
The 2026 Jakarta Treaty shifts Australia–Indonesia defence ties from functional cooperation to deeper strategic alignment, institutionalising high-level consultation while preserving both countries’ autonomy amid regional uncertainty. It could see expanded opportunities for collaboration in areas like maritime security, cybersecurity and defence industry, reflecting growing mutual reliance without formal alliance commitments. But enduring strategic differences and a persistent trust deficit means that the treaty’s success will depend on whether both parties can sustain transparent cooperation without reigniting historical tensions.
The
signing of the Australia–Indonesia Treaty on Common Security (the ‘Jakarta
Treaty’) on 6 February 2026 during Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s
visit marks more than just a diplomatic highlight. It signals the start of a
new strategic episode in the long-standing and often turbulent relationship
between Indonesia and Australia.
In
a region becoming increasingly defined by US–China competition, entangled in a
web of defence pacts and with fears of maritime insecurity heightened by US
withdrawal from its regional security commitments, this treaty offers an anchor
of stability in a volatile sea.
For
Australia, deepening defence ties with its largest neighbour represents a
pragmatic move to diversify its security architecture beyond its traditional
reliance on the United States. As Australia’s bridge to Southeast Asia and
beyond, Indonesia is a prerequisite to Australia’s own security. For Indonesia,
the treaty is a masterclass in strategic hedging, building functional
integration while maintaining strategic autonomy.
The
Jakarta Treaty marks an upgrade beyond the existing mechanisms within the 2024
Australia–Indonesia Defence Cooperation Agreement — 2+2 meetings, joint
military exercises and education and training for military personnel.
While
the Jakarta Treaty draws inspiration from the 1995 Lombok Treaty, the
underlying logic noticeably differs. The 1995 pact was leader-led, driven more
by then-Australian prime minister Paul Keating’s personal ambitions to ‘secure
Australia in Asia’ rather than a shared strategic blueprint. This top-down
agreement proved fragile, unravelling quickly during the 1999 East Timor crisis.
The 2024 agreement represents a more institutionalised framework for deepening
defence collaboration, built upon decades of sustained engagement and growing
interoperability.
The
Jakarta Treaty marks a shift from operational commitments to broader mutual
understanding. By institutionalising leader-level dialogue in mandating
periodic consultations at head-of-government and ministerial levels, the treaty
ensures that defence issues remain a top-tier political priority. It also
establishes a formal consultation mechanism, enabling early exchange of
assessments and joint deliberations over possible responses to adverse security
developments, effectively ending the era of ‘diplomatic surprises’.
And
unlike alliance commitments that involve collective defence obligations, the
treaty centres on coordinated responses to mutual challenges while protecting
each party’s freedom of action. The treaty does not explicitly acknowledge
‘mutual defence’ clauses, preserving Indonesia’s autonomy to upgrade security
measures in its southern flank and ensuring each party’s right to hold
differing views, including in their ‘threat perceptions’ regarding China. It
reflects a maturation of trust where both countries acknowledge that their
security is inextricably linked, yet their foreign policy paths remain
distinct.
The
Jakarta Treaty has the potential to deepen Indonesia–Australia bilateral
security cooperation across several areas, including maritime security,
cybersecurity, and defence industry. Maritime security will likely remain at
the forefront of collaborative efforts, with Indonesia and Australia facing
common maritime threats ranging from illegal fishing to grey-zone coercion.
Enhanced cooperation could include joint maritime exercises, capacity building
for the Indonesian Maritime Security Agency and coordinated patrols to
strengthen maritime domain awareness.
Cybersecurity
represents another growing domain for collaboration. Hybrid threats like
cybercrime and disinformation campaigns require joint attention due to their
potential to cripple critical national infrastructure. Given Australia’s
well-established cybersecurity capabilities, cooperation through information
sharing and joint cyber exercises will be vital in supporting Indonesia’s cyber
resilience.
An
underexplored area of opportunity is defence industry collaboration. In line
with Indonesia’s defence modernisation agenda, the treaty could pave the way
for technology transfers and joint development of defence equipment.
But
at the strategic level, a fundamental divergence in outlook persists. Australia
remains firmly anchored in alliance-based security frameworks like AUKUS and
the Quad, while Indonesia has traditionally approached minilateralism with
caution, prioritising strategic autonomy and a regionalism grounded in ASEAN
centrality.
And
despite current optimism, history teaches us that Indonesia–Australia relations
are prone to sudden chills — the consequence of a ‘trust deficit’, rooted in
sovereignty-related baggage. For many in the Indonesian military, the memory of
past friction runs deep — from the suspension of defence ties during the 1999
East Timor crisis to the 2013 wiretapping scandals involving then-Indonesian
president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and perennial sensitivities over Papua.
Sovereignty remains a clear ‘red line’ and actions interpreted as encroaching
on Indonesia’s internal matters could freeze cooperation instantly.
These
differing strategic orientations raise questions as to how far Indonesia can
foster defence cooperation with Australia without challenging its long-standing
‘free and active’ foreign policy doctrine. While Jakarta has signalled that
high-level mobility is only ‘temporary’ and ‘collaborative’ rather than
‘foundational’, increasing Australian troop rotations and reciprocal access to
military installations could be seen as toeing the ‘red line’. This has
prompted debate about whether Indonesia may be moving closer to a
Western-aligned security architecture and if it can preserve strategic autonomy
while deepening operational cooperation.
The
2026 Jakarta Treaty represents a sophisticated framework for good-faith
communication and confidence-building. But to counter the longstanding ‘trust
deficit’, both countries must translate these words into concrete action. This
requires developing transparent communication mechanisms to manage differences
before they escalate into diplomatic crises, including in the form of 1.5-track
policy dialogues.
If
executed with sincerity, the treaty could represent the moment two neighbours
decided that their shared security was too important to be left to the whims of
great power politics, marking a bold step towards a more stable, predictable
and sovereign Indo-Pacific.
By:
Marina Ika Sari is a Coordinator and Researcher at the ASEAN Studies Program,
The Habibie Center.
Dion Maulana Prasetya is an Assistant Professor in the Department of
International Relations at Universitas Muhammadiyah Malang.
This article was
published in East Asia Forum on April 3, 2026.
https://doi.org/10.59425/eabc.1775253600
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| Defence | Indonesia and Australia step up defence cooperation