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Opinion | US has missed the boat on engaging Pacific island nations

  • Washington is stepping up engagement in the Pacific as its struggles to counter China’s influence in the region
  • But attempts to woo Pacific Island nations and stoke fear of a ‘China threat’ may simply be a case of too little, too late

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Illustration: Craig Stephens

The Solomon Islands’ decision to temporarily prevent foreign navy ships from entering its waters while it finalises a new approval process for port visits may seem like a route matter at first glance.

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However, when viewed alongside last week’s incident, when a US Coast Guard vessel, the Oliver Henry, was barred from making a routine port call in the absence of formal government approval, the decision cannot be shrugged off so easily.

Since the Solomon Islands signed a security agreement with China in April, relations between the tiny island state and the United States have been tense. A US spokesperson labelled the lack of clearance for Oliver Henry “regrettable”.

Yet, with no apparent link between the incident and China, White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said in a separate statement that “we’ve seen the Chinese try to bully and coerce nations throughout the Indo-Pacific to do their bidding” at the expense of upholding “a free and open Indo-Pacific”.

Ships anchor near Honiara port in the Solomon Islands on August 30, after the nation implemented a snap ban on foreign military vessels. Photo: AFP
Ships anchor near Honiara port in the Solomon Islands on August 30, after the nation implemented a snap ban on foreign military vessels. Photo: AFP

These two divergent statements on the same incident are a clear sign of the growing anxiety in the US over China’s already-embedded role in the geopolitical and geoeconomic fabric of the Pacific islands. Some Western political analysts have even started using the term “China-Pacific islands bloc” in reference to Beijing’s influence in the region.

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