Eastern Eye (UK)

Modi and Macron to ‘act jointly’ in Indo-Pacific

IINDIA AND FRANCE STRESS TRUST AND RESPECT AFTER AUSTRALIA SUBMARINE ROW

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FRENCH president Emmanuel Macron and India’s prime minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday (21) vowed to “act jointly” in the Indo-Pacific region, as a row intensifie­d with Australia and the US over a ditched submarine contract.

Macron’s telephone talks with Modi were timed conspicuou­sly as French anger over an Australian cancellati­on of a submarine contract in favour of US submarines as part of an alliance with Washington and the UK appeared undiminish­ed.

US officials said US president Joe Biden is seeking a phone call with Macron to ease tensions, while Macron has taken the unpreceden­ted step of recalling France’s ambassador­s to Australia and the United States.

The French presidency said Macron and Modi agreed they would “act jointly in an open and inclusive Indo-Pacific area”.

Macron assured Modi of France’s continued “commitment to the strengthen­ing of India’s strategic autonomy, including its industry and technology base, as part of a close relationsh­ip based on trust and mutual respect”.

The statement from Macron’s office said their shared approach was aimed at promoting “regional stability and the rule of law, while ruling out any form of hegemony”. Calling Macron “my friend” in a tweet, Modi said India placed “great value on our strategic partnershi­p with France”.

Modi’s office added in a statement that both countries had an “important role” for stability and security in the Indo-Pacific region. AUKUS, the new three-way strategic alliance between Washington, Canberra and London is seen aimed at countering the rising power of China.

Paris has in the last years sought to tighten ties with India. In 2016 the two sides signed a multi-billion dollar deal for 36 French Rafale fighter jets for New Delhi.

While the agreement is under investigat­ion in France over kickback allegation­s, it is viewed as a commercial and diplomatic success for Paris. Indian media speculated that Australia’s cancellati­on of the submarine deal could spark a French-Indian submarines agreement.

France accused its allies of a “stab in the back” after learning the US had secretly led talks about the new strategic alliance and struck the deal for the delivery of American nuclear-powered submarines to Australia.

Australia informed France only hours before pulling out of the submarines deal, according to the French government. In the upcoming call with Biden, Macron will demand “clarificat­ions”, his political advisor Stephane Sejourne said on Tuesday, adding it would not be “a reconcilia­tion talk”.

He said the way the French-Australian deal was cancelled raised many questions “including about the concept of what it means to be an ally of the Americans”.

Behind the scuppered contract were deeper difference­s about strategies in the Indo-Pacific, he said.

France, which has a presence in the region through overseas territorie­s such as New Caledonia, has been trying to calm down tensions in the area, but “the United States is in more of a confrontat­ion with China”, Sejourne said.

French defence ministry spokesman Herve Grandjean wrote on Twitter that the reneged deal was “bad news” for Australia.

“The first Attack submarines were to be delivered by 2030. With this new AUKUS partnershi­p, it will be more like 2040. That’s a long time, when you see how fast China is militarisi­ng,” he said. (AFP)

 ?? ?? SHARED CONCERNS: Emmanuel Macron (left) and Narendra Modi
SHARED CONCERNS: Emmanuel Macron (left) and Narendra Modi

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