Papua New Guinea said Wednesday it supported the creation of a multinational Pacific police force, a landmark proposal pushed by Australia that could significantly blunt China’s regional ambitions.
Under the so-called Pacific Policing Initiative, a multinational force would be drawn from across the Pacific islands and based in northern Australia.
The creation of such a force could seriously hamstring China’s own efforts to ink policing and security agreements with Pacific states.
“We support the initiative,” Foreign Minister Justin Tkatchenko told AFP as the region’s leaders met in Tonga for the Pacific Islands Forum.
Some Pacific nations — particularly those considered closer to China — have voiced unease over the plan, which Australia hopes to sew up before the forum ends this week.
It would reportedly create a force of some 200 officers that would be dispatched to regional hot spots and disaster zones as needed.
Tkatchenko said regional heavyweight Papua New Guinea would “work together with Australia” to implement the proposal.
Australia has historically been the region’s go-to security partner, leading peacekeeping missions in Solomon Islands and training in Nauru, Fiji and Papua New Guinea.
But policing has increasingly become a cornerstone of Beijing’s efforts to build Pacific influence.
China has been supplying under-resourced Pacific police forces with martial arts training and fleets of Chinese-made vehicles.
It already maintains a small but conspicuous police presence in Solomon Islands, sending a revolving cadre of officers to train locals in shooting and riot tactics.
New police vehicles roam the capital Honiara emblazoned with the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force badge and red “China Aid” stickers.
Earlier this year, Beijing also started sending teams of police advisers to Kiribati.
Solomon Islands is one of the nations that has voiced concern over Australia’s plan, seemingly suspicious it could inflame unfolding regional rivalries.
But a second senior Pacific security source told AFP Wednesday they were confident that these anxieties would be calmed and that the initiative would go ahead.
Australia and longtime ally the United States were caught off-guard in 2022 when China signed a security pact with Solomon Islands.
There are fears China may one day parlay this agreement into a permanent military foothold in the region.
China’s efforts have typically centered on police, as most Pacific island nations do not have a military, according to analyst Peter Connolly.
This allowed China to plug the gap — and curry diplomatic favor — when Pacific nations were beset by “civil unrest and climate-related crisis,” Connolly wrote for the National Bureau of Asian Research earlier this year.
“In a state with no military, police advisers are often the only means for delivering security statecraft.”