Biden
Abruptly Cuts out Quad Meet in Sydney, Organisers left in the Lurch
·
PM Modi as Quad Invitee Settles for Bilateral
with Australia and G7 Meet in Japan
·
PM Modi to visit Japan, Papua New Guinea
and Australia from May 19-24
·
Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be in
Japanese city of Hiroshima from May 19 to 21 for the G7 summit
A Pacific
Island nation had gone to great lengths to host the U.S. president. Now a
region is left to wonder again about American steadfastness.
It was meant to be a moment for
the history books — the first time a U.S. president visited a Pacific Island country.
Papua New Guinea, the host nation, scrambled to mobilize 1,000 security officers;
the leaders of 17 other countries agreed to make the trip for just a few hours with
President Biden, who was scheduled to go on to a meeting in Australia with allies
known as the Quad.
Now all those plans have been
scrapped. The White House announced on Tuesday that Mr. Biden would cut short an
Asia-Pacific trip and return to Washington on Sunday after the Group of 7 summit
in Japan for debt ceiling negotiations to ensure the United States does not run
out of cash and default.
What the cancellation means,
in the broadest of terms, is that America’s domestic politics is undermining American
foreign policy at a crucial time, in a critical region. Analysts and diplomats warn
that fears of an unreliable and dysfunctional America will now be revived in Asia
and the Pacific, where the United States has only recently started to build momentum
in its efforts to counter Chinese influence.
“It will reinforce lingering
doubts about U.S. staying power,” said Hal Brands, a professor of global affairs
at Johns Hopkins University. “And you can bet China will make hay of this — its
message to countries in the region will be, ‘You can’t count on a country that can’t
even perform basic functions of governance.’”
American officials have framed
the cancellation as a postponement, arguing that the last-minute change does not
reflect a flagging commitment.
“We look forward to finding other
ways to engage with Australia, the Quad, Papua New Guinea and the leaders of the
Pacific Islands Forum in the coming year,” said a statement from the U.S. Embassy
in Australia. The leaders of the Quad nations — the United States, Japan, India
and Australia — had planned to meet in Sydney, and Pacific Island leaders in Papua
New Guinea.
But for many, the American assurances
carried a whiff of déjà vu. President Barack Obama skipped a planned appearance
at an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in 2013 to deal with a government
shutdown instigated by Republicans. Xi Jinping, the Chinese leader, went on to dominate
the event, declaring that “the Asia-Pacific cannot prosper without China.”
Doubts about American resolve
— and Mr. Obama’s promise of a pivot to Asia — have been in the air ever since,
even as the Biden administration has offered tangible evidence of a shift in priorities.
Along with more high-profile visits to the region, the United States has reopened
an embassy in the Solomon Islands, added an embassy in Tonga and tilted its foreign
policy heavily toward countering China, both militarily and in contested technologies
like microchips.
But Washington is still playing
catch-up. Beijing’s diplomatic corps worldwide is now bigger than that of the United
States, and heavily concentrated in Asia. China has the world’s largest navy and
coast guard, and its state-owned companies have surged into the construction and
mining industries of many developing countries, including Fiji and Papua New Guinea,
which sits just north of Australia.
For much of the region, especially
the South Pacific, the United States has yet to prove that it can be as reliably
present and productive as China.
“There’s still a sense that this
is early days,” said Anna Powles, a senior lecturer in security studies at Massey
University in New Zealand. “Trust is the currency of the Pacific, and building trust
takes consistency, it takes being reliable, being there, being present.”
Abandoning a meeting of the Quad
— which aims to foster collaboration on everything from health care to the environment
— may be mostly a logistical irritant. Australia’s prime minister, Anthony Albanese,
said on Wednesday that the four Quad leaders would try to meet on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Hiroshima.
Mr. Biden’s aborted stop in Port
Moresby, the capital of Papua New Guinea, may carry greater consequences. It is
likely to delay or halt efforts to finalize a security agreement that, in early
negotiations, involved the possibility of granting the U.S. military access to the
lands and seas around a country that played a strategic role in World War II.
Mr. Biden knows that history
intimately: Two of his uncles fought there in the war, and one was killed.
Papua New Guinea’s prime minister,
James Marape, said this week that U.S. officials had also
promised to deliver billions of dollars in infrastructure investments, and that
a group of American executives had planned to join the president’s entourage. It
is not clear if or when those pledges will be fulfilled, a costly slight in a poor
nation of nine million people desperate for development, where China has already
invested heavily in construction and mining.
“There’s no way to deny that
this is a big missed opportunity,” said Derek Grossman, a senior defense analyst at the RAND Corporation.
“You can actually argue that
going to Papua New Guinea for three hours is more important than going to the G7
or maybe even going to the Quad because it is a new opportunity opening the door
to all kinds of possibilities — and now that may be closing because of our own domestic
situation.”
For the Pacific Island leaders
who had been summoned to Port Moresby to meet with Mr. Biden, there will be additional
frustrations. The meeting was billed as a follow-up to their summit at the White
House last year, and many had specific requests to address, particularly on climate
change, an existential threat to the region.
They had prepared to leave their
own domestic politics behind for the gathering, in some cases taking connecting
flights to get there. Some, like Fiji’s new prime minister, Sitiveni Rabuka, have said in strong terms that they will work closely
only with countries that share their values, distancing themselves from China’s
embrace. But many leaders have also expressed annoyance with America’s lack of focus
— when, for instance, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken
went to Fiji and talked at length about Ukraine, or when other senior American officials
were late for important regional meetings.
Now their attention will shift,
back to China, and to another rising power: India.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi,
who had planned a visit to Papua New Guinea before Mr. Biden committed and then
canceled, will now be the focal point in Port Moresby
and in Sydney. Around 20,000 people are expected to gather in Sydney’s Olympic Park
for a bilateral celebration on Tuesday.
“Modi is still going to have
a state visit in Australia,” said Bates Gill, director of the Center for China Analysis at the Asia Society. “He will be warmly
welcomed.”
Prime Minister Narendra Modi
will visit Japan, Papua New Guinea and Australia from May 19 to 24, the
Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) announced on May 16.
Mr. Modi will be in Japanese
city of Hiroshima from May 19 to 21 for the G7 summit.
The MEA said the Prime
Minister will speak at G7 sessions with partner countries on subjects such as
peace, stability and prosperity of a sustainable planet; and food, fertiliser
and energy security.
From Japan, Mr. Modi will
then travel to Port Moresby where he will host the third summit of
the Forum for India-Pacific Islands Cooperation jointly with Prime
Minister of Papua New Guinea James Marape on May 22,
the MEA said in a statement.
On the third and final leg
of the trip, Mr. Modi will visit Sydney in Australia from May 22 to 24 to
attend the Quad summit.
The summit, being hosted by
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, will also be attended by U.S.
President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.
"The summit provides an
opportunity for the leaders to exchange views about developments in the
Indo-Pacific region and advance their vision for a free, open and inclusive
Indo-Pacific," the MEA said.