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WWII Pacific battlegrounds now site of US-China tug of war
By Giff Johnson
Majuro (AFP) Marshall Islands (AFP) Aug 12, 2019

Australian coal use an 'existential threat' to islands: Fiji PM
Suva, Fiji (AFP) Aug 12, 2019 - Fiji on Monday challenged Australia to do more on climate change ahead of a regional summit of Pacific nations this week, warning Canberra's reliance on coal posed an "existential threat" to low-lying islands.

Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama said Australia should recognise the threat climate change poses to Pacific island nations.

"I appeal to Australia to do everything possible to achieve a rapid transition from coal to energy sources that do not contribute to climate change," he told a function in Tuvalu, which will this week hold the annual Pacific Islands Forum.

Some low-lying Pacific island nations are threatened by rising seas, while others are pummelled by cyclones that have become more regular and powerful due to climate change.

There has been disquiet in the Pacific that Australia -- led by climate-sceptic Prime Minister Scott Morrison -- recently approved the giant Adani coal mine in Queensland state.

"We face an existential threat that you don't face and challenges we expect your governments and people to more fully appreciate," Bainimarama said.

He added: "Put simply, the case for coal as an energy source cannot continue to be made if every nation is to meet the net zero emission target by 2050."

Smaller members of the 18-nation Pacific Islands Forum have been unusually vocal in criticising Australia's climate policies ahead of this year's summit amid a diplomatic push from Canberra to counter China's growing influence in the region.

High-level representatives from the likes of Tuvalu, Palau and Vanuatu have criticised their powerful neighbour for not doing enough to halt global warming.

Bainimarama, who seized power in a 2006 military coup but has since reinvented himself as a climate campaigner, is making his first appearance at the forum in a decade.

He has been sharply critical of Australia in the past and is unlikely to let Morrison's concerns, which centre on Beijing's activities, to dominate the Pacific Islands Forum agenda at the expense of climate change.

Oxfam Australia's climate change adviser Simon Bradshaw said the summit in Tuvalu was shaping as a key test for Canberra.

"If Australia is to remain a trusted partner to the members of the Pacific family, and with that retain the ability to help shape the region's future, it must immediately step up its response to the number one priority of its neighbours -- climate change," Bradshaw said.

The Pacific Islands Forum summit will officially open on Tuesday and continue until Thursday.

Pacific islands that were key World War II battlegrounds but largely neglected for the past 30 years are now back in the spotlight as China challenges traditional US supremacy in the region.

Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia and the Marshall Islands, whose territories stretch thousands of kilometres across the Pacific, have been the recipients of largesse by Washington, Tokyo and other allied powers, but otherwise mostly ignored in recent decades.

However, increasing competition between China and the US has dramatically altered the landscape, elevating the island nations beyond even their Cold War visibility when they were the site of strategic outposts and 1950s atom bomb tests.

In recent years Washington's attention was focused elsewhere and US funding grants to the three nations were slated to end in 2023.

China was quick to spot the opportunity to woo new diplomatic allies and look for strategic advantage in the vast region, analysts said.

"Reductions in development assistance, and redirections as to where that assistance is given have created a vacuum which China has been able to fill, particularly in addressing stated needs of Pacific island countries in relation to infrastructure," said Pacific politics specialist Tess Newton Cain, a visiting fellow at the Australian National University.

Washington and its allies have only recently woken up to the challenge, with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Japan's Foreign Minister Taro Kono making unprecedented visits to the region, taking their cheque books with them.

"Recognition of the strategic value of the three north Pacific nations has re-emerged given the tensions between China and the United States and its allies," said David Hanlon, a retired University of Hawaii professor of Pacific Islands, Micronesia and ethnographic history.

"The recent increase in Chinese commercial activity, diplomatic initiatives, territorial disputes, and expansionist ambitions -- real or imagined -- in the larger Asia-Pacific region have challenged the notion of the Pacific as an American lake."

- Looking to re-engage -

In a sign that Washington is looking to re-engage with the region, Pompeo announced the start of negotiations with the three island nations to extend the US funding grants due to end in 2023.

Japan's Kono has also unveiled multi-million dollar support for a hospital ship, disaster management centres, a new water reservoir for the Marshalls along with fisheries and maritime enforcement support.

Japan wants to "increase support to countries in the region for a free and open Indo-Pacific," Kono said as he wrapped up a four-nation swing that also took in Fiji.

Pompeo's funding announcement came two weeks after China deposited $2.0 million into Micronesia's trust fund -- a fund the US had said only the previous week was unlikely to produce sufficient interest to maintain the Micronesian government's financial stability.

Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia and the Marshall Islands have treaties with Washington known as Compacts of Free Association.

The soon-expiring funding agreements under these treaties were established to capitalise trust funds in an effort to wean the islands off direct US federal funding after decades of largesse from Washington.

Pompeo however confirmed the United States would not allow a financial opening for China in the US-affiliated islands.

"We want to help nations of the Indo-Pacific to continue their decades' long rise and maintain their sovereignty both in the political and economic spheres," he said as he announced discussions to extend the US funding beyond its long-planned end in 2023.

Tokyo's pledge of increased aid to the Pacific also reflects the fact "this region is gaining importance more than ever", said Naoaki Kamoshida, an assistant press secretary for Japan's foreign ministry.

And Japan would work with any country that "shares our values and vision".

The US move to extend funding "indicates the leverage that diplomatic tensions have provided the three Pacific states", Hanlon said.

And Cain said it was evident Washington wanted to reassert itself with the three states with support from key allies.

"Part of the rhetoric around this is to stress that the US and Japan, along with Taiwan, Australia, and New Zealand, are democratic countries who share key values with the countries of the Pacific," she said.


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WATER WORLD
Pacific leaders want summit focus on climate, not China
Wellington (AFP) Aug 4, 2019
Pacific island leaders insist climate change, not China, will top the agenda when they meet in Tuvalu this month as western-aligned nations push to curb Beijing's growing influence in the region. Once regarded as a sleepy backwater of the diplomatic world, the islands are now a hotbed of aid projects and charm offensives as anxiety over China's presence grows. Australia has labelled its campaign the Pacific Step-Up, New Zealand has the Pacific Reset and Britain the Pacific Uplift, while the Unit ... read more

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