
Why the U.S. is paying for the construction of a massive new US embassy in Jakarta
U.N. officials have expressed concern about the prospects of an embassy in the Indonesian capital Jakarta after the government of Jakarta said it would construct a large new U.M.
S Embassy there.
The U.K. government also said it was considering an embassy.
U.B.H. Jakarta Mayor Fikri Tengku told a news conference the project would be “huge” and would “be very costly” to build.
The city has a population of just over one million people.
Jakarta was home to a U.U.S.-backed coup in 1971 and has been a major U.T.A. headquarters since.
Jakarta is the third-largest city in Indonesia, after Jakarta and Jakarta.
In October, the Jakarta Municipal Council approved the construction plan for the UFAS headquarters, a 4.4-million-square-meter complex in a major commercial and residential district.
Jakarta City Council members have voiced concerns about the costs of the project and said it could become a problem.
The United States and other countries have been building diplomatic missions in Indonesia.
The Trump administration has made building new embassies a priority, citing the threat of a terror attack.
In 2016, the State Department approved a $100 million loan for the $50 million embassy.
Jakarta also has a long history of U.F.A.-style military bases, including the largest in the world, UF-10, a base that includes the headquarters for U.
H-60 Black Hawk helicopters.
The bases, which cost $10 billion each, are among the most important U.A., A.S., B.E., F.
A, and F.
B bases in the region.