Colin Ambler/cvnznews
New Zealand is preparing to enter one of the most significant defence conversations in its modern Pacific history, with the Government confirming it will explore joining the newly announced Ocean of Peace Alliance between Fiji and Australia. The move comes in a week where Pacific security has again been thrust into the spotlight — including renewed concern after China’s recent South Pacific missile test, a demonstration that unsettled defence officials across the region and sharpened calls for stronger collective security.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said New Zealand “welcomes” the Fiji–Australia alliance and sees value in elevating long‑standing defence ties into a more formal structure. “We already work with both countries on how we can develop a safer region for all, so engaging with them on this alliance is logical,” he said. The Ocean of Peace Alliance is a mutual defence treaty committing its members to consult, cooperate, and act together in the face of common danger.
Crucially, it is designed as a Pacific‑led framework — something Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters says aligns with decades of regional thinking. “Pacific leaders have long operated under an approach of Pacific‑led responses to Pacific security issues,” Peters said. “Elevating our relationships with Australia and Fiji to the next level through an alliance would mean we become even closer partners.
Defence Minister Chris Penk noted the timing: New Zealand and Australia are marking 75 years of their own alliance, and both countries have been working more closely with Fiji on defence training, maritime security, and humanitarian operations. “New Zealand values the opportunity to grow Pacific unity and build stronger defence and security partnerships within our region,” Penk said.
The Government will now begin formal discussions with Fiji and Australia on potential membership. Any final decision will go to Cabinet, followed by the usual Parliamentary treaty process.
For New Zealand, the question is no longer whether the Pacific is becoming strategically contested — China’s missile test made that clear — but how quickly the region can strengthen its collective shield.







