A More Confident or Overconfident Foreign Policy Actor?
from TIMOR-LESTE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
Summary
The year 2011 in Timor-Leste was marked by the national leadership's growing confidence in the governance of the country's challenging institutional and political affairs. This confidence, which is essentially about the ability to demonstrate sovereign state identity, has developed against a background of compounding tensions between the Gusmão-led Parliamentary Majority Alliance (AMP) government and the UN mission (United Nations Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste, UNMIT) and the flow of increasing offshore petroleum revenues over the past few years. It has been manifest in the emphasis Timorese leaders placed on different platforms throughout 2011 on three key policy objectives prioritized in the context of a broader nation-building process: phasing out the foreign military and civilian presence; joining ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations); and setting a model for “post-conflict” development. A most recent example of this approach can be noted in Prime Minister Xanana Gusmão's speech in September before the UN General Assembly, where he proudly cited the national petroleum fund's $8.9 billion balance to “transform Timor-Leste from a low income country to an upper middle income country” over the next two decades by maintaining the recent high economic growth rates.
Indeed, Timorese political leaders, enabled by a bourgeoning oil and gas wealth, have already acted in considerable autonomy from the UN mandate. This is evident in the fields of justice and security sector reform, where the Gusmão government has largely ignored UNMIT's advice on clearly delineating the roles of the military and the police, and establishing accountability for the crimes committed during the 2006 violence. Already marginalized from the political process, the UN mission is planning to pull out following the completion of the presidential and parliamentary polls in 2012. The drawdown of foreign troops and civilian support staff signifies the political leadership's claim for Timor-Leste's transition from conflict to development. It has also constituted a significant component of the government's efforts to allay the objection of some ASEAN members to the admission of their small and still institutionally weak state.
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- Southeast Asian Affairs 2012 , pp. 341 - 358Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2012