Spearheaded by the United States, the Western military alliance has looked to step up cooperation with Asia-Pacific democracies as it increasingly casts a wary eye at Beijing's growing might.
For the second year running, the leaders of Australia, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea attended a NATO summit.
NATO had planned to open a liaison office in Tokyo to help improve cooperation with Japan.
But France has blocked the move insisting that NATO should focus on its responsibility of protecting the Euro-Atlantic area.
"Whatever people say, geography is stubborn," Macron said after the NATO summit in Vilnius.
"The Indo-Pacific is not the North Atlantic, so we must not give the impression that NATO is somehow building legitimacy and a geographically established presence in other areas."
Macron's rejection of the NATO office has left diplomats of ally countries fuming.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg insisted after meeting Japan's prime minister that opening the liaison office remains "on the table".
He said the alliance was looking to deepen cooperation with Tokyo in areas such as cyber and maritime security.
Stoltenberg said NATO's meeting with the Asian-Pacific partners sent the message that "security is not regional security it's global, and therefore we really have to stand together".
"China's heavy investments in new military capabilities demonstrates that," he said.
"We expect that China by 2035 will have 1,500 nuclear warheads on missiles that can reach North America and a whole of Europe, NATO territory."
The alliance chief said, "This is not about NATO becoming a global military alliance, but this is about recognising that this region faces global challenges and the rise of China is part of that."
The United States has long been pushing its European allies in NATO to take a tougher line on China, which Washington sees as its leading global rival.
In a statement on Tuesday, NATO leaders expressed worries about "the deepening strategic partnership" between Russia and China.
They urged Beijing to use its influence to get Moscow to halt its war on Ukraine.
Australia, NZ press China to reveal Solomons policing deal
Sydney (AFP) July 12, 2023 -
Australia and New Zealand have urged China to release the details of a new policing pact with Solomon Islands, saying Beijing's latest push for influence threatens to inflame tensions in the South Pacific.
Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare inked a raft of deals during a trip to Beijing this week, including an agreement allowing China to maintain a police presence in the developing Pacific nation until 2025.
China has lavished attention on the Solomons since it severed ties with Taiwan in 2019, pledging large amounts of aid and bankrolling a series of critical infrastructure projects.
A spokesperson for Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Tuesday there were concerns the police cooperation plan between Solomon Islands and China would "invite further regional contest".
"Solomon Islands and China should provide transparency of their intentions to Australia and the region by publishing the agreement immediately, so the Pacific family can collectively consider the implications for our shared security."
New Zealand's foreign ministry echoed that sentiment.
"We would like the text to be made public in order to understand any security implications for the region," a spokesperson said Wednesday.
Solomon Islands, one of the poorest countries in the Pacific, sits at the centre of an escalating tug-of-war as China vies for regional influence with Australia and the United States.
In response to the calls, Beijing insisted the agreement was "in line with relevant international laws and practices".
"Cooperation on policing and law enforcement is an important part of the cooperation between China and Solomon Islands, and has played a positive role in promoting the security and stability of Solomon Islands," foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin told a regular briefing.
- 'I'm home' -
Australia's own longstanding security pact with the Solomons was recently put under review, stoking fears the island nation was drifting closer to China's orbit.
Sogavare has repeatedly stressed his country was "friends to all", a claim questioned by some after a video posted by Chinese state media showed him telling officials "I am back home" after touching down in Beijing earlier this week.
Solomon Islands opposition politician Peter Kenilorea Junior said he had a "gut feeling" that Sogavare wanted to shift the country's stance closer to China.
"This choice has been made a long time ago," he told Australian broadcaster ABC.
"Arriving in China and saying that, 'I'm home', it's very clear."
Chinese Premier Li Qiang earlier this week praised Sogavare for switching diplomatic relations from Taiwan to Beijing, saying it was "the correct choice that confirms the trend of the times".
Sogavare told Li that his country had "a lot to learn from China's development experience".
Solomon Islands alarmed Western powers in 2022 when it signed a secretive security pact with China.
Although details of that pact have never been released, it has stoked concerns that China could use it to establish a military foothold in the South Pacific.
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