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US military wants to expand ties with New Zealand, says Pacific commander who called China ‘destabilising’

  • Admiral John Aquilino, head of the US Indo-Pacific Command, said he wanted to identify new areas where the US could work with New Zealand
  • ‘The United States has been a Pacific nation our entire life. We will continue to operate in the Pacific no matter what else you might hear,’ he said

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Ships and a submarine from 10 participating nations, including New Zealand, are seen during the US-led ‘Rim of the Pacific Exercise’ in 2020. Photo: US Pacific Fleet Handout
The commander of the United States military in the Pacific said on Monday he wants to expand and strengthen its ties with New Zealand against a backdrop of rising geopolitical tensions and China increasingly asserting its might.
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The visit to Wellington by Admiral John Aquilino, commander of the US Indo-Pacific Command, comes as the US is looking to increase its presence in the region amid deep concerns over China’s growing ambitions in the Pacific.

Aquilino was greeted with a traditional Māori welcome ceremony and laid a wreath at the Pukeahu National War Memorial Park. He spoke briefly to the media ahead of meetings with top New Zealand defence force and government officials.

Admiral John Aquilino, head of the US Indo-Pacific Command, is welcomed by Maori warriors in Wellington on Monday. Photo: Mark Mitchell/New Zealand Herald via AP
Admiral John Aquilino, head of the US Indo-Pacific Command, is welcomed by Maori warriors in Wellington on Monday. Photo: Mark Mitchell/New Zealand Herald via AP

“Our partnership runs very deep,” Aquilino said. “We are doing many things together to continue to ensure peace and prosperity for both of our nations and for all the nations in the region.”

Aquilino said he wanted to identify new areas where the US could work with New Zealand. He said the leadership of Australia and New Zealand in the Pacific was “critically important”.

“The one thing you will never hear out of me is big or small. This is a partnership,” Aquilino said. “All nations deliver those things that they can deliver.”

He said the US understood the security implications of climate change in Pacific island nations, including for food security and water security, and the importance for island nations to be able to fish in exclusive zones.
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