The Russian Pacific Fleet’s corvette Gromkiy is seen at the Indonesian port of Surabaya. Photo: Russian Pacific Fleet Press Office / TASS

JAKARTA – Indonesia held its first-ever bilateral naval exercise with Russia on Monday (November 4), symbolic drills scheduled to run from November 4 to 8 with three Russian corvettes and a support vessel participating.

The exercises, known as Orruda 2024, have been interpreted in some quarters as Indonesia’s new president, Prabowo Subianto, tilting the Southeast Asian nation away geopolitically from the US and its allies and toward Russia and perhaps China.

However, the consensus in Jakarta is against reading too much into the exercise, with many seeing it as merely a signal of Indonesia’s continued commitment to non-aligned neutrality and a counterbalancing nod to Russia amid more significant security ties to the US and its allies.

To be sure, there is no denying that President Prabowo, who assumed office on October 20, is keen on cultivating warm relations with Russia, a long-time provider of Indonesian arms.

In July, when Prabowo was president-elect but still serving as defense minister, he traveled to Moscow and met with President Vladimir Putin. During the trip, Prabowo praised Russia as a “great friend” of Indonesia and expressed diplomatic hope that the two sides could continue to improve ties.

On October 25, Indonesian Foreign Minister Sugiono announced Indonesia’s desire to join BRICS while attending the expanding bloc’s summit in Kazan, Russia – a clear break from the previous Joko Widodo government’s non-committal stance.

As Sugiono is a close mentee of Prabowo, there was little doubt the instruction came from the top. Thus, Prabowo’s first major foreign policy move as national leader was Russia-friendly.

Significantly, Indonesia has also started discussions with China about the possibility of bilateral joint military exercises, a potential ground-breaking development as such exercises have not been held in nearly a decade.

Indonesia suspended them in 2015 due to the two sides’ ongoing dispute over the North Natuna Sea, Indonesian territorial waters that fall within China’s nine-dash line claim to nearly all of the South China Sea. While these initial moves may jangle nerves in the US and among its allies, viewed in their broader context they are less dramatic.

For one, despite the official branding, this week’s drills are not the first time Indonesia has held a naval exercise with Russia. The multilateral Komodo Exercise, held four times since 2014 and most recently in 2023, included Russia from the outset alongside the US, Japan and China, among others. Holding a smaller bilateral exercise with Russia may be a notable development, but it’s hardly a step change.

Furthermore, while serving defense minister, Prabowo oversaw the ongoing intensification of Indonesia’s defense ties with the US and its allies. In August, Indonesia signed a new defense pact with Australia, hailed by the latter as the most significant security agreement in the two neighbors’ history, with Prabowo shepherding the agreement on Indonesia’s side.

Super Garuda Shield, an annual military exercise involving Indonesia and the US plus aligned powers, grew in size and complexity under Prabowo’s watch. This year, the exercise ran for a month from August 26 to September 26 and involved some 5,500 troops from Indonesia, the US, Japan, Singapore, the UK, Australia, Canada, France, Brazil, Brunei, India, South Korea, New Zealand and Thailand.

By comparison, the Orruda 2024 naval exercise being held with Russia now is clearly smaller in scale, lasting just four days and involving just a few hundred soldiers in total.

As one expert, who preferred to remain anonymous, bluntly put it: “It’s kind of a pathetic exercise if you compare it with Garuda Shield. This is kind of like the change you give to a beggar after eating at a really good restaurant called Garuda Shield.”

Fauzan Malufti, a defense analyst and member of JATOSINT, which provides open-source intelligence on Indonesia’s military, was less dismissive.

“Given the number of warships and the exercise materials, I don’t think it’s merely symbolic,” he said. However, Malufti agreed that if compared to exercises with Western powers, Orruda was clearly much smaller and less complex.

Zooming out, Prabowo’s willingness to entertain warm ties with Russia and perhaps increase military cooperation can be viewed as part of Indonesia’s traditional preference for non-bloc positioning.

Outreach to Russia and China in security matters could serve as a signal that close defense ties with the US do not mean Indonesia has sacrificed its room for geopolitical maneuver.

“I personally think Prabowo would like to replicate India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who positioned India as a member of the Quad but also meeting with Putin,” said Fitriani Bintang Timur, a senior analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute think tank.

She cited Prabowo’s unexpected proposal of a peace plan for Ukraine at the Shangri-La summit in Singapore in 2023 as a sign of his aspirations to position Indonesia as an influential middle power on the world stage.

Indeed, Prabowo’s known predilection for foreign policy, his desire to cut an influential figure on the world stage and unpredictable nature may be driving a foreign policy that is attention-grabbing but does not necessarily represent a course shift.

Shafiah Muhibat, deputy executive director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank, admitted she and many others in Indonesia’s foreign policy community were surprised by decisions like moving to join BRICS but were unsure of how significant they really are.

“Prabowo likes being on the global stage and for him to appear as much as possible he needs to get attention,” she said. Whether these will add up to a coherent and distinct strategic vision, though, is still uncertain, Shafiah said, suggesting the situation may become clearer over the next year.

For the time being, this week’s naval exercise seems more significant for Russia than Indonesia, according to Radityo Dharmaputra, a lecturer and expert in Indonesia-Russia relations at Airlangga University.

The exercise is a way for Russia to show it still has strong diplomatic relations with an important middle power despite American attempts to try isolate it diplomatically, he said.

Still, there is potential for the exercises to become something more. “I think Russia also understands that Prabowo wants a global stage to show his capability. If Russia gives that, and the West overly criticizes Prabowo, he will lean to Russia more,” Dharmaputra predicted.

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2 Comments

  1. This sounds like something a spurned lover would write. Which is exactly what the United States has become in a world where its no longer the only game in town. Expect more such screetching from the empire fanboys as the Global South re-calibrates away from malign American influence.