New Solomon Islands leader reviews security pact with China, seeks treaty with Australia

​The Solomon Islands will negotiate a comprehensive strategic treaty with Australia and review a security agreement with China, the Pacific country's new prime minister said on Wednesday.


Reuters | * Pm Matthew Wale Cites Lack Of Transparency Over China Security Deal * Wale | Updated: 03-06-2026 13:05 IST | Created: 03-06-2026 13:05 IST
New Solomon Islands leader reviews security pact with China, seeks treaty with Australia

​The Solomon Islands will negotiate a comprehensive strategic treaty with Australia and review a security agreement with China, the Pacific country's new prime minister said on Wednesday. Matthew Wale is a veteran opposition figure who has been critical of China ‌in the past. His visit to Canberra comes less than three weeks after he became leader of the archipelago nation 1,600 km (1,000 miles) northeast of Australia. The Solomon Islands is seen as the nation with the closest ties to Beijing among the strategically located Pacific Islands. It signed a security pact with China in 2022, prompting concern from ‌neighbours and the United States, and a ramping up of Australia's diplomacy in the region.

"The Solomon Islands is Australia's friend, has always been and always ‌will be," Wale said at a press conference with his Australian counterpart Anthony Albanese. "We acknowledge that there have been problems in the last few years," he said. "We have sought a reset."

Wale said in 2022 the deal with China was against the interests of the Solomon Islands but has since visited Beijing and become less critical of China. He said the security agreement had a non-disclosure ⁠clause and he ​had only seen a full copy ⁠of it for the first time in recent days after fighting for access.

"I've had to remove certain people from key positions," he said. "We are going to be reviewing (it) as we are reviewing other ⁠security agreements we have with many other countries." Asked about Wale's remarks, China's foreign ministry said Beijing was willing to expand practical cooperation in various fields with the new government ​of the Solomon Islands.

COMPREHENSIVE TREATY Albanese said Australia would provide a support package to help the Solomon Islands cope with high energy prices and the impact ⁠of Tropical Cyclone Maila earlier this year, as well as move forward on a policing partnership.

"Today we've committed to elevate our bilateral relationship at the request of the Solomon Islands," he said. "This will ⁠be agreed ​in a new comprehensive treaty." Neither he nor Wale said what areas the treaty would or would not touch. Wale was accompanied in Canberra by a delegation including his ministers for foreign affairs, finance and policing.

In 2024, Australia provided more than $100 million for Solomon Islands' police force, which Albanese said showed Canberra was ⁠its "security partner of choice". Australia has a longstanding security agreement with the Solomon Islands. Connor Graham, a researcher specialising in the Pacific at Australian think tank the ⁠Lowy Institute, said Wale was providing a "very clear ⁠signal".

"He's only been in power for a couple of weeks and we're already here," he said, adding that Australia would advance its position better by addressing Solomon Islands' priorities such as health, education, climate resilience and economic diversification than by ‌obsessing on security and ‌China.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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