Bangkok Post

High-level US officials to visit Pacific

Washington vows to step up engagement

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WASHINGTON: White House IndoPacifi­c coordinato­r Kurt Campbell said on Thursday he expects more high-level US officials to visit Pacific island countries as Washington steps up its engagement to counter China in the strategica­lly important region.

Mr Campbell said the United States needed more diplomatic facilities across the region, and more contact with Pacific island countries that at times “receive lesser attention”.

“You will see more cabinet-level, more senior officials, going to the Pacific ... recognisin­g that nothing replaces, really, diplomatic boots on the ground,” he told Washington’s Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies (CSIS).

The US has vowed to commit more resources to the Indo-Pacific as China seeks to boost economic, military and police links with Pacific island nations hungry for foreign investment.

Beijing’s growing influence was highlighte­d by its security pact with the Solomon Islands this year, a move that fanned concerns in Australia, New Zealand and the US.

“Sovereignt­y is central in terms of how we see the Pacific overall. Any initiative that compromise­s or calls into question that sovereignt­y, I think we would have concerns with,” Mr Campbell said, without referring to China.

Washington has said it will expedite the opening of an embassy in the Solomon Islands, announced earlier this year when Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Fiji, the first trip there by America’s top diplomat in four decades.

Mr Campbell said he envisioned Fiji would be one of the US’ “hubs” of engagement.

“Our mantra will be nothing in the Pacific without the Pacific ... we do not take these bonds for granted,” he said, acknowledg­ing perception­s that the US had not always sufficient­ly taken the needs of islanders into account.

Monica Medina, responsibl­e for Oceans and Internatio­nal Environmen­tal and Scientific Affairs at the US State Department, said areas where Pacific islands particular­ly needed help included coping with climate change and countering illegal fishing.

“We know we have much, much, much more work to do,” she said.

Fiji’s UN ambassador, Satyendra Prasad, told the CSIS event the islands needed “great predictabi­lity” and no “stop-start” in ties with Washington.

“Pacific people and their government­s would welcome an enduring partnershi­p with US that is there for the long-term,” he said.

Samoa’s UN envoy said there was a need to see whether a US treaty with the Pacific covering tuna could be expanded into a wider trade agreement.

“I think that is already under considerat­ion,” Fatumanava-o-Upolu III Pa’olelei Luteru said. “That’s something that would be very helpful.”

Washington could also help by supporting the UN-driven Multi-Dimensiona­l Vulnerabil­ity Index to help island nations access concession­al financing.

In apparent reference to China’s attraction, Samoa’s envoy said politician­s had a responsibi­lity to their people.

“If ... you ask a particular country and they are not able to help you, you then have a choice to say no, we’re not going to provide that service to the people; or you go to another country that perhaps is not the traditiona­l partner, and you say to them, can you help us?” Mr Luteru said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? US Secretary of State Antony Blinken watches a cultural farewell ceremony during his visit to Nadi, Fiji on Feb 12.
REUTERS US Secretary of State Antony Blinken watches a cultural farewell ceremony during his visit to Nadi, Fiji on Feb 12.

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