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China's Influence Overshadows Pacific Islands Forum: Taiwan Mention Erased

China's Influence Overshadows Pacific Islands Forum: Taiwan Mention Erased
Monday 02 September 2024 - 13:00
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The Pacific Islands Forum, a critical diplomatic summit for the region, has been marred by controversy as a mention of Taiwan was removed from its closing statement following pressure from China. This incident underscores the growing influence of Beijing in the South Pacific and the delicate balance Pacific nations must strike between major powers.

The Pacific Islands Forum, which includes 18 island nations plus Australia and New Zealand, initially included a reaffirmation of Taiwan's standing in a public communiqué. However, this mention was later removed, with no official explanation provided. Video footage surfaced showing a Pacific leader assuring China’s special envoy, Qian Bo, that the reference to Taiwan would be removed, highlighting the extent of China’s influence in the region.

This episode has brought to the fore a contentious regional debate about China’s role in the Pacific. The annual summit, which emphasizes regional unity and rejects major powers’ interference, has been overshadowed by geopolitical tensions. Analysts note that the incident underscores the challenges faced by some of the world’s smallest nations as they navigate the demands of larger countries that view them as geopolitical pawns.

“The ability of the forum to pursue increasingly demanding regional agendas and manage the geopolitical interests of external actors is clearly at risk,” said Anna Powles, a professor at Massey University’s Center for Defense and Security Studies. The public display of China’s influence-wielding was “deeply troubling” and raised questions about the autonomy of the region’s top diplomatic body, she added.

The Pacific Islands Forum, established in 1971, has traditionally been a platform for leaders to coordinate responses to issues affecting the diverse and remote region. In recent years, the Pacific Ocean has become a site of intense geopolitical contest, with Beijing wooing Pacific leaders with loans, diplomacy, and security agreements. This has prompted Western alarm and a rapid expansion of attendance at forum summits.

This year, Pacific leaders sought to focus on pressing issues such as climate change, debt, health, and security, including fundraising for a Pacific-led climate and disaster resilience facility in Tonga. They warned major powers against overshadowing the summit with geopolitical squabbling.

“We don’t want them to fight in our backyard here. Take that elsewhere,” Baron Waqa, the forum’s secretary-general and a former president of Nauru, told reporters in July.

Throughout the five-day summit, an uneasy calm prevailed in public, with superpowers making unusual overtures of cooperation. U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell and China’s emissary, Qian Bo, both pledged to work together on Pacific projects, reflecting a new effort by superpowers to display restraint.

However, the controversy over Taiwan’s mention in the communiqué erupted when Qian insisted that the reference was a mistake and demanded its removal. The communiqué was subsequently unlinked from the forum’s website and later circulated without the Taiwan reference, with no explanation for the change.

Video footage published by Radio New Zealand showed Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown apparently telling Qian, “we’ll remove it,” in reference to the document, as the pair shook hands. Brown did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Taiwan’s foreign ministry condemned China’s intervention, stating that the communiqué did not jeopardize Taiwan’s position in the forum or its right to participate.

The Solomon Islands, which severed diplomatic ties with Taipei in 2019 in favor of Beijing, will host the 2025 summit. Analysts suggest that the forum should “urgently develop guardrails to prevent further disruption and undermining of regional unity.”

This incident highlights the complex geopolitical dynamics at play in the Pacific region, where small island nations must navigate the competing interests of major powers while addressing their own pressing issues. The removal of Taiwan’s mention from the communiqué serves as a stark reminder of the influence China wields in the region and the challenges faced by Pacific nations in maintaining their autonomy.


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