Woods: so much lol. The only reason make you think that more people bullied the work of annies than those who praise him, is because you place yourself in environment that prepared to made you to think like that, those medias, those information, you just eat from the selected sources that prepared for you.
This is the point of this article, that you guys are the living samples of regime’s smoke and mirror.
Gladlt this article are written by foreigner, otherwise you guys bigot logic will directly think that the writer is either FPI, HTI or any of you guys call as extremist
Agus Nizami there are truths in your words. It is curious that no Indonesian media has done a very good coverage on cyber armies and drones. Unlike American media (look at recent coverage by NY Times). When Indonesian media do any of it, they seem to try to be as neutral as possible; covering "safe" topics like business and marketing.
Nice Article… Smoke and Mirror
I can say this president is smart one , but very weak.
1. Support Papua Fuel Price ( Even it’s just limited quantity ) Bear High Cost to send there, but to get Papua People to support him to get FreePort Back. Freeport under government, 100% Corrupted , is that a good things?
2. Trying to Build infrastructure at once (No Money , Low Export , Economic Problem ) then impose higher tax for everyhing , especially targetted on middle income / Small-Medium Size Business Man. He will not targetted the richest people in indonesia as they can cause inflation very high, and can’t impose tax on poor people or low salary as they can perform riot or uprising.
3. Build Infrastructure but never optimized the production natural resources like Salt , Rice , and everything that Indonesia is strong as agricultural country, seriously??
4. Build Infrastructure and all the project goes to Government as well like WIKA , and so on. Yeah it good if the company is Clean 😀 , but the truth is not, it’s just want to show how great the infrastructure is, and the money is corrupted within their company, basically from the tax.
5. Import Rice when you are agricultural country, what a joke, and the importir is BULOG. if you ever met Bulog people, and you will know how bad the bulog is.
6. Basically if you want to make Indonesia very strong, then it need to clean up at least 80% of the Government institution, seems he is Weak and does not have strong backed up power, then it’s useless.
7. Government Corrupt, Company under Government Corrupt , Police Corrupt , Judge Corrupt , Higher Electricity , Higher Gas, Slow movement on Economic Condition, High Inflation can be seen by price of the Commodities, then Go for Big Project of Infrastructure. Nice Idea
Just wait for the time, if one of the big project has a problem, for sure Indonesia will go crisis.
*Smoke and Mirror*
Caka Aja what great things?
"I GOOGLED the issues…" oh come on…
Schillachi Bianco , he may not be perfect for overpopulated country, pak Jokowi missed things he promised, but thats NOTHiNG compared to the great things he’s done so far. Humble people only would appreciate the facts pak Jokowi has done.
Can’t wait !!
A’an Alireki: oh come on guys.
Let me tell you all the best achievement done by jokowi. FPI went national in 2000’s and nothing big happened. So called as "radical" HTI went national in 2000’s also nothing big happened.
But when jokowi & ahok debut for national stage at 2012 for jakarta election, rapidly the masses became noisy, the citizen are divided into two: supporters and haters. And the situation are getting even worse since the presidential election in 2014.
now we all can see by our eyes, that indonesian are separated into two radicals positions, either radically supporting government or againts them.
So well done mr jokowi, and your allies for all your chicanery,smoke and mirror things you could made a big bunch of fanatic bigot supporters.
Bigot supporters will definitely exite the haters to born. And so now we can see between indonesian are argumentating each others.
Good job!
halah halaaaaah…. lucrative mines… coba datanya mana data. Dik, coba data:
1. Data kalau pertambangan di Indonesia lebih menarik dibandingkan negara lain
2. Data kalau banyak yang mau ambil freeport
3. Data kalau freeport itu mau pergi?
Mbak, dikasih apa sih sama pemerintahan sekarang? angot banget belain…
Schillachi Bianco hehehe… oh well… plenty cebongs in the sea… i just have to wait…