Why is China’s military base big threat to South Pacific?

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Chinas military base big threat to South Pacific1

Hong Kong: After talks between the leaders of Australia and the Solomon Islands, the aspirations of China are visible. The Solomon Islands has announced that it will not allow any foreign military base on its land. This announcement is seen as a major diplomatic defeat for Beijing. In fact, a few days ago, China had announced a new security agreement with the Solomon Islands with great fanfare. China had claimed that the agreement is a mutually beneficial one aimed at creating peace and stability in the Solomon Islands. At the same time, Australia, America, New Zealand, and Japan had objected to this agreement.

Documents leaked online of the intelligence security agreement between Beijing and Honiara have fueled political rivalry in the Indo-Pacific. According to Honiara’s confirmation, under this agreement, they will allow China to enter military and law enforcement officials necessary for the maintenance of social order there. It has raised alarm bells in the region and raised fears about China’s growing hegemony in the region, as it would make it easier for Beijing to build its military base on the island.

On the one hand, the Prime Minister of the Solomon Islands has opposed the deal under his sovereign prerogative, while critics of the deal fear that it will lead to militarization in the region.
China’s presence in the Pacific Islands
The Indo-Pacific has been globally known as the ‘center of gravity due to the economic activity in the region, which has the potential to globally induce or disrupt the global economy for a number of reasons, most notably The geopolitical importance of China’s growing and expanding dominance around this region. Today the Indo-Pacific narrative has assumed unprecedented prominence throughout the strategic world and is therefore at the center of the geopolitical standoff in recent times.

Suitable pasture for china
However, on the strength of its access to these islands, China has got the pull towards them. What can China do that other country can neither match nor can it bow down to? For one, China’s lending capacity is quick and it doesn’t announce many of its accompanying nuances, which are often extremely problematic. In other words, the Chinese grant is without any preconditions. From China’s point of view, development is better than better governance.

Chinas military base big threat to South Pacific1

These are the most suitable pastures for China for two reasons – first that they are always ready to accept it and second that they are always unable to pay these debts in the long or short term, due to which Beijing Opportunity to reactivate your savior bet

However, in recent days, China’s growing influence in the Pacific Islands has created a climate of fear among them about Beijing’s determined policy on the island, especially its predatory economics policy. Samoa, for example, is attempting to halt the construction of a China-backed port project under an agreement signed during its previous reign.

China’s penetration of the Solomon Islands has sharply divided politics and security agreements, which were allegedly leaked by opponents, who seek to further deepen unrest by dividing the country deeper. The decision to recognize the one-China policy in 2019 had worked to divide the regions of the entire Pacific Island countries including Palau, Nauru, Marshall Islands and Tuvalu etc. The reason for this was that some of these countries went to Taiwan and some other countries with China.

In 2020, the decision of the Solomon Islands’ state of Malaita to accept COVID 19 aid from Taiwan led to a complex situation. In 2019, Tuvalu rejected China’s offer to build an artificial island despite the sensitive situation of rising sea levels. At the same time, as buyers of a strong Indo-Pacific narrative, Australia and the United States, in particular, are striving to shore up Beijing’s efforts and increase its dominance in the South Pacific at the provincial level.

In Canberra’s foreign policies, the Pacific Islands remain a key priority for them and have emerged as an investment hub, a move given Beijing’s growing dominance in the region over the past decade, post-2018. Canberra has also invested billions of dollars to strengthen its hold in the region, which is in the form of long-term financial assistance. Its purpose is to increase its presence in this area through media and cultural relations.

It was also in 2018 that the contract to build the Internet cable line in the Solomon Islands was awarded to Australia after it was awarded to Huawei. The US has also announced the opening of its own embassy in the Solomon Islands, again in February, after ending its mission in the country in 1993.

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