INDONESIA has joined the race to host the World Cup in 2018 or 2022.
The Indonesian football federation officially expressed interest in staging one of the tournaments to FIFA late on Tuesday, becoming the sixth potential host to show interest ahead of Monday's deadline.
England, Japan, Qatar, Russia and a joint Spain-Portugal candidacy have already declared intentions to bid.
Other contenders including Australia, a combined Belgium-Netherlands-Luxembourg proposal, Canada, China, Mexico and the United States are expected to enter the first stage of a two-year selection process before the cutoff.
Though its team is currently No.144 in the FIFA world rankings, Indonesia fulfills one major requirement of hosting the world's most-watched sports event - it has a stadium capable of holding at least 80,000 spectators for the opening match and final.
The government-owned Bung Karno Stadium in the capital Jakarta has a capacity of 88,000 and staged the 2007 Asian Cup final, when Iraq beat Saudi Arabia 1-0.
Indonesia has previously made World Cup history.
It became the first Asian nation to play at a World Cup, at the 1938 tournament in France under its colonial name of the Dutch East Indies. The team lost 6-0 to eventual runner-up Hungary in a first-round match at Reims.
Indonesia was quickly knocked out of qualifying for the 2010 World Cup being played in South Africa. It advanced through the Asian first round when opponent Guam withdrew, then lost 11-1 to Syria in a two-legged series in November 2007.
FIFA began the process of choosing the 2018 and 2022 World Cup hosts two weeks ago. It will issue official bid forms next month, which must be returned by March 16.