Engaging the Eagle - Exploring U.S. Foreign Policy in Southeast Asia

Episode 40 - Assessing the US-Indonesia Major Defence Cooperation Partnership

27 min · 12 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 40 - Assessing the US-Indonesia Major Defence Cooperation Partnership

Descripción

The United States and Indonesia signed a Major Defence Cooperation Partnership (MDCP) on April 13, signifying a new stage in bilateral defence cooperation. The MDCP’s three pillars concern military modernisation and capacity building; training and professional military education; and exercises and operational cooperation, all of which are ostensibly aimed at building Indonesia’s military capacity and interoperability with the US military. Yet, there have also been reports of the US requesting blanket overflight clearance to Indonesia’sairspace, raising questions about sovereignty and neutrality.   What do these developments signal about the US-Indonesia relationship, and how can we expect this relationship to develop?

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episode Episode 40 - Assessing the US-Indonesia Major Defence Cooperation Partnership artwork

Episode 40 - Assessing the US-Indonesia Major Defence Cooperation Partnership

The United States and Indonesia signed a Major Defence Cooperation Partnership (MDCP) on April 13, signifying a new stage in bilateral defence cooperation. The MDCP’s three pillars concern military modernisation and capacity building; training and professional military education; and exercises and operational cooperation, all of which are ostensibly aimed at building Indonesia’s military capacity and interoperability with the US military. Yet, there have also been reports of the US requesting blanket overflight clearance to Indonesia’sairspace, raising questions about sovereignty and neutrality.   What do these developments signal about the US-Indonesia relationship, and how can we expect this relationship to develop?

12 de may de 202627 min
episode Episode 38 - Iran and 301: Incoming Economic Shocks for Southeast Asia artwork

Episode 38 - Iran and 301: Incoming Economic Shocks for Southeast Asia

Since the start of March, Southeast Asian economies have been met with bad news from outside the region. For one, the US war on Iran has created economic ripple effects that reverberated beyond the Middle East. Then, on March 11, the US Trade Representative’s office opened not one, but two Section 301 investigations into countries allegedly abusing excess industrial capacity and forced labour to the detriment of American firms. These investigations will take months to process. Nonetheless, they point to a new phase of US President Donald Trump’s efforts to use tariffs as tools of leverage. What can we expect in terms of broader economic turbulence as a result of these challenges? Should the war continue for weeks, if not months, how serious could the economic consequences become? What should we expect from the Section 301 investigations, and how are governments responding?

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episode Episode 37 - Asia After America - A Conversation with Dr Zack Cooper artwork

Episode 37 - Asia After America - A Conversation with Dr Zack Cooper

For years, successive US governments have expressed a desire to make Asia their primary strategic interest – but that push for a pivot to Asia seems to have faded. The most recent National Security Strategy and National Defense Strategymake it clear that America’s strategic priority is the Western Hemisphere, explicitly narrowing US security objectives in Asia to protecting the first island chain. What would such a shift mean for US strategy, and what implications does this have for regional governments?   Tune in to hear Dr Zack Cooper, Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a Lecturer at Princeton University, offer his thoughts on US strategy in Asia, and what the region might look like as American strategic attention shifts elsewhere.

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