Muscat Daily

Biden and Macron discuss ‘stronger’ European defence

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Washington, US - US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron discussed strengthen­ing European defences in a telephone call on Friday, the White House said, as Washington seeks to mend ties after a bitter row over submarine contracts.

The two leaders ‘discussed efforts to enable a stronger and more capable European defence while ensuring complement­arity with NATO’, the statement said.

Biden will meet Macron in Rome later this month, and the statement said he looked forward to the chance to ‘take stock of the many areas of US-France cooperatio­n, and reinforce our shared interests’.

A similar statement was issued by the French presidency.

Biden and Macron last spoke on September 22 for their first conversati­on since the furious spat over selling submarines to Australia severely strained relations.

Specifical­ly, Australia agreed to acquire US nuclear sub technology and in doing so scrap a huge, already existing deal with France to buy convention­al submarines. The new accord infuriated the French.

Macron recalled France’s ambassador to Washington and Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian compared Biden’s unilateral methods to ex-president Donald Trump’s but ‘without the tweets’.

VP Harris to visit Paris

Although Biden did not apologise for secretly negotiatin­g to sell nuclear submarines to Australia, he did acknowledg­e that the issue ‘would have benefited from open consultati­ons among allies’, according to a statement after the dispute erupted.

Following four years of tumultuous relations with Trump, the diplomatic fireworks dashed hopes of a complete reset under Biden, who took office in January aiming to rebuild frazzled ties with Europe. US officials have since sought to patch up ties, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken visiting Paris earlier this month and holding a one-to-one meeting with Macron.

In their September call, Macron secured what he saw as a significan­t commitment from Biden to respect French-led efforts to boost European defence and autonomy.

US Vice President Kamala Harris will also hold talks with Macron in Paris next month, the White House announced.

‘They will discuss the importance of the transatlan­tic relationsh­ip to global peace and security,’ it said, underlinin­g partnershi­p on challenges ‘ from COVID-19 and the climate crisis to issues affecting the Sahel and the Indo-Pacific’.

 ?? ?? French President Emmanuel Macron (left) and US President Joe Biden
French President Emmanuel Macron (left) and US President Joe Biden
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