
30 MARCH 2026
This week’s edition unfolds against a strategic backdrop in which Asia is being shaped not only by immediate regional tensions, but by a broader reorganisation of power, production, and partnership across the Indo-Pacific. Delayed U.S. fighter deliveries to Taiwan are finally moving forward, allied defence manufacturing is being pushed closer to potential Asian front lines, and new military access and cooperation arrangements—from Japan and Germany to the Philippines and France—suggest that security competition in the region is becoming more operational, more distributed, and less easily contained within old alliance frameworks.
At the same time, this issue shows that Asia’s strategic environment is not being transformed by military developments alone. The temporary U.S. sanctions waiver on Iranian crude has created a narrow opening for Asian refiners struggling with disrupted energy flows, while Japan’s push for another coordinated oil reserve release reflects mounting concern that the Gulf crisis is becoming a prolonged test of Asian resilience rather than a short-term market shock. What emerges is a region still acutely vulnerable to distant conflict, but increasingly forced to improvise under pressure rather than rely on stable external conditions.
Yet this issue is also about strategic adaptation—and about who is trying to benefit from it. Europe is giving its Indo-Pacific role more substance through trade, defence, and technology links with Australia, Japan, and the Philippines, while China is urging talks with Iran without allowing itself to be pulled too deeply into the conflict. Pakistan, meanwhile, is trying to turn geopolitical exposure into diplomatic relevance by positioning itself as a possible intermediary between Washington and Tehran. The common thread is obvious: crisis is creating openings, and multiple actors are now trying to convert instability into leverage.
Taken together, the developments in this issue point to an Indo-Pacific that is becoming harder, denser, and more strategically interconnected: a region in which defence industrial policy, energy insecurity, diplomatic manoeuvring, and alliance formation are no longer separate stories, but parts of the same larger shift. Asia on the Horizon continues to track these intersections—linking immediate developments to the broader transformations reshaping deterrence, dependence, and geopolitical influence across Asia and the wider international system.
- Key Developments
- Statistics of the Week
- Map of the Week
- Photo of the Week
- Infographic of the Week
- Regional Alliances
- Analysis
Delayed U.S. F-16 Deliveries to Taiwan Set to Begin in 2026
Taiwan has announced that deliveries of its long-delayed F-16V fighter jets from the United States will begin this year, marking a key step forward in a programme that has faced repeated setbacks. The $8 billion deal, agreed in 2019 for 66 aircraft, was slowed by software issues and production challenges, but officials now say manufacturing is running at “full capacity” and assembly lines are operating smoothly. The advanced F-16V variant—equipped with upgraded radar, avionics, and weapons systems—is intended to significantly strengthen Taiwan’s air capabilities, expanding its fleet to more than 200 aircraft and enhancing its ability to counter China’s increasingly modern air force.
The resumption of deliveries carries broader strategic significance. Taiwan has long expressed concern about delays in U.S. arms shipments amid rising military pressure from Beijing, and the F-16 programme has become a test case of Washington’s reliability as a defence partner. While the aircraft will still require further testing and integration, their arrival signals renewed momentum in bilateral military cooperation. More fundamentally, it underscores the central role of U.S. arms transfers in sustaining Taiwan’s deterrence posture—even as production bottlenecks and geopolitical tensions continue to complicate delivery timelines.
U.S.-Led Defence Manufacturing Push Moves Closer to Asia’s Front Lines
A U.S.-led defence industrial coalition has agreed new steps to produce key weapons components closer to Asia’s potential conflict zones, in a move aimed at reducing supply-chain vulnerability and speeding wartime resupply. Following a virtual meeting of the Partnership for Indo-Pacific Industrial Resilience (PIPIR), the Pentagon said members would launch a new solid rocket motor production programme led by Japan, advance cooperation on small military drones, and explore establishing a facility in the Philippines to load, assemble and package 30mm ammunition. Thailand and the United Kingdom also joined the group, bringing membership to 16 countries.
The initiative is strategically significant because it shifts allied defence production away from a U.S.-centric model toward a more geographically distributed network in the Indo-Pacific. Solid rocket motors are a critical bottleneck for many guided weapons, while drone cooperation is intended to build common standards and regional supply chains for batteries and small motors. A possible ammunition line in the Philippines would place basic munitions production much closer to likely flashpoints, including the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait, underscoring how Washington and its partners are preparing not only to deter conflict in Asia, but to sustain a prolonged one if necessary.
Asian Refiners Eye Iranian Crude After U.S. Sanctions Waiver
Asian refiners are moving to assess purchases of Iranian crude after Washington issued a 30-day waiver allowing imports of Iranian oil already at sea, in an effort to ease the supply crunch caused by the war involving the United States, Israel, and Iran. Reuters reports that Indian refiners plan to resume buying, while other Asian buyers are checking whether they can also take advantage of the temporary opening. The waiver covers cargoes loaded by March 20 and discharged by April 19, potentially unlocking a large volume of stranded supply at a moment when disruption in the Strait of Hormuz is forcing refineries across Asia to cut runs and trim fuel exports.
The development matters because it offers Asia a short-term energy relief valve, but not a clean solution. Reuters cites Kpler data showing roughly 170 million barrels of Iranian crude are currently at sea, yet payment arrangements, banking compliance, and the use of ageing shadow-fleet tankers remain major obstacles to any rapid commercial reopening. India has particular incentive to move quickly given its relatively limited crude stockpiles, while China—already Iran’s main customer—remains the most established buyer. The waiver therefore reflects emergency market management rather than any durable relaxation of U.S. pressure on Iranian oil exports.
Germany Pushes Reciprocal Access Pact with Japan
Germany is seeking a new military cooperation pact with Japan that would make it easier for the two countries’ armed forces to operate on each other’s territory, as Berlin deepens its Indo-Pacific security role. During talks in Yokosuka on March 22, German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius and Japanese Defence Minister Shinjiro Koizumi agreed to expand bilateral defence cooperation and to hold regular consultations when necessary for the security of both countries and regional stability. Tokyo said the ministers also confirmed their shared view that security in the Euro-Atlantic and the Indo-Pacific is “inseparable.”
The move is significant because it points toward a more operational Japan–Germany partnership, not just symbolic coordination. A reciprocal access-style arrangement would lower bureaucratic barriers for training, exercises, and temporary troop deployments, bringing Germany closer to the kind of security cooperation Japan already has with partners such as Australia and the United Kingdom. Pistorius’s broader trip to Japan, Singapore, and Australia—accompanied by major German defence firms—also underlines that Berlin is pairing its military outreach with defence-industrial diplomacy as it tries to establish itself as a more durable security actor in the Indo-Pacific.
Iran’s Failed Diego Garcia Strike Extends Gulf Conflict Into the Indian Ocean
Britain has confirmed that Iran unsuccessfully targeted the joint U.S.-U.K. military base on Diego Garcia, a strike that marks a notable geographic escalation of the conflict. Reuters reported that Iran fired two ballistic missiles toward the base on March 20, while a British official later confirmed the “unsuccessful targeting” of the facility. The incident is significant because Diego Garcia, in the central Indian Ocean, lies far beyond the ranges usually associated with Iran’s publicly stated missile limits and serves as a key platform for U.S. and British military operations.
The development matters less for the physical damage caused—none was reported—than for what it reveals about the widening reach of the war. The strike came after London allowed the United States to use Diego Garcia for defensive operations linked to the Iran conflict, underscoring how British facilities are now tied more directly to the crisis. Yet Prime Minister Keir Starmer has also said there is no evidence that Iran is targeting Britain itself, suggesting London is trying to contain the political implications even as the operational risks to its regional assets increase.
Kim Links Economic Planning to Permanent Nuclear Expansion
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has unveiled a new five-year economic plan while reaffirming an uncompromising commitment to expand the country’s nuclear arsenal, in a speech to the Supreme People’s Assembly. According to state media, the plan prioritises industrial modernisation, increased energy and food production, and housing development, alongside constitutional revisions and a new state budget. Kim simultaneously declared North Korea’s nuclear status “irreversible,” arguing that nuclear weapons are essential to national security and have helped enable economic development.
The pairing of economic planning with explicit nuclear expansion underscores a strategic shift rather than a contradiction. Pyongyang is not trading deterrence for growth, but embedding both within a single policy framework. Defence spending—reportedly around 15% of the budget—is set to reinforce that priority, while Kim’s rhetoric toward South Korea as a “hostile state” signals a further hardening of policy. The result is a more entrenched model of state development in which economic management, military buildup, and geopolitical alignment—particularly with Russia—are increasingly integrated, narrowing the already limited space for future denuclearisation diplomacy.
EU and Australia Conclude Long-Delayed Free Trade Deal
The European Union and Australia have finalized a free trade agreement after years of stalled negotiations, giving both sides a significant economic and strategic win. Reuters reports that the deal will eliminate tariffs on almost 100% of EU goods exports to Australia, while the European Commission says it will save EU exporters about €1 billion annually in duties and could lift the value of those exports by a third over the next decade. Australia, meanwhile, secured improved access for products including beef and sheep meat through expanded tariff-rate quotas, although sensitive farm access remained tightly managed.
The agreement matters for more than trade. It also opens access to Australian critical minerals such as lithium, manganese, and aluminium, and Euronews reports that it was paired with a new EU–Australia security and defence partnership, underscoring Brussels’ effort to deepen its Indo-Pacific presence amid wider geopolitical tensions. That geostrategic logic is clear: the EU is seeking more resilient supply chains, diversified export markets, and closer alignment with trusted partners beyond its traditional commercial orbit. This is not a routine tariff-cutting exercise; it is part of Europe’s broader push to connect trade policy with economic security and regional influence.
EU–Australia Security Pact Marks a Broader Indo-Pacific Turn
The European Union and Australia have signed a new Security and Defence Partnership, creating a formal framework for closer cooperation across defence industry, maritime security, cyber security, counter-terrorism, countering hybrid threats, space, arms control, and emerging technologies. Signed by EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas and Australian ministers Richard Marles and Penny Wong, the agreement is designed to deepen practical cooperation, including exercises, training, information exchange, and potential Australian participation in EU security missions. Importantly, the arrangement is political rather than legally binding, but it gives both sides a structured basis for more regular and operational coordination.
The deal is significant because it shows the EU trying to move beyond declaratory Indo-Pacific strategy toward a more concrete security role in the region. Brussels has explicitly framed European and Indo-Pacific security as increasingly interconnected, while Canberra has presented the partnership as part of a wider effort to tackle shared global challenges with like-minded partners. Coming alongside the newly concluded EU–Australia trade agreement, the pact suggests that Europe is linking economic security, critical minerals, and defence cooperation more tightly as it seeks a more durable strategic presence in the Indo-Pacific.
Germany Eyes Australia’s Ghost Bat as Defence Ties Deepen
Germany is considering buying Australia’s MQ-28A “Ghost Bat” combat drone, in what would make Berlin the first foreign customer for the Boeing-developed autonomous aircraft. During a visit to Australia, Defence Minister Boris Pistorius said the drone was among the systems being evaluated to support Germany’s air force, alongside European alternatives. The Ghost Bat is designed to operate with crewed aircraft such as fighter jets, and Reuters has previously reported that Australia ordered an initial operational batch after weapons testing, including an air-to-air missile trial, highlighting the platform’s growing maturity.
The move is strategically significant because it points to a broader Germany–Australia defence alignment that goes beyond procurement. Pistorius’s trip also included discussions on closer military cooperation, defence industrial ties, and joint production projects, including missile-related manufacturing in Australia. For Berlin, interest in the Ghost Bat reflects the pressure to modernise quickly as drones become central to air warfare; for Canberra, a German purchase would validate one of its flagship defence technologies and strengthen its claim to be an emerging exporter of advanced military systems.
EU–Australia Joint Statement Links Trade, Security, and Critical Minerals
The European Union and Australia used their joint statement in Canberra to present their relationship as both economic and strategic, not merely commercial. Issued alongside the conclusion of their long-delayed free trade agreement, the statement says the deal will strengthen bilateral trade and investment, support growth, and reinforce both sides’ commitment to an open, rules-based international order. It also ties the agreement to supply-chain resilience, especially through closer cooperation on critical minerals and clean-energy technologies, reflecting shared concern about overdependence on concentrated external suppliers.
The statement matters because it shows Brussels treating Australia as an Indo-Pacific strategic partner rather than just an export market. Reuters reports that the two sides also signed a separate security and defence partnership, while Ursula von der Leyen framed cooperation on critical minerals as essential to reducing vulnerability in strategically important supply chains. The broader significance is clear: the EU is increasingly binding trade policy to economic security and geopolitical alignment, and Australia is becoming part of that wider effort to diversify markets, secure raw materials, and deepen coordination with like-minded partners in a more contested international environment.
Taiwan Says U.S. Is Moving with Greater Urgency on Delayed Arms Deliveries
Taiwan says the United States is showing a “quite high” sense of urgency in helping speed up delayed weapons deliveries, as Taipei presses to strengthen its defences amid growing military pressure from China. Defence Minister Wellington Koo said Washington has established a special project team to accelerate programmes that have fallen behind schedule, while stressing that many previously ordered systems have already begun arriving. One of the most prominent delayed items is Taiwan’s 2019 order for 66 F-16V fighter jets, which the defence ministry said last weekend will begin to be delivered this year as production runs at “full capacity.”
The development is significant because it suggests a more active U.S. effort to address the delivery bottlenecks that have become a recurring source of anxiety in Taiwan. Reuters also notes that Michael Miller, director of the U.S. Defense Security Cooperation Agency, said last week that he had signed a 2023 directive prioritising Taiwan above other buyers, underscoring that security assistance to the island remains a top U.S. priority. The message from Taipei is therefore not that delays have disappeared, but that Washington is trying to treat them as a strategic problem rather than a normal procurement backlog.
China Demands Accountability After Breach at Tokyo Embassy
China has lodged a formal protest with Japan following a serious security breach at its embassy in Tokyo, where a man identified as a serving member of Japan’s Self-Defense Forces allegedly scaled the compound wall and entered the premises carrying a knife. According to Chinese officials, the intruder threatened embassy staff and admitted the act was illegal, prompting Beijing to condemn the incident as a grave violation of diplomatic norms and a direct threat to personnel safety. China has demanded a full investigation, punishment of the suspect, and stronger measures to protect its diplomatic mission.
Tokyo has described the incident as “regrettable” and pledged to tighten security, but Beijing has signalled that such language is insufficient, calling for a more substantive response. The episode comes amid already deteriorating relations, with tensions elevated over Taiwan, trade restrictions, and security policy shifts in Japan. As a result, the embassy breach is not being treated as an isolated incident, but as further evidence—at least from Beijing’s perspective—of a broader negative trajectory in bilateral ties, increasing the risk that even minor events could carry disproportionate diplomatic consequences.
Pakistan Positions Itself as a Potential U.S.–Iran Go-Between
Pakistan is seeking to translate its ties with both Washington and Tehran into a more prominent diplomatic role by offering to host talks aimed at ending the Iran war. Reuters reports that Islamabad has already shuttled messages between the two sides and that Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif confirmed the offer after weeks of intensive regional diplomacy, including more than 30 conversations with Middle Eastern counterparts over the past month. Pakistan’s case rests on an unusual mix of access and relative distance: it maintains direct channels with both governments, has long-standing relations with Iran, and—unlike Gulf mediators such as Qatar—does not host U.S. military bases.
The move is significant not only diplomatically but strategically. Pakistan has strong reasons to push for de-escalation: it fears spillover from the war, has faced fuel disruptions, and remains vulnerable along its sensitive border with Iran. At the same time, Islamabad’s growing rapport with the Trump administration, driven in part by army chief Asim Munir’s outreach, has raised its standing in Washington. Reuters also notes that Pakistan’s defence pact with Saudi Arabia complicates its balancing act, making mediation both an opportunity and a necessity as it tries to avoid being pulled directly into the conflict.
Germany and South Korea Face Growing Exposure in Rare Earth Supply Race
Germany and South Korea are increasingly vulnerable to shortages of critical rare earth materials as the United States and Japan move quickly to secure long-term supply deals, according to Australia’s Arafura Rare Earths. Reuters reports that China’s export restrictions on key minerals last year disrupted global markets, prompting a scramble among advanced economies to diversify supply chains. However, with major non-Chinese producers limited to a handful of firms—primarily Australia’s Lynas Rare Earths and the U.S.-based MP Materials—much of the available supply has already been locked in by Washington and Tokyo, leaving other industrial powers exposed.
The warning underscores a widening structural imbalance in global critical mineral access. Rare earths such as neodymium and praseodymium are essential for electric vehicles, wind turbines, and defence systems, making supply security a strategic priority. Arafura’s planned Nolans project in Australia, expected to produce about 4% of global NdPr supply by 2029, has already secured key customers and is now negotiating further deals amid rising demand. The broader implication is clear: as supply becomes increasingly pre-allocated through long-term contracts, late-moving economies risk facing tighter markets and higher costs in industries central to both energy transition and military capability.
China Urges Iran Toward Talks While Avoiding Deeper Entrapment
China has urged Iran to move toward negotiations rather than continued fighting, as Foreign Minister Wang Yi told his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araqchi that regional crises should be resolved “through dialogue and negotiation, not by force.” In their March 24 phone call, Wang called on all parties to seize any opportunity to start peace talks as soon as possible, while reaffirming China’s opposition to further escalation. Araqchi, for his part, urged China and Russia to take a stronger position at the U.N. Security Council against what Tehran described as U.S. abuse of the body.
The exchange is significant because it shows Beijing trying to balance political support for Iran with clear limits on how far it is willing to go. China has repeatedly condemned U.S. and Israeli military action and called for an immediate ceasefire, but it has stopped short of signalling any direct military role. Instead, Beijing is positioning itself as a diplomatic actor pressing for de-escalation while protecting its own interests in regional stability, energy flows, and freedom of navigation. That is not mediation in any robust sense yet; it is cautious crisis management designed to avoid being pulled deeper into the conflict.
North Korea and Belarus Sign Friendship Treaty, Deepening Russia-Aligned Bloc
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko have signed a friendship and cooperation treaty during Lukashenko’s visit to Pyongyang, marking a significant upgrade in bilateral ties. According to Reuters, the agreement includes cooperation across sectors such as diplomacy, agriculture, education, and public health, and follows a summit that both sides described as opening a “new stage” in relations. The visit—the first by a Belarusian president—was accompanied by symbolic gestures and strong political messaging, with both leaders emphasising shared positions on international issues and closer alignment going forward.
The development is strategically significant because it consolidates ties between two heavily sanctioned states that are already closely aligned with Russia. Both Pyongyang and Minsk have played direct roles in supporting Moscow’s war in Ukraine—North Korea through arms and personnel, and Belarus by hosting Russian forces and nuclear weapons—making their closer cooperation part of a broader geopolitical alignment. The treaty itself may have limited immediate economic impact, given modest bilateral trade, but it reinforces a pattern of political coordination among Russia’s partners and signals a continued effort by these states to build alternative networks of support outside Western-led systems.
Japan Pushes for Further Coordinated Oil Reserve Release
Japan has asked the International Energy Agency to prepare another coordinated oil stockpile release as the Iran war continues to disrupt Middle East supply routes and keep the Strait of Hormuz closed. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said she requested additional preparations in case the crisis becomes prolonged, following the March 11 decision by IEA members to release 400 million barrels from emergency reserves. IEA chief Fatih Birol said that release amounts to only about 20% of the oil and oil-product stocks the agency is coordinating and that more could be deployed “if necessary.”
The move underscores how seriously Tokyo is treating the risk of a sustained energy shock. Japan had already decided to open joint oil stockpiles co-owned by producing nations in the country, while shipping disruption remains acute: the head of the Japan Shipowners’ Association said 45 Japan-related vessels were still stranded in the Gulf on March 25. The significance is twofold: Japan is trying both to cushion its own energy vulnerability and to push for broader collective market stabilisation before shortages and price pressure deepen further across Asia.
Japan’s Remote-Island Missile Plan Signals a Wider Pacific Defence Shift
Japan is planning to deploy missiles on Minamitorishima, a remote Pacific island about 1,900 kilometres southeast of Tokyo, in a move that reflects a broader effort to harden the defence of its far-flung territories and expand its strategic reach beyond the East China Sea. According to the South China Morning Post, the proposal also includes creating a new Pacific defence initiative office, suggesting Tokyo is treating the island not as an outpost in isolation but as part of a wider Pacific security architecture. The plan fits with Japan’s current defence buildup, which prioritises stand-off strike capabilities and systems for the defence of remote islands.
The significance lies in what Minamitorishima represents. The island already figures in Japan’s economic security strategy because of nearby rare-earth resources, and Reuters has reported that Tokyo is testing mining there to reduce dependence on China. Linking missile deployment to an island with growing resource and military value shows that Japan is increasingly merging territorial defence, maritime security, and supply-chain resilience into a single strategic logic. In practical terms, this is less about one missile site than about Japan extending deterrence deeper into the Pacific as regional competition with China intensifies.
Sri Lanka’s Refusal to Host U.S. Warplanes Highlights the Costs of Neutrality
Sri Lanka has confirmed that it denied a U.S. request to station two armed combat aircraft at Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport between March 4 and 8, with President Anura Kumara Dissanayake saying the planes would have arrived from Djibouti carrying eight anti-ship missiles. Colombo also rejected an Iranian request to dock three ships, presenting both decisions as part of a neutrality policy aimed at keeping Sri Lanka out of the widening Iran war. The episode came after a U.S. submarine sank the Iranian warship IRIS Dena off Sri Lanka’s coast earlier this month, underscoring how the conflict has already reached the Indian Ocean.
The decision is strategically understandable, but economically risky. The United States is Sri Lanka’s largest export market, while Iran remains a major buyer of Ceylon tea, leaving Colombo exposed whichever side it appears to offend. Analysts cited by the South China Morning Post warn that distancing itself from Washington could carry serious trade consequences for a country still recovering from financial collapse. The significance, then, is not simply that Sri Lanka said no, but that smaller Indo-Pacific states are being forced to defend neutrality in a conflict whose economic and strategic pressures are becoming harder to avoid.
Philippines and France Sign Visiting Forces Pact Amid South China Sea Tensions
The Philippines and France have signed a visiting forces agreement that will allow their militaries to conduct joint training on each other’s territory, adding another layer to Manila’s expanding defence partnerships as tensions with China continue to rise in the South China Sea. The agreement was signed in Paris on March 26 by Philippine Defence Secretary Gilberto Teodoro and French Minister for the Armed Forces and Veterans Catherine Vautrin, with both sides also reaffirming support for a rules-based international order and the peaceful resolution of disputes.
The pact is significant because it gives the Philippines another formal security arrangement with an external partner, alongside similar agreements with the United States, Australia, Japan, and New Zealand. Its timing is also pointed: the deal came a day after the Philippine military said a Chinese missile frigate had carried out an “unsafe and unprofessional” manoeuvre against a Philippine Navy vessel near Thitu Island. The broader message is that Manila is continuing to widen its security network not only to improve interoperability, but also to strengthen diplomatic and military backing as confrontations with Beijing intensify.
Trump Reschedules China Trip for Mid-May After Iran War Delay
The White House says President Donald Trump will visit China on May 14–15 for talks with Xi Jinping, rescheduling a trip that had originally been expected at the end of March but was delayed as Washington focused on the Iran war. Reuters reports that Trump said preparations for the Beijing visit are now being finalized and that Xi is expected to make a reciprocal visit to Washington later this year. The meeting will be the two leaders’ first in-person talks since their October 2025 encounter in Busan, where they agreed to a trade truce.
The visit matters because it suggests both sides still want to stabilize relations despite continued tension over trade, Taiwan, and the wider geopolitical fallout from the Middle East conflict. Reuters says possible agreements in Beijing could include agriculture and aircraft parts, but major disputes—especially over Taiwan—remain unresolved, with China again warning Washington to handle arms sales to the island with “extreme caution.” The trip therefore points less to any real reset than to an effort to prevent broader U.S.–China rivalry from worsening while both capitals manage other strategic pressures.
Pakistan Expands Mediation Bid with Four-State Talks and Iran Outreach
Pakistan hosted talks with Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Egypt on March 29–30 as it sought to build a broader diplomatic platform for de-escalation in the Iran war and to position itself as a possible venue for future U.S.–Iran negotiations. Reuters reported that the four countries’ foreign ministers met in Islamabad for “in-depth discussions” on reducing regional tensions, with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan saying they would examine where negotiations are heading and what practical steps could be taken. Islamabad has already been passing messages between Washington and Tehran and has conveyed a U.S. proposal for ending the conflict.
The diplomacy matters because Pakistan is trying to turn geographic exposure into political leverage. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s office said Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian told him that trust is essential for mediation and praised Pakistan’s diplomatic efforts during an hour-long call on March 28. Sharif, in turn, briefed him on Pakistan’s contacts with the United States and Gulf states. The result is not a breakthrough, but a clearer sign that Islamabad is emerging as a serious intermediary as regional powers search for a channel acceptable to both Tehran and Washington.
Manila and Beijing Reopen South China Sea Talks with Energy Security in Focus
The Philippines and China have resumed high-level consultations on the South China Sea for the first time since January 2025, combining their usual dispute-management agenda with new discussions on energy and fertilizer security. According to the Philippine foreign ministry, the 11th round of their bilateral consultation mechanism included initial exchanges on possible oil and gas cooperation, alongside talks on renewable energy, agriculture, trade, and confidence-building between the two coast guards. The shift reflects the pressure created by the wider Middle East conflict, which pushed President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to declare a national energy emergency and seek more diversified fuel supplies.
The talks are significant because they show Manila trying to compartmentalize its worsening maritime dispute with Beijing in order to manage immediate economic risk. The Philippine side said it firmly reiterated its legal and security concerns, including incidents affecting Filipino personnel and fishermen, while China called for “concrete actions” to improve ties. That makes this less a diplomatic thaw than a pragmatic attempt to keep channels open while tensions remain high in contested waters where China’s claims continue to clash with the Philippines’ position and with the 2016 arbitral ruling Beijing rejects.
China Courts Europe with Offer to Expand Imports
China has said it is willing to “actively” expand imports from the European Union, as Commerce Minister Wang Wentao used talks with European Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic on the sidelines of a World Trade Organization meeting in Cameroon to call for steadier economic ties. According to Reuters, Wang also urged the EU to relax restrictions on high-tech exports to China, avoid politicising trade issues, and view China’s development “rationally and objectively.” The message points to a clear Chinese effort to stabilize relations with Europe at a time of wider trade friction with the United States and growing scrutiny of Chinese industrial policy.
The significance lies in what Beijing is trying to achieve. Expanding imports is not simply a goodwill gesture; it is part of a broader attempt to reduce pressure on China’s trade relationship with Europe while pushing back against export controls and other restrictions on advanced technology. That makes the outreach strategically two-sided: China is offering market access in some areas while pressing the EU to soften measures it sees as limiting its economic and technological room for manoeuvre. For Brussels, the issue is whether commercial engagement can be widened without weakening its increasingly security-conscious trade posture toward China.
The Economic Scale of the EU–Australia FTA
The EU–Australia Free Trade Agreement represents a significant structural shift in bilateral economic relations, with measurable impacts on both trade flows and market access. According to Beyond the Horizon analysis, the deal targets a €27.9 billion trade imbalance while eliminating tariffs on roughly 99% of EU goods exports to Australia. It is expected to generate around €1 billion in annual savings for EU firms, while delivering an estimated A$10 billion boost to the Australian economy each year.
What makes these figures strategically important is not just their scale, but their distribution. The near-total tariff liberalization underscores how deeply barriers are being dismantled, while the savings and growth projections highlight asymmetric but complementary gains: Europe benefits from cost reductions and export expansion, while Australia gains macroeconomic uplift and market access. At the same time, the agreement reinforces supply-chain integration, particularly in critical minerals, where duty-free access and investment flows are expected to strengthen long-term industrial cooperation. Taken together, the numbers illustrate that this is not a marginal trade adjustment, but a substantial reconfiguration of economic ties between Europe and the Indo-Pacific.

Japan’s Expanding Island Defence Perimeter
This week’s map highlights the strategic geography behind Japan’s reported plan to deploy missiles on Minamitorishima, a remote Pacific island that sits far beyond the country’s more familiar southwestern defence line. By situating Minamitorishima alongside Okinotorishima and the broader “first” and “second” island chains, the visual shows how Tokyo is increasingly thinking about its security in wider maritime terms—not only around the East China Sea and Taiwan, but across a broader Pacific arc. The map also underlines how these remote islands extend Japan’s exclusive economic zone deep into the ocean, giving them significance well beyond their small physical size.
What makes the map important is that it illustrates Japan’s emerging strategic logic: remote islands are being treated not as isolated outposts, but as nodes linking territorial defence, sea-lane security, and economic resilience. Minamitorishima’s location gives it value both as a potential military site and as part of Japan’s effort to secure nearby seabed rare-earth resources. In that sense, the visualization captures a wider shift in Japanese defence planning—toward extending deterrence outward, hardening peripheral positions, and integrating military posture with resource security in response to intensifying regional competition.

Kim and Lukashenko in Pyongyang: Symbolism of a Sanctions-Era Alignment
This week’s image captures North Korean leader Kim Jong Un alongside Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko during the latter’s high-profile visit to Pyongyang, a meeting marked by carefully staged symbolism and overt political messaging. The photograph—set against the backdrop of North Korean state iconography—shows both leaders in a relaxed and visibly cordial moment, reinforcing the narrative of solidarity that accompanied Lukashenko’s first-ever visit to the country. The summit featured elaborate ceremony and culminated in the signing of a friendship treaty, with both sides framing the relationship as entering a “new stage.”
The image matters because it encapsulates more than a bilateral meeting—it reflects the consolidation of a broader geopolitical alignment among states facing Western pressure. Kim explicitly criticised “undue pressure on Belarus from the West,” underscoring a shared political stance rooted in resistance to sanctions and external influence. The visual pairing of the two leaders therefore serves as a symbol of an emerging network of coordination among Russia-aligned partners, where diplomatic engagement, political messaging, and strategic signalling are increasingly intertwined in response to a more polarized international environment.

China’s Messaging on Iran: Diplomacy Framed as Strategic Restraint
This week’s infographic highlights China’s carefully calibrated messaging during the Iran war, centred on Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s call that “dialogue is always better than continued fighting.” The visual combines imagery of Wang Yi and his Iranian counterpart with key quotations and interpretive text, presenting Beijing’s position as one of consistent support for negotiations, opposition to escalation, and emphasis on sovereignty. It also captures Iran’s own framing, stressing that its objectives go beyond a temporary ceasefire and include maintaining control over strategic routes such as the Strait of Hormuz.
The infographic is significant because it illustrates how China is positioning itself rhetorically as a stabilising actor while avoiding deeper commitment. By emphasising diplomacy without offering concrete mediation mechanisms, Beijing preserves flexibility: it signals alignment with de-escalation while limiting exposure to the conflict’s risks. The final panel’s emphasis on a “window for diplomatic engagement” reinforces the uncertainty of the moment, but also reflects China’s broader strategy—presenting itself as a necessary political interlocutor in crises where it remains cautious about direct involvement.
🇨🇳☎️🇮🇷 Diplomacy in Focus as China Urges Talks Amid Rising Tensions
As geopolitical tensions continue to unfold, China has called for renewed dialogue, emphasizing negotiation over confrontation in its recent engagement with Iran.
The Exchange signals a broader push for… pic.twitter.com/zDaYOy2Qqo
— European Hub for Contemporary China (@EuroHub4Sino) March 26, 2026
Manila’s Expanding Security Network and Europe’s Indo-Pacific Role
Introduction
The new visiting forces agreement between the Philippines and France is not a routine defence document. It is another sign that Manila is steadily widening its external security network as confrontations with China intensify in the South China Sea. By allowing both militaries to train on each other’s territory, the pact adds France to a growing list of Philippine security partners that already includes the United States, Australia, Japan, and New Zealand. The immediate trigger is obvious: repeated friction at sea has convinced Manila that diplomatic protest alone is inadequate. The broader significance is that the Philippines is no longer relying on a single alliance anchor. It is building a layered coalition.
This matters because the South China Sea dispute is increasingly being internationalised not just rhetorically, but institutionally. The Philippines is turning external support into practical military access, interoperability, and political signalling. France, for its part, is demonstrating that its Indo-Pacific presence is not merely declaratory. The agreement therefore reveals something larger than a bilateral defence arrangement: it shows how middle powers and extra-regional actors are becoming more embedded in Asia’s maritime security landscape.
From Bilateral Dependence to Networked Deterrence
For the Philippines, the logic is straightforward. Its alliance with the United States remains central, but it is no longer sufficient on its own as the sole framework for deterrence. Manila’s answer has been to multiply defence ties, creating overlapping partnerships that reinforce one another. The agreement with France fits precisely into that strategy.
That is a sensible shift. A country facing sustained maritime coercion gains more by broadening its strategic options than by tying itself too narrowly to one patron. Joint training arrangements do not amount to a mutual defence treaty, but they do raise the political and operational costs of further pressure. They improve familiarity between forces, create habits of cooperation, and signal that the Philippines is not diplomatically isolated.
What emerges is a form of networked deterrence. Instead of a single dominant security guarantee, Manila is assembling a web of smaller but cumulative commitments. That does not eliminate the asymmetry with China, and anyone claiming otherwise would be indulging in fantasy. But it does make coercion more politically visible and potentially more costly.
Why France Matters
France is not entering this picture as a symbolic outsider. It is a resident Indo-Pacific power with territories, military assets, and strategic interests in the region. Its relevance lies precisely in that combination of European weight and regional presence. By signing this pact, Paris is showing that its commitment to a “rules-based order” is not confined to speeches.
The agreement also points to a wider European trend. European states increasingly argue that security in Europe and the Indo-Pacific is interconnected. Sometimes that language is empty posturing. Here, however, it takes a more concrete form. France is putting institutional substance behind the claim by deepening practical defence cooperation with a frontline Southeast Asian claimant state.
That gives the pact importance beyond the Philippines itself. It suggests that Europe’s Indo-Pacific role may develop less through grand collective strategy and more through selective bilateral engagements with exposed regional partners. In that sense, France is acting where broader European policy often remains vague.
The China Factor
The timing of the agreement makes its strategic context unmistakable. Coming just after the reported unsafe manoeuvre by a Chinese missile frigate near Thitu Island, the deal cannot credibly be treated as neutral or abstract. It is a response to an environment in which Chinese pressure has become more persistent, more operational, and more difficult for Southeast Asian claimants to manage alone.
That does not mean the pact is escalatory in itself. Training agreements are defensive instruments. But they are still political acts, and Beijing will read them as part of a wider pattern of external balancing. The Philippines clearly accepts that risk. It appears to have concluded that the greater danger now lies in underreacting, not overreacting.
Conclusion
The Philippines–France visiting forces agreement shows how alliance politics in the Indo-Pacific are evolving. Manila is moving away from narrow dependence and toward a broader security network designed to improve resilience, interoperability, and diplomatic backing. France, meanwhile, is demonstrating that extra-regional powers can play a more concrete role in Asian security when they are willing to move beyond rhetoric.
The real significance of the pact is therefore cumulative. On its own, it does not transform the military balance in the South China Sea. But as part of a wider pattern of expanding Philippine defence ties, it strengthens a coalition-based response to coercion. That is the point. Manila is not trying to match China ship for ship. It is trying to ensure that pressure on the Philippines increasingly carries international consequences.
Europe’s Indo-Pacific Turn Becomes Material
Introduction
The EU–Australia free trade agreement and the parallel security and defence partnership are important not because they are dramatic, but because they are cumulative. Together, they show Europe trying to turn its Indo-Pacific rhetoric into something more concrete: market access, critical-mineral supply, defence-industrial cooperation, and structured security engagement with a trusted regional partner. Add Germany’s interest in Australia’s Ghost Bat combat drone, and the pattern becomes harder to dismiss as diplomatic decoration. What is emerging is not a European military pivot to Asia in any grand sense. It is something narrower and more realistic: a selective Indo-Pacific strategy built on economic security, technology access, and practical cooperation with like-minded states.
Trade Policy as Strategic Policy
The EU–Australia FTA is plainly about commerce, but reducing it to tariff liberalisation would miss the point. The agreement eliminates tariffs on almost all EU goods exports to Australia, promises major savings for European firms, and gives Australia improved access for products such as beef and sheep meat. That is economically significant. More importantly, it reflects a deeper European calculation: open trade now has to serve resilience as well as growth.
That is where critical minerals become central. Australian lithium, manganese, aluminium and other inputs matter not just for industry in the abstract, but for batteries, clean technology, and strategic manufacturing chains that Europe no longer wants overly concentrated in politically risky suppliers. Brussels is increasingly using trade agreements to lock in access to trusted sources of strategic materials. That is a rational adjustment to a harsher geopolitical environment.
The key point is that the EU is no longer treating trade as a separate domain from power politics. It is binding market access, supply-chain security, and geopolitical alignment together. Anyone still describing this as routine trade policy is not paying attention.
Security Cooperation Without Illusions
The EU–Australia Security and Defence Partnership pushes in the same direction. It is not legally binding, and it does not create an alliance. That limitation matters. Overstating it would be sloppy. Still, dismissing it as empty would also be wrong. Political frameworks shape habits of cooperation, and this one creates a formal basis for work on maritime security, cyber, defence industry, hybrid threats, space, and emerging technologies.
What makes the pact noteworthy is that it moves the EU beyond declaratory Indo-Pacific language toward operational relevance, however modest. Europe has long claimed that Euro-Atlantic and Indo-Pacific security are linked. Often that has sounded like borrowed American phrasing rather than serious strategy. Here, at least, Brussels is attaching institutions and policy mechanisms to the claim.
Australia is useful to Europe precisely because it is a credible regional actor with resources, strategic geography, and established defence ties with the United States and Asian partners. In other words, Brussels is not trying to build Indo-Pacific influence from scratch. It is attaching itself to capable partners already embedded in the regional balance.
Germany and the Defence-Industrial Dimension
Germany’s interest in the Ghost Bat drone sharpens the industrial side of this shift. On one level, this is a procurement story: Berlin is exploring an advanced autonomous system as air warfare becomes increasingly drone-centric. But the broader significance lies in what it says about Europe’s evolving view of Australian defence industry.
If Germany buys the platform, it would signal that Australia is not merely a security partner or minerals supplier, but a source of advanced military technology. That would matter for both sides. Berlin needs faster modernisation and more flexible industrial options. Canberra wants validation as a producer, not just a consumer, of high-end defence capability. Joint discussions on missile-related manufacturing and broader defence cooperation reinforce that trend.
This does not mean Europe is abandoning its own defence-industrial ambitions. But it does show a growing willingness to source strategically from outside Europe when capability, speed, and political alignment make it worthwhile.
Conclusion
Taken together, these developments point to a clearer strategic reorientation in EU–Australia relations. Trade, critical minerals, defence cooperation, and industrial technology are being pulled into a single framework. That is the real story. Europe is trying to make its Indo-Pacific role more durable by grounding it in material interests rather than slogans. Australia, meanwhile, is becoming more valuable to Europe not just as a commodity supplier or diplomatic partner, but as a strategic node in a wider effort to diversify risk and deepen cooperation among like-minded powers.
This is not a grand alliance, and pretending otherwise would be absurd. But it is more serious than symbolic diplomacy. Europe’s Indo-Pacific turn is becoming tangible precisely because it is being built through practical agreements, strategic supply chains, and selective defence ties rather than inflated rhetoric.
