Agencies, Sydney, Australia – Australia and Indonesia cemented a landmark new defence pact Tuesday, pledging closer cooperation in the Asia-Pacific region as a new leader prepares to take over in Jakarta.
The pact – which includes provisions for joint drills and deployments to each country – was unveiled during defence minister and president-elect Prabowo Subianto's visit to Canberra. Prabowo takes the reins of Indonesia on October 20.
Speaking after meeting Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Prabowo said the defence deal represented a "very good outcome" that would be "beneficial to both our countries in the future".
Aside from defence, Prabowo expressed a wish for Australian cooperation on the economy, agriculture, food security and curbing international drug trafficking.
"We would like to see more Australian participation in our economy," Prabowo told reporters at Australia's Parliament House. "I am determined to continue this good neighbour relationship... Australia plays a very important role for us."
Since being elected in February, the ex-special forces commander has also visited China and Japan, displaying a keener interest in foreign affairs than incumbent Joko "Jokowi" Widodo.
During Jokowi's decade-long tenure, he never attended the UN general assembly in New York, rarely spoke a foreign language and was regularly chided for taking little interest in foreign affairs.
On Tuesday, Prabowo said he wanted to follow the "general policies" of his predecessor, but also forge closer ties with Canberra.
"Prabowo is much more interested in international affairs," said Greg Raymond, a foreign affairs expert from the Australian National University.
"He will look to bring Indonesia into international issues. He's very confident, he's very knowledgeable, and he's very comfortable in international settings."
Gunboats and diplomacy
Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles said the defence pact was one of the most significant agreements ever negotiated between the two nations.
Australia also hopes to cement close ties as the region is riven by rivalry between China and the United States.
Separated by less than 300 kilometres (186 miles) at their closest point, Indonesia and Australia have charted different courses while navigating those geopolitical upheavals.
Canberra has drawn ever nearer to longtime ally the United States, bolstering its military in an attempt to deter the might of a rising China.
Jakarta has meanwhile walked a more neutral path, wary of drawing too close to Washington and far less willing to needle Beijing.
The defence agreement has been in train since February last year, but the details remain under wraps for now.
Analysts anticipate maritime cooperation will be a focal point – a hot topic given unresolved tensions in the South China Sea.
"It's very much about the practical arrangements, making military exercises and cooperation easier," Raymond told AFP.
"It might also cover logistics. So the travelling country can use the other's facilities, ammunition, logistics support and similar things."
Australia and Indonesia share the world's longest maritime boundary and already collaborate on a number of issues, including security, people-trafficking and drug smuggling.
Prabowo said at a forum last November that Indonesia was committed to its policy of non-alignment and would keep good ties with both China and the United States.
Fraught trade
Trade between Australia and Indonesia meanwhile remains far trickier terrain.
A flood of cheap Indonesian nickel threatens to crash international prices and all-but wipe out a once-profitable Australian sector.
Indonesia and Australia are the world's two biggest thermal coal exporters, and both are anxious to shed their economic reliance on polluting fossil fuels.
While nickel remains a point of tension, there are other areas – such as electric vehicle manufacturing – where opportunities abound.