Government refutes claim FBI's new office in Wellington to counter China
The US Federal Bureau of Investigation director Kash Patel - a Trump appointee - on Thursday announced the opening of a new dedicated attaché office in the capital.
An official statement was accompanied
by a video
, in which Patel said the issues New Zealand and the US worked on together were "some of the most important global issues of our times".
Top of the list of those issues was: "countering the CCP (Chinese Communist Party)" in the Indo-Pacific region. Other issues included countering narcotics trade, cyberintrusion and ransomware and protecting citizens across the world.
FBI spokesperson Ben Williamson also told the
Daily Mail
the opening was a "historic step" in strengthening the working relationship with New Zealand including to "confront the growing threats of our time emanating from the Indo-Pacific - particularly from hostile nation-state actors like the Chinese Communist Party".
Patel told the newspaper the FBI had "a strong relationship and collaborated closely with our counterparts in New Zealand for years".
He was first spotted at the Beehive on Wednesday, and the statement confirmed he had met with the Minister Responsible for the spy agencies GCSB and NZSIS Judith Collins, Police Minister Mark Mitchell, and Foreign Minister Winston Peters.
FBI director Kash Patel at the announcement of the standalone FBI office in Wellington.
Photo:
OLA THORSEN
Collins said it was an "excellent" meeting with "a lot of good discussion around the need for the FBI and our intelligence agencies, as well as police, to work even more closely together".
"The upgrade of the FBI presence here into an office that reports through to Washington DC, not through to Canberra, has got to be a good thing ... we were the only one of the Five Eyes partners that did not have an FBI office here - we had people, but not a full office.
"You know, we just love being our own office."
Collins said New Zealand was "fortunate to be part of Five Eyes" given it had a population the size of Alabama: "we cannot do everything by ourselves".
She pushed back on suggestions the office was a response to China's influence, saying it was "about the transnational crime that we see, the increasing influence of major drug traffickers across the Pacific, but also interference in countries' systems - particularly when I look at some of the gun-running sort of type behaviour that we know goes on the Pacific from transnational and global criminal outfits".
When it was pointed out Patel himself had referred to China, Collins said: "well, I don't respond to other people's press releases".
"That's up to him, he doesn't answer to me," she said.
Collins said the US was "very focused on fentanyl" and knew New Zealand was focused on disrupting methamphetamine trade.
"We know that we do have international criminals ... let's just understand that our security agency is also involved in this. We're not going to single out any particular country."
When pressed on
China's warships being sent near New Zealand
waters, and
launching intercontinental ballistic missiles
into the Pacific, she said the FBI was "focused on parts of that but not all of that - I mean, obviously it's not Defence ... the point is that it's a US decision and we're happy to support it".
She did not expect "any response at all" from China to the news.
"This is our country, our sovereign right to do what we do."
The secrecy around Patel's travel to New Zealand was for security reasons, she said: "the US, actually, they've made their own arrangements and so consequently we've obviously respected that".
From left Police Minister Mark Mitchell and Minister Responsible for the GSCB and NZSIS Judith Collins with FBI director Kash Patel at the opening ceremony for a dedicated FBI law enforcement attaché office in Wellington.
Photo:
OLA THORSEN
Winston Peters said the new office was "a really serious utility added to our crime fighting capacity in the Pacific, and crime and drug dealing and narcotics is an awful scourge, and we've got to get on top of it, so it's great news".
He said the subject of China had not been raised in their meeting.
"We never raised that issue, we talked about the Pacific, what we could do to improve the law and order situation, the great concern that Pacific countries had and that they needed help, and that we need to be part of the solution."
Peters pushed back when asked how China might view it: "No, no, look, we're not going to run to your narrative, that's a waste of our time."
He said his 40-minute meeting with Patel on Wednesday took place at "about the same time as the tsunami warning went off", which the FBI director heard.
"We all did, but then he realized that when I told him we are a country that put 70 Dart boys throughout the whole of Pacific to give us all the alerts in the world."
Mark Mitchell said that as well as meeting with Patel alongside the other ministers, he had also spoken with the director privately.
"I like him, yeah. He's very down to earth, very aware and across the issues that we're facing, very aligned - for us, we've got a big methamphetamine problem obviously that we're dealing with as a country, they've got the same sort of issues.
"He's got right behind his bureau, he's got his agents back out, highly active doing their work. So, yeah, I was very impressed with him."
Mitchell said the new office was not a sign of "growing ties" with the US, saying "we've got very strong pre-existing relationship".
"We should be working right across our Five Eyes partnership - especially for me and law enforcement and public safety, it's really important. We have a responsibility out to the Pacific as well, they are really suffering and buckling under the pressure of Class-A drugs and methamphetamine so I think that it's a very positive step."
He referred questions about whether it was related to China to Peters and Prime Minister Christopher Luxon.
"All I'm doing is speaking from my position as minister of police that it's a really good step and a really positive step for us to have a permanent FBI liaison office set up here in New Zealand."
Whether the office would have New Zealanders staffing it was an operational matter that police would work on with the FBI, he said - but the benefit of having it was that the FBI was "very good at law enforcement".
"They've got very good intelligence networks in terms of the countries that are peddling and sending methamphetamine down to our countries, so ... there's lots of different areas that our law enforcement officers can work and collaborate together to try and make sure that we're safe and the Pacific's safer, and ultimately, the United States is safer as well."
With Labour leader Chris Hipkins out of Wellington, deputy Carmel Sepuloni said the announcement was a serious one and had come "as quite a surprise".
"I personally haven't received an explanation, and I think that the general public are going to be wanting to know what the rationale is for this."
Green Party national security and intelligence spokesperson Teanau Tuiono was disappointed to see the office set up at all.
"Just no. We're not another state of the United States, we shouldn't be allowing foreign powers to set up shop like this, we don't like that, we don't like that at all ... it flies in the face of our independent foreign policy."
Tuiono reiterated the party's position that New Zealand should exit the Five Eyes intelligence sharing group.
"Our policy is we don't like Five Eyes, we think we should step away from Five Eyes, and if you look at what's happening around the world as well with the chaotic nature of the Trump regime, more and more people around the world are looking to build alliances in other ways."
Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour said the US was "a long and strong friend of New Zealand" and having an FBI office "doesn't really change that, it just strengthens the relationship".
His response to the Greens' stance was dismissive: "We need to make sure that we understand the world that we're living in which is not the safe one that we'd like it to be.
"The idea that New Zealand would pull out of an intelligence sharing agreement with Britain, America, Australia and Canada, I mean - who do they think our friends are in this world?"
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
3 minutes ago
- RNZ News
PM wants NZ to get behind development, progress, stem tide of Kiwis leaving for Oz
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon addresses 550 delegates at the annual National Party conference in Christchurch. Photo: RNZ / Giles Dexter National leader Christopher Luxon has told the party's annual conference that the country needs to "say yes" more. Addressing about 550 delegates, MPs and supporters at the Air Force Museum of New Zealand in Christchurch, Luxon bemoaned "activists" who opposed housing developments, agriculture, cruise ships and mines. "If we're serious about keeping Kiwis at home, creating jobs and increasing wages for all New Zealanders, we can't afford to keep saying no to every opportunity that comes our way." Opposition parties have heavily criticised the government for its economic policies and laid the blame at its feet for the 30,000 New Zealanders who moved to Australia last year, but Luxon said the opposition would make it worse. "Take a look at Australia," he said. "If they shut down their mining industry or their energy industry tomorrow, as Labour and the Greens want to do here, I guarantee you would see fewer Kiwis moving across the ditch." Luxon's speech came hot on the heels of an announcement from the United States that it would increase tariffs to 15 percent. Still digesting the announcement and what it would mean for New Zealand exporters, Luxon acknowledged "challenging" global conditions. "We can't just batten down the hatches and hope for the best," he said. Luxon's speech made no mention of National's coalition partners, New Zealand First or ACT, or even the word 'coalition' itself, although deputy Nicola Willis acknowledged the "energy" it took to keep Winston Peters and David Seymour under control. Instead, Luxon's speech was heavy on shoutouts to his National ministers and their policies, and also on blaming the previous government for the cost-of-living struggles New Zealanders currently faced. "In the years to come, immediate action on the cost of living isn't enough," he said. "The last government spent billions of dollars in failed handouts, only to watch inflation roar and the economy falter. "We have to keep our eyes on the prize." Echoing his speech at Monday's post-cabinet press conference, Luxon leaned on the economic policies the government had introduced, such as tax changes, FamilyBoost and the removal of the Auckland Fuel Tax. "We're doing what we can," he said. The speech contained an announcement the government would make it easier to get a concession on Department of Conservation land . "That means more certainty for businesses, less bureaucracy and much faster decisions, so the businesses that should be operating can get up and running." There would still be restrictions on some parts of the DOC estate. "Where it does make sense, we need to get to the 'yes' much faster - instead of being bogged down in process and uncertainty," Luxon said. Charges of $20-40 for foreign visitors to high-volume sites like Cathedral Cove, Tongariro Crossing, Milford Sound, and Aoraki Mount Cook were being introduced, but New Zealanders would be exempt from the fees. Party president Sylvia Wood, who was re-elected at the conference, said the party would select candidates for the 2026 election shortly. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
33 minutes ago
- RNZ News
PM wants NZ to get behind development, progress, stem tide of Kiwis living for Oz
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon addresses 550 delegates at the annual National Party conference in Christchurch. Photo: RNZ / Giles Dexter National leader Christopher Luxon has told the party's annual conference that the country needs to "say yes" more. Addressing about 550 delegates, MPs and supporters at the Air Force Museum of New Zealand in Christchurch, Luxon bemoaned "activists" who opposed housing developments, agriculture, cruise ships and mines. "If we're serious about keeping Kiwis at home, creating jobs and increasing wages for all New Zealanders, we can't afford to keep saying no to every opportunity that comes our way." Opposition parties have heavily criticised the government for its economic policies and laid the blame at its feet for the 30,000 New Zealanders who moved to Australia last year, but Luxon said the opposition would make it worse. "Take a look at Australia," he said. "If they shut down their mining industry or their energy industry tomorrow, as Labour and the Greens want to do here, I guarantee you would see fewer Kiwis moving across the ditch." Luxon's speech came hot on the heels of an announcement from the United States that it would increase tariffs to 15 percent. Still digesting the announcement and what it would mean for New Zealand exporters, Luxon acknowledged "challenging" global conditions. "We can't just batten down the hatches and hope for the best," he said. Luxon's speech made no mention of National's coalition partners, New Zealand First or ACT, or even the word 'coalition' itself, although deputy Nicola Willis acknowledged the "energy" it took to keep Winston Peters and David Seymour under control. Instead, Luxon's speech was heavy on shoutouts to his National ministers and their policies, and also on blaming the previous government for the cost-of-living struggles New Zealanders currently faced. "In the years to come, immediate action on the cost of living isn't enough," he said. "The last government spent billions of dollars in failed handouts, only to watch inflation roar and the economy falter. "We have to keep our eyes on the prize." Echoing his speech at Monday's post-cabinet press conference, Luxon leaned on the economic policies the government had introduced, such as tax changes, FamilyBoost and the removal of the Auckland Fuel Tax. "We're doing what we can," he said. The speech contained an announcement the government would make it easier to get a concession on Department of Conservation land . "That means more certainty for businesses, less bureaucracy and much faster decisions, so the businesses that should be operating can get up and running." There would still be restrictions on some parts of the DOC estate. "Where it does make sense, we need to get to the 'yes' much faster - instead of being bogged down in process and uncertainty," Luxon said. Charges of $20-40 for foreign visitors to high-volume sites like Cathedral Cove, Tongariro Crossing, Milford Sound, and Aoraki Mount Cook were being introduced, but New Zealanders would be exempt from the fees. Party president Sylvia Wood, who was re-elected at the conference, said the party would select candidates for the 2026 election shortly. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


Scoop
2 hours ago
- Scoop
Empire In The Antipodes: Why The FBI's Wellington Office Is A Threat ToAotearoa
On 31 July 2025, the FBI officially opened its first standalone office in Aotearoa New Zealand, based in Wellington's U.S. Embassy. For most of the mainstream media, this development was reported with a mixture of bureaucratic neutrality and mild curiosity. For politicians, it was framed as a logical step in enhancing cooperation on 'transnational crime.' But for those of us grounded in anti-authoritarian, anti-imperialist traditions of resistance, the meaning is far clearer – this is a dangerous expansion of American imperial policing into the Pacific, an alarming deepening of New Zealand's entanglement with the global surveillance state, and a stark reminder that in the eyes of empire, no land is truly sovereign. This move is not about safety or justice but about extending the reach of capital and control through surveillance and soft occupation. The narratives of 'cybercrime' and 'child exploitation' are being used to justify foreign policing on Indigenous land, while drawing historical and contemporary connections to colonialism, Five Eyes hegemony, and capitalist control. Policing Beyond Borders The Federal Bureau of Investigation is, by legal definition, a domestic agency. It exists to enforce U.S. federal law on U.S. soil. Yet the FBI now operates over 60 Legal Attaché offices around the world, and the new Wellington branch has been upgraded to become one of them, tasked with responsibility not only for Aotearoa but also for Niue, Samoa, the Cook Islands, Tonga, and even Antarctica. This is a global policing project masquerading as international cooperation. The FBI has been present in New Zealand since 2017, managed through its Canberra office. What has changed is that now, the FBI is no longer a guest, it is a tenant with its own office, its own staff, and its own extraterritorial power. FBI Director Kash Patel's visit to New Zealand was not just administrative, it was ideological. At a press conference, he made clear that the new office was about 'countering the influence of the Chinese Communist Party in the Indo-Pacific.' While New Zealand ministers such as Winston Peters and Judith Collins quickly distanced themselves from this overt geopolitical framing, the cat was already out of the bag. The FBI is not just here to stop online paedophiles or drug traffickers. It is here to enforce the strategic goals of the American empire. The backlash was immediate. Beijing condemned the comments as provocative and destabilising. Thousands of Kiwis expressed their anger online. Some posted furious responses on social media. This is not a fringe reaction. It is the instinct of people who know, whether consciously or intuitively, that what is being done in their name is not for their protection but for their submission. Five Eyes, Many Lies To understand the danger of this moment, one must understand the Five Eyes. Formed as a post-war intelligence alliance between the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, the Five Eyes has become a sprawling surveillance machine. It is a central pillar of what Edward Snowden exposed as the modern panopticon, a world where the internet is weaponised to track, manipulate, and suppress populations in the name of 'national security.' In this context, the FBI's expansion is not a bureaucratic upgrade, it is an insertion of another gear in the machine. It deepens the convergence of policing, intelligence, and military strategy across the Anglosphere. It makes Aotearoa even more complicit in the surveillance of its own people and of Pacific nations long exploited by Western colonial powers. It also deepens our vulnerability. New Zealand has tried to maintain a strategic balance in its foreign relations – reliant on China as its biggest trading partner, aligned with the U.S. and UK through Five Eyes. This tightrope walk has always been fraught, but the FBI's presence risks turning it into a fall. Patel's anti-China statements not only escalated diplomatic tension, they forced New Zealand to pick a side in the increasingly dangerous theatre of U.S.- China competition. And that choice is being made without democratic consent. The FBI was not invited by the people of Aotearoa. It was welcomed in by a political class eager to please its imperial friends while hiding behind the language of public safety. The Carceral Smokescreen The official justification for the FBI's expansion rests on the pillars of 'transnational crime' – cyber intrusions, child exploitation, organised crime, and drug trafficking. These are serious issues. But serious problems do not justify authoritarian solutions. What we are witnessing is the use of moral panic to expand surveillance infrastructure and carceral logic. The FBI has a long and brutal history, not just of policing crime, but of repressing dissent. From the COINTELPRO operations that targeted civil rights leaders, Black radicals, and Indigenous activists, to the post-9/11 entrenchment of racial profiling and entrapment, the FBI has always served the preservation of white supremacist, capitalist, and imperial power. Its arrival in Aotearoa is not neutral. It is not humanitarian. It is not apolitical. It is the expansion of a violent institution that answers to a violent empire. Moreover, the notion that transnational crime is best tackled through foreign intelligence agencies ignores the real roots of harm. Why is organised crime flourishing? Because economic systems create desperation, exclusion, and inequality. Why are children exploited? Because patriarchal capitalism commodifies bodies and thrives on secrecy and silence. Why is cybercrime rampant? Because capitalism digitised the economy without care for consent, justice, or digital sovereignty. To address these harms, we do not need more spies. We need more justice, real, transformative, community-rooted justice. The FBI is not the answer. It is part of the problem. Pacific Subjugation, Again That the FBI's jurisdiction includes Niue, Tonga, Samoa, and the Cook Islands is not a coincidence, it is a strategy. The Pacific is being recolonised under the guise of security. With China increasing its presence in the region through economic partnerships and infrastructure projects, the U.S. is rushing to reassert dominance, not through aid or diplomacy, but through militarisation and surveillance. The FBI in Wellington will act as a regional hub, not just for information gathering, but for soft coercion. These nations, many still grappling with the legacies of colonisation and neo-colonial governance, are now being brought into the orbit of American law enforcement without meaningful consent or reciprocal benefit. This is not security. This is soft occupation. And it must be opposed. The People Say No One of the few hopeful elements in this bleak development has been the public response. Aotearoa is not asleep. Many see this for what it is, imperial overreach dressed in bureaucratic clothing. The protests, online and offline, speak to a population that still values sovereignty, autonomy, and transparency. As anarcho-communists, we believe in people power. We believe that real security comes not from surveillance but from solidarity. We believe that no foreign agency should operate on these lands without the consent of the people who live here, and that even then, true justice is built from the ground up, not imposed from above. The anger is growing, and it is righteous. But we must go beyond protest. We must organise. A Call to Resistance This moment is a call to action. The FBI's presence is only the most visible layer of a deeper system that treats Aotearoa and the Pacific as pawns in a geopolitical chess game. To resist this system, we must connect the dots. We must link the FBI to the NZ Police, to the SIS, to the Five Eyes, to the prison-industrial complex, to colonial land theft, to capitalism's extraction and surveillance economies. We must say not just 'No FBI', but also 'No prisons. No cops. No empires. No bosses.' We must demand an end to foreign policing and a beginning to something else, something rooted in mana motuhake, tino rangatiratanga, and collective liberation. The opening of an FBI office in Wellington is not an isolated event. It is a sign of a system expanding, a machine tightening its grip. But every expansion carries the seeds of its own opposition. The future we want will not be built by diplomats or directors. It will be built by us, together, from below, in defiance of the states and empires that seek to divide and dominate us. Let this be our line in the sand. We were not born to be watched. We were born to be free. AOTEAROA WORKERS SOLIDARITY MOVEMENT aotearoa_anarchism@