French president Emmanuel Macron
has denounced “new imperialism” in the Pacific during a landmark visit
to the region, warning of a threat to the sovereignty of smaller states.
“There
is in the Indo-Pacific and particularly in Oceania new imperialism
appearing, and a power logic that is threatening the sovereignty of
several states – the smallest, often the most fragile,” he said in Vanuatu on Thursday.
His
comments came as US secretary of defense Lloyd Austin told reporters in
Papua New Guinea that Washington was not seeking a permanent base in
the Pacific Islands nation under a new defence agreement with Port
Moresby.
“Our Indo-Pacific strategy is above
all to defend through partnerships the independence and sovereignty of
all states in the region that are ready to work with us,” Macron said.
France
has 1.6 million citizens in the Asia-Pacific across seven overseas
territories, including New Caledonia and French Polynesia, and an
exclusive economic zone spanning nine million square kilometres (3.5m
square miles).
As the US and its allies seek to counter China’s
growing sway in the region, France offered an “alternative”, a
presidential adviser said, with plans for expanded aid and development
to confront natural catastrophes.
Macron last year relaunched France’s Indo-Pacific approach in the aftermath of a bitter row over a cancelled submarine contract with Australia, casting France as a balancing power in a region dominated by the tussle between China and the US.
He is on a five-day visit to the region, which has
also included a stop in New Caledonia and will continue in Papua New
Guinea (PNG). It is the first time a French president has travelled to
independent countries in the Pacific region, and not only French
overseas territories.
France has sovereignty over three territories in the Pacific: New Caledonia, French Polynesia and Wallis and Futuna
New Caledonians rejected independence
in a third referendum on the subject in December 2021, although the
vote was boycotted by pro-independence movements largely backed by the
indigenous Kanak population.
While Macron was
in Vanuatu, US defense secretary Austin was meeting PNG’s prime
minister, James Marape, to discuss their countries’ deepening defence
ties. “I just want to be clear, we are not seeking a permanent base in
PNG,” he said afterwards.
The
text of the agreement shows that it allows the staging of US forces and
equipment in PNG, and covers the Lombrum naval base which is being
developed by Australia and the US.
Austin said the two nations were deepening an
existing defence relationship, and would modernise PNG’s defence force
and boost interoperability. “Our goal is to make sure we strengthen
PNG’s ability to defend itself and protect its interest,” he added.
The
US has been seeking to deter Pacific island nations from forming
security ties with China, a rising concern amid tension over Taiwan, and
after Beijing signed a security pact with Solomon Islands.
Marape
on Thursday said the defence cooperation with the US would build up
PNG’s capability, and was “not for a war joint preparation”.