The Guardian Australia

US Pacific summit faces rocky start as island leaders reject Washington’s offers

- Kate Lyons

US attempts to bolster ties with Pacific islands have suffered a major blow on the eve of its landmark summit, with Solomon Islands rejecting a draft US agreement, and Micronesia­n leaders raising serious concerns about “insufficie­nt” financial assistance to the region, leaked documents obtained by the Guardian reveal.

Joe Biden is hosting a number of Pacific leaders in Washington for a US Pacific Islands summit, which starts on Wednesday – the first time that Pacific leaders have been invited to the White House for such a meeting.

The summit is an attempt by the US to strengthen ties with Pacific countries and has been widely seen as a response to China’s growing engagement in the region.

However, the US’s offering to the region has sparked consternat­ion among Pacific leaders.

A leaked note, written by the embassy of Solomon Islands in New York, announced the country, which signed a controvers­ial security deal with China in April, would not be endorsing a regional diplomatic agreement being proposed by the US.

“Solomon Islands is not in a position to adopt the declaratio­n this week and will need time to reflect on the declaratio­n and refer the declaratio­n through Solomon Islands’ national decision making process,” says the note, which was addressed to the Pacific Islands Forum Secretaria­t, and seen by the Guardian. “Solomon Islands note that the declaratio­n remains under discussion and have yet to enjoy consensus and will need further discussion.”

The proposed declaratio­n is in the process of being negotiated and the US was hoping it would be adopted by Pacific leaders at this week’s summit.

A source involved in the negotiatio­ns told the Guardian that Pacific Island leaders were going to meet on Tuesday night in New York to discuss the declaratio­n, but the meeting was deferred by the Solomon Islands delegation.

The 11-point declaratio­n of US-Pacific partnershi­p, a draft of which has been seen by the Guardian, commits Pacific countries and the US to working together “in the face of a worsening climate crisis and an increasing­ly complex geopolitic­al environmen­t”.

The draft differs markedly from the sweeping regional economic and security deal that China presented to 10 Pacific countries earlier this year, which was ultimately rejected by Pacific leaders.

China’s deal was incredibly detailed, committing to particular sums of money, programs and even outlining the number Chinese art troupes that would be sent to the islands as part of a cultural exchange program.

It also would have seen a massive expansion of China’s involvemen­t in security arrangemen­ts in the region, including expanding its training of police forces, constructi­ng laboratori­es for fingerprin­t testing, forensic autopsy, drugs, electronic and digital forensics, and strengthen­ing cooperatio­n on cybersecur­ity.

The draft declaratio­n with the US is far more general, committing to principles of engagement – such as bolstering Pacific regionalis­m, tackling the climate crisis, advancing economic growth, protecting the Blue Pacific and maintainin­g peace and security – rather than outlining specific policies and promises.

‘US economic assistance is insufficie­nt’

The first point in the draft Declaratio­n details the US’s commitment to “the timely and successful completion of negotiatio­ns relating to the Compacts of Free Associatio­n with the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands and the Repub

lic of Palau”.

The US has Compact of Free Associatio­n agreements with these Pacific nations, which obliges the US government to provide financial assistance to them in exchange for defence responsibi­lities. Agreements are currently under negotiatio­n, with the Marshall Islands’ and Federated States of Micronesia­n compacts due to expire next year.

In the draft declaratio­n, the US called these compacts “one of the cornerston­es of US-Pacific cooperatio­n for nearly four decades” and committed to resolving negotiatio­ns in a way “that adequately address and meet the priority needs of those three nations”.

However, the Guardian has also obtained a leaked letter sent by ambassador­s for Palau, the Federated States of Marshall Islands and the Marshall Islands to Kurt Campbell, the US National Security Council coordinato­r for Indo-Pacific, and one of Biden’s most senior foreign policy advisers, raising concerns about what has been offered by the US.

“The current proposed assistance is inconsiste­nt with the contributi­ons of our islands towards the security and stability of the region, which also supports US interests in the region,” said the letter, sent on Monday. “The US proposed economic assistance seems predetermi­ned and based on insufficie­nt analysis … To put it simply: the US economic assistance is insufficie­nt.”

The ambassador­s made it clear that the US “has been, is, and will continue to be our first and foremost ally” but also that “the government­s we represent cannot rely on a successful outcome from what has been presented” in negotiatio­ns.

“The gaps between the needs of our peoples and what has been offered are narrowed, but are far from closed,” said the letter.

The impacts of the climate crisis are being acutely felt across the Pacific, including in the north Pacific nations of Palau, FSM and Marshall Islands.

A report from the World Bank last year found that 40% of the buildings in the Marshall Islands’ capital of Majuro would be permanentl­y flooded and entire islands would disappear, based on projection­s of one-metre sea level rise.

“Our remarks may come across as heated, but the primary point is that this [climate change] is our hottest and most important topic,” said the ambassador­s in the leaked note. “We are unable to solve climate change, and unable to provide for our citizens’ education and health needs, unless and until these negotiatio­ns conclude, and conclude in such a manner that genuinely meet our developmen­t needs.”

Richard Clark, the press secretary for President David Panuelo of the Federated States of Micronesia, said that FSM considered the US, Palau and Marshall Islands to be “family”.

“We are a healthy and functional family, and we are internally discussing sensitive issues with frankness because we have no doubt that we collective­ly have each other’s backs,” he said.

The president of Palau, the foreign minister of the Marshall Islands and the US National Security Council could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Charley Piringi/AFP/Getty Images ?? Military and civil representa­tives from Australia, the US, Japan and Solomon Islands attend a ceremony marking the Pacific Partnershi­p on board USNS Mercy in Honiara. Solomon Islands has rejected a US draft agreement for the Pacific.
Photograph: Charley Piringi/AFP/Getty Images Military and civil representa­tives from Australia, the US, Japan and Solomon Islands attend a ceremony marking the Pacific Partnershi­p on board USNS Mercy in Honiara. Solomon Islands has rejected a US draft agreement for the Pacific.

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