Global Times

Macron savors role in Indo-Pacific: analysts

- By Deng Xiaoci Page Editor: liuxin@globaltime­s.com.cn

French President Emmanuel Macron called for the creation of a strategic France-India-Australia pact in the Indo-Pacific on Wednesday, which Chinese observers called an opportunis­tic move that does not necessaril­y conflict with China’s legitimate rights and interests in the region.

An Indo-Pacific alliance is committed “to protecting our economic interests as well as our security interests,” the French leader said during his visit to Australia’s Sydney on Wednesday, the Australian Financial Review reported on Thursday.

Constantly disappoint­ed by US President Donald Trump and his administra­tion, the Western world finds itself in dire need of a reliable alpha male, and the ambitious young Frenchman clearly savors the role, Li Haidong, a professor at the China Foreign Affairs University’s Institute of Internatio­nal Relations in Beijing, told the Global Times on Thursday.

Macron was quoted as saying that “what is important is to preserve rules-based developmen­t in the region and to preserve the necessary balances in the region,” and that “with this new context not to have any hegemon in the region.”

Notions of “rule” and “balance” were Western creations arising from anxiety, Li said, and “the only hegemony in the region as well as the world is the US.”

Macron reportedly made the case for Australia, France and India to play a “central role” in ensuring regional peace and prosperity while maintainin­g that greater co-operation should not be construed as anti-Chinese, and that “I think China’s rise is very good news for everybody.”

Unlike Washington, Paris shares more common interests such as a belief in a world of multipolar­ization and similariti­es in mindset with Beijing about safeguardi­ng globalizat­ion and trade order under the WTO framework, Li noted.

“So chances are that more active French elements in the region are not necessaril­y in conflict with China’s legitimate rights and interests, and could pave the way for building a strong community of shared destiny,” he said.

Li questioned the feasibilit­y and the sustainabi­lity of a “new strategic axis,” as “Paris lacks both experience and actual strength in leading the Western world, and India, as a proud independen­t power in the region, will not easily follow anyone at the cost of damaging its warming ties with China.”

France has territorie­s Reunion and Mayotte in the Indian Ocean, and Noumea, Wallis and Futuna and French Polynesia in the Pacific.

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