The US wants expanded partnerships in the Pacific to contain China’s rise – but do its allies agree?
- China’s economic clout in the Pacific is clearly growing, as its recent poaching of Taiwan allies has demonstrated. The US has expanded military activity to counter this, but it’s not certain it can sustain the necessary partnerships
Chinese advances in the South Pacific are firmly in the sights of the United States. And it could not be otherwise, as the Pacific island nations are an essential component of the US strategy to tackle China’s growing military clout.
Beijing looks increasingly at ease in the region. At the third China-Pacific Island Countries Economic Development Cooperation Forum, in Samoa last week, Chinese Vice-Premier Hu Chunhua presided over the signing of a programme of eight measures to contribute to the social and economic advancement of the region. Hu also emphasised Beijing’s interest in working with Pacific Island nations as part of the Belt and Road Initiative.
In the narrative of the American security establishment, the belt and road scheme is nothing less than a geostrategic tool to erode US military supremacy in Asia and beyond.