For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
November 20, 2006
Joint Statement Between the United States and the Republic of Indonesia
President Bush Meets with President Yudhoyono of Indonesia
President's Trip to Southeast Asia
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and President George W. Bush today
reaffirmed the strength and vitality of the bilateral relationship
between Indonesia and the United States, and reviewed the highly
positive development of U.S-Indonesia relations over the past two years.
The two Presidents recognized the special and enduring bonds between the
two countries and their people, demonstrated recently by the close
cooperation following the devastating tsunami in Aceh and Hurricane
Katrina. President Bush expressed his admiration for the resilience and
determination of the Indonesian people and government in rebuilding
areas affected by the earthquake in Yogyakarta and Central Java.
The two Presidents reaffirmed that Indonesia and the United States are
bound by a broad-based democratic partnership based on equality, mutual
respect, common interests and shared values of freedom, pluralism and
tolerance. The Presidents committed themselves to broadening and
deepening such partnership.
President Bush congratulated Indonesia on the successful signing and
implementation of a Memorandum of Understanding that has brought peace
to the province of Aceh, and renewed the United States' firm support for
Indonesia's peace-building efforts in Aceh. President Bush also
re-emphasized the United States' strong support for Indonesia's national
unity and territorial integrity, and opposition to secessionist
movements in any part of Indonesia. President Bush stressed the
importance of a united, democratic, pluralistic and prosperous Indonesia
to the region and beyond.
President Bush congratulated President Yudhoyono on signing an agreement
with the Millennium Challenge Corporation for a $55 million Threshold
program, noting that it represents a resounding endorsement of President
Yudhoyono's anti-corruption program and "pro-growth, pro-job, and
pro-poor" economic strategy. President Bush expressed confidence that
the threshold program will have a transformative effect on Indonesia's
development and international competitiveness.
Noting the strength and importance of educational and cultural links,
the Presidents reviewed the excellent work being done through the US$157
million U.S-Indonesia Education Initiative on basic education, the
cornerstone of U.S. assistance to Indonesia and a symbol of our
forward-looking partnership. The Presidents highlighted the importance
of education for democracy, tolerance and economic progress and
reaffirmed their commitment to working together to revitalize their
cooperation in education. The Presidents also expressed their desire to
encourage more people-to-people contacts through travel, educational
exchanges, and tourism between Indonesia and the United States.
President Yudhoyono and President Bush noted with satisfaction the
continuing development of U.S-Indonesia economic and trade relations.
They welcomed the strong support by APEC Leaders for the conclusion of
an ambitious Doha Round agreement and noted their joint commitment to do
everything possible to realize the development goals of the Doha
negotiations. President Yudhoyono briefed President Bush on his
government's program to strengthen the investment climate by improving
infrastructure, reducing red tape, enhancing the rule of law and respect
for contracts. They welcomed a number of positive developments since
their May 2005 meeting in Washington DC, including:
* The establishment of the ASEAN-U.S. Enhanced Partnership;
* Signing of a U.S.-ASEAN Trade and Investment Framework
Arrangement (TIFA);
* The June 2006 extension of U.S. Export-Import Bank coverage to
private Indonesian corporations for the first time since 1998;
* The upgrading of Indonesia from the Special 301 Priority Watch
List in November 2006 based on steps to improve intellectual property
rights enforcement; and
* The strengthening of our dialogue through our bilateral Trade
and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) to further promote and
facilitate trade and investment.
The Presidents praised two recently signed MOUs, one on Cooperation in
Trade in Textile and Apparel Goods and another on Combating Illegal
Logging and Associated Trade in the context of the TIFA between the two
countries. They also applauded the resumption of cooperation and
capacity building activities between the U.S. Forest Service and the
Indonesian Ministry of Forestry.
The two Presidents discussed the grave threat posed by Avian Influenza
(AI), and President Yudhoyono reiterated his Government's firm
commitment to combating its spread. He briefed President Bush on
Indonesia's completion of a unified national response plan, increase in
the AI budget for 2007, and active participation in the International
Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza. President Bush announced
the United States would increase its AI assistance to Indonesia to
expand animal surveillance and response efforts and strengthen
nation-wide public awareness. President Bush confirmed that the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service would assign permanent staff to Indonesia to build
more effective partnerships with their counterparts in Indonesia.
President Yudhoyono thanked President Bush for the United States' work
in support of the Indonesian Ministry of Health's efforts to identify
human AI cases and investigate AI outbreaks. The two Presidents
stressed the imperative of continued and enhanced cooperation between
Indonesian and American health workers and medical scientists to fight
infectious diseases, including through the Naval Medical Research Unit
(NAMRU-2), which has been in operation since 1968. They agreed that
negotiations to extend the research work of NAMRU-2 should be expedited.
President Bush and President Yudhoyono reviewed the expanding
partnership between the U.S. and Indonesia in the area of disaster
management, emergency preparedness, and mitigation. The two Presidents
noted the steady progress on constructing the west coast road in Aceh
Province that will restore communication and economic links to
communities that were devastated by the tsunami, and agreed on the
importance of expediting land acquisition so that the road can be
completed on schedule. President Bush applauded the significant progress
made in reconstructing Aceh, paving the way for sustained peace and
economic growth. President Bush and President Yudhoyono also welcomed
the recent agreement between their two governments to cooperate on the
development of a tsunami early warning system that will safeguard
Indonesia's tsunami-prone areas by 2009.
The two leaders noted the tremendous opportunities for cooperation
between Indonesia and the United States in the areas of alternative
fuels and environmental protection. President Yudhoyono briefed
President Bush on his ambitious biofuel development initiative and the
Presidents endorsed the U.S.-Indonesia Energy Policy Dialogue as a forum
to discuss ways and means to acquire clean and safe alternative energy,
including biofuels.
As the leaders of two nations which have both suffered terrorist attacks
on their soil, the two leaders reaffirmed their solidarity in defeating
the scourge of terrorism. Both Presidents expressed satisfaction at the
successful arrest and conviction in Indonesia of suspects involved in
the 2002 incident in Timika, and agreed to begin negotiations toward a
Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty.
President Bush and President Yudhoyono discussed a broad range of
regional and global security issues. President Bush and President
Yudhoyono welcomed the successful restoration of bilateral military
ties, and pledged to make such ties sustainable and mutually beneficial
in the support of peace and stability. They agreed that such ties would
be primarily targeted at increasing coordination on disaster relief,
exchanges and training on the role of militaries in democratic
societies, increasing mutual professional development and enhancing
regional and maritime security. They agreed to explore the possibility
of a Status of Forces Agreement.
President Bush congratulated Indonesia on its election as a
non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. Both
Presidents pledged to work closely together on issues before the Council
in order to maintain international peace and security, especially the
challenge posed by North Korea's nuclear weapons program. President
Bush applauded Indonesia's participation in maintaining peace in
southern Lebanon by volunteering forces to join UNIFIL. The two
Presidents also discussed the Arab-Israeli conflict, and both Presidents
stressed their support for the establishment of a viable, independent,
democratic and sovereign Palestine state that would live side by side in
peace with Israel.
The two Presidents stressed the importance of inter-civilizational and
inter-faith dialogues. The two Presidents expressed their concern to see
growing religious intolerance in some parts of the world and their
common desire to work against it. President Bush expressed great
admiration and respect for Indonesia's long history of religious
tolerance and moderate Islamic thought.
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