Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-9pm4c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-28T05:35:08.031Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Getting our piece of the “national cake”: the Islamists' attitude toward Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's China policies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 September 2023

Ardhitya Eduard Yeremia*
Affiliation:
International Relations, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia
Klaus Heinrich Raditio
Affiliation:
Sekolah Tinggi Filsafat Driyarkara, Jakarta, Indonesia
*
Corresponding author: Ardhitya Eduard Yeremia; Email: yerehi@ui.ac.id
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Studies on Indonesia–China relations have emphasized the central role of Indonesia's domestic politics in shaping its foreign policy toward China. However, there has been little discussion on the context in which and the extent to which internal struggles for power have contributed to shape Indonesia's China policy. Contributing to such a discussion, this article specifically focuses on the roles of Indonesian Islamist groups in affecting Jakarta–Beijing ties. It examines their political maneuvers in responses to the attitudes and policies of two governments, the Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (2004–2014) administration and that of Joko “Jokowi” Widodo (2014–), on China-related foreign policy issues. Both Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's governments display the same friendly attitude toward China. On the South China Sea issues, nevertheless, Jokowi's government adopts tougher measures against China's maneuvers. Despite Jokowi's implementation of such policy, the Islamists put up considerable resistance to his China policy, even compared to his predecessor. This article finds that the extent of power sharing between the Islamists and the regime in power determines the former's responses toward the latter's China policy. This suggests that in the management of bilateral relations, the Islamists are not a hindrance per se in Indonesia–China relations.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Following the fall of Suharto's authoritarian regime and especially in the democratic consolidation era, Indonesia has seen some unprecedented developments in its relations with China. During his decade-long presidency (2004–2014), Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono laid a stronger foundation for bilateral relations by signing two landmark agreements: the Strategic Partnership in 2005 and its upgrade the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership in 2013.Footnote 1 In addition, Jakarta's burgeoning economic ties with China were also strongly evident. One year before Yudhoyono left office, Indonesia saw China replace Japan as the country's largest trading partner. In 2014, Indonesia's total trade with China reached USD 48.2 billion, a more than fivefold increase within the ten years he held in office.

Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, Yudhoyono's successor, continues this development. In the diplomatic domain, Jokowi markedly intensifies Jakarta's bilateral exchanges with Beijing. Compared to his predecessors, Jokowi has met with his Chinese counterpart much more frequently. During his presidency (2014–), Indonesia–China stronger relations are particularly evident in the field of economics. In 2016, China was among the top three countries with the largest foreign direct investment (FDI) in Indonesia.Footnote 2 Three years later, it replaced Japan as the country's second-largest source of FDI with a realized investment valued at USD 4.7 billion.Footnote 3

However, both government's displays of the same friendly attitude toward China by embracing closer economic and diplomatic cooperation have triggered markedly different internal dynamics. Like what happened to Yudhoyono, Jokowi has to face domestic criticism for expanding his country's economic exchanges or pursuing friendly relations with China. Still, he needs to deal with notably much more severe criticism as a strong anti-China/Chinese sentiment surfaced.Footnote 4 Some domestic actors exploit negative sentiments to mobilize considerable opposition against Jokowi's government who have been perceived as excessively pro-China. Regarding these differences between the responses of some domestic actors toward Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's China policy, prominent scholar on Indonesian foreign policy Dewi Fortuna Anwar has noted that “throughout the Yudhoyono period, Indonesia's economic relations with China had not been a divisive political issue. Nor was Yudhoyono … seen as being too pro-China.”Footnote 5

This article explores the internal dynamics that emerge along with Indonesia's expanding relations with China. It follows the path taken by previous authoritative and important studies on Indonesia–China relations that underline the prominent role of internal politics in shaping the former's external relations with the latter.Footnote 6 A recent line of scholarly works has further confirmed that an internal struggle for power has continued to play such a role even in the context of Indonesia's asymmetrical relations with a rising China that presented both opportunities and challenges to the country.

Yuliantoro, for example, links internal balance of power with prospects for Indonesia–China cooperation.Footnote 7 He argues that President Jokowi's re-election in 2019, with a wider support from both the people and the political elites, will contribute positively to Jakarta's intention to pursue closer economic ties with Beijing. Indeed, Indonesia's China policy during his first presidential term had been largely constrained. This is, as Yeremia highlights, partly due to “his regime need[ing] to strike a balance between competing pathways” of developmentalism, nationalism, and Islamism to further ensure political survival.Footnote 8 Indonesia's internal struggle for power has prevented the country from “taking full advantage of the opportunities presented by China's rise.”Footnote 9

Amidst the emphasis on the central role of Indonesia's internal political dynamics, nevertheless, only a few studies elaborate on the extent to which those dynamics have contributed to shape Indonesia's China policy.Footnote 10 In this regard, this article seeks to contribute to current literature by looking into some important episodes of Indonesia–China relations to examine how responses of some major political actors have influenced overall relations, with specific focus on Islamist groups.

This focus on the roles of Islamic political forces is important for two reasons. First, post-authoritarian Indonesia has seen the emergence of political Islam as a major political force following the decades-long suppression during the rule of Suharto as well as his predecessors, Sukarno.Footnote 11 Second, Islamist groups in Indonesia have historically been among the domestic political actors who harbor a strong animosity against China as well as the ethnic Chinese.Footnote 12

This article finds that Islamists are not always triggered to mobilize anti-China/Chinese sentiment by the widely perceived danger of China's economic domination or threat of the country undermining Indonesia's territorial integrity in the Natuna waters. In this regard, the Islamists' position vis-à-vis the ruling coalition is central in defining their responses. If the Islamists are included within or accommodated by the coalition, they refrained from exploiting the anti-China sentiment. On the other hand, if they are excluded from the ruling coalition or prevented from accessing government resources and patronage, the Islamist groups examined in this current article play the Muslim card to generate negative sentiment against China and the ethnic Chinese. This article shows how the Islamist groups (previously accommodated within Yudhoyono's ruling coalition but excluded from the Jokowi's) stirred up anti-China/Chinese sentiment in order to put up direct opposition against Jokowi.

These findings suggest that political Islam is not a hindrance factor in Indonesia–China relations per se. Only in an opposition role can the Islamists exploit negative sentiments against China to pursue their interests in the internal struggle for power. Anti-China/Chinese sentiments are leveraged contextually, rather than constantly.Footnote 13 In other words, the domestic politics of Indonesia's more consolidated democracy still provide ample room for both Jakarta and Beijing to further expand their relations. Thus, it is indeed good news for Beijing as it continues to pursue stronger relations with the world's most populous Muslim majority country.

This article is divided into five parts. Following the introductory section, the second section identifies the Islamic political groups in Indonesia and discusses how their animosity against ethnic Chinese, the Communists, and China (CCC) has historically developed. The third section elaborates on Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's approaches to dealing with Islamists. The fourth section then shows how both approaches have triggered different responses from the Islamists toward Indonesia–China relations. It compares the Islamist's responses to the issue of the influx of made-in-China products during Yudhyono period with their responses to the issue of inflow of Chinese foreign workers during the Jokowi period. In addition, it looks into their responses to Yudhoyono's and Jokowi’ strategies to deal with Chinese challenges to Indonesia's maritime rights in the Natuna waters. Following the examination of these case studies in both economic and strategic fields, the concluding sections give a summary of the findings and an elaboration of the implications for future efforts in understanding Indonesia–China relations.

Political Islam in Indonesian context

In general, political Islam is a movement to promote Islam's significance, giving the religion a significant role in the governing politics and society of the contemporary Muslim World.Footnote 14 Even though political Islam is present globally, its qualities and attributes differ in each country. The nation state is the fundamental structure that rendered political Islam possible.Footnote 15 Political Islam in each state depends on the natures of the Islamic parties, their governance, and their political tactics since these factors develop under the specific circumstances of the country.Footnote 16

Luthfi Assyaukanie – a prominent Indonesian Muslim scholar – as quoted by Cesari, identified three main polity models in the country: the Islamic Democratic State (IDS), the Religious Democratic State (RDS), and the Liberal Democratic State (LDS).Footnote 17 The proponents of IDS as coined by Mohammad Natsir believe that the state, though not a theocracy, must be based on Islam. The groups that adopted this idea in the post-independence period were Partai Masyumi (the Consultative Council of Indonesian Muslims Party) and, following the fall of Suharto's authoritarian regime in 1998, PKS (Partai Keadilan Sejahtera, Justice and Prosperous Party).Footnote 18 Other extra parliamentary groups of this polity model are FPI (Front Pembela Islam, the Defender of Islam Front) and HTI (Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia).

The RDS or Muslim Nationalists are represented by moderate Islamic organizations such as NU and Muhammadiyah as well as PPP (Partai Persatuan Pembangunan, United Development Party), PKB (Partai Kebangkitan Bangsa, National Awakening Party), and PAN (Partai Amanat Nasional, National Mandate Party).Footnote 19 The groups of this polity model suggest that democracy cannot be built on Islamic ideology, since it will marginalize the participation of other religious communities. RDS promoters advocate the state establishment of religion – including non-Islam religions and dismiss the concept of an Islamic state.

The LDS groups or the nationalist–secularists advocate the separation between state and religion and oppose the officialization of religion. In Indonesia, this polity model is represented by the nationalist such as PDIP (Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle) under the leadership of Megawati Sukarnoputri – the daughter of Sukarno who was the country's first president.

The political Islam actors, the Islamists in this study, refer to the proponents of the IDS. There are several distinguishing characteristics that signify the Islamists in Indonesian context, particularly in the post-1998 era. First, the Islamists in this study groups have an Islamist agenda, i.e., promoting sharia in the politics and society, and even in the long run they seek to implement Islamization of Indonesia. This character is apparent for FPI and HTI, but not PKS. PKS states in its statute (article 7) that its mission is to “build a civic society that is just, prosperous and dignified in the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia based on Pancasila ideology.” However, in the Party's internal doctrinal documents, the Party makes clear that it aims at comprehensive Islamization of Indonesia and the implementation of sharia in the long term.Footnote 20 Being an ideological offspring of Egyptian Moslem Brotherhood (Ikhwanul Muslimin), PKS adopts the strategy of disguising the main agenda and branding itself as the promoter of social welfare, anti-corruption, and good governance.Footnote 21

In addition to that, previous studies also categorize PKS, FPI, and HTI into the Islamist camp in fundamentalist sense. Mietzner and Mutadi call FPI and HTI scriptualist, and PKS puritan.Footnote 22 Cesari regards FPI and HTI fundamentalist.Footnote 23 Nuraniyah labels PKS and HTI hardliner and intolerant groups; particularly, the puritan PKS aims at implementation of Islamic law upon Indonesia's diverse society.Footnote 24 Hadiz and Robison classify PKS a puritan Islamic Party and FPI – HTI Islamic rule imposters.Footnote 25 All in all, these scholars distinguish PKS, FPI, and HTI from Muslim-inclusive/Muslim Nationalists such as NU (Nahdlatul Ulama, the Revival of Ulama), Muhammadiyah, and their mass-based political parties (PKB, PPP, and PAN).

The second distinguishing characteristic is their opposition toward the nationalist–secularist. This characteristic is obvious from the Islamist groups such as PKS, FPI, and HTI which never cooperate or share power with the nationalist–secularist group, i.e., PDIP, on a national level since 1998 due to their opposing ideologies.Footnote 26 Particularly, PDIP and PKS are both political parties with strong ideological nuances. Instead of operating mainly based on electoral gain, these parties steadfastly hold their respective ideology in taking their political stance.

Ideologically, the proponents of the IDS or the Islamist hold the opposite views with the supporters of the LDS or the nationalist–secularists for at least three reasons.Footnote 27 Firstly, the Islamists aim at social morality. Building a moral society according to the Islamic precept is one of the main Islamist agenda while the nationalist–secularists leave the moral issues to personal discretion. Secondly, the Islamists claim to promote transcendental values that go beyond worldly affairs. They regard the nationalist–secularists are inherently alien to this goal. Thirdly, the Islamists perceive that nationalism could be a dangerous force within the umma (Muslim community) since it has potentially divided it. Nationalism may enforce the segment of umma against non-Muslim domination, but in the long run it may harm the umma itself.

Historically, in Indonesian context, the Islamists do not develop its uneasiness toward nationalist–secularists only. Indonesian Islamists share the anguish of global Islamists who lament the backwardness of umma vis-à-vis non-Muslim superiority. The Islamists today are particularly concerned with non-Muslim domination in many fields.Footnote 28 They attribute the decline of Muslim societies to moral and spiritual weakening. Hence, Indonesian Islamists advocate the implementation of sharia to protect Muslims from non-Muslim's conspiracy, resolve the crisis in the society – as the consequence of ungodly system – and bring prosperity to umma.Footnote 29

Islamists' animosity toward ethnic Chinese, the Communists, and China

This section elaborates on the historical development of animosity between Islamists and ethnic Chinese, as well as the Communists, and by extension, China. There are at least three dimensions to this phenomenon: economic competition, political rivalries, and bloody conflicts. This structure arguably perpetuates the Islamists' perception of those three entities as a “triangular threat,” causing the enmity to linger.Footnote 30

Political Islam in Indonesia emerged in the context of the growing proto-nationalist movement of the early twentieth century. It could be traced back to the establishment of the first mass-based political movement under the Dutch colonial rule, the Sarekat Islam (SI), in 1912. Around that time, Islam first and foremost signified the sense of being people of the land, as Christianity was the signifier of the Dutch and Confucianism of the ethnic Chinese who resided in the Dutch East Indies.Footnote 31 SI was founded as an instrument to protect the interests of the batik traders in Solo, Central Java against a stronger competition of the members of the out-group, the Chinese traders.Footnote 32

This episode highlights how political Islam in Indonesia has historically been incubated within economic concerns of some members of the Muslim middle class.Footnote 33 In post-Independence Indonesia, political Islam continued to exploit this petty bourgeoisie's grievances and the ethnic Chinese again became the target. A call for an economic policy “which directly favored ethnic Indonesians in their competition with all others, Chinese of Indonesian citizenship included” was echoed in Masyumi's stronghold in early 1956.Footnote 34 What was later known as the Asaat Movement soon spilled over to other policy domains, creating a gateway for the anti-Chinese sentiment to again resurface in the public. As Herbert Feith noted, a high sense of political dissatisfaction was indeed widely shared among the general public and the members of Masyumi, the party which failed to win the majority of votes.Footnote 35 In these regards, the Asaat Movement can show how the rise of anti-Chinese sentiment is rooted in the general public's dissatisfaction with the country's socio-economic and political situation and how political Islam played a central role in exploiting the sentiment.

During the initial two decades of Suharto's authoritarian rule in Indonesia, political Islam faced a process of marginalization, as the government sought to suppress its influence. However, a shift occurred in the late 1980s when President Suharto strategically embraced Islamic rhetoric, recognizing the potential to consolidate his power base by appealing to the growing and increasingly educated Muslim community.Footnote 36 To a large extent, the situation mirrored what happened during the Asaat Movement. Political expression of Islam was primarily found among the middle class and business circles who “hoped to displace ethnic Chinese and foreign capital in the upper reaches of the economy.”Footnote 37

The perception that ethnic Chinese are more successful economically compared to other ethnic groups in Indonesia is pervasive until today. According to a survey by ISEAS in 2017, most of the respondents perceive that life is easier for Chinese Indonesian: 48% compared to 31.6% who said neither and 20.4% who disagree with the statement.Footnote 38 The majority of respondents (59.8%) also believe that the ethnic Chinese are more likely than other Indonesians to be wealthy.

Some high-profile Muslims project this perception and express their grudge publicly. Then Vice President Jusuf KallaFootnote 39 in a 2017 event held by MUI (Majelis Ulama Indonesia, Indonesian Ulema Council) contrasted rich Chinese descents with poor “Muslim pribumi.”Footnote 40 Kalla mentioned that there is only one “Muslim businessmen” for every ten ethnic Chinese businessmen.Footnote 41 In 2023, before the Eid Gathering of ICMI (The Indonesian Association of Muslim Intellectuals), Kalla stated that the Indonesian economy is dominated by the ethnic Chinese. “They only comprise 4.5% of the population, but control more than 50% of the country's economy,” Kalla said.Footnote 42 It is noteworthy that the statements were always delivered before Islamic audience with the intention to contrast, if not highlight, the uneasiness of Muslims toward ethnic Chinese.

In addition to that, political Islam in Indonesia has historically been intensified in the context of struggle for leadership position among the Muslim masses. SI's central leadership under Oemar Said Tjokroaminoto, for example, had eventually turned to Islam in addressing the challenges from the Communist sympathizers within this mass organization.Footnote 43 Tjokroaminoto propagated how communism was atheistic and anti-Islam in nature, and thus, incompatible with SI.Footnote 44 He further transformed the organization into Partai Sarikat Islam, a cadre party, seeking to defend those who “entrusts everything to Allah” against those who “endangered the unity of Islam.”Footnote 45

Another outright confrontation between the Islamists and the Communists arose amid Indonesia's first general election in 1955. Anti-communist narratives were at the core of Masyumi's strategy to mobilize electoral support.Footnote 46 The party, which is the main embodiment of political Islam in post-independence Indonesia, propagated, for example, that Muslims should not vote for Partai Komunis Indonesia (PKI) because “a compromise between religion and Communism was impossible.”Footnote 47 Its religious council (majelis syuro) even declared that “a Muslim who embraces Communism or [joins] communist organizations … is a heretic.”Footnote 48 These anti-Communist narratives were widely distributed to the masses with the help of the party's media outlets and youth-wing, women group, labor, and peasant union, as well as artist association.Footnote 49

Clashes between Islamists and Communists had also been characterized by bloody violence. This was particularly evident in the aftermath of the 1948 Madiun Affair (Peristiwa Madiun). In the eyes of the ruling elites, the Madiun Affair was an attempted coup staged by communist elements centered around PKI.Footnote 50 In the times leading up to the Madiun Affair, the Communists were intensely promoting a land reform program to mobilize support from the masses.Footnote 51 This was understood as a direct challenge to Masyumi, as the majority of the big landlords in the territory were party members. According to George McTurnan Kahin, when the communists fled from Madiun, they brutally attacked prominent Islamic figures and religious leaders as well as the Masyumi members.Footnote 52 In this context, Rémy Madinier argued that the Madiun Affair was “a traumatic episode in the Republic [of Indonesia]'s history” that further reinforced the enmity between the Islamists and the communists.Footnote 53

This bitter and violent memory of Madiun Affair was instrumental in the anticommunist massacre in 1965–1966, which according to Roosa is “one of the worst bloodbaths of the twentieth century.”Footnote 54 Following the abortive coup of September 30, 1965, allegedly staged by PKI, the Indonesian army utilized the memory of Madiun Affair to propagate how the Communists were by nature, treacherous, barbaric, evil, and anti-Islam.Footnote 55 This propagandistic portrayal of PKI helped to organize and then mobilize anti-communist civilian militia, including the Islamists, to arrest and even kill the party members and supporters. Against this background, some of Masyumi supporters reportedly sought to capitalize on the momentum of the anti-PKI campaign, utilizing it as a means to stage a political comeback following their banishment during Sukarno's Guided Democracy.Footnote 56

The collective memory of the Communist's brutality lingers until today. The fear of PKI's revival is quite pervasive in Indonesian society. According to a survey by Media Survei Nasional (Median) in 2021, 46.4% of the Indonesian population think that the issue of PKI's revival is real.Footnote 57 The top two reasons from those who believe in PKI's revival are the suspicion on the growing number of Chinese workers (12.3%) and the frequent arrest of Muslim clerics by the authorities (12%). The lingering perception of Communist threat among the society enables the Islamists or any interest group to politicize the issue for advancing their agenda.

The Islamists' hostility toward the Communists was also evident in their approach to the People's Republic of China. When Indonesia established diplomatic relations with China in the spring of 1950, Jakarta appointed a chargé d'affaires at a junior level, while China sent an ambassador. This deliberate reluctance to reciprocate by Hatta Cabinet reportedly aimed to keep Indonesia's relations with China at a lower level, primarily to secure the parliamentary support of the anti-communist Masyumi.Footnote 58 Prime Minister Mohammad Hatta's two immediate successors, Mohammad Natsir and Sukiman, both from Masyumi, continued Indonesia's limited engagement with China, projecting clearly what their party was known for: “the strongest anticommunist force in the country, except for the army.”Footnote 59

Prime Minister Sukiman even further antagonized China, causing Jakarta's one-year-old diplomatic relations with Beijing to reach their lowest point.Footnote 60 In July 1951, diplomatic tension grew when Jakarta denied entry to sixteen Chinese diplomatic staff members. The Sukiman Cabinet became alarmed by the Chinese embassy's increasing connections with ethnic Chinese communities in Indonesia, following the establishment of China's consular offices. The situation intensified after the Chinese embassy granted asylum to Alimin, a prominent leader of the PKI, who sought refuge there following the Sukiman Cabinet's anti-communist raid in August 1950.Footnote 61 The culmination of this diplomatic tension occurred when Jakarta declared the Chinese Ambassador, Wang Renshu, persona non grata in late 1951. These events, as pointed out by Mozingo, demonstrated the Indonesian government's readiness to take risks and even provoke diplomatic ruptures with Beijing.Footnote 62

Under Suharto's army-backed regime, Indonesia suspended its diplomatic relations with China for more than twenty years. Throughout this period, Muslim groups consistently opposed each plan from the government to resume Jakarta's diplomatic ties with Beijing. However, in August 1990, Jakarta eventually normalized the ties. This move partly indicates that political Islam, despite its resurgence, continued to stay on the political margin, playing a minor role in Indonesia's foreign policy making until the end of Suharto's era.Footnote 63

In the more recent context, the general public tend to view ethnic Chinese Indonesians a projection of the People's Republic of China.Footnote 64 In other words, the public learn about China from Indonesia's ethnic Chinese. As the image of ethnic Chinese among the Islamists is not positive, China inherits a not-so-good reputation. The fact that China is a communist state exacerbates the Islamists' enmity toward the country. A 2019 opinion poll from LSI (Lembaga Survei Indonesia, Indonesian Survey Institute) shows that those who vote for Islamic party such as PKS (77%) and PAN (55%) view China as a threat to Indonesia.Footnote 65 This data suggest the enmity against China is stronger among the Islamists.

In post-Suharto Indonesia, political Islam has emerged as a major political force. Before proceeding to assess how this phenomenon affects Indonesia's relations with China, it is necessary to outline the contemporary political dynamics that the Islamists have helped to shape. The next section identifies the major Islamist political forces in post-Suharto Indonesia and describes their interactions with the regimes in power.

Yudhoyono, Jokowi, and the Islamic political forces

During his two-term presidency, Yudhoyono accommodated all Muslim-based and Islamist political parties in his ruling coalition. This approach to Islamic forces was merely a part of his strategy to build a highly inclusive coalition in order to ensure political stability, and thus, longevity – a strategy which originates from the highly uncertain democratic transition following the fall of Suharto's regime.Footnote 66 Incorporating major political parties across the secularist–Islamist spectrum into the ruling coalition, Yudhoyono's government received 73 and 76% of parliamentary support in his first and second presidential terms respectively.Footnote 67 On the other hand, Jokowi has taken a rather selective approach toward the Islamic political parties, in fact toward the other parties as well, in building the governing coalition. During his two presidential terms, Jokowi incorporated some Islamic or Muslim-based parties into his coalition. Like Yudhoyono, he has sought to seek a parliamentary majority to deal with a highly competitive inter-elite struggle. Still, there has been a limit to the inclusivity of his coalition. Jokowi has been consistent in disengaging PKS a major Islamist political party, as well as Yudhoyono's Demoratic Party (Partai Democrat).

Moreover, political Islam could not be associated only with the struggle of actors operating within the established party system. Post-Suharto Indonesia also sees the rise of Islamic extra-parliamentary forces; the most prominent one is FPI. This Islamic vigilante group became publicly known only after General Wiranto, then commander of armed forces, incorporated it into the security community (Pamswakarsa) forces, a fusion of civil militias mainly formed in November 1998 to defend interim Habibie's presidency against pro-reform student movement.Footnote 68 FPI gains credibility as a power broker not from its relatively small membership, but from its ability to inflict violence and, most importantly, to organize and mobilize the masses. What has been among the group's strongest appeal, especially for the urban poor and lower middle class, is its use of Islamic populist narratives and aggressive rhetoric in articulating their everyday resentments.Footnote 69

Another Islamic extra-parliamentary political force that also deserves mention is HTI, an offshoot of the transnational Party of Liberation (Hizb ut-Tahrir).Footnote 70 HTI differs from FPI in at least two aspects: first, its strong adherence to non-violent approaches though it does not reject the use of violent rhetoric, and second, its transnational aspiration toward restoring the Islamic Caliphate.Footnote 71 Similar to FPI, nevertheless, this organization developed strong mass-mobilization capability.Footnote 72 In the following year, with the help of the Yudhoyono's government, HTI organized International Caliphate Conference in Jakarta, attracting the participation of about 100,000 Muslims. The group made the conference look much more like a rally, suggesting that HTI had been transformed into one of the largest Muslim organizations in Indonesia and one of the largest and leading chapters of Hizb ut-Tahrir in the world.Footnote 73

The Yudhoyono administration had taken an accommodationist toward both Islamic extra-parliamentary forces. President Yudhoyono, for example, had never gone beyond the issue of threats to disband the group despite FPI's brutality toward religious minority groups. Members of Yudhoyono's cabinet also turned a blind eye to FPI's frequent acts of violence and even portrayed the group as an asset to the nation. These embracing attitudes toward the group and the fact that FPI had relatively enjoyed impunity indicate that the group “must have had support from key elements of the Yudhoyono administration.”Footnote 74

In addition, the Yudhoyono administration also granted what HTI needed for the expansion of HTI's activities and network: the recognition of the organization's status as a legal mass organization.Footnote 75 The administration could not be more accommodative toward HTI when it took no action against the conduct of the 2007 International Caliphate Conference. This large mass gathering persuaded Indonesian Muslims to transfer their allegiance from their country to the Islamic Caliphate that the Hizb ut-Tahrir was seeking to restore. More importantly, both FPI and HTI had gained access to government patronage through accommodation within state-sponsored MUI.Footnote 76

Unlike his immediate predecessor, Jokowi has been reluctant to accommodate the aspirations and interests of the Islamic extra-parliamentary forces. In his ascent to power, he became greatly indebted to PDIP of which he is a member. The party “had long presented itself as the bastion against the Islamization of national politics”Footnote 77 and its matriarch, Megawati Sukarnoputri, put that into practice during her presidency by confronting and isolating the Islamist forces.Footnote 78 Similarly, Jokowi during his governorship in Jakarta also showed a tendency to ignore FPI and even excluded it and other vigilante groups from government patronage.Footnote 79 To large extent, these contexts help explain why Islamist forces supported Jokowi's rival, Prabowo Subianto, during the 2014 presidential elections. It should be noted that during the presidential campaign, Prabowo's camp attacked Jokowi's credentials by portraying Jokowi as “secularist, communist, and agent of foreign interests” and by spreading rumors that Jokowi “was the son of a Singaporean Chinese.”Footnote 80

The opportunity for FPI to challenge Jokowi's regime and diminish his prospect for re-election arose in a heated political situation leading to the 2017 Jakarta's gubernatorial election. This political event in the nation's capital could not be more favorable for a power broker like the FPI, as the country's political kingmakers put up their own candidate to compete. FPI vilified the ethnic background of Basuki Tjahaja Purnama (also known as Ahok), the incumbent PDIP-backed candidate as well as Jokowi's former vice-governor in Jakarta, by simply referencing his identity as a Christian Chinese descendant. In one of his campaign rallies, Ahok told the Muslim voters that he did not mind if they refuse to vote for him, lest they are fooled by using Al-Maidah 51 – a Quranic verse which forbids non-Muslims to govern the Muslims.

FPI, as well as HTI, immediately exploited the situation by alleging that Ahok had blasphemed Islam and further demanding his imprisonment. These two Islamist groups then mobilized the Muslim masses to conduct two large public demonstrations in November and December 2016, in which more than 200,00 and 500,000 people took part respectively. Many people believe that these rallies are the two largest mass mobilizations in the nation's history. These events indicated how the Islamists' organizational capacity and network had largely expanded – thanks to Yudhoyono's accommodationist approach during his ten-year presidency.Footnote 81 In addition, the events that led to Ahok's eventual electoral defeat also become a testimony of how Indonesia's political kingmakers and politico-business elites could exploit the hard-line Islamists' mass-mobilization capacity to shape a political situation to their own favor.Footnote 82

Jokowi's initial responses to this Islamist mobilization included attempts to make conciliatory gestures. Seeking to manage the political tension, he was present at one of the rallies to directly address the protesters. This action required Jokowi to share the stage with Rizieq Shihab, the FPI's leader, while facing hundreds of thousands of demonstrators, something that only boosted FPI's credibility as power broker. Jokowi further bowed to the pressure from the masses by letting Ahok to be prosecuted and having his case to be taken to court. Eventually, Ahok was found guilty of blasphemy and sentenced to a two-year jail term.

The failure of these accommodating gestures in moderating the mass movement then paved the way for repressive measures. In this regard, the FPI and HTI were among the primary targets. Seeking to destroy Rizieq Shihab's credibility as a religious Islamic leader, the national police launched investigations into selected criminal cases, leading to a portrayal of the FPI leader as a felon and even a pervert.Footnote 83 This criminalization campaign eventually forced Rizieq to be in exile in Saudi Arabia for three years. During Jokowi's era, the Government Regulation in Lieu of Law (Peraturan Pemerintah Pengganti Undang-Undang or Perppu) No.2/2017 was issued to allow it to disband social organization without prior judicial process. This new law was clearly meant to be a tool to ban HTI because the Islamist organization was the first and only organization dissolved since the law was issued.Footnote 84

This section has presented how Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's administrations have dealt with Islamic politic forces both inside and outside the established party system. While the former sought to be inclusive, the latter has not been hesitant in excluding or even confronting some Islamic groups. With such an arrangement, PKS, FPI, and HTI are the Islamist forces that have lost the spoils of office and access to state infrastructure and resources since Jokowi's rise to power. The following section then describes how these internal political dynamics have shaped the Islamists responses to Jakarta's growing ties with Beijing under both Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's administrations.

The two governments' China policies and the attitude of political Islam elements

Among the Indonesian masses, there is a common perception that Jokowi has boosted Indonesia's economy through cooperation with China. Jokowi is perceived by the political Islam elements as the most China-friendly leader in the nation's history – often a derogatory description. In fact, Yudhoyono adopted a similar attitude toward China to develop the country's economy. Yet, he is free from the disapproval of the political Islamists. This section discusses the response of the political Islamists toward Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's China policies on controversial issues related to foreign workers, ASEAN-China Free Trade Area (ACFTA), and the Natuna waters.

ACFTA, foreign workers, Ahok case, and the political Islam responses

Economic development is a high priority for Yudhoyono's government. Yudhoyono believes that strong relations with China are indispensable for boosting the country's economy. One year after he assumed presidency, Yudhoyono upgraded China–Indonesia relations to strategic partnership. Despite several cabinet reshuffles, strategic partnership continued to be a key policy agenda.Footnote 85 Trade ministers from Mari Elka Pangestu, to Gita Wirjawan, and Muhammad Lutfi suggested that closer relations with China would set a clear target for trade and investment cooperation, accelerate Indonesia's economic development, and leave a legacy for Yudhoyono's administration. As part of its strategy to boost bilateral trade with China, Yudhyono's government supported the ACFTA.

Nevertheless, the full implementation of the free trade deal in 2010 had fueled public anxiety.Footnote 86 Although the ACFTA is essentially a multilateral free trade deal, the utmost concern of its implementation was Indonesia's expanding bilateral trade with China. The narrative of the way made-in-China products had flooded (membanjiri) the domestic market started to emerge in the national media as early as 2004.Footnote 87 As China replaced Japan as Indonesia's largest import market in 2006, the media put forward an image of how Indonesia's market had already been “under the grip of the dragon” (di bawah cengkraman sang naga) following “the invasion” (serbuan) of made-in-China products and further highlighted how the business community had been powerless (tidak berdaya) to compete.Footnote 88

These concerns were intensified after Indonesia's trade balance with China turned into deficit for the first time in 2008 and culminated when the ACFTA was put into effect completely.Footnote 89 Local industries were reportedly struggling to compete in the domestic market and many of them were forced to close down, affecting the livelihood of many workers.Footnote 90 Hence, Yudhoyono's government received strong pressure from some sections of the society to either renegotiate, delay the implementation, or withdraw from the free trade deal, showing that the government stood by the people.Footnote 91

It should be noted that opposition to the ACFTA proved to be minimal and short-lived. The efforts to undermine Indonesia's commitment to the ACFTA were primarily made by the Ministry of Industry and the private sectors represented by Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KADIN) and Association of Indonesian Entrepreneurs (API). In response to their concerns, a bilateral talk was organized in April 2010 in which the Indonesian Trade Minister met with her Chinese counterpart. Although they were disappointed with the government's failure to cancel or delay the implementation of the trade deal, the end of the talk also marked the decline of their expression of disagreement to the government's commitment to the ACFTA. The government claimed that the talk was successful in accommodating the interests of industries and private sectors, leading to the renegotiation of up to 228 tariff lines with China.Footnote 92

In addition, civil society organizations, labor unions, and farmer groups also launched aggressive public campaign through social media and organized mass demonstrations in Jakarta and other main cities to attract opposition from wider sections of the society.Footnote 93 Still, they only managed to attract a small amount of attention and finally failed to sustain their movement beyond 2010. It is beyond the scope of this paper to explain why the opposition to the ACFTA was a short-lived one. It was nevertheless apparent that the movement at that time lacked concerted support from parties concerned, both at the elite and mass levels to coordinate actions and share resources in order to mobilize and sustain a bigger resistance.Footnote 94

Widespread concern about Chinese domination in the domestic market caused by the massive influx of Chinese products and the waves of opposition that accompanied it only provoked limited responses from the Islamic political forces. Criticism against the government's commitment to the ACFTA mainly came from the PKS, while Islamic extra-parliamentary forces were relatively silent. One of PKS parliamentarians, for example, stated that the free trade deal “will harm the pribumi's businesses and increase unemployment … If [the deal] is implemented, oranges from Medan or apple from Malang will be missing [from the market], all substituted by fruits from China.”Footnote 95 Interestingly, the party sided with the non-ruling parties to ensure the formation of the parliamentary working committee (panitia kerja) and even special committee (panitia khusus) to oversee the implementation of the ACFTA.Footnote 96 According to Rakhmat Syarip, nevertheless, all maneuvers made in the parliament at that time “have never resulted in either a formal cancellation request nor an interpellation meeting.”Footnote 97

The narratives about invasion from China resurfaced in Jokowi's presidency, but this time, such a threat was arguably manifested in the massive inflow of the mainland Chinese. In mid-2015, national media reported that thousands of workers from China, especially the unskilled ones, had entered Indonesia to work on Chinese investment projects.Footnote 98 The opposition groups blamed Jokowi for over-accommodating Chinese foreign workers at the expense of local workers. Jokowi's government was questioned for allowing the influx of unskilled foreign laborers because millions of Indonesians were still unemployed.

According to the official data from the Ministry of Manpower, Chinese workers have been in Indonesia since the Yudhoyono era. Chinese workers have been the largest group of foreign workers in Indonesia since 2007.Footnote 99 In 2017, the number of Chinese workers was 24,800.Footnote 100 In 2015, when the issue of Chinese foreign workers sparked heated controversy, the minister of manpower Hanif Dhakiri also stated that the number of foreign workers was 54,953.Footnote 101 In contrast, in 2012 and 2013, when Yudhoyono was in power, the number of foreign workers was 77,000 and 72,000 respectively.

Qualitatively, the regulation on foreign workers under Yudhoyono's administration (Perpres No. 72/2014) was somehow loose. There was no sanction or penalty in violation of the regulation, no obligation to provide social insurance, and no type of occupation can be allocated for foreign workers.Footnote 102 Under Jokowi's administration, there are penalties for employers of foreign workers who violate the regulation (Perpres No. 20/2018). This regulation also specifies occupations that can be held by foreign workers and the timeline based on conditions of the domestic human resources market.

This issue of Chinese foreign workers re-emerged with greater magnitude at the end of 2016, coinciding with the Islamist mobilization against Ahok's alleged blasphemy. A rumor claiming that ten million Chinese workers would be coming to Indonesia was widely circulated in the social media, especially after Jokowi made the statement on December 5, 2016 that his government would like to have ten million Chinese tourists visit the country.Footnote 103 In response, Jokowi later stated that there were only 21,000 Chinese workers in Indonesia at that time, but his remark had little effect in curbing the spread of the hoax in social media, which was accompanied by the rise of anti-China/Chinese sentiment.Footnote 104

FPI, as well as HTI, were the leading actors promoting anti-government narratives, thereby raising public anxiety over the Chinese worker issue. On December 9, 2016, Syihab tweeted how Jokowi designated the Ahok-backed reclamation project in North Jakarta to welcome around 25 million Chinese nationals, arguing that Ahok's electoral victory would only pave the way for communist domination, first in Jakarta and then the whole country.Footnote 105 HTI in fact had been consistent in promoting this narrative about the threat of sinicization (Cinaisasi) presented by the reclamation project since mid-2006. It organized a series of public seminars, seeking to portray how the government had sold Indonesia to China by bringing in massive Chinese capital and workers.Footnote 106 Echoing this, Syihab through his tweets further claimed that Indonesia was becoming a vassal state of the anti-Islam and Communist China.Footnote 107 While for the government, FPI and HTI were merely spreading hoaxes about the Chinese workers. Both groups claimed that promoting such narratives was part of their efforts to defend Islam.Footnote 108

PKS also contributed to the intense public debate by further mobilizing opposition against the government. After the spread of a rumor about the inflow of ten million workers from China, one of the party parliamentarians warned that Jokowi's government would bring Indonesia under the danger of neocolonialism. He argued that the worker's entry marked the start of China's economic domination in Indonesia, and that such economic domination would lead to political domination.Footnote 109 In social media, moreover, @maspiyungan, a Twitter account that was historically associated with PKS, was reportedly among the most active ones in using the issue to generate negative sentiments against Jokowi and Ahok, as well as the Chinese.Footnote 110 When the government claimed that the massive influx of the Chinese workers was a hoax, the party sided those who were concerned with it. The party chairman, for example, made a public statement, arguing that it was normal for the people to question the government because the authorities provide more confusing than reliable information about the issue.Footnote 111

Contrasting approaches to the Natuna issue

The two governments' different approaches to the Natuna issue led to different responses from the Islamists. Yudhoyono and Jokowi used different strategies to deal with China's maritime rights violation in the Natuna waters. During Yudhoyono's presidency, the South China Sea (SCS) issue escalated, while Chinese maritime rights violation in the Natuna waters was no less frequent than similar cases in the Jokowi era (Table 1).

Table 1. The incidents in the Natuna waters involving Chinese fishermen vessels (and China Coast Guard) during the Yudhoyono presidency

1 Kompas 2008.

2 Kompas 2009.

3 Hellendorf and Kellner Reference Hellendorff and Kellner2014.

4 Garuda Militer 2013.

Yudhoyono preferred to handle the matter behind the scene.Footnote 112 His government tended to keep secret from the public the incidents that could cause chaos and hurt relations with Beijing. Furthermore, Yudhoyono was also concerned about Indonesia's roles as an honest broker and a confidence builder in the region. Surprisingly, unlike Jokowi who is burdened with “China's pawn” stigma, Yudhoyono's soft attitude toward China's violation of Indonesia's maritime rights in the Natuna waters did not face any disapproval from the Islamists.

During Jokowi's presidency, every reported Chinese incursion to Indonesia waters, particularly in the Natuna waters, became a media headline. There is a sense of anxiety from the public that Indonesia's sovereign rights might be threatened by China, the superpower. This worry provides an opportunity for the opposition and dissent groups to politicize the issue and perpetuate the public perception that Jokowi takes a soft approach toward China.

Responding to China's maritime rights violation in the Natuna waters, FPI reprimanded the Jokowi government for being harsh toward Muslims yet tolerant toward China's maritime rights violation in Indonesia's waters.Footnote 113 PKS for instance, specifically directed the criticism at Defence Minister Prabowo Subianto – who was its political ally in the 2014 and 2019 presidential elections – for being too soft toward China in the Natuna issue.Footnote 114 Prabowo, the former leader of the opposition camp but currently a part of Jokowi government, has become a target of censure. The same criticism was also delivered by the 212 Alumni Brotherhood.Footnote 115 This Islamic group consists of those who organized and conducted the series of anti-Ahok rallies (Defending Islam Action) in 2016 and 2017 in Jakarta. The total members of this group are reportedly seven million.Footnote 116

In fact, in two reported China's maritime rights violation in the Natuna waters in 2016 and 2020, the government sent diplomatic protests to Beijing. President Jokowi, along with relevant senior officials, visited the Natuna after the incidents. In June 23, 2016, Jokowi boarded Indonesian navy warship KRI Imam Bonjol and headed toward Natuna and led a restricted meeting to send a strong signal to Beijing.Footnote 117 The same gesture was made following China's maritime rights violation to Indonesia's EEZ as Jokowi visited the Natuna Islands on January 8, 2020 to assert Indonesia's sovereignty and sovereign rights over the islands.Footnote 118 Moreover, Jokowi government sent two diplomatic notes to the UN Secretary General on May 26 and June 12, 2020 to disprove China's South China Sea claim by quoting the 2016 Tribunal Award which is fiercely rejected by Beijing.

This section has shown how the widely perceived threats of China's economic domination in Indonesia and maneuvers in the Natuna waters do not always lead the Islamists to exploit anti-China sentiment to challenge the government. This article argues that the Islamists' position vis-à-vis the ruling coalition has shaped their responses to perceived threats from China.

Although Yudhoyono coalition's accommodation did not prevent PKS from challenging the government's commitment to ACFTA, it had some impact on the extent to which the party is willing to spend resources to mobilize the opposition. The party was indeed among a few political parties which proposed the formation of a parliamentary working committee on the issue in question. However, it did not put in effort to establish the actual committee or to use other parliamentary mechanisms to effectively challenge the government. Becoming a non-ruling party under Jokowi's presidency, PKS voiced strong criticism against his government on the Chinese worker issue as expected. This time, nevertheless, the party went beyond parliamentary mechanisms by officially supporting the FPI-led Islamist mobilization against Ahok's alleged blasphemy.Footnote 119 This mobilization reportedly benefited from the party's skills and experiences as the first party in the country that carries out Internet-based electoral campaigns.Footnote 120 Through these maneuvers, the PKS sought to create a larger opposition against the government on the Chinese worker issue because the issue had already been extensively used to exploit anti-China/Chinese sentiment both in the cyberspace and the actual world.

Access to state infrastructures has also seemed to play a role in shaping the responses of Islamist extra-parliamentary forces to the perceived China's economic threat to Indonesia. Unlike the PKS, both FPI and HTI made no response to the economic threat posed by the influx of made-in-China products in the domestic Indonesian market. This phenomenon occurred during Yudhoyono's presidency which took an accommodative approach toward Islamist groups. Being denied access to government patronage under Jokowi's presidency, these Islamist groups took up the issue of the influx of foreign workers from China, even creating rumors and fabricating hoaxes around the issue, to promote strong anti-government narratives. Both groups further exploited this issue to fuel anti-Chinese sentiment and mobilized Muslim masses against Ahok's alleged blasphemy case. This kind of mass demonstration against perceived expansion of China's influence in Indonesia is something that was absent from the public scene during Yudhoyono's presidency.

Yudhoyono and Jokowi face the same challenge in defending maritime rights in the Natuna waters. The frequency and intensity of China's violation during the two governments are on the same level. However, Yudhoyono handled the Natuna issue behind the scenes and avoided straining relations with Beijing. On the contrary, Jokowi is openly against China's maritime rights violation. He has adopted a tougher stance against China since he recognized the 2016 Tribunal Award. Interestingly, Yudhoyono did not receive any censure from the Islamists; on the other hand, Jokowi's assertiveness does not prevent the Islamists from criticizing the government for being too soft to China.

The Islamists did not have a reason to delegitimate Yudhoyono's policy in the Natuna waters because they enjoy power sharing with the regime. No matter how resolute the Jokowi government is in defending Indonesia's maritime rights in the Natuna waters against China's EEZ violation, the Islamists always found a way to perpetuate the perception of Jokowi as a pawn of Beijing. When excluded from the government, Islamists tend to activate enmity toward China and portray the Jokowi government as pro-China in an attempt to delegitimate Jokowi before the Muslim population. As explained by Eko Sulistyo, the deputy of information and political communication section at the Presidential Office, there is a move to discredit the government by associating Jokowi's administration with China. This action will raise suspicion of the threat of communism and eventually lead to the perception that Jokowi is anti-Islam.Footnote 121

This article also argues the domestic political setting had seemingly further determined whether or not the narrative of China's economic domination would be used to fuel anti-China/Chinese sentiment. As described, initial media coverage on the issue of the massive influx of Chinese workers did not immediately trigger reactions from the Islamists. During the heated domestic political situation approaching the 2017 Jakarta gubernatorial election, the issue was under intense public scrutiny. During the election, the Islamists were among the actors of interest.

The electoral contest had prompted the Islamist forces to exploit the narrative of China's economic domination to serve their political interests. FPI exploited the issue and even spread hoaxes and conspiracy theories about it to further generate anti-China/Chinese sentiment against the ethnic-Chinese incumbent gubernatorial candidate following the accusation that he insulted Islam. In so doing, FPI sought to prevent Ahok – who had followed Jokowi's footsteps by taking a non-accommodative approach to the group – from staying in power. The group also intended to demonstrate to Ahok's rivals how powerful and useful its mobilization capacity had been in serving their interest during the electoral contest. As they – including the PKS and Gerindra whose candidate eventually won the election – aligned their interests with the FPI and further benefited from its actions against Ahok, the Islamist extra-parliamentary group then expected to reap the spoils of electoral victory. This kind of electoral setting failed to produce the same effect during the Yudhoyono's presidency as the Islamist forces did not compete for power, thanks to Yudhoyono's accommodation.

Conclusion

Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's governments adopt welcoming attitude toward economic cooperation with China. As described above, President Yudhoyono put no less effort compared to President Jokowi into engaging with China. Moreover, Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's governments dealt with serious challenges regarding Indonesia's economic exchanges with China. The former had to deal with the implementation of ACFTA causing the inflow of Chinese commodities in Indonesian market, which is harmful to small and medium businesses. The latter dealt with an influx of Chinese foreign workers as a consequence of Chinese investment. The increasing number of Chinese workers in Indonesia is perceived as threat that could deprive local Indonesians of job opportunities.

In the maritime domain, nevertheless, Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's governments take divergent approaches. Both governments face the same level of menace from China's violation of Indonesia's EEZ in the Natuna waters. Yudhoyono chose to deal with the matter behind the curtain lest it offends Beijing. On the contrary, Jokowi shows an assertive posture against China's violation by inspecting the Natuna Islands and recognizes the 2016 Tribunal Award that invalidates China's claim.

In all of the abovementioned cases, the Islamists' responses show strong criticism against Jokowi's China policies, while there was relatively little significant opposition against Yudhoyono's policies. The Islamists are consistent in labelling Jokowi's government as China's puppet yet show little critical attitude toward Yudhoyono's government. The difference in the Islamists' responses to Yudhoyono's and Jokowi's China policy can be attributed to the two governments' attitude toward the sharing of their power with the Islamist political forces. In the Yudhoyono era, the Islamists did not exploit the negative sentiment as they did not compete for power, thanks to Yudhoyono's accommodation. In the Jokowi era, since the Islamist forces are excluded from the ruling coalition, they forcefully activated the triangular animosities of CCC to delegitimate the perceived Chinese-accommodating, pro-China, and communist-tolerant regime.

The Islamists' main consideration in activating the negative sentiments against CCC is more about power sharing. In other words, their actions are primarily directed toward the ruling coalition. The position of the Indonesian Islamists regarding the country's relations with China is essentially pragmatic. This finding confirms the argument of Azyumardi Azra, a reputable Islamic scholar in Indonesia, who contends that the adoption of Islamic symbolism/formalism by political forces in post-Suharto era is predominantly driven by a “lust for power among Muslim political leader.”Footnote 122

It is important to note that the findings of this study do not necessarily imply that the Islamists within the ruling coalition would contribute positively to bilateral ties. The current government, which excludes and even coerces the Islamists is able to address domestic challenges. Sino-Indonesia relations under Jokowi is expanding more rapidly than during Yudhoyono's years though the later included the Islamists in the government and faced minimum resistance from them in managing China's policy. The status of Indonesia–China relations depends on the government capacity to navigate the bilateral cooperation.

The domestic contexts described above only highlight how the Islamists have the capacity to present unique challenges to Indonesia–China relations. The turbulence around the issues of China's foreign workers and China's violation of Indonesia's maritime rights in the Natuna waters voiced by the Islamists during Jokowi's first term does not suggest the Islamists' intention to disrupt the bilateral relations.

It is nevertheless beyond the scope of this article to put forward suggestions concerning Jakarta's approach in dealing with the Islamists challenge while managing its ties with Beijing. After all, the findings of this article only suggest that the Islamists are concerned about access to political power, not boycotting Indonesia–China relations. In other words, they might complicate the relations, but not without limitations. The future management of Indonesia–China relations must take this matter into consideration. China should view Indonesia's internal dynamic in constructive manner, more as navigable complexities than a formidable barrier to its efforts to build closer and wider interaction with the country. On the other hand, Indonesia should not expand its economic and strategic engagement with the rising power at the expense of its commitment to uphold democratic principles, including transparency, accountability, and public participation.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Associate Professor Li Mingjiang for allowing us to further develop the research presented in the workshop China's Relations with Neighbouring Countries: Domestic Politics Perspective in 2021. We are grateful to Rakhmat Syarip, Abdil Mughis Mudhoffir, and Yoes Chandra Kenawas for sharing their insights during the writing of this article and the anonymous reviewers of this journal for their insightful feedback.

Competing interest

None.

Footnotes

1 See Tjhin Reference Tjhin2012.

2 Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board 2017. China was ranked only eighth when Jokowi assumed power in 2014 and was not even in the top-ten list before that.

3 Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board 2020.

5 Anwar Reference Anwar2019, p. 155.

8 Yeremia Reference Yeremia2021, p. 325.

9 Fitriani Reference Fitriani2021, p. 200.

12 Chin and Tanasaldy Reference Chin and Tanasaldy2019; Hadiz and Robison Reference Hadiz and Robison2012; Mozingo Reference Mozingo2007; Sukma Reference Sukma1999. See also Sumaktoyo Reference Sumaktoyo2021 as well as Yu and Han Reference Yu and Han2023.

13 See Yuliantoro Reference Yuliantoro2020.

18 PKS was initially known as PK (Partai Keadilan, Justice Party).

19 PPP and PKB rely on NU constituents and PAN relies on Muhammadiyah constituents. PPP and PKB do not establish institutional connection with NU, but they are culturally linked, the same thing with PAN and Muhammadiyah.

20 Bubalo, Fealy and Mason Reference Bubalo, Fealy and Mason2008.

22 Mietzner and Muhtadi Reference Mietzner and Muhtadi2020.

25 Hadiz and Robison Reference Hadiz and Robison2012.

26 Kompas.com 2022.

30 The term “triangular threat” was introduced by Rizal Sukma. See Sukma Reference Sukma1999 and Sukma Reference Sukma2009. He argued that ethnic Chinese, the Communists, and China are interwoven constituting a threat perception, which prevented Jakarta from resuming its diplomatic ties with Beijing for 23 years (1967–1990).

31 Shiraishi Reference Shiraishi1990, p. 43.

33 Hadiz and Robison Reference Hadiz and Robison2012.

34 Feith Reference Feith2007, p. 481.

36 Sukma Reference Sukma2002b, p. 63.

37 Hadiz and Robison Reference Hadiz and Robison2012, p. 148.

38 Fossati, Hui and Negara Reference Fossati, Hui and Negara2017.

39 Apart from his Vice-Presidency, Kalla chaired DMI (Dewan Masjid Indonesia, the Council of Indonesian Mosques). Kalla is a businessman cum politician and a prominent Muslim figure. He was paired with Jokowi in the 2014 election to attract Muslim voters and compensate Jokowi's lack of Islamic credential.

40 Setijadi Reference Setijadi2017, p. 4.

42 CNBC Indonesia 2023.

43 These individuals, who were among the first Indonesia Marxists, criticized Tjokroaminoto's leadership for its cooperative and submissive attitude toward the colonial government. Having expressed more radical demands for social and economic justice, these Leftists managed to attract considerable support, thereby strengthening their influence within SI. See McVey Reference McVey1965, pp. 22–23.

44 Shiraishi Reference Shiraishi1990, p. 237.

45 Footnote ibid., p. 238.

48 Historia 2013, p. 44.

51 Hadiz and Robison Reference Hadiz and Robison2012, p. 143.

52 Kahin Reference Kahin2013, p. 433.

53 Madinier Reference Madinier2015, p. 106.

54 Roosa Reference Roosa2006, p. 4.

55 Roosa Reference Roosa2020, p. 80.

56 Footnote ibid., p. 236.

57 CNN Indonesia 2021.

58 Feith Reference Feith2007, p. 91; Agung Reference Agung1973, p. 202.

59 Mozingo Reference Mozingo2007, p. 100.

61 This raid specifically targeted thousands of PKI members and ethnic Chinese individuals.

62 Mozingo Reference Mozingo2007, p. 101.

65 LSI 2019.

66 After twenty months in office, President Abdurrahman Wahid was impeached by the parliament. He reportedly learned a valuable lesson: the more parties included in a ruling coalition, the higher the leader's chance to stay in power until the end of presidency (Sherlock Reference Sherlock, Aspinall, Mietzner and Tomsa2015). See also, Slater Reference Slater2004.

68 It should be noted, nevertheless, that Wiranto's mobilization of militias and vigilantes as a means to fight for power is not unprecedented in Indonesian politics. Under Suharto's authoritarian rule, militias were also mobilized to boost the ruling party's electoral prospect, and even institutionalized to bolster the legitimacy of those in power, as well as to serve the interests of politico-business elites in their quest of both power and capital (Mudhoffir Reference Mudhoffir2017). See also, Mietzner Reference Mietzner2008; Wilson Reference Wilson, Fealy and White2008.

70 van Bruinessen Reference van Bruinessen2013.

72 Osman Reference Osman2010a, p. 617.

76 This further allowed these two Islamist groups to have equal standing with the country's two largest Muslim organizations, Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah. See also, Mietzner and Muhtadi Reference Mietzner and Muhtadi2018; Nuraniyah Reference Nuraniyah, Power and Warburton2020.

77 Power Reference Power2018, p. 312.

80 Mietzner and Muhtadi Reference Mietzner and Muhtadi2018.

81 Mietzner and Muhtadi Reference Mietzner and Muhtadi2018.

86 Chandra and Lontoh Reference Chandra and Lontoh2011.

89 The authors thank Rakhmat Syarip for highlighting this point. See also, Kompas 2010c; Yunanto Reference Yunanto2009.

90 Kompas 2010a; Kompas 2010b; Kompas 2010d.

91 Juwana Reference Juwana2010; Kompas 2011.

92 Chandra and Lontoh Reference Chandra and Lontoh2011.

94 The authors thank Rakhmat Syarip for highlighting this point.

95 PKS Grogol 2019.

96 JPNN 2010.

97 Syarip Reference Syarip2020, pp. 416–17.

98 Suryadinata Reference Suryadinata2017; Tempo 2015.

103 Suryadinata Reference Suryadinata2017.

104 Tempo 2017.

105 Islam Cyber Center 2016; Tempo 2017.

106 Tribun Rakyat 2016.

107 Portal-Islam 2016.

108 Tempo 2017.

109 PKS 2016a.

110 Tempo 2017.

112 Suryadinata Reference Suryadinata2016.

113 CNN Indonesia 2020a.

114 CNBC Indonesia 2020.

115 CNN Indonesia 2020b.

116 CNN Indonesia 2019.

118 The Jakarta Post 2020.

119 PKS 2016b.

References

Agung, I.A.A.G. (1973). Twenty Years Indonesia Foreign Policy 1945–1965. Mouton: The Hague.Google Scholar
Anwar, D.F. (2019). Indonesia-China relations: Coming full circle? Southeast Asian Affairs 2019, 145161. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/722678.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Azra, A. (2004). Political Islam in post-Soeharto Indonesia. In Hooker, V. and Saikal, A. (eds), Islamic Perspectives on the New Millennium. Singapore: ISEAS Publishing, pp. 133149.Google Scholar
Baswedan, A.R. (2004). Political Islam in Indonesia: Present and future trajectory. Asian Survey 44(5), 669690. https://doi.org/10.1525/as.2004.44.5.669.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourchier, D.M. (2019). Two decades of ideological contestation in Indonesia: From democratic cosmopolitanism to religious nationalism. Journal of Contemporary Asia 49(5), 713733. https://doi.org/10.1080/00472336.2019.1590620.Google Scholar
Bubalo, A., Fealy, G. and Mason, W. (2008). Zealous Democrats: Islamism and Democracy in Egypt, Indonesia And Turkey. 17 October 2008. Available at https://www.lowyinstitute.org/publications/zealous-democrats-islamism-democracy-egypt-indonesia-turkey.Google Scholar
Bush, R. (2015). Religious politics and minority rights during the Yudhoyono presidency. In Aspinall, E., Mietzner, M. and Tomsa, D. (eds), The Yudhoyono Presidency: Indonesia's Decade of Stability and Stagnation. Singapore: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, pp. 239257.Google Scholar
Cesari, J. (2018). What Is Political Islam? Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers.Google Scholar
Chandra, A. and Lontoh, L.A. (2011). Indonesia-China Trade Relations: The Deepening of Economic Integration Amid Uncertainty? Trade Knowledge Network. International Institute for Sustainable Development. 7 September 2011. Available at https://www.iisd.org/system/files/publications/indonesia_china_relations.pdf.Google Scholar
Chin, J. and Tanasaldy, T. (2019). The ethnic Chinese in Indonesia and Malaysia: The challenge of political Islam. Asian Survey 59(6), 959977. https://doi.org/10.1525/as.2019.59.6.959.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
CNBC Indonesia (2020). PKS: Prabowo Lembek dan Santai-santai Sikapi Masalah di Natuna [Prabowo is being soft and relaxed in dealing with the Natuna issues]. 4 January 2020. Available at https://www.cnbcindonesia.com/news/20200104180349-4-127677/pks-prabowo-lembek-santai-santai-sikapi-masalah-di-natuna.Google Scholar
CNBC Indonesia (2023). JK Ungkap Alasan Ekonomi RI ‘Dijajah’ China [Jusuf Kalla elaborates why Indonesian Economy is ‘ruled’ by the Chinese]. 14 May 2023. Available at https://www.cnbcindonesia.com/news/20230514060840-4-437090/jk-ungkap-alasan-ekonomi-ri-dijajah-china.Google Scholar
CNN Indonesia (2019). Ahok Sang Pemicu Rentetan Aksi Bela Islam dan Nama Besar 212 [Ahok the man who sparked the series of Defending Islam rallies and raised the popularity of 212]. 22 January 2019. Available at https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20190115135955-32-360979/ahok-sang-pemicu-rentetan-aksi-bela-islam-dan-nama-besar-212/1.Google Scholar
CNN Indonesia (2020a). FPI Kritik 2 Menteri soal Natuna: Tak Seganas ke Umat Islam [FPI criticizes two ministers on Natuna: Unlike towards Muslims, they are not harsh towards China]. 4 January 2020. Available at https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20200104120745-20-462352/fpi-kritik-2-menteri-soal-natuna-tak-seganas-ke-umat-islam.Google Scholar
CNN Indonesia (2020b). Gara-gara Natuna PA 212 Minta Jokowi Copot Menhan Prabowo [Due to Natuna issue, the Brotherhood of 2 December Alumnae demands Jokowi to discharge Prabowo]. 8 January 2020. Available at https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20200108085332-32-463349/gara-gara-natuna-pa-212-minta-jokowi-copot-menhan-prabowo.Google Scholar
CNN Indonesia (2021). Survei: 46, 6 Persen Warga Percaya PKI Bangkit di RI [Survey: 46.6 Percent of the Public Believes that PKI Has Reemerged in Indonesia]. 30 September 2021. Available at https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20210930120301-20-701458/survei-466-persen-warga-percaya-pki-bangkit-di-ri.Google Scholar
Dwicahyo, S. (2022). Dalil Penghalau Sang Batil: Kampanye Antikomunime oleh Partai Politik Islam di Indonesia 1950an-1960an [Proposition to Resist Evil: Anticommunism Campaign of Islamic Political Parties in Indonesia, 1950s-1960s’]. Bangkalan: Penerbit Terang.Google Scholar
Farneubun, P.K. (2017). Explaining Yudhoyono's Decision to Develop a Strategic Partnership with China. Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Social and Political Sciences (ICSPS 2017). https://doi.org/10.2991/icsps-17.2018.70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fauzi, G. (2015). Gerindra: Buruh Indonesia jangan Terjajah di Negeri Sendiri [Gerindra: Indonesian workers must not be oppressed in their own land]. CNN Indonesia, 1 September 2015. Available at https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20150901103656-32-75817/gerindra-buruh-indonesia-jangan-terjajah-di-negeri-sendiri/.Google Scholar
Fealy, G. and White, S. (2008). Expressing Islam: Religious Life and Politics in Indonesia. Singapore: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feith, H. (2007). The Decline of Constitutional Democracy in Indonesia. Jakarta: Equinox Publishing.Google Scholar
Fitriani, E. (2021). Linking the impacts of perception, domestic politics, economic engagements, and the international environment on bilateral relations between Indonesia and China in the onset of the 21st century. Journal of Contemporary East Asia Studies 10, 183202. https://doi.org/10.1080/24761028.2021.1955437.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fossati, D., Hui, Y.-F. and Negara, S.D. (2017). The Indonesia National Survey Project: Economy, Society and Politics. Singapore: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fuller, G.E. (2003). The Future of Political Islam: Its Dilemmas and Options. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garuda Militer (2013). Kisah Gesekan di Laut Natuna [The details of friction in the Natuna Sea]. 26 March 2013. Available at https://garudamiliter.blogspot.com/2013/09/kisah-gesekan-di-laut-natuna.html.Google Scholar
Gultom, A. (2017). Istana: Hoax 10 Juta Buruh China Pra Kondisi untuk Mencap Pemerintah Anti Islam [Palace: The dissemination of 10 million workers from China hoax is meant to label the government anti-Islam]. RMOL.ID, 1 May 2017. Available at https://politik.rmol.id/read/2017/05/01/289682/Istana:-Hoax-10-Juta-Buruh-China-Pra-Kondisi-Untuk-Mencap-Pemerintah-Anti-Islam-.Google Scholar
Hadi, S. (2008). Menyikapi kebangkitan China [Responding to the rise of China]. Kompas, 2 September 2008.Google Scholar
Hadiz, V.R. (2017). Behind Indonesia's illiberal turn. New Mandala, 20 October 2017.Google Scholar
Hadiz, V.R. and Robison, R. (2012). Political economy and Islamic politics: Insights from the Indonesian case. New Political Economy 17(2), 137155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamdani, T. (2018). Menaker: TKA China di RI sampai 2017 Cuma 24800 orang [Minister of Manpower: The number of workers from China per 2017 is only 24800]. detikFinance, 23 April 2018. Available at https://finance.detik.com/berita-ekonomi-bisnis/d-3986414/menaker-tka-china-di-ri-sampai-2017-cuma-24800-orang.Google Scholar
Hasan, N. (2005). September 11 and Islamic militancy in post-new order Indonesia. In Nathan, K.S. and Kamali, M.H. (eds), Islam in Southeast Asia: Political Society and Strategic Challenge for the 21st Century. Singapore: ISEAS, pp. 301324.Google Scholar
Hellendorff, B. and Kellner, T. (2014). Indonesia: A bigger role in the South China Sea? The Diplomat, 9 July 2014. Available at https://thediplomat.com/2014/07/indonesia-a-bigger-role-in-the-south-china-sea/.Google Scholar
Historia (2013). Riwayat Masyumi Menuju Sunyi [Masyumi's route to hollowness]. 19 February 2013.Google Scholar
Iman, M.S. (2017). Menyikapi Hoax [Dealing with hoax], PKS, 27 January 2017. Available at https://pks.id/content/menyikapi-hoax.Google Scholar
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board (2017). Domestic and foreign direct investment realization in quarter IV and January–December 2016. Available at https://www.bkpm.go.id/en/publication/press-release/readmore/436901/22701 (accessed 12 September 2021).Google Scholar
Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board (2020). Domestic and foreign direct investment realization in quarter IV 2019. Available at https://www.bkpm.go.id/en/publication/press-release/readmore/2378701/45501 (accessed 12 September 2021).Google Scholar
Islam Cyber Center (2016). Selamat Datang China Komunis [Welcome, Communist China]. 9 December 2016. Available at https://islamcybercenter.blogspot.com/2016/12/datang-china-komunis.html.Google Scholar
The Jakarta Post (2020). Jokowi's Visit to Natuna Asserts Jakarta's “Serious Attention” to Sovereignty: Minister. 8 January 2020. Available at https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/01/08/jokowis-visit-to-natuna-asserts-jakartas-serious-attention-to-sovereignty-minister.html.Google Scholar
Jannah, S.M. (2018). Beda Aturan Tenaga Kerja Asing Era Jokowi dan SBY [The differences between Jokowi's and Yudhoyono's regulations on foreign workers]. detikFinance, 24 April 2018. Available at https://finance.detik.com/berita-ekonomi-bisnis/d-3987865/beda-aturan-tenaga-kerja-asing-era-jokowi-dan-sby.Google Scholar
JPNN (2010). Panja ACFTA Alami “Deadlock” [ACFTA Working Group faces deadlock]. 16 February 2010. Available at https://www.jpnn.com/news/panja-acfta-alami-deadlock.Google Scholar
Juwana, H. (2010). Mungkinkah Tunda ACFTA? [Is it possible to postpone the ACFTA?]. Kompas, 10 February 2010.Google Scholar
Kahin, G.M. (2013). Nasionalisme & Revolusi Indonesia. Depok: Komunitas Bambu.Google Scholar
Kompas (2008). Pencurian Ikan: Kapal Asing yang Tertangkap Ternyata Gunakan “Trawl” dan Alat Modern [Fish thievery: Foreign ships that got caught turns out to be using “trawl” and modern tools]. 17 April 2008, pp. 22.Google Scholar
Kompas (2009). Kilas Ekonomi: Kapal pukat harimau China ditangkap [Economic news: Chinese trawlers arrested]. 23 June 2009, p. 18.Google Scholar
Kompas (2010a). Cikapundung: 1.250 perajin kaus terancam menganggur [Cikapundung: 1,250 t-shirt craftsmen are threatened with unemployment]. 13 January 2010.Google Scholar
Kompas (2010b). Cikapundung: pekerja tekstil Jabar tolak ACFTA [Cikapundung: West Java textile worker rejects ACFTA]. 5 January 2010.Google Scholar
Kompas (2010c). Dampak ACFTA: Defisit perdagangan membengkak [The impact of ACFTA: Rising trade deficit]. 20 April 2010.Google Scholar
Kompas (2010d). Menko Kesra khawatirkan FTA [Coordinating Minister of People's Welfare worries about the FTA]. 3 January 2010.Google Scholar
Kompas (2011). Penetrasi produk China [Chinese product penetration]. 7 April 2011.Google Scholar
Kompas.com (2022). SMRC: PDIP dan PKS Kecil Kemungkinan Berkoalisi di Tingkat Nasional [Saiful Mujani Research Centre: PDIP and PKS have low possibility to cooperate on the national level], Kompas.com, 7 April 2022. Available at https://nasional.kompas.com/read/2022/04/07/15400031/smrc-pdi-p-dan-pks-kecil-kemungkinan-berkoalisi-di-tingkat-nasional.Google Scholar
Kwok, Y. (2016). Indonesian President Jokowi visits the Natuna Islands to send a strong signal to China. TIME, 23 June 2016. Available at https://time.com/4379401/indonesia-china-jokowi-natuna-sovereignty-maritime-fishing-dispute/.Google Scholar
Laksmana, E.A. (2011). Variations on a theme: Dimensions of ambivalence in Indonesia-China relations. Harvard Asia Quarterly 13(1), 2431.Google Scholar
Lembaga Survei Indonesia (LSI) (2019). Persepsi Publik terhadap Negara-Negara paling Berpengaruh di Asia: Update Temuan Survei Nasional 10–15 Juli 2019 [Public perception on the most influential countries in Asia: Updated National Survey 10–15 July 2019].Google Scholar
Lim, M. (2017). Freedom to hate: Social media, algorithmic enclaves, and the rise of tribal nationalism in Indonesia. Critical Asian Studies 49(3), 411427. https://doi.org/10.1080/14672715.2017.1341188.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liow, J.C. (2015). The Arab Spring and Islamist Activism in Southeast Asia: Much ado about nothing?. August 2015. Available at https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Southeast-Asia_Liow-FINALE.pdf.Google Scholar
Madinier, R. (2015). Islam and Politics in Indonesia: The Masyumi Party between Democracy and Integralism. Singapore: National University of Singapore.Google Scholar
McGregor, K. (2009). A reassessment of the significance of the 1948 Madiun uprising to the Cold War in Indonesia. Kajian Malaysia 27(1), 85119. http://web.usm.my/km/27%281&2%29,2009/KM%20SE-%20XXVI%20NO%201%20&%202%20ART%204%20%2885-119%29.pdf.Google Scholar
McVey, R. (1965). The Rise of Indonesian Communism. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mietzner, M. (2008). Military Politics, Islam, and the State in Indonesia: From Turbulent Transition to Democratic Consolidation. Singapore: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mietzner, M. (2018). Fighting illiberalism with illiberalism: Islamist populism and democratic deconsolidation in Indonesia. Pacific Affairs 91(2), 261282. https://doi.org/10.5509/2018912261.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mietzner, M. and Muhtadi, B. (2018). Explaining the 2016 Islamist mobilisation in Indonesia: Religious intolerance, militant groups and the politics of accommodation. Asian Studies Review 42(3), 479497. https://doi.org/10.1080/10357823.2018.1473335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mietzner, M. and Muhtadi, B. (2020). The myth of pluralism: Nahdlatul Ulama and the politics of religious tolerance in Indonesia. Contemporary Southeast Asia 42(1), 5884. https://doi.org/10.1355/cs42-1c.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mozingo, D. (2007). Chinese Policy toward Indonesia 1949–1967. Singapore: Equinox Publishing.Google Scholar
Mudhoffir, A.M. (2017). Islamic militias and capitalist development in post-authoritarian Indonesia. Journal of Contemporary Asia 47(4), 495514. https://doi.org/10.1080/00472336.2017.1336564.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Muhtadi, B. (2015). Jokowi's first year: A weak president caught between reform and oligarchic politics. Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies 51(3), 349368. https://doi.org/10.1080/00074918.2015.1110684.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nuraniyah, N. (2020). Divided Muslims: Militant pluralism, polarisation, and democratic backsliding. In Power, T. and Warburton, E. (eds), Democracy in Indonesia: From Stagnation to Regression?. Singapore: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, pp. 81100.Google Scholar
Osman, M.M.N. (2010a). Reviving the caliphate in the Nusantara: Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia's mobilization strategy and its impact in Indonesia. Terrorism and Political Violence 22(4), 601622. https://doi.org/10.1080/09546553.2010.496317.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osman, M.M.N. (2010b). The transnational network of Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia. South East Asia Research 18(4), 735755. https://doi.org/10.5367/sear.2010.0018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
PKS (2016a). Jangan Serahkan Jutaan Lapangan Kerja kepada Pekerja Tiongkok [Don't give millions of jobs to Chinese workers]. 20 July 2016. Available at https://pks.id/content/jangan-serahkan-jutaan-lapangan-kerja-kepada-pekerja-tiongkok.Google Scholar
PKS (2016b). Pernyataan Sikap PKS terhadap Aksi Bela Islam III [Statement on PKS's stance towards Defending Islam rallies III]. 20 November 2016. Available at https://pks.id/content/pernyataan-sikap-pks-terhadap-aksi-bela-islam-iii.Google Scholar
PKS Grogol (2019). Pro-Pasar, PKS Tuding Mari Elka Pangestu Jalan Sendiri [Pro-Market, Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) accuses Mari Elka Pangestu of walking by herself]. 28 December 2019. Available at http://pks-grogol.blogspot.com/2009/12/pro-pasar-pks-tuding-mari-elka-pangestu.html.Google Scholar
Portal-Islam (2016). Bahaya China Komunis [The Peril of Communist China]. 22 December 2016. Available at https://www.portal-islam.id/2016/12/bahaya-china-komunis-oleh-habib-rizieq.html.Google Scholar
Power, T.P. (2018). Jokowi's authoritarian turn and Indonesia's democratic decline. Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies 54(3), 307338. https://doi.org/10.1080/00074918.2018.1549918.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raditio, K.H. and Yeremia, A.E. (2022). The limits of populism: SBY and Jokowi's strategies on the South China Sea issue. In Peng, N. and Ngeow, C. (eds), Populism, Nationalism and South China Sea Dispute: Chinese and Southeast Asian Perspectives. Singapore: Springer, pp. 79109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roosa, J. (2006). Pretext for Mass Murder: The September 30th Movement and Suharto's Coup d'État in Indonesia. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Roosa, J. (2020). Buried Histories: The Anticommunist Aassacres of 1965–1966 in Indonesia. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Setijadi, C. (2017). Chinese Indonesians in the eyes of the Pribumi Public. ISEAS Perspective 73, 112. https://www.iseas.edu.sg/images/pdf/ISEAS_Perspective_2017_73.pdf.Google Scholar
Setuningsih, N. (2017). “Kalla Defends Comment about Chinese Wealth After Criticism”, Jakarta Globe, 15 May 2017. Available at https://jakartaglobe.id/news/kalla-defends-comment-about-chinese-wealth-after-criticism/.Google Scholar
Sherlock, S. (2015). A balancing act: Relations between state institutions under Yudhoyono. In Aspinall, E., Mietzner, M. and Tomsa, D. (eds), The Yudhoyono Presidency: Indonesia's Decade of Stability and Stagnation. Singapore: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, pp. 93113.Google Scholar
Shiraishi, T. (1990). An Age in Motion: Popular Radicalism in Java, 1912–1926. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Slater, D. (2004). Indonesia's accountability trap: Party cartels and presidential power after democratic transition. Indonesia 78, 6192. https://www.jstor.org/stable/3351288.Google Scholar
Sukma, R. (1999). Indonesia and China: The Politics of a Troubled Relationship. London: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203165355.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sukma, R. (2002a). Indonesia's perceptions of China: The domestic bases of persistent ambiguity. In Yee, H.S. and Storey, I. (eds), The China Threat: Perceptions, Myth and Reality. London: Routledge, pp. 183207.Google Scholar
Sukma, R. (2002b). Islam in Indonesian Foreign Policy: Domestic Weakness and the Dilemma of Dual Identity. London: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203634202.Google Scholar
Sukma, R. (2009). Indonesia-China relations: The politics of re-engagement. Asian Survey 49(4), 591608. https://doi.org/10.1525/as.2009.49.4.591.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sumaktoyo, N.G. (2021). Ethnic and religious sentiments in Indonesian politics: Evidence from the 2017 Jakarta gubernatorial election. Journal of East Asian Studies 21(1), 141164. https://doi.org/10.1017/jea.2020.35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suryadinata, L. (1977). Pribumi Indonesians, the Chinese Minority, and China: A Study of Perception and Policies. Kuala Lumpur: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Suryadinata, L. (2016). Did the Natuna incident shake Indonesia-China relations? ISEAS Perspective 19, 18.Google Scholar
Suryadinata, L. (2017). The Growing “Strategic Partnership” between Indonesia and China Faces Difficult Challenges. Singapore: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Syarip, R. (2020). Defending foreign policy at home: Indonesia and the ASEAN-based free trade agreements. Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs 39(3), 405427. https://doi.org/10.1177/1868103420935556.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tanuwidjaja, S. (2010). Political Islam and Islamic parties in Indonesia: Critically assessing the evidence of Islam's political decline. Contemporary Southeast Asia: A Journal of International and Strategic Affairs 32(1), 2949. muse.jhu.edu/article/380023.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tempo (2007). Serbuan Made-in China [The Attack of “Made-In-China”]. 19 February 2007.Google Scholar
Tempo (2015). Selamat Datang Buruh China [Welcome, Chinese Workers]. 31 August 2015.Google Scholar
Tempo (2017). Wabah Hoax [The Hoax Plague]. 2 January 2017.Google Scholar
Tjhin, C.S. (2012). Indonesia's relations with China: Productive and pragmatic, but not yet a strategic partnership. China Report 48(3), 303315. https://doi.org/10.1177/0009445512462303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tribun Rakyat (2016). Komentar Miring Tentang Proyek Reklamasi [Negative comments about the reclamation project]. 30 September 2016. Available at https://tribunrakyat.com/2510/30/09/2016/komentar-miring-tentang-proyek-reklamasi.html.Google Scholar
van Bruinessen, M. (2013). Contemporary Developments in Indonesian Islam: Explaining the “Conservative Turn”. Singapore: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ward, K. (2009). Non-violent extremists? Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia. Australian Journal of International Affairs 63(2), 149164. https://doi.org/10.1080/10357710902895103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waskita, U.J. (2004). Banjir Produk Konsumsi dari Cina [The overflow of Chinese consumption products]. Kompas, 26 January 2004.Google Scholar
Wibowo, I. (2004). Murahnya Produk dari China [The cheapness of Chinese products]. Kompas, 2 May 2004.Google Scholar
Wibowo, I. (2006). Mengapa China? [Why China?]. Kompas, 16 March 2006.Google Scholar
Wilson, I. (2008). “As long as it's halal”: Islamic preman in Jakarta. In Fealy, G. and White, S. (eds), Expressing Islam: Religious Life and Politics in Indonesia. Singapore: ISEAS Publishing, pp. 192210.Google Scholar
Wilson, I. (2014). Morality racketeering: Vigilantism and populist Islamic militancy in Indonesia. In Teik, K.B., Hadiz, V.R. and Nakanishi, Y. (eds), Between Dissent and Power. London: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 248274. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137408808_12.Google Scholar
Wiwoho, B. (2018). Menaker Sebut TKA China Sudah Marak sejak Era SBY [Ministry of Manpower said many workers from China have been here since Yudhoyono era]. CNN Indonesia, 28 April 2018. Available at https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20180428180234-20-294380/menaker-sebut-tka-china-sudah-marak-sejak-era-sby.Google Scholar
Yeremia, A.E. (2021). Explaining Indonesia's constrained engagement with the belt and road initiative: Balancing developmentalism against nationalism and Islamism. Asian Perspective 45(2), 325347. https://doi.org/10.1353/apr.2021.0003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yu, T.J. and Han, E. (2023). Indonesia's relations with China in the age of COVID-19. Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs 42(1), 4562. https://doi.org/10.1177/18681034221149751.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yuliantoro, N.R. (2020). The 2019 presidential election and the BRI's prospects in Indonesia. China Quarterly of International Strategic Studies 6(1), 79102. https://doi.org/10.1142/S2377740020500050.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yunanto, A. (2009). Januari 2010: China “Serbu” Indonesia [January 2010: China “attacked” Indonesia]. Kompas, 11 December 2009.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. The incidents in the Natuna waters involving Chinese fishermen vessels (and China Coast Guard) during the Yudhoyono presidency