South China Morning Post

TOKYO AIMS TO SHORE UP PACIFIC SECURITY

Defence minister set to hold talks with nations in ‘significan­t’ post-war policy shift to counter China moves in region of strategic importance

- Christophe­r Cottrell

Japan’s Defence Minister Minoru Kihara will hold talks with peers from Pacific Island nations next week over security support, as Tokyo steps away from decades of Pacific policy to counter China’s deal making in a remote but strategica­lly crucial region.

Tuesday’s talks with 14 South Pacific Island countries and Western allies will pave the way for a leaders’ meeting in July, in what some experts say could become the largest Japanese security-focused move in the Pacific Islands since World War II.

The talks will tee up security and police agreements ahead of an expected agreement to be signed at the 10th Pacific Islands Leaders’ Meeting this July in Tokyo.

The efforts come as China pours money and time into Pacific nations in exchange for dropping diplomatic recognitio­n of Taiwan – China recently flipped Nauru’s loyalty.

Beijing regards the self-ruled island as a breakaway province to be brought under mainland control – by force, if necessary.

The talks are expected to involve Japan’s Self-Defence Forces and police taking part in local and regional responses as well as training, a dramatic departure from previous post-war policies.

“Since World War II, Japan has focused on infrastruc­ture, resource management and governance. The deployment of Self-Defence Forces would be a significan­t change,” said Meg Keen, director of Australia-based Lowy Institute’s Pacific Islands Programme.

Japan aimed “to protect critical sea routes in the region, lucrative fisheries, and its preferred rules-based order”, she added. “All will benefit, but some Pacific Islands leaders are wary of unspoken drivers for Japanese engagement, including balancing Chinese power and influence.”

The meeting comes after the US Congress belatedly approved US$7.1 billion for the northern Pacific Islands of Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia, and the Marshall Islands as part of a long-standing funding deal called the Compacts of Free Associatio­n (Cofa).

The deal followed a fivemonth impasse which alarmed these three states over promised Cofa funds to pay for infrastruc­ture, healthcare and education, and led to warnings from Palau President Surangel Whipps Jnr, Micronesia President Wesley Simina and Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine, who sent a joint letter to Congress, saying China was using the gap to influence the region with money and support.

But the Cofa payout shores up exclusive US military access to a vast patch of seas between the Philippine­s and Hawaii, giving it missile and military facilities in exchange for sending billions of dollars to be used on education, healthcare and infrastruc­ture across the partner nations.

Signing the deal on Monday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken hailed it as a guarantee of tight relations for “the next two decades”, while Whipps Jnr called it “wonderful news”.

Japan’s Foreign Minister Yoko Kamikawa on Tuesday vowed to provide “offer-based” financial developmen­t to the nations rather than wait for them to ask for it, in a policy pivot making foreign aid one of its “most important diplomatic tools” which would help keep the Indo-Pacific “free and open”, according to Japanese media.

From mitigating climate change to disaster response, Japan has a lot to offer in the Pacific arena, according to Hideyuki Shiozawa, head of the Pacific Island Nations Programme Team at the Ocean Policy Research Institute of the Sasakawa Peace Foundation. “While the idea of countering China exists conceptual­ly, [Japan’s] actual actions will contribute to the self-reliance, disaster resilience, stability and developmen­t of the Pacific Island countries with or without China,” he said.

Fiji, Papua New Guinea and Tonga already have their own defence forces, with cooperatio­n agreements with Australia, New Zealand and the United States.

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