
06 Nov, 2025
1 min read
Foreign Ministers from Six Nations Unite Over Indo-Pacific and European Security Concerns
Foreign ministers and senior officials from Japan, South Korea, Australia, Britain, France, and Germany convened on Tuesday in New York alongside the UN General Assembly to reaffirm their joint commitment to addressing shared security challenges in the Indo-Pacific and Europe. The meeting focused particularly on concerns involving China, Russia, and North Korea.
In a joint statement issued after the gathering, the representatives emphasized their alignment on core principles such as free trade and adherence to the rule of law. The statement noted that "peace, security and resilience in the Indo-Pacific and Europe are becoming more intertwined."
The coalition stressed its determination to enhance cooperation on cyber defense initiatives and to counter hybrid threats—complex challenges that combine military actions with other tactics.
Observers view this meeting as a strategic effort to present a coordinated front, partly in response to the "America First" foreign policy stance of the U.S. administration under President Donald Trump.
The group aims to strengthen multilateral partnerships to safeguard regional stability and promote international norms in the face of evolving geopolitical dynamics.
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