The U.S.-Indonesian relationship in the 1990's and beyond

This thesis argues that while Indonesia and the United States are not the closest of allies, new approaches to the way both countries formulate foreign policy will lead to a stronger friendship. A summary of U.S.-Indonesian relations is placed within the context of Indonesian history, so as to provi...

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Main Author: Packard, Anthony M.
Other Authors: Buss, Claude Albert
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/26830
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-268302014-11-27T16:16:32Z The U.S.-Indonesian relationship in the 1990's and beyond Packard, Anthony M. Buss, Claude Albert School for International Graduate Studies National Security Affairs This thesis argues that while Indonesia and the United States are not the closest of allies, new approaches to the way both countries formulate foreign policy will lead to a stronger friendship. A summary of U.S.-Indonesian relations is placed within the context of Indonesian history, so as to provide an appropriate vantage point from which to view future developments. The national goals of each country are examined next, with the belief that any improvement in bilateral relations will naturally stem from the common interests of the two countries. Where differences are noted, it is often a case of similar underlying objectives driving incongruent policies. It is in these areas that modern approaches to American foreign policy will reap the largest rewards. This thesis contends that from the political, economic, and security points of view, both the United States and Indonesia have much to gain from an improved relationship. The domestic and foreign policies of the two countries can be furthered simultaneously; first, INdonesia must soften its anti-colnoial rhetoric, and the United States must take post-Cole War approaches to formulate post-Cole-War foreign policy 2013-01-23T22:06:26Z 2013-01-23T22:06:26Z 1993-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/26830 ocm39327657 en_US Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description This thesis argues that while Indonesia and the United States are not the closest of allies, new approaches to the way both countries formulate foreign policy will lead to a stronger friendship. A summary of U.S.-Indonesian relations is placed within the context of Indonesian history, so as to provide an appropriate vantage point from which to view future developments. The national goals of each country are examined next, with the belief that any improvement in bilateral relations will naturally stem from the common interests of the two countries. Where differences are noted, it is often a case of similar underlying objectives driving incongruent policies. It is in these areas that modern approaches to American foreign policy will reap the largest rewards. This thesis contends that from the political, economic, and security points of view, both the United States and Indonesia have much to gain from an improved relationship. The domestic and foreign policies of the two countries can be furthered simultaneously; first, INdonesia must soften its anti-colnoial rhetoric, and the United States must take post-Cole War approaches to formulate post-Cole-War foreign policy
author2 Buss, Claude Albert
author_facet Buss, Claude Albert
Packard, Anthony M.
author Packard, Anthony M.
spellingShingle Packard, Anthony M.
The U.S.-Indonesian relationship in the 1990's and beyond
author_sort Packard, Anthony M.
title The U.S.-Indonesian relationship in the 1990's and beyond
title_short The U.S.-Indonesian relationship in the 1990's and beyond
title_full The U.S.-Indonesian relationship in the 1990's and beyond
title_fullStr The U.S.-Indonesian relationship in the 1990's and beyond
title_full_unstemmed The U.S.-Indonesian relationship in the 1990's and beyond
title_sort u.s.-indonesian relationship in the 1990's and beyond
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/26830
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