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Indonesia and the Muslim World
Between Islam and Secularism in the Foreign Policy of Soeharto and Beyond
Anak Agung Banyu Perwita,
Parahyangan Catholic University
  • Muslim Indonesian opposition to the ‘War on Terror’ hides a host of internal differences, explored here

  • Analyses military and bureacratic efforts to turn the country from a religious to a secular, nationalist state

  • Highly relevant to current conflicts - actual or perceived - between Muslims and non-Muslims

Contains a wealth of information on the role of Islam in Indonesia’s foreign policy [and] provides enough background and insight ... to make this a very useful reference work for scholars of Indonesia and Islam.
Quote from external reviewer

Popular hostility in Indonesia to US attacks on Afghanistan and Iraq seem easily understandable, as is the ambivalent attitude of Indonesian governments to the US-led war on terror. After all, Indonesia is the world’s largest Muslim country. But this analysis fails to address the complexity of Indonesia. Much like in Turkey, military and bureaucratic elites since independence have worked to create a more secular nationalist Indonesian identity out of the country’s multi-ethnic and multi-religious mix. However, often there has been tension between such a secularist course and elements of the majority Muslim population. This dynamic has especially shaped how Indonesia faces the outside world.

Perwita explores Islam as a domestic political variable in Indonesia’s foreign policy under Soeharto and argues that the foreign policy toward the Muslim world was increasingly based on domestic political struggles between local actors, particularly the Muslim community and the State. Chapters cover Indonesia’s behaviour toward the Organization of the Islamic Conferences and the Middle East conflict, the role of Indonesia in facilitating a peaceful settlement of the conflict between the Philippines government and the Moro National Liberation Front, and Indonesia’s policy toward the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina. An epilogue discusses how Indonesian foreign policy is still shaped by the same forces.

Published by NIAS Press, NIAS Reports # 50
Published 2007, 222 pp.
ISBN 978 87 91114 92 2, paperback, £13.99