China wants 10 Pacific islands to endorse 'game-changing' pact

Beijing hopes regional island nations will accept its Common Development Vision — a major cooperation deal, ranging from fisheries to security, that has alarmed US and its regional partners.

Security aspects of agreement will be particularly troubling to many in region, especially after China signed a separate security pact with the Solomon Islands last month.
TRTWorld

Security aspects of agreement will be particularly troubling to many in region, especially after China signed a separate security pact with the Solomon Islands last month.

China wants 10 small Pacific nations to endorse a sweeping agreement covering everything from security to fisheries in what one leader warns is a "game-changing" bid by Beijing to wrest control of the region.

A draft of the agreement obtained by The Associated Press news agency shows that China wants to train Pacific police officers, team up on "traditional and non-traditional security" and expand law enforcement cooperation.

China also wants to jointly develop a marine plan for fisheries — which would include the Pacific's lucrative tuna catch — increase cooperation on running the region's internet networks and set up cultural Confucius Institutes and classrooms. 

China also mentions the possibility of setting up a free trade area with the Pacific nations.

China's move comes as Foreign Minister Wang Yi and a 20-person delegation begin a visit to the region this week.

In Washington, US State Department spokesperson Ned Price expressed concern on Wednesday about China's intentions, saying Beijing might use the proposed accords to take advantage of the islands and destabilise the region.

"We are concerned that these reported agreements may be negotiated in a rushed, nontransparent process," Price told reporters. 

He warned that China "has a pattern of offering shadowy, vague deals with little transparency or regional consultation in areas related to fishing, related to resource management, development, development assistance and more recently even security practices."

READ MORE: Why has the China-Solomon Islands defence deal irked the West?

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'Common Development Vision'

China's Wang is visiting seven of the countries he hopes will endorse the "Common Development Vision" — the Solomon Islands, Kiribati, Samoa, Fiji, Tonga, Vanuatu and Papua New Guinea.

Wang is also holding virtual meetings with the other three potential signatories — the Cook Islands, Niue and the Federated States of Micronesia. He is hoping the countries will endorse the pre-written agreement as part of a joint communique after a May 30 meeting in Fiji he is holding with the foreign ministers from each of the 10 countries.

Micronesia's President, David Panuelo, has told leaders of the other Pacific nations his nation won't endorse the plan, warning it would needlessly heighten geopolitical tensions and threaten regional stability, according to a letter from Panuelo obtained by the AP.

Panuelo called the Common Development Vision "the single most game-changing proposed agreement in the Pacific in any of our lifetimes” and said it "threatens to bring a new Cold War era at best, and a World War at worst."

Like some other countries in the Pacific, Micronesia is finding itself increasingly caught between the competing interests of Washington and Beijing.

Micronesia has close ties to the US through a Compact of Free Association. But it also has what Panuelo describes in his letter as a "Great Friendship" with China that he hopes will continue despite his opposition to the agreement.

The security aspects of the agreement will be particularly troubling to many in the region and beyond, especially after China signed a separate security pact with the Solomon Islands last month.

That pact has raised fears that China could send troops to the island nation or even establish a military base there, not far from Australia. The Solomon Islands and China say there are no plans for a base.

READ MORE: Quad summit in Japan seeks unity on countering China

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Provisions of draft agreement

The May 30 meeting will be the second between Wang and the Pacific islands' foreign ministers after they held a virtual meeting last October.

Those who follow China's role in the Pacific will be scrutinising the wording of the draft agreement.

Among its provisions: "China will hold intermediate and high-level police training for Pacific Island countries."

The agreement says the countries will strengthen "cooperation in the fields of traditional and non-traditional security" and will "expand law enforcement cooperation, jointly combat transnational crime, and establish a dialog mechanism on law enforcement capacity and police cooperation."

The agreement would also see the nations "expand exchanges between governments, legislatures and political parties."

The draft agreement also stipulates that the Pacific countries "firmly abide" by the one-China principle, under which Taiwan, a self-ruled island democracy, is considered by Beijing to be part of China. It would also uphold the "non-interference" principle that China often cites as a deterrent to other nations speaking out about its human rights record.

The agreement says that China and the Pacific countries would jointly formulate a marine spatial plan "to optimise the layout of the marine economy, and develop and utilise marine resources rationally, so as to promote a sustainable development of blue economy."

READ MORE: US, allies to launch tracking system to monitor illegal fishing by China

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