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Magello Rainer Fenis
Magello Rainer Fenis Mohon Tunggu... Mahasiswa - Student

MA student and full-ride scholar, Universitas Islam Internasional Indonesia; Lecturer, National Teachers College-Manila; Filipino currently based in Depok, West Java.

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Assessing Indonesia's Peacemaking Efforts in Pre-G20 Summit: Did It Work or Fail?

17 November 2022   17:24 Diperbarui: 17 November 2022   18:14 317
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Indonesian President Widodo went to Kiev and Moscow last June in hopes to mediate the Russo-Ukrainian War. (Source photos by Reuters)

For the first time in history, Indonesia holds the G20 (Group of Twenty) presidency, a cooperation forum of the world’s top 20 economies which will take place in Bali, Indonesia on November 15-16 this year.

Even with many months to go before the G20 Summit, President Joko Widodo is doing his very best in inviting state leaders to physically attend the much anticipated meeting. 

Last June, President Widodo visited Kiev and Moscow in an attempt to serve as a mediator between the Russo-Ukrainian war and also in hopes for the two leaders, Putin and Zelenskyy, to be present in the upcoming G-20 forum as this could serve as a venue for dialogue on having a ceasefire which may result to stopping the increasing global inflation and food shortages. The Ukrainian president is one of the guest invitees of the said summit.

If ever both leaders will attend in Bali, this would be the first time that both leaders will sit at the same table after the war began, face-to-face. This will be of course a mission-accomplished moment for Widodo as Indonesia always takes pride in being neutral or having a ‘friend to all, enemy to none’ foreign policy. Because at the end of the day, this could be a chance for peace or at least a new phase for negotiations.

Although we might forget that other expected participating leaders would be around too like Biden, Xi Jinping and also some representatives from the European Union that could ignite the tension. Ever since Russia conducted the special military operation in Eastern Ukraine, most of the countries (particularly U.S. Western allies) have demanded the exclusion of the Russian president from the G20. Biden and his allies even emphasized the need to arrest Putin for his atrocious war crimes and invasion in Ukraine.

This is the reason why Putin will not attend the summit but would only rather send his Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. Meanwhile, Zelenskyy stated that he will not attend the summit in case Putin attends. It seems that Jokowi’s meeting with both leaders months ago has been nothing but abysmal since the dominoes are starting to fall with only weeks to go before the much awaited intergovernmental forum.

During Widodo’s meeting with Putin last June, the Russian leader raised Soviet’s assistance to Indonesia in the early days of independence in building important projects ranging from infrastructures, industrial facilities, hospitals and other important institutions. 

This is like a slap in the face of Widodo in trying to reach out to Russia and having the guts to question its operations and military build-up when in fact it is the Soviet who helped Indonesia in establishing the state and positioning itself in the international arena.

This condescending point of view is also used by Russia among countries in Central Asia and Eastern Europe, as it always has this habit of refusing the agency of formerly Soviet-aligned states. This is not to say that other hegemonic powers in the West are unlike Russia as they also push for further influence and control among their formerly colonized countries.

Moreover, the U.S. has provided Ukraine with more than $27 billion in arms and weapons transfers ever since the war started, including an additional $400 million as announced last Friday. As Putin seems to have no plans in pulling out his troops any soon as he continues to drop bombs in Kiev, Zelenskyy has no business conceding especially with the technical support it is receiving from the U.S., Germany, France, to name a few countries.

Indonesia has really been a productive broker in mediating conflicts in Southeast Asia, mainly because Jakarta is labeled as the center of ASEAN leadership. The much-prolonged Cambodia-Vietnam war which ended in 1989 allowed Indonesia to become a peace negotiator signifying that an inter-state conflict would impact the region’s stability and security.

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