Asia Pacific

New Zealand Eyes NATO Deal Amid Security Rethink

New Zealand on Friday said it was ready to sign a new cooperation deal with NATO, as the country rethinks security in the face of regional tensions and growing Chinese military might.

Foreign Minister Winston Peters said after a two-day visit to NATO headquarters in Brussels that a “partnership programme” with the alliance would be agreed “in the coming months.”

Since the center-right coalition was elected last October, steadfastly independent New Zealand has looked to deepen military ties with “traditional” Western allies.

“The coalition government has made clear the strong emphasis it places on cooperation with New Zealand’s traditional partners, and NATO is a big part of that,” Peters said.

New Zealand has had a partnership with NATO since 2012, but the new deal is expected to foster much closer strategic alignment.

Wellington is also looking at joining Australian, US, and UK joint research into military use of artificial intelligence, hypersonic weapons, and other emerging technologies.

Since World War II, New Zealand has been a part of the FiveEyes intelligence-sharing alliance with Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

But it has sometimes been an uneasy ally when it comes to military matters.

Objections to nuclear weapons caused a decades-long defense pact with the United States to be effectively mothballed in the 1980s.

‘Dangerous Game’

And the country’s dependence on trade with China — New Zealand’s largest commercial partner — has forced Wellington to walk a fine diplomatic line between Beijing and Washington.

“New Zealand is playing a dangerous game,” Geoffrey Miller, a geopolitical analyst at the Victoria University of Wellington, told AFP.

Miller worries that signing a new tailored deal with NATO or joining with AUKUS could be seen as a “red flag” by key trade partner China.

“At some point, China may simply snap back,” he said.

Beijing has been fiercely critical of the AUKUS pact, which includes supplying Australia with a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines.

There are already signs that tensions with China are building. In March, China’s foreign minister Wang Yi made a rare visit to the country and spoke of shoring up diplomatic ties.

At the same time, the New Zealand government revealed a Chinese state-backed group hacked its parliamentary system back in 2021.

Beijing rejected the cyber-attack accusation as “groundless and irresponsible.”

Peters is expected to meet US Secretary of State Antony Blinken next week.

New Zealand’s desire to revamp its roughly 15,000-strong military and upgrade its armory of aging equipment is likely to be front of mind.

New Zealand’s defense ministry admitted last year that the forces were “not in a fit state to respond to future challenges.”

Former New Zealand diplomat Marion Crawshaw said the government must beef up defense spending when the budget is announced next month.

“You only need to look around the world to think that we need to be doing and spending more,” she told AFP.

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