US recognises two Pacific nations to counter China as Biden hosts summit

US President Joe Biden says Washington recognised the Cook Islands and Niue as "sovereign and independent" states and would establish diplomatic relations with both.

US President Joe Biden speaks with Cook Islands PM Mark Brown during the US-Pacific Islands Forum Summit in the White House. / Photo: AP
AP

US President Joe Biden speaks with Cook Islands PM Mark Brown during the US-Pacific Islands Forum Summit in the White House. / Photo: AP

President Joe Biden said the United States officially recognised the Pacific nations of Cook Islands and Niue, as he hosted regional leaders in a bid to wrest influence from China.

The announcement came on Monday at the start of a summit with the 18-member Pacific Islands Forum, where US officials said the president was announcing a more assertive American stance in the region.

Biden said in statements that Washington recognised the Cook Islands and Niue as "sovereign and independent" states and would establish diplomatic relations with both.

The move would help maintain a "free and open Indo-Pacific region," said Biden.

Biden added that the deals to recognise the two nations would also help curb illegal fishing, deal with climate crisis in a vulnerable region and boost economic growth.

The Cook Islands and Niue together have fewer than 20,000 inhabitants but constitute a sprawling economic zone in the South Pacific.

Both are self-governing nations in "free association" with New Zealand, meaning that their foreign and defence policies are in varying degrees linked to Wellington.

After decades of being treated as a relative backwater , the South Pacific has become an important arena for competition between the United States and an increasingly assertive China.

China has dramatically ramped up its economic, political and military footprint in the strategic ocean region.

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'Assertiveness'

There is "no question that there is some role that the PRC has played in all this," a senior White House official said on condition of anonymity, referring to China by the abbreviation of its formal name.

China's "assertiveness and influence, including in this region, has been a factor that requires us to sustain our strategic focus."

The forum brings together states and territories scattered across the Pacific Ocean, from Australia to sparsely populated micro-states and archipelagos.

But China's influence will be felt through the absence of the prime minister of the Solomon Islands, now closely aligned with Beijing.

Manasseh Sogavare, who was in New York last week to attend the UN General Assembly, did not extend his stay in the United States.

"We're disappointed that he's chosen not to come to this very special summit," another White House official said.

Biden had been due to follow up last year's inaugural summit with a meeting of Pacific leaders this May, in Papua New Guinea. But he cut short an Asia trip and returned stateside to address a debt-ceiling crisis.

For the Washington summit, Biden has prepared a full program, kicking off with an afternoon of American football on Sunday.

The leaders traveled by train to Baltimore, where they were guests of honor at an NFL game between the port city's Ravens and the Indianapolis Colts.

Monday's agenda features meetings and a lunch with Biden. On Tuesday, the leaders will meet wit h top officials on climate and the economy, and spend time with US lawmakers.

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