France, which has island territories spanning the Indo-Pacific, including French Polynesia, has boosted defence ties with India and other countries in the region as part of a move to counter Chinese influence.
In a speech in Vanuatu, Macron, the first French president to have set foot on the Pacific islands nation since war leader Charles de Gaulle, said France would work “shoulder to shoulder” with states in the region to preserve their independence.
“There is in the Indo-Pacific, especially in Oceania, new imperialism appearing and a power logic which is threatening the sovereignty of many states, the smallest and often the most fragile ones,” Macron said, without naming any country. “The modern world is shaking up the Indo-Pacific’s sovereignty and independence. First, because of the predation of big powers. Foreign ships fish illegally here. In the region, many loans with Leonine conditions strangle up development.”
Pacific Islands nations are being courted by China, a major infrastructure lender which struck a security pact with Solomon Islands last year, and the United States, which is re-opening embassies closed since the Cold War. China has been a major infrastructure lender to Pacific Islands nations including Vanuatu over the past decade.
After Vanuatu, Macron is due to arrive in Papua New Guinea on Thursday evening, hot on the heels of US secretary of defence Lloyd Austin, who was there on Thursday.