The Borneo Post

Macron rejects ‘confrontat­ion’ as he relaunches Asia strategy

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FRENCH President Emmanuel Macron urged an end to ‘confrontat­ion’ yesterday as he relaunched his strategy for the Asia-Pacific region after a bitter row over a cancelled submarine contract with Australia.

In a speech on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) summit, Macron cast France as a balancing power in a region long dominated by the superpower tussle between China and the United States.

The APEC summit comes days after a high-stakes meeting between US President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping took some heat out of their escalating rivalry.

Tensions between Washington and Beijing have risen sharply in recent years over the future of self-governing Taiwan, human rights, trade and China’s increasing assertiven­ess.

“We don’t believe in hegemony, we don’t believe in confrontat­ion, we believe in stability,” Macron said.

Regional powers including Paris – which has overseas territorie­s in the Indian and Pacific oceans, including Reunion, New Caledonia and French Polynesia – should play a role, he said.

“We are in the jungle and we have two big elephants, trying to become more and more nervous,” Macron said in his speech, which he gave in English.

“If they become very nervous and start war it will be a big problem for the rest of the jungle. You need cooperatio­n of a lot of other animals: tigers, monkeys, and so on.”

Macron said a coordinate­d response was needed to tackle the overlappin­g crises facing the internatio­nal community – from climate change to economic turmoil triggered by Russia’s war in Ukraine.

“Our Indo-Pacific strategy is how to provide dynamic balance in this environmen­t,” he said.

“How to provide precisely a sort of stability and equilibriu­m which could not be the hegemony of one of those, could not be the confrontat­ion of the two major powers.”

France’s vocal engagement in the region comes after a rocky period last year, when Australia’s previous prime minister Scott Morrison abruptly torpedoed a French contract to provide Canberra with submarines and announced a deal to buy US or British nuclear-powered subs instead.

The row capsized relations and threatened to sink an EUAustrali­a trade agreement, but the two sides have made up since Prime Minister Anthony Albanese took power. 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 on Thursday, a day after meeting Albanese on the sidelines of a G20 summit in Indonesia, Macron said France was still willing to help fill the capability gap.

But Albanese reiterated Friday that Australia was pressing ahead with its deal under a security pact with the United States and Britain, saying “there’s nothing ambiguous about it”.

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