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Beware China’s ‘false promise’ with Papua New Guinea security deal, US official warns

  • US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Verma called on Monday for Papua New Guinea to choose arrangements with ‘countries that play by the rules’
  • PNG said last week it was in early talks with China on a potential security deal. Such agreements come ‘with a high cost’, Verma said in Australia

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An aerial view of smoke billowing from burning buildings in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, last month amid looting and arson during widespread protests and riots. Photo: Femli Studio via Reuters
Reuters

A senior US state department official has urged Papua New Guinea to turn down China’s offer of a potential security pact, warning the Pacific nation that any security guarantee with Beijing comes with consequences and costs.

“We’ve seen that the Chinese commitment in defence or investment comes with a high cost. That’s what we’d say to PNG,” US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Verma told The Sydney Morning Herald in an interview published on Monday.

PNG Foreign Minister Justin Tkachenko said last week that the country’s was in early talks with China on a potential security deal. China has offered to assist PNG’s police force with training, equipment and surveillance technology, Tkachenko said.

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The United States and ally Australia have for decades seen the Pacific as their sphere of influence, and are seeking to deter the island nations from forming security ties with China, after Beijing signed a security pact with Solomon Islands in 2022.
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Verma, in Australia last week after visiting the South Pacific, said it was a competition for influence in the resource-rich region, and that “we have to compete aggressively”.

His comments came ahead of an address by PNG Prime Minister James Marape to the Australian parliament later this week. PNG has previously said Australia and the US were its security partners, while China was an important economic partner.

“We would like to see people choose security arrangement or investment opportunities or advanced connectivity with countries that play by the rules, that live up to the international standards,” Verma said.

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