Pengaturan

Gambar

Lainnya

Tentang KASKUS

Pusat Bantuan

Hubungi Kami

KASKUS Plus

© 2024 KASKUS, PT Darta Media Indonesia. All rights reserved

  • Beranda
  • ...
  • Militer
  • Pertukaran Mata-mata antara BIN dengan ASIO (Australia)

westside20Avatar border
TS
westside20
Pertukaran Mata-mata antara BIN dengan ASIO (Australia)
ASIO to swap spies with Indonesia to combat ISIS


Gedung ASIO

Australia will exchange spies with Indonesia in a bid to confront the growing scourge of Islamic State-inspired terrorism in the region.

As security agencies from both countries grapple with the threat of Islamist terrorism, which is ­resurgent in Indonesia, Malaysia and parts of The Philippines, spy agencies from Indonesia and Australia have begun quietly exchanging intelligence officers in a bid to deepen co-operation. (Badan Mata-mata Indonesia dan Australia sudah memulai pertukaran perwira2 intelijen secara diam-diam untuk memperdalam kerjasama)

The program, which builds on years of close co-operation ­between Indonesian and Australia security officials, reflects a growing belief in both countries that the security environment in Southeast Asia has deteriorated rapidly, thanks largely to the rise of Islamic State.

In January, ISIS-inspired militants struck in Jakarta in a deadly, if inept, attack that raged for hours, claiming four civilian lives.

Despite the deaths, the attack was largely a failure. However, it focused the minds of security officials in Jakarta and Canberra, who were alarmed at the ease with which the terrorists struck the centre of Indonesia’s capital. It came on the heels of a string of failed plots in Malaysia, some ­involving members of the police and military.

It is understood Jakarta officials have been vocal about their need for support combating ISIS, which has revitalised Indonesia’s splintered Islamist groups, including some remnants of Jemaah ­Islamiah, the terror group behind the 2002 Bali bombings, which killed 88 Australians among 202 fatalities.

The exchange program will ­involve officers from ASIO, Australia’s domestic spy agency, and Badan Intelijen Negara, or BIN, Indonesia’s national intelligence service. (Program pertukaran ini akan diikuti perwira-perwira dari badan mata-mata ASIO dan BIN)

Each agency will second officers from the other for several months to enhance information flows and mutual understanding of the services’ operations. (Perwira2 dari BIN dan ASIO akan ditukar selama beberapa bulan untuk memantapkan alur informasi dan pengertian yang sama dalam operasi-operasi intelijen)

Indonesian national police and the Australian Federal Police have a fruitful history of co-operation, back to the 2002 Bali bombings ­aftermath, when AFP provided valuable technical and forensic support to the investigation.

However, co-operation between the spy services has been more fraught. In November 2013, files leaked by the former US ­National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden showed that Australia’s Defence Signals Directorate appeared to have bugged the phones of Kristiani Herawati, wife of then Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and others in the president’s circle.

The revelations, not denied by Canberra, prompted an instant freeze in bilateral relations and temporarily cruelled inter-agency co-operation between the two countries. They also fuelled suspicion within Indonesia’s political establishment about Australia’s trustworthiness as an ally.

Within Australia’s intelligence community, BIN has a poor reputation: it has a dubious counter-terrorism record, its analysts are not well trained and much of the intelligence it produces is considered of low value by partner agencies, including in Australia. ( Didalam Komunitas Intelijen Australia reputasi BIN terbilang rendah: BIN memiliki catatan kontra-terorisme yang meragukan, analis-analis yang kurang terlatih dengan baik dan juga karena banyak intel-intel yang dihasilkan BIN dirasa bernilai rendah oleh para mitra termasuk Australia)



ASIO is likely to be deeply ­reluctant to reveal too much of its inner operations to BIN. (Kemungkinan besar ASIO akan sangat pelit untuk memperlihatkan operasi rahasianya ke BIN)

Australian National University Indonesia expert Greg Fealy expressed scepticism about the ­exchange. “In Indonesia the main game in catching terrorists is really with the police, and that’s the Indonesian National Police and Detachment 88,’’ Professor Fealy said. “They’ve got the best training and information.’’

Source

ASIO is comparable with the British Security Service (MI5) and the American Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).


Love and hate relationship sama tetangga...

Mudah2an bisa untung dan dapet lebih banyak ilmu yang bisa diggunakan untuk keamanan negara!
0
7.3K
22
Thread Digembok
Mari bergabung, dapatkan informasi dan teman baru!
Militer
MiliterKASKUS Official
20KThread7.1KAnggota
Terlama
Thread Digembok
Ikuti KASKUS di
© 2023 KASKUS, PT Darta Media Indonesia. All rights reserved.