South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol hosted the country’s first summit with leaders of Pacific islands yesterday, as Seoul seeks to boost its influence in a region that has become the focus of intense geopolitical rivalry.
As the leaders agreed to increase efforts to fight climate change, South Korea will also consider additional funding initiatives to support the Pacific region, Yoon’s office said.
Yoon launched his administration’s Indo-Pacific strategy last year, pledging to foster a ‘free, peaceful and prosperous’ region built on a rules-based order, amid concerns over China’s security ambitions for the strategic waters and economic leverage among the small island states.
“The summit today will mark a new beginning of co-operation between South Korea and the Pacific islands,” Yoon said in his opening remarks yesterday.
Earlier, Yoon held bilateral talks with several leaders including Kiribati President Taneti Maamau and Papua New Guinean Prime Minister James Marape on issues such as fisheries and climate change ahead of the main summit, his office said.
Mark Brown, prime minister of the Cook Islands, told the summit opening that the challenges facing the region were ‘vast and complex’ and talks would also cover areas such as disaster risk and resilience, ocean governance and maritime affairs.
Brown is chair of the 18-member Pacific Islands Forum (PIF).
South Korea’s Indo-Pacific strategy also sees greater scope for trilateral co-operation with the US and Australia to tackle regional challenges such as supply chains, critical minerals and climate change.
Still, while the Yoon government’s strategy indicates closer alignment with the US, “South Korea must still move cautiously between the two great power rivals given Seoul’s larger economic and geopolitical stakes in China relative to other US allies”, said Andrew Yeo, a Senior Fellow at US think tank Brookings Institution.
Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles will attend the summit, his office said, adding it would show co-operation between PIF and South Korea for a secure region.
Australia and New Zealand are the largest members of the forum, a bloc of mostly small island countries at risk from rising sea levels.