Sat. Sep 21st, 2024
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The United States is nearing deals with two Pacific Island nations to extend ties that are considered critical to maintaining US influence in a region where China is becoming increasingly assertive.

This week, the US signed memorandums of understanding with the Marshall Islands and Palau that Biden administration officials hope will pave the way for broader agreements that will govern the islands’ relations with Washington for the next two decades.

Those ties grant the US unique military and other security rights on the islands, in return for substantial aid.

The administration believes that extending those so-called “Compacts of Free Association” agreements will be key to efforts to retain American power and blunt Chinese expansion throughout the Indo-Pacific.

The memorandums lay out the amounts of money that the federal government will provide to the Marshall Islands and Palau if their compacts are successfully renegotiated.

Negotiations on a similar memorandum with a third compact country, Micronesia, are ongoing.

The current 20-year compacts with the Marshall Islands and Micronesia expire this year; the current compact with Palau expires in 2024, but administration officials say they believe all three can be renewed and signed by mid-to-late spring.

Costs of the deals

Officials would not discuss specifics of the amounts of money involved because the deals are not yet legally binding, and must still be reviewed and approved by Congress.

A Micronesian news outlet, Marianas Variety, reported on Thursday that the Marshall Islands will receive $US700 million ($1 billion) over four years under the memorandum that it signed.

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