China-Solomon Islands security pact: Alarm bells ringing for Australia and New Zealand?

01 Apr 2022
politics
Anne-Marie Schleich
Former German Ambassador to New Zealand
Dr Anne-Marie Schleich, a former German ambassador to New Zealand, explains why Australia and New Zealand are worried about a new security deal inked between China and Solomon Islands. Have they not been paying enough attention to their own backyard?
An undated handout photo released on 29 March 2022 by the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force (RSIPF) shows a China Police Liason Team officer (centre) training local RSIPF officers. (Handout/RSIPF/AFP)

Australian and New Zealand government officials are alarmed at Solomon Islands' security deal with China which was inked on 31 March and had been leaked a few days ago.

Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare of the Solomon Islands was adamant about his government being able to cut a deal and did not want to divulge any details. The Office of the Prime Minister stated: "Addressing Parliament on the Security treaty with China[,] PM Sogavare said the deal was not a secret deal but a sovereign issue by a sovereign nation that has the (Solomon Islands) national interest at heart." The security pact follows a memorandum of understanding with China on policing cooperation which was signed on 18 March.

The leaked document states that "Solomon Islands may, according to its own needs, request China to send police, armed police, military personnel and other law enforcement and armed forces to Solomon Islands to assist in maintaining social order, protecting people's lives and property". It gives China the possibility to provide "assistance on other tasks" and requires confidentiality: "Neither party shall disclose the cooperation information to a third party."

The security cooperation provides for Chinese naval ships to carry out logistical replenishments in the Solomon Islands. Even though there had been no indication from China's side about any additional move, this has fuelled frantic speculation in neighbouring countries that the security pact could be a step in the direction to build a Chinese military base in the Pacific. PM Sogavare, however, insisted: "We are not pressured in any way by our new friends and there is no intention whatsoever to ask China to build a military base in the Solomon Islands."

...Australia and New Zealand are concerned that such a security pact could give China the possibility to establish a military base and send PLA forces into the heart of the Pacific region.

(Graphic: AFP)

The implications for the Pacific region's security situation could be far-reaching. The Solomon Islands is about 1700 miles away from Australia's east coast. Politicians and commentators in Australia and New Zealand are concerned that such a security pact could give China the possibility to establish a military base and send PLA forces into the heart of the Pacific region. They are also concerned that China could block vital shipping routes and be able to gather regional intelligence.

Australian Minister for Defence Peter Dutton stated on TV: "...we don't want pressure and extortion rolled out from China." And the Australian opposition leader Anthony Albanese seconded this view with unusual unanimity, noting that this is "an issue that has serious implications for Australia". New Zealand's Minister of Foreign Affairs Nanaia Mahuta said: ".. developments within this purported agreement could destabilise the current institutions and arrangements that have long underpinned the Pacific region's security. This would not benefit New Zealand or our Pacific neighbours."

On a side note: as a long-time member of the Five Eyes intelligence network, New Zealand must have been embarrassed about the surprise revelations of the China-Solomons agreement as its main surveillance activity is directed against its close partners, the Pacific Island countries.

China's Global Times, however, lamented a "hegemonic and colonial mentality" in Australia. "Military expert Song Zhongping believes Australia is 'experiencing persecutory delusions' in which whatever China does in the South Pacific region will be portrayed as 'threats' to Australia. 'This won't help Australia win the trust of the island countries in the region, but will only expose Australia's hysterical and ugly face,' Song noted."

The president of Micronesia had urged the Solomon Islands against the security pact, citing "grave security concerns". So far, there has been no further reactions from other Pacific Island countries.

National flags of the Solomon Islands and China flutter at Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, 7 October 2019. (Stringer/File Photo/Reuters)

Why a China-Solomon Islands security pact matters

To present a wider picture: Solomon Islands belongs to the Melanesian sub-region in the southwest Pacific Ocean with some 1000 islands comprising nine main island groups and a population of around 700,000. Timber and tuna fishing are its main exports and - in spite of undeveloped resources such as nickel, gold and zinc - it remains one of Asia's poorest nations with a high unemployment rate.

Australia is its main development partner providing A$174 million (2019-2020) in official development assistance (ODA). Both countries signed in 2018 a security agreement covering the deployment of Australian police and armed forces to Solomon Islands.

In September 2019, the re-elected government of PM Sogavare decided to upgrade its relations with the People's Republic of China (China) at the expense of its long-term political and economic connections with Taiwan and switched allegiance from Taiwan to China - similar to its fellow Pacific nation Kiribati. In October 2019, Tulagi island, the pre-war seat of the Solomon Islands British colonial government, was leased to a Chinese company for 75 years. It was expected that economic and political cooperation with China would subsequently increase. There were then concerns about a possible dual use (civilian as well as military) of Tulagi by the Chinese.

One of the Solomon Island provinces, the island of Malaita, which has a history of disputes with the main island Guadalcanal, however, has continued to support Taiwan. The premier of Malaita has prohibited Chinese companies on the island and accepted US aid.

Now, following the revelations about the security pact with China, there are calls to increase Australia's "Step-up" aid programme with the Pacific which was de facto reduced in recent years...

(Left to right) Solomon Islands Foreign Minister Jeremiah Manele, Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi attend a signing ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, 9 October 2019. (Thomas Peter/File Photo/Reuters)

The subsequent riots which erupted in the Solomon Islands capital Honiara on Guadalcanal island in November 2021 had a number of causes: perceived unequal distribution of resources amongst the provinces, especially Malaita; unemployment and poverty; animosity against Chinese in the country; and a list of grievances by the opposition against the Sogavare government such as the logging industry's wealth extraction.

Unable to control the situation, the Solomon Islands government requested help from abroad. Australia deployed police and army personnel under the bilateral security treaty and New Zealand, Fiji and Papua New Guinea sent peacekeepers. The situation has since calmed down. One was somewhat reminded of the 14-year long multinational Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (RAMSI) 2003-2017 which also followed unrest in the country.

In terms of development assistance to the Pacific, China is lagging behind Australia, New Zealand and other countries.

Now, following the revelations about the security pact with China, there are calls to increase Australia's "Step-up" aid programme with the Pacific which was de facto reduced in recent years, so as to become more engaged with Solomon Islands and improve the economic situation to counter a growing Chinese influence.

In terms of development assistance to the Pacific, China is lagging behind Australia, New Zealand and other countries. But closer Solomon Islands-China security ties and the prospect of a Chinese-run maritime port in Australia's backyard could present an additional strategic headache for a country which has become a member of the US-led defence alliance AUKUS only six months ago.

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