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Macron says Australia submarine cooperation offer 'on the table'
By Valerie Leroux and Lisa Martin
Bangkok (AFP) Nov 17, 2022

French President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday that an offer to cooperate with Australia on submarines still stood, after a bitter row over a cancelled contract last year threatened to torpedo relations.

Macron was left furious when Australia's previous prime minister Scott Morrison abruptly tore up a contract for France to build a dozen diesel-powered submarines and announced a deal to buy US or British nuclear-powered subs.

The row derailed relations and threatened to sink an EU-Australia trade agreement, but the two sides have made up since Prime Minister Anthony Albanese took power in Canberra.

The delivery of the new nuclear submarines could take years, potentially leaving Australia short of capacity at a time when China is increasing its assertiveness in the region.

Speaking in Bangkok a day after meeting Albanese on the sidelines of a G20 summit in Indonesia, Macron said the French offer "remains on the table".

He said France would not supply nuclear submarines to foreign countries, so the offer related only to conventional vessels. He added it would guarantee Canberra's "freedom and sovereignty", noting that construction would be in Australia.

"We will now see how they adapt to the difficulties (they face)," Macron said.

"There is a fundamental choice, which is to know whether they produce submarines in their own country or rely on another -- whether they go for nuclear or not."

- China worries -

Albanese hailed a new start in ties during a visit to Paris in July, stressing he would act with "trust, respect and honesty" in his dealings with Macron.

That meeting came after Australia agreed on a massive compensation deal with French submarine builder Naval Group to end the contract.

The settlement of 555 million euros ($584 million) drew a line under the spat and was hailed by Albanese as "fair and equitable". The original contract was worth an estimated 33 billion euros at the time.

The submarine row came as part of a new security pact between Australia, Britain and the United States -- dubbed AUKUS -- aimed at countering a rising China.

Sam Roggeveen, a defence analyst at Australia's Lowy Institute think tank, said it was sensible for Macron to pitch French conventional submarines as a stop-gap.

"Australia needs an interim conventional submarine to fill the gap between the improved Collins Class and the AUKUS submarines," he told AFP.

"They could be French -- why not?"

France considers itself to be a Pacific power, thanks to its overseas territories including New Caledonia and French Polynesia.

But while it shares Australia's concerns about China's assertiveness, it has been keen to craft its own strategy for the region.

Macron is attending an APEC summit in Bangkok and on Friday he will give a speech as he seeks to relaunch his Indo-Pacific policy after the AUKUS humiliation.

"In this highly contested region, which is the theatre of a confrontation between the two major world powers, our strategy is to defend freedom and sovereignty," Macron said on Thursday.

The APEC meeting comes hard on the heels of a G20 summit in Bali where Chinese President Xi Jinping and his US counterpart Joe Biden held landmark talks aimed at easing tensions between the world's two biggest economies.

vl/pdw/dva

NAVAL GROUP


Related Links
Naval Warfare in the 21st Century


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US nuclear engineer, wife get long jail terms in sub secrets plot
Washington (AFP) Nov 9, 2022
A US Navy nuclear engineer and his wife were sentenced to long prison terms on Wednesday for plotting to sell submarine secrets to a foreign country. Jonathan Toebbe, 44, and his wife, Diana Toebbe, 46, pleaded guilty in February to conspiring to sell information related to naval nuclear propulsion systems. Jonathan Toebbe was sentenced to 19 years and three months in prison while his wife, Diana Toebbe, 46, received a prison term of 21 years and eight months, the Justice Department said. Ac ... read more

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