Antelope Valley Press

France seeks lead role in E.U. strategy

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PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday advocated a more coordinate­d European Union defense strategy in which France, the bloc’s only post-Brexit nuclear power, and its arsenal would occupy a central role.

Macron outlined France’s nuclear strategy during a speech to graduating military officers one week after Britain, Europe’s only other nuclear-armed state, officially exited the E.U..

The French leader said his country sees its nuclear weapons as a deterrent against attacks from belligeren­t foes, though acknowledg­ed that France’s nuclear might is diminished after its military scaled down its arsenal to under 300 nuclear weapons.

But Macron’s keynote speech aimed to project strength. The president said he refused to sign any treaties at this time to further reduce the size of France’s nuclear arsenal and announced an increase in military spending.

Macron also positioned himself as the driving force for a united E.U., using France’s military clout to make his point. He touted the French military’s role in spots such as Africa’s Sahel, where he just pledged an additional 600 troops to fight extremists.

The central idea in the speech, however, was that of a boosted Europe-wide role for the French nuclear arsenal in a more coordinate­d European defense policy.

“Europeans must collective­ly realize that, in the absence of a legal framework, they could quickly find themselves exposed to the resumption of a convention­al, even nuclear, arms race on their soil,”

Macron warned.

His remarks come at a time when NATO allies, who would ordinarily look to the United States for help in a nuclear standoff, worry about Washington’s retreat from the multilater­al stage. This could create new tensions within NATO, where Macron ruffled feathers last year by saying the lack of U.S. leadership is causing the “brain death” of the military alliance.

Last year, the U.S. and then Russia pulled out of the Intermedia­te Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty — dating from the era of the Soviet Union — and each blamed the other for its failure. Evoking the tearing-up of the INF treaty, Macron said he wanted the Europeans to propose their own “internatio­nal arms control agenda together.”

Friday’s speech was part of Macron’s long-running push for a stronger European defense, as U.S. President Donald Trump has pulled away from European allies and admonished them to pay more for their own protection.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This July 27, 1995, file photo shows the Mururoa Atoll bases, 750 miles southeast of Tahiti, French Polynesia in the Pacific Ocean.
ASSOCIATED PRESS This July 27, 1995, file photo shows the Mururoa Atoll bases, 750 miles southeast of Tahiti, French Polynesia in the Pacific Ocean.

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