Do
New Zealanders want this? I don't think so.
U.S.,
New Zealand sign defense agreement
New
Zealand and the United States have signed an agreement to bolster
defense co-operation in the Asia-Pacific region, both governments
said on Wednesday, signaling a further thaw in relations after a
25-year stand-off.
19
June, 2012
The
two countries said they would hold regular high-level dialogue and
co-operate on maritime security, counter-terrorism, and peacekeeping
operations, paving the way to closer military ties between Washington
and Wellington.
"This
high-level arrangement recognizes the significant security
co-operation that exists between New Zealand and the U.S. within the
context of our independent foreign policy, and seeks to build upon
that co-operation in the years ahead," New Zealand Defense
Minister Jonathan Coleman said.
The
latest agreement, dubbed the Washington Declaration, follows the 2010
Wellington Declaration, which opened the door to renewed U.S.-New
Zealand defense links breached in the mid-1980s when New Zealand
declared itself nuclear-free.
Washington
lifted its ban on military links between the two countries, resulting
in U.S. Marines training in New Zealand and ships from the two navies
holding exercises earlier this year, the first in two decades.
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