Updated
Updated · Asia Times · Jun 1
Solomon Islands Opposition Coalition Takes Power After 1 No-Confidence Vote, Questioning China Security Deal
Updated
Updated · Asia Times · Jun 1

Solomon Islands Opposition Coalition Takes Power After 1 No-Confidence Vote, Questioning China Security Deal

2 articles · Updated · Asia Times · Jun 1
  • Matthew Wale’s opposition coalition has taken office in the Solomon Islands after a no-confidence vote ousted Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele, opening the way for a government more skeptical of Beijing-linked agreements.
  • The shift matters because China deepened its foothold after Honiara switched recognition from Taiwan in 2019 and later signed a security pact whose leaked draft suggested a basis for PLA deployments.
  • Chinese police are already on the ground, while Chinese-linked logging, mining, fishing and construction interests have built influence through business ties, patronage and alleged corruption, the report says.
  • The article argues the opening could be short-lived unless the US engages more directly, citing Admiral Samuel Paparo’s command of more than 300,000 personnel and urging visible aid such as hospital upgrades and anti-corruption support.
  • It also casts Australia’s long lead role in Honiara as a strategic failure despite projects including a $190 million police offer, saying it did not stop Chinese inroads or back cleaner governance.
Can the Solomon Islands' new leader balance US security interests against China's pervasive economic grip?
Is US military-led aid the key to winning Pacific influence, or a recipe for mission creep?