US moves to reopen Solomon Islands embassy to counter China
The Biden administration is plowing ahead with plans to open a U.S. embassy in the Solomon Islands in a bid to counter China's increasing assertiveness in the Pacific
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Your support makes all the difference.The Biden administration is plowing ahead with plans to re-open the U.S. embassy in the Solomon Islands in a bid to counter Chinaās increasing assertiveness in the Pacific.
The State Department has informed Congress that it will establish soon an interim embassy in the Solomonsā capital of Honiara on the site of a former U.S. consular property. It said the modest embassy will at first be staffed by two American diplomats and five local employees at a cost of $1.8 million per year. A more permanent facility with larger staffing is eventually envisioned, it said.
The department notified lawmakers nearly a year ago that Chinaās growing influence in the region made re-opening the U.S. embassy in the Solomon Islands a priority. Since that notification last February, the Solomons have signed a security pact with China and the U.S. has countered by sending several high-level delegations to the islands.
The U.S. closed its embassy in Honiara in 1993 as part of a post-Cold War global reduction in diplomatic posts and priorities.
But it has since determined that China's rise as a regional and global power demands American attention as part of its Indo-Pacific strategy to counter Beijing, particularly in the Solomon Islands, which were a key battleground in the Pacific theater during WWII and where pro-American sentiment had been high.
āWe are seeing this bond weaken as the Peopleās Republic of China aggressively seeks to engage Solomon Islandsā political and business elites, utilizing a familiar pattern of extravagant promises, prospective costly infrastructure loans, and potentially dangerous debt levels,ā the department said in a notice to Congress dated Dec. 23 that was obtained by The Associated Press.
āThe United States needs a permanent diplomatic presence in Honiara to effectively provide a counterweight to growing (Chinese) influence and deepen our engagement with the region commensurate with its importance,ā the notice said.
āBefore (China) becomes strongly embedded in Solomon Islands, now is the opportunity to bolster Solomon Islandsā resilience and deepen cooperation on security, democratic governance, and a free and open economy,ā it said. āThe absence of an embassy has severely constrained our ability to engage with this strategically situated country with alacrity and precision.ā
Since the administration first announced its plan to re-open the U.S. embassy in the Solomons in February, the nation moved ahead with a security pact with China, sparking fears that Beijing might establish a military base on the islands. China has also increased its economic and infrastructure assistance to the Solomons as it has done with other Pacific islands.
The Solomon Islands prime minister assured the U.S. and other Western allies, like Australia and New Zealand, after signing the deal with Beijing in April that he would not allow China to set up a naval base in his country, but concern about Chinese intentions has not abated.
In July, the U.S. sent two senior officials ā Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman and U.S. Ambassador to Australia Caroline Kennedy ā to the Solomons to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Guadalcanal and to highlight nearly century-long ties between the islands and the U.S. The fathers of both Sherman and Kennedy fought in the Solomons during the war.
As it moves to enhance ties with the Solomon Islands, the U.S. is also seeking to shore up relations with other Pacific nations that it fears may also be drawn into China's orbit.
Negotiations are ongoing for the renewal of so-called āCompact of Free Association" agreements between the U.S. and the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia and Palau. Those pacts expire within the next two years.