Polynesian and pre-statehood relations Cross-cultural similarities between the
Māori (
tangata māori) of precolonial New Zealand and native Hawaiians (
kanaka māoli) date back thousands of years. According to oral history, the Māori homeland is
Hawaiki, a semi-mythical island from which the name of the
state of Hawaii is derived. The Māori language and the Hawaiian language are closely related
Polynesian languages, to the extent that the Hawaiians' endonym
Kānaka Maoli itself is
cognate to
Tangata Māori of the former both deriving from Proto-Polynesian , which has the reconstructed meaning "true, real, genuine". The United States established consular representation in New Zealand in 1838 to represent and protect American shipping and whaling interests, appointing
James Reddy Clendon as consul, resident at
Okiato in the
Bay of Islands. In 1840, New Zealand became part of the
British Empire with the signing of the
Treaty of Waitangi. Although it gradually grew more independent, for its first hundred years, New Zealand followed the United Kingdom's lead on foreign policy. In declaring war on Germany on 3 September 1939, Prime Minister
Michael Joseph Savage proclaimed, "Where she goes, we go; where she stands, we stand". While Hawaii was still an
independent kingdom, many Hawaiian sailors in the 1850s settled at
Papakōwhai not far from Wellington, where they were referred to with the exonym
Wahu (after the island
Oʻahu). On the other hand, Māori New Zealanders quickly established a community at
Manoa; they at one point gained the audience with
Kamehameha and
Kalākaua nobility in 1920.
Conflicts fought alongside the United States New Zealand has fought in a number of conflicts on the same side as the United States, including
World War I,
World War II, the
Korean War, the
Vietnam War, the
Gulf War and the
Afghanistan War; it also sent a unit of army engineers to help rebuild Iraqi infrastructure during the
Iraq War.
World War II During the Pacific theatre of WWII (1941–1945), significant numbers of US military personnel were deployed to New Zealand to prepare for crucial battles such as
Guadalcanal and
Tarawa; there were between 15,000 and 45,000 US servicemen stationed in New Zealand at any one time between June 1942 and mid-1944. The habits and spending power of these troops had various influences on New Zealand's culture. Though relations were largely positive, some points of tension developed. For example, the
1st Marine Division, was tasked with loading reconfiguration from administrative to combat configuration during a strike by Wellington dock workers. The
Battle of Manners Street also occurred in Wellington involving American servicemen and New Zealand servicemen and civilians outside the Allied Services Club in Manners Street after American servicemen in the Services Club began forcibly stopping
Māori soldiers from also using the Club because of their skin colour. Many New Zealand soldiers in the area, both white (
Pākehā) and Māori, combined in opposition. The battle resulted in a possible two American deaths and 1 New Zealand Serviceman being arrested, as well as a cover up. After the war New Zealand joined with
Australia and the United States in the
ANZUS security treaty in 1951.
Korean War 1950–1953 New Zealand was among those who responded to the
United Nations call for help in Korea. New Zealand joined 15 other nations, including the United Kingdom and the United States, in the anti-communist war. The Korean War was also significant, as it marked New Zealand's first move towards association with the United States' stand against communism. New Zealand contributed six frigates, several smaller craft, and a 1044 strong volunteer force (known as K-FORCE) to the
Korean War. The ships were under the command of a British flag officer and formed part of the
US Navy screening force during the
Battle of Inchon, performing shore raids and inland bombardment. The last New Zealand soldiers did not leave until 1957 and a single liaison officer remained until 1971. A total of 3,794 New Zealand soldiers served in K-FORCE and 1300 in the
Navy deployment. 33 were killed in action, 79 wounded and one soldier was taken prisoner. That prisoner was held in North Korea for eighteen months and repatriated after the armistices.
ANZUS Treaty The Australia, New Zealand, United States Security Treaty (
ANZUS or ANZUS Treaty) is the military alliance which binds Australia and New Zealand and, separately, Australia and the United States to cooperate on defence matters in the
Pacific Ocean area, though today the treaty is understood to relate to defence operations. Initially the 1951 ANZUS Treaty was a fully mutual
collective security alliance between Australia, New Zealand and the United States, but this is no longer the case as the United States suspended its treaty obligations to New Zealand following the refusal to allow an American destroyer, the , into a New Zealand port in February 1985. A 1984 policy of a
New Zealand nuclear-free zone meant that any ship thought to be carrying nuclear weapons was banned from New Zealand's ports, which meant all American naval vessels were essentially denied access due to the American policy to 'neither confirm nor deny' the presence of nuclear weapons. In suspending obligations to New Zealand under the ANZUS treaty, the
US cut major military and diplomatic ties between Wellington and Washington, downgrading New Zealand from 'ally', to 'friend'. This included removing New Zealand from military exercises and war games in the area, and limiting the intelligence sharing to New Zealand. New Zealand has not removed itself from ANZUS, arguing that allowing nuclear weapons into New Zealand was not part of the ANZUS treaty, and that New Zealand's position is not a pacifist or Anti-American decision, and would increase its conventional military cooperation with the US. The Americans felt personally betrayed by the New Zealanders and would not accept the anti-nuclear stance, stating that New Zealand will be welcome back in ANZUS if and when New Zealand accepted all US ship visits. This Act formalized the previous policy of New Zealand being a
nuclear-free zone and banned all nuclear-powered ships or nuclear weapons from entering New Zealand waters or air space. New Zealand's relationship with the United States further suffered when French agents
sank the Rainbow Warrior while it was docked in Auckland Harbour in July 1985. The United States, as well as other western countries aside from Australia, failed to condemn the attack which was seen in New Zealand as
state-sponsored terrorism by the French. This inaction furthered the breach between the two countries, with the US State Department finally stating that it "deplored such acts, wherever they may occur" in September 1985, a few days after the French admission of guilt. In 1996, the United States under President
Bill Clinton reinstated New Zealand's status from a 'friend' to an 'ally' by designating New Zealand as a
Major non-NATO ally. Although the ANZUS treaty has never been officially called on by the United States, New Zealand has fought alongside the United States in multiple conflicts since it was signed, notably the
Korean War,
Vietnam War,
Gulf War, and
War in Afghanistan.
Vietnam War New Zealand's involvement in the
Vietnam War was highly controversial, sparking widespread protest at home from anti-Vietnam War movements modelled on their American counterparts. This conflict was also the first in which New Zealand did not fight alongside the United Kingdom, instead following the loyalties of the ANZUS Pact (Australia also fought in the war). New Zealand's initial response was carefully considered, and characterised by Prime Minister
Keith Holyoake's cautiousness towards the entire Vietnam question. New Zealand non-military economic assistance continued from 1966 and averaged US$347,500 annually. This funding went to mobile health teams to support refugee camps, the training of village vocational experts, to medical and teaching equipment for
Huế University, equipment for a technical high school and a contribution toward the construction of a science building at the University of Saigon. Private civilian funding was also donated for 80 Vietnamese students to take scholarships in New Zealand. The government preferred minimal involvement, with other
Southeast Asian deployments already straining the New Zealand armed forces. From 1961, New Zealand came under pressure from the United States to contribute military and economic assistance to South Vietnam, but refused. American pressure continued for New Zealand to contribute military assistance, as the United States would be deploying combat units (as opposed to merely advisors) itself soon, as would Australia. Holyoake justified New Zealand's lack of assistance by pointing to its military contribution as an ally of
Malaysia, which was
confronted in arms by Indonesia, but eventually the government decided to contribute. It was seen as in the nation's best interests to do so—failure to contribute even a token force to the effort in Vietnam would have undermined New Zealand's position in ANZUS and could have had an adverse effect on the alliance itself. New Zealand had also established its post-Second World War security agenda around countering communism in South-East Asia and of sustaining a strategy of forward defence, and so needed to be seen to be acting upon these principles. On 27 May 1965 Holyoake announced the government's decision to send 161 Battery,
Royal Regiment of New Zealand Artillery to South Vietnam in a combat role. The Engineers were replaced by the battery in July 1965. The battery served under the U.S.
173rd Airborne Brigade until the formation of the
1st Australian Task Force in 1966. In 1966, when the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation came to an end, Australia and New Zealand were pressured by the United States to expand their involvement in the Vietnam War. The 1st Australian Task Force (1ATF) was formed with additional Australian infantry and artillery, supported by Australian tanks, cavalry, air support, logistics, intelligence, engineering, and
special forces. The task force was given the province of
Phuoc Tuy as its tactical area of operations. New Zealand reluctantly increased its commitment by sending two companies of
RNZIR troops in 1967. The companies were integrated into
2nd Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment in March 1968, forming the 2RAR/NZ (ANZAC) Battalion, with New Zealand personnel assuming various positions in the battalion, including that of second in command. A
NZSAS troop was sent in 1968 and worked on operations with the Australian SAS. The New Zealand rifle companies were deployed on infantry operations with various Australian regiments and in independent operations in addition to their battalion operations, with each member serving a 12-month tour of duty thereafter. The RNZA artillery battery continued to support Australian, New Zealand, and American forces throughout the entire war. RNZAF pilots joined
No. 9 Squadron RAAF in 1968 and from December 1968 more than a dozen RNZAF
forward air controllers served with the
Seventh Air Force,
United States Air Force. As American focus shifted to President
Richard Nixon's '
Vietnamization'—a policy of slow disengagement from the war, by gradually building up the
Army of the Republic of Vietnam so that it could fight the war on its own—New Zealand withdrew one of the infantry companies at the end of 1970, replacing it with a training team in January 1971. Numbering 25 men from all branches of service, the New Zealand team assisted the
United States Army Training Team in Chi Lang. In December 1971 all Australian and New Zealand combat forces left Vietnam after turning over the 1ATF base to the Army of the Republic of Vietnam. In February 1972 a second NZ training team, 18 strong, was deployed to Vietnam and was based at
Dong Ba Thin Base Camp, near Cam Ranh Bay. It assisted with the training of
Cambodian infantry battalions. This team also provided first aid instruction and specialist medical instruction at Dong Ba Thin's 50-bed hospital. The two New Zealand training teams were withdrawn from South Vietnam in December 1972. fighters,
Royal New Zealand Air Force and
United States Navy patrol aircraft in Australia during Exercise Sandgroper in 1982 Like veterans from many of the other allied nations, as well as Vietnamese civilians, New Zealand veterans of the war claimed that they (and their children and grandchildren) had suffered serious harm as a result of exposure to
Agent Orange, a
herbicidal warfare programme used by the British military during the
Malayan Emergency and the U.S. military during the Vietnam War. In 1984, Agent Orange manufacturers paid New Zealand, Australian and Canadian veterans in an out-of-court settlement, and in 2004 Prime Minister
Helen Clark's government apologised to Vietnam War veterans who were exposed to Agent Orange or other toxic defoliants, following a health select committee's inquiry into the use of Agent Orange on New Zealand servicemen and its effects. In 2005, the New Zealand government confirmed that it supplied Agent Orange chemicals to the United States military during the conflict. Since the early 1960s, and up until 1987, it manufactured the 2,4,5T herbicide at a plant in
New Plymouth, which was then shipped to U.S. military bases in South East Asia.
Bill Clinton meets with
Prime Minister of New Zealand Jenny Shipley,
Christchurch, 15 September 1999.
Middle East (1982–present) and
United States Secretary of Defense Robert Gates at
the Pentagon, 21 March 2007.
Robert Gates and
New Zealand Minister of Defence Phil Goff at
the Pentagon, 11 May 2007. New Zealand has assisted the United States and
Britain in many of their military activities in the
Middle East. However New Zealand forces have fought only in Afghanistan; in other countries New Zealand support has been in the form of support and engineering. During the
Iran–Iraq War two New Zealand frigates joined the British
Royal Navy in monitoring merchant shipping in the
Persian Gulf. and in 1991, New Zealand contributed three transport aircraft and a medical team to assist
coalition forces in the
Gulf War. New Zealand's heaviest military involvement in the Middle East in recent decades has been in Afghanistan following the
United States-led invasion of that country after the
September 11 attacks. A Squadron of
New Zealand Special Air Service (NZSAS) personnel were dispatched, and in March 2002 they took part in
Operation Anaconda against about 500 to 1000
Al-Qaeda and
Taliban forces in the
Shah-i-Kot Valley and Arma Mountains southeast of Zorma, Afghanistan. New Zealand has also supplied two transport aircraft and a 122-strong tri-service Provincial Reconstruction Team, which has been located in
Bamyan Province since 2003.
Afghanistan (2001–2021) The
New Zealand Special Air Service (NZSAS) began operations assisting in the
War in Afghanistan in late 2001. Three six-month rotations of between 40 and 65 soldiers from the SAS served in Afghanistan during
Operation Enduring Freedom before the unit was withdrawn in November 2005. On 17 June 2004, two SAS soldiers were wounded in a predawn gun-battle in central Afghanistan. According to a New Zealand government fact sheet released in July 2007, SAS soldiers routinely patrolled enemy territory for three weeks or more at a time, often on foot, after being inserted by helicopter. There were "casualties on both sides" during gun battles. In December 2004, the
Presidential Unit Citation was awarded to those units that comprised the Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force-SOUTH/Task Force K-BAR between 17 October 2001 and 30 March 2002 for "extraordinary heroism" in action. One of these units was the NZSAS. The citation said SAS helped "neutralise" Taliban and al-Qaeda in "extremely high risk missions, including search and rescue, special reconnaissance, sensitive site exploitation, direct action missions, destruction of multiple cave and tunnel complexes, identification and destruction of several known al-Qaeda training camps, explosions of thousands of pounds of enemy ordnance." "They established benchmark standards of professionalism, tenacity, courage, tactical brilliance and operational excellence while demonstrating superb esprit de corps and maintaining the highest measures of combat readiness." In August 2009, the
John Key government decided that NZSAS forces would be sent back to Afghanistan. In April 2013, the last remaining New Zealand troops, the
Provincial Reconstruction Team, withdrew from Afghanistan. As of 2017, a contingent of 10
New Zealand Defence Force personnel remained in Afghanistan to provide mentorship and support at the Afghan National Army Officer Academy in Kabul, in addition to support personnel.
Iraq (2003–2011) In accordance with
United Nations Security Council Resolution 1483 New Zealand contributed a small engineering and support force to assist in post-war reconstruction and provision of humanitarian aid. The engineers returned home in October 2004 and New Zealand is still represented in
Iraq by liaison and staff officers working with coalition forces.
Hurricane Katrina In response to
Hurricane Katrina in the U.S. in 2005,
Prime Minister Helen Clark sent condolences and an offer of help to
United States President George W. Bush.
Foreign Affairs Minister Phil Goff sent a message of sympathy to
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. The
Government of New Zealand offered to send an
urban search and rescue team, a
disaster victim identification team or post-
disaster recovery personnel, and gave $2 million to the
Red Cross for aid and disaster relief. A senior member of the
Ministry of Civil Defence and Emergency Management, John Titmus went to
Denton, Texas, to lead an official
United Nations Disaster Assessment and Coordination (UNDAC) team to assess the damage from the hurricane. ==Political relations==