I really do hope that the Australian and NZ Governments (Departments/Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Defence, Office of the Prime Minister, their national security and intelligence groups etc) accord high priority to dialogue and meetings with Tongan Govt officials (and are liaising of course with the likes of the US, Japan, France, EU, UK etc), in regards to the long term rebuild and recovery, loans and debts etc.
Yes there are many other highly important international issues to be dealing with, particularly in the wider Indo-Pacific and tensions in Ukraine etc.
But this is to counter growing CCP influence (with the Tongan situation) which has the potential to destabalise the wider region in the medium and longer term. Perhaps a specialised "ANZ task/oversight group" needs to be setup?
The Japanese have been principled benefactors (in the South West Pacific) for a number of decades now, working in with the Pacific Forum nations and ensuring transparency etc. The fact that Japan has dispatched an amphibious transport dock and a number of transport aircraft carrying aid and important plant and equipment for the recovery highlights how seriously Japan takes its relationship with Tonga and the Pacific. Of course nowadays there is the CCP factor as per this article from yesterday.
TOKYO -- Following the eruption of an underwater volcano in Tonga, the Japanese government is focusing on providing aid to the South Pacific nation, eying Beijing’s growing influence in
newsinfo.inquirer.net
Today The Spectator (Australia) reminds us of the growing influence of the CCP and how it could exploit the Tongan disaster (with more and more loans, with strings attached no doubt, to an already indebted and beholden Tongan Govt).
Australia and NZ has dropped the ball in the recent past (eg sanctions against Fiji in the 2000's saw CCP influence leap and bound etc), we must be cautious to not repeat past mistakes, but also factor in the wider, longer strategic view, when it comes to long term recovery and rebuilding.
Geoffrey Blainey’s famous reference to ‘the tyranny of distance’ — the title of his 1966 history — may resonate less today than it did with previous generations of Australians. In a world of…
www.spectator.com.au
There is much to consider in that article but one aspect is this - "China has invested more than $1.3 trillion in 42 Commonwealth states alone since 2005", that's a lot of influence!