US' oldest alliance
Remember this phrase (Google it, if you must): Je m'en bats les couilles. This is in essence the message that President Joe Biden sent to President Emmanuel Macron of France, a country that is considered to be "America's oldest ally."
In the last several days, the Biden administration has found itself embroiled in a completely avoidable contretemps with Paris over a now scrapped multibilliondollar defense contract between France and Australia.
The rupture is significant in the annals of Franco-American relations, since it is the first time since 1778 that France has pulled its ambassador from the United States. And the fallout is unlikely to abate soon - which will have greater ramifications for the overall American alliance with France, the European Union, and NATO. In the end, China and Russia stand to benefit from this development. Lacking all finesse
Fact is, the United States and the United Kingdom both needed to enhance their military relationships with Australia, the most powerful English-speaking democracy in the Indo-Pacific region.
Biden should be given credit for doing a truly monumental action, such as offering proprietary American nuclear submarine technology to Australia - something that Washington has not done for another country since 1958 - to create a strong military alliance aimed at containing China's rise in the Indo-Pacific.
As former Australian government adviser Rohan Watt wrote recently, the US-UK-Australia nuclear submarine deal was a "victory for freedom and democracy."
Yet at no point was it written that this alliance should have been created at the expense of democratic France. In France, Washington has a capable military partner - the strongest military on the European continent - that has, for the last several years, shouldered a great burden by battling against anti-American Islamists in Africa. Like the United States and Britain, France also has interests in the Indo-Pacific.
The inartful deal
Five years ago, Australia wanted to enhance its submarine fleet. Its Collins-class diesel-powered submarines needed replacement. The French defense contractor Naval
Group had been commissioned to replace Australia's six Collins-class diesel subs with 12 French Barracuda-class diesel submarines.
According to Politico-EU, "Canberra [wanted] the French bid because of the ability to switch the Barracudas from diesel to nuclear power." However, the deal was fraught with complications and tensions between the Australians and French, mainly because Naval Group was proving unable to meet the parameters of the contract inked in 2016.
The deal was collapsing at least 15 months before the Americans and British stepped in. Beyond that, it was clear that what Australia's leaders really wanted was not another set of diesel-powered submarines. They wanted nuclear-powered submarines.
Generally quieter than their diesel counterparts, nuclear-powered submarines can stay submerged longer and can travel farther than the diesels can. Nuclearpowered subs are more sophisticated, too - especially the US Virginia-class or the UK's Astuteclass submarines (Australia is looking to buy one of these two classes of nuclear sub).
Ultimately, however, if Australia is not intending for their submarines to carry nuclear warheads, a nuclear-powered submarine might not be worth the investment and time it will require of
Australia - especially considering that Australia lacks the infrastructure needed to build and maintain a nuclear submarine fleet.
Still, interoperability is a lofty ambition for any country, such as Australia, seeking to create a new military alliance in its part of the world. Both the United States and Britain are worthy partners in this endeavor, too.
But France is also a viable partner. At no point did anyone in Canberra or Washington think to give their friends in Paris a headsup of Australia's coming abandonment of the French submarines in favor of Anglo-American ones.
Was there truly nothing that the Biden administration could not offer as a consolation prize for Paris' wounded ego? I thought the adults were in charge again in Washington!
According to global-affairs analyst Leon Hadar, after the rude way Paris and the rest of the European Union went behind America's back in December 2020 to sign a historic bilateral trade deal with China a slap in the face to the incoming Biden administration President Biden needed to send a sharp message to his French interlocutors.