Mindanao Times

France to spell out post-Brexit nuclear weapons strategy

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FRANCE, the European Union’s sole nuclear power since Britain’s exit from the bloc, will unveil Friday how it intends to use its atomic arsenal as a deterrent in an increasing­ly unstable world.

President Emmanuel Macron, in an address to military officers graduating in Paris, is expected to recommit to upgrading France’s capacity, at a time when NATO allies, who would ordinarily look to the United States in a nuclear standoff, worry about Washington’s retreat from the multilater­al stage.

On Monday, Macron said his speech, eagerly anticipate­d in military circles, would address the interests of other European countries.

“I will focus on the doctrine (of French deterrence), but also on the procedures and modalities that I wish to propose on this topic to our partners

in the coming months,” he said on a visit to Warsaw.

Deterrence theory postulates that countries with nuclear weapons are less likely to attack each other for fear of mutual destructio­n, meaning the arms serve as guarantors of peace.

France considers nuclear deterrence a keystone of its defence strategy and the ultimate guarantee of its most vital interests.

Macron has already agreed to a costly modernisat­ion of France’s atomic arsenal, arguing in January 2018 that “deterrence is part of our history, part of our defence strategy, and will remain so.”

An act of parliament provides for about 37 billion euros ($41 billion) to be spent on the maintenanc­e and modernisat­ion of the French nuclear arsenal from 2019 to 2025 -- some 12.5 percent of the total defence budget for these seven years.

Macron’s address Friday comes at a time of high global anxiety, marked by rising tension between military powers, a proliferat­ion of regional security crises and the breakdown of internatio­nal arms control.

Russia and the US last year withdrew from the Soviet-era Intermedia­te Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty, and blamed one another for its demise.

That deal was seen as a cornerston­e of global security and its end sparked fears of a new arms race. - ‘Sympatheti­c ears’ Macron last December said the treaty’s end meant that “France, Germany, and other European countries are now threatened by new Russian missiles.”

Washington has also since threatened not to renew the New START treaty with Russia, the last key nuclear deal between the former Cold War foes.

The treaty, which expires this month, obliged both sides to halve their number of strategic nuclear missile launchers and establish a new verificati­on regime.

Corentin Brustlein, research director at the Parisbased IFRI institute for internatio­nal relations, said

Europe has always been a strong focus of France’s nuclear vision.

There had been several French attempts at dialogue with European partners on the topic, he said, “that have never succeeded”.

However, “the balance is shifting, including in countries such as Germany” where public opinion is deeply anti-nuclear and the subject remains largely taboo, but “where we see emerging positions on the level of European strategic ambition that must grow,” Brustlein said.

Just Monday, a senior member of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s CDU party pleaded for the EU to create its own nuclear deterrence capability.

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