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New Zealand to consider joining Australia and Fiji in defence alliance, PM says

By Thomson Reuters Jul 8, 2026 | 10:37 PM

WELLINGTON, July 9 (Reuters) – New Zealand will consider joining a defence alliance between Australia and Fiji that both countries entered earlier this week, ​Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said on Thursday.

Australia ‌and Fiji signed a major defence treaty, the Ocean of Peace Alliance, on Monday, committing each country to come to the other’s aid if either is attacked as Australia works to ‌counter ​China’s growing influence in the ⁠region.

The treaty marks Fiji’s ⁠first-ever alliance, while the Pacific nation becomes Australia’s fourth formal ally, after the U.S., New Zealand and Papua New Guinea.

The agreement allows for other Pacific ​states to join.

New Zealand Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters added in the statement that Pacific leaders ⁠have for decades operated under ⁠an approach of having Pacific-led responses to ​regional security issues – and this alliance underscores that stance.

“Elevating ​our long-standing relationship with Australia and Fiji – and ‌other Pacific nations – to the next level through an alliance would mean we become even closer partners,” he said.

New Zealand currently only has one formal ally, ⁠Australia, although it is a member of the Five Eyes intelligence grouping and is a key partner of NATO.

The statement ⁠said the ‌government would now discuss its interest ⁠in membership with Australia and Fiji, and ​any ‌final decision would be made by cabinet.

The ​announcement follows China’s ⁠military test-firing a missile from a nuclear-powered submarine into the Pacific on Monday, which leaders across have reacted to with concern.

(Reporting by Lucy Craymer in Wellington and Renju Jose in Sydney; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman ​and Raju Gopalakrishnan)