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Indonesia
This Week in AsiaPolitics

‘Resilience’ is Indonesia’s new foreign policy buzzword, but is it just rhetoric?

Analysts warn the vague concept lacks a long-term strategy and risks Jakarta drifting from its non-aligned values into transactional deals

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Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto (left) meets UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer meets in 10 Downing Street on Tuesday. Photo: dpa
Resty Woro Yuniar
Indonesia has placed “resilience” at the heart of its foreign policy this year, pitching it as a way to keep the country from being buffeted by intensifying rivalry among the world’s major powers.

But analysts say the concept, though rhetorically appealing, lacks clear objectives and a long-term strategy – running the risk of Jakarta’s diplomacy becoming more transactional and drifting away from its stated values of non-alignment, multilateralism and respect for international law.

In his annual foreign policy statement on January 14, Foreign Minister Sugiono said Indonesia must build a “resilient” diplomacy to avoid being “swept away” in an increasingly “harsh, competitive and unpredictable” world.

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“In an uncertain world, only a nation that is strong at home will have leverage abroad,” he said in the statement setting out the country’s diplomatic priorities for the year.

“This is what I mean by resilient diplomacy: a diplomacy that is not reactive, but adaptive, as a fundamental pillar of Indonesia’s foreign policy.”

Indonesia’s Foreign Minister Sugiono delivers his annual press statement in Jakarta on January 14. Photo: AFP
Indonesia’s Foreign Minister Sugiono delivers his annual press statement in Jakarta on January 14. Photo: AFP

Sugiono said defence and economic cooperation would play a major role in building that resilience, highlighting recent foreign policy milestones including new defence accords with key partners.

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