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Papua New Guinea, US to sign security pact with eye on China

Blinken will also expand the US military's capacity to deploy in the region by signing deal
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken attends a meeting with New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins (not pictured) at the US embassy in Port Moresby on May 22, 2023, on the sidelines of the Forum for India-Pacific Islands Cooperation at APEC Haus. AFP
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken attends a meeting with New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins (not pictured) at the US embassy in Port Moresby on May 22, 2023, on the sidelines of the Forum for India-Pacific Islands Cooperation at APEC Haus. AFP

Papua New Guinea will sign a defence pact with the United States on Monday, giving US forces access to its airfields and ports as Washington vies with China’s growing footprint in the Pacific region.

In a sign of the intensifying rivalry over the South Pacific, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was not alone in representing major powers in Port Moresby, where the deal is to be signed.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi flew into town just hours before him on the eve of a summit Monday with 14 South Pacific island states, asserting his nation’s role as a regional power in the face of China’s rise.

“We share your belief in multilateralism. We support a free, open, and inclusive Indo-Pacific. We respect the sovereignty and integrity of all countries,” Modi told Pacific leaders in opening remarks.

Blinken will meet those same South Pacific leaders as the United States aims to counter China’s expanding economic, political and military presence.

But by signing the security deal with PNG Prime Minister James Marape, Blinken will also expand the US military’s capacity to deploy in the region.

Beijing has snapped up mines and ports across the Pacific and last year inked a secretive security pact with the Solomon Islands that allows China to deploy troops to the country.

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The United States fears that a “Chinese military foothold in the South Pacific could outflank its facilities on Guam,” and make the defence of Taiwan more complicated in the event of a Chinese invasion.

The State Department said the pact with PNG would “enhance security cooperation and further strengthen our bilateral relationship, improve the capacity of the PNG Defence Force, and increase stability and security in the region”.

“Port Moresby is no longer the sleepy diplomatic outpost it once was,” said Gordon Peake, a senior adviser for the Pacific Islands at the United States Institute of Peace.

“While China might not be mentioned anywhere in the document, it’s an important subtext in this story of deepening US-PNG relations.”

Marape last week said the deal would offer Washington movement in the country’s waters in return for access to US satellite surveillance to battle “illegal activities on the high sea”.

The deal would not prevent him from signing similar agreements with other nations, including China, he said.

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