Wiranto Emerging as Serious Presidential Contender
Indonesian Armed Forces (ABRI) commander, General Wiranto, may end up as Indonesia's ruling Golkar party's presidential nominee, according to Golkar deputy chairman Marzuki Darusman. It has been widely reported that current president B.J. Habibie has Golkar's nomination effectively wrapped up. But Darusman, who is also leader of the Golkar faction in parliament and chairman of the Golkar Leaders' Council, said that Golkar was deeply divided over Habibie and other potential nominees, and could disintegrate unless it finds a consensus candidate. "There is only one candidate who has wide support and that is, ironically, Wiranto," said Darusman.
Darusman said Wiranto has a good working relationship with major opposition parties and student groups. "Wiranto is a good person, easy to get along with, and is well connected, including his connections with [former] president Suharto," said Darusman. Golkar does not plan to officially select its presidential candidate until after the June 7 parliamentary elections, and the president will not be chosen by parliament until November. But in his statements in support of Wiranto, Darusman identified the key power brokers that will help determine who becomes Indonesia's next president -- opposition leaders, student demonstrators, and Suharto.
Neither the once almighty and now largely discredited Golkar nor the host of opposition parties that sprang up in the wake of Suharto's resignation will be able to muster a ruling majority. Golkar is optimistically expecting around 20 percent of the vote. Megawati Sukarnoputri's PDI-Struggle party and Amien Rais' largely Moslem National Mandate Party are seen as the biggest opposition contenders, though it is questionable as to whether they can muster as much support as Golkar. This means that, whatever the outcome of the parliamentary election, the president will have to have cross-party appeal.
Wiranto would seem at first to be an odd choice, since he heads ABRI, long seen as a tool of oppression in the hands of Suharto. But Wiranto has been levelheaded and apparently fair and honest in his handling of ABRI since Suharto's departure, and with violence currently ripping the country apart, Indonesians may soon become sentimental for the unity and stability ABRI once represented and guaranteed. Moreover, Wiranto responded quickly to Abdurrahman Wahid's call last year for a dialogue of reconciliation among Indonesia's elites and has maintained steady contact with Wahid since then. Wahid is head of Indonesia's largest Moslem organization, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), and is the presidential candidate for his own National Awakening Party. He is also likely to be one of the main power broker between the June and November elections.
If Wiranto does, in fact, enjoy good relations with the legitimate student organizations, he could only boost his credibility in keeping mass unrest in Indonesia's major cities in check. However, while the legitimate student organizations provide the masses in the street, much of the violence has apparently been sparked by instigators, tools of the "Third Force" many see trying to destabilize the country and undermine the elections. From the mass murders in Eastern and Western Java, to the arming of opponents of an independent East Timor, from the riots that led to Suharto's resignation and the murders of student demonstrators last fall, to the religious and ethnic feuds across Indonesia, there is the unshakeable taint of manipulation and instigation. Most signs point to Suharto, and his supporters in the military, as the force behind the Third Force.
If Suharto is indeed behind much, or even some, of the chaos sweeping Indonesia, he is clearly a major potential power broker before, during, and after the upcoming elections. His legacy taints all Golkar candidates, though Habibie is seen by many as his heir apparent. Still, Habibie is apparently damned from both sides when it comes to Suharto, as Suharto's lawyers have threatened to expose Habibie for corruption in retaliation for Habibie's investigation and trial of Suharto's relatives. Suharto can certainly undermine Habibie. If he is behind the Third Force, he can disrupt the elections. He may also be able to give Wiranto substantial direct support, should he choose to do so. So Darusman, though reputedly not a Habibie fan, may ahve a legitimate point -- with the support of students, Wahid, and Suharto, Wiranto may have what it takes not only to be Golkar's candidate, but to be Indonesia's next president.
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