FBI director says new office in New Zealand will counter China's sway, provoking Beijing's ire
Patel was in Wellington on Thursday to open the FBI's first standalone office in New Zealand and to meet senior officials.
PTI
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FBI Director Kash Patel with US President Donald Trump (ANI)
Wellington, 1 Aug
FBI Director Kash Patel provoked diplomatic discomfort in New Zealand by
suggesting the opening of a new office in the capital aims to counter China's
influence, drawing polite dismissals from Wellington and ire from Beijing.
Patel was in Wellington on Thursday to open the FBI's first standalone
office in New Zealand and to meet senior officials. The arrangement aligns New
Zealand with FBI missions in other Five Eyes intelligence-sharing nations,
which also include the United States, Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom.
The Wellington office will provide a local mission for FBI staff who
have operated with oversight from Canberra, Australia, since 2017.
Patel's China remarks
prompted awkward responses
In remarks made in a video published Thursday by the US Embassy, Patel
said the office would help counter Chinese Communist Party influence in the
contested South Pacific Ocean.
New Zealand ministers who met Patel, the highest-ranking Trump administration official to visit New Zealand, quietly dismissed his claims. A
government statement Thursday emphasised joint efforts against crimes such as
online child exploitation and drug smuggling, with no mention of China.
“When we were talking, we never raised that issue,” Foreign Minister
Winston said Thursday.
Judith Collins, minister for the security services, said the focus would
be on transnational crime.
“I don't respond to other people's press releases,” she said when
reporters noted Patel had mentioned China, Radio New Zealand reported.
Trade Minister Todd McClay rejected a reporter's suggestion Friday that
Wellington had “celebrated” the office opening.
Beijing decries the FBI
chief's comments
At a briefing Friday, Beijing's foreign ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun
denounced Patel's remarks.
“China believes that cooperation between countries should not target any
third party,” he said. “Seeking so-called absolute security through forming
small groupings under the banner of countering China does not help keep the
Asia Pacific and the world at large peaceful and stable.”
New Zealand, the smallest Five Eyes partner, has faced ongoing pressure
to align with US stances on China, its largest trading partner, while carefully
balancing relations with Beijing. Analysts said the FBI chief's comments could
vex those efforts, although New Zealand has faced such challenges before.
“It's in New Zealand's interest to have more law enforcement activities
to deal with our shared problems,” said Jason Young, associate professor of
international relations at Victoria University of Wellington. “It's perhaps not
in New Zealand's interest to say we're doing this to compete with China.”
The FBI expansion comes
during fresh Pacific focus
Patel's visit came as the Trump administration has sought to raise global alarm about Beijing's designs. US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth in June said China posed an imminent threat and urged Indo-Pacific countries to increase military spending to 5% of GDP.
New office provokes anger among New Zealanders
Not everyone welcomed the expanded FBI presence.
Online, the new office drew rancour from New Zealanders who posted
thousands of overwhelmingly negative comments about the announcement on social
media sites. A weekend protest against the opening was planned.
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