- 2021-09-20 00:45:26
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-21 09:38:30
Biden asks for early Macron talks as allies try to smooth tensions
Photo Collected :
International Desk:
Dhaka, Sept-20,
The United States and
Britain sought
Sunday to smooth
tensions with Paris over a new security pact with Australia, With US president
Joe Biden requesting early talks with his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron.
The announcement of the
defence alliance, and Australia's related decision to tear up a deal to buy
French submarines in favour of American nuclear-powered vessels, sparked
outrage in Paris, with Macron recalling France's ambassadors to Canberra and
Washington in an unprecedented move. But on Sunday British Prime Minister Boris
Johnson tried to downplay France's concerns about the deal, saying the pact was
"not meant to be exclusionary... it's not something that anybody needs to
worry about and particularly not our French friends". Biden has requested
a phone call with Macron, French government spokesman Gabriel Attal said, which
would happen "in the coming days". "We want explanations,"
Attal said, adding that the US had to answer for "what looks a lot like a
major breach of trust". The recall of the ambassadors to Australia and the
US -- for the first time in the history of relations with the countries -- was
"to show how unhappy we are and that there is a serious crisis between
us", French Foreign MinisterJean-Yves Le Drian said Saturday.
"There has been
lying, duplicity, a major breach of trust and contempt," Le Drain told
France 2 television.
- 'Grave concerns -
Australian Prime
Minister Scott Morrison on Sunday rejected the accusation that Canberra had
lied, saying he had raised concerns over the now-scuppered subs deal "some
months ago".
"I think they
would have had every reason to know that we had deep and grave concerns,"
he told reporters in Sydney. "We made very clear that we would be making a
decision based on our strategic national interest." The French contract to
supply conventional submarines to Australia was worth Aus$50 billion ($36.5
billion, 31 billion euros) when signed in 2016. Morrison said he understood
France's disappointment, but added: "I don't regret the decision to put
Australia's national interest first. Never will." Defence Minister Peter
Dutton also insisted Canberra had been "upfront, open and honest"
with Paris about its concerns -- a claim quickly rejected by French Defence
Minister Florence Parly. "His statement is inaccurate," she said
during a visit to Niger. "We were never informed of Australia's
intentions."
- 'Ineradicable love' -
En route to New York on
Sunday, Johnson told reporters that Britain and France have a "very
friendly relationship", which he described as being of
"huge
importance".
"Our love of
France is ineradicable," he said. But although France has not recalled its
ambassador to Britain, Le Drian's explanation for why was stinging. "There
is no need. We know their constant opportunism. So there is no need to bring
our ambassador back to explain," he said in the France 2 interview. Of
London's role in the pact, he said: "Britain in this whole thing is a bit like the third wheel." A source at France's defence ministry said
Paris had cancelled a meeting set for this week between Parly and her British
counterpart Ben Wallace. In London, a Ministry of Defence source said they
could neither confirm nor deny the cancellation.
- 'Nuclear arms race' -
Biden announced the new
Australia-US-Britain defence alliance, widely seen as aimed at countering the
rise of China, on Wednesday. It extends American nuclear submarine technology
to Australia, as well as
cyber-defence applied
artificial intelligence and undersea capabilities. North Korea on Monday warned
the deal could trigger a "nuclear arms race" in the region.
"These are
extremely undesirable and dangerous acts which will upset the strategic balance
in the Asia-Pacific region and trigger off a chain of the nuclear arms
race," state media KCNA quoted a foreign ministry official as
saying. China has also
reacted angrily, describing the deal as an "extremely irresponsible"
threat, and warning the Western allies they risked "shooting
themselves in the
foot". Paris' fury at what it sees as a "stab in the back" threatens
long-term
diplomatic
repercussions. Le Drian said NATO would have to take account of what has
happened as it
reconsiders strategy at
a summit in Madrid next year. France would now prioritise developing an EU
security strategy when it
takes over the bloc's
presidency at the start of 2022, he added. French European Affairs Minister
Clement Beaune has hinted that the row could affect Australia's chances of
making progress towards a trade pact with the EU, its third-biggest trading
partner.
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