US intermediate-range missiles would not be deployed in Australia, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said yesterday, after the US revealed ambitions to site missiles in the Asia-Pacific region.
Officials from both governments held talks in Sydney over the weekend that ended with a joint statement in which the two allies pledged to strengthen opposition to Chinese activities in Asia-Pacific, as the two sides have become increasingly concerned about China’s spreading influence.
During the talks, US Secretary of Defense Mark Esper spoke of hopes to deploy missiles in the Asia-Pacific region in coming months following Washington’s withdrawal from a landmark arms control treaty last week.
Esper’s comments prompted speculation that Australia had been asked to host the missiles, but Morrison denied that any request had been made and said that Australia would decline if it was asked.
“It’s not been asked to us, not being considered, not been put to us. I think I the rule a line under that,” Morrison told reporters in Brisbane.
A recent increase in tensions between Washington and Beijing, both over trade and rights of navigation in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait, has put Australia in an awkward spot, as the US is its biggest ally, while China is its biggest export market.
Beijing last week described Australian efforts to improve bilateral relations as “unsatisfactory.”
Australia worries China is using foreign aid to secure greater influence over small Pacific countries that control vast swathes of resource-rich ocean.
Australia, traditionally the major power in the South Pacific, has promised up to A$3 billion (US$2.03 billion) in grants and cheap loans to counter what Washington describes as China’s “payday loan diplomacy.”
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