Sinking of submarine deal leaves Franco-US friendship in tatters

Sinking of submarine deal leaves Franco-US friendship in tatters

Australia's scrapping of the "contract of the century" with France in favour of a trilateral security pact with the US and UK has also seen the scrapping of a gala event in Washington Friday that was intended to celebrate the Franco-American friendship.


The dust has yet to settle on Canberra's surprise decision to terminate a 56 billion euro deal with submarine maker Naval Group - a move described as a "stab in the back" by French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian.


"We had established a relationship of trust with Australia ... This trust is betrayed," Le Drian told France Info TV.


"What also concerns me is the behaviour of the Americans - this unilateral, brutal, unpredictable decision. It looks a lot like what Mr Trump would do."


Warnings


While France claims to have been completely blindsided, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Friday said he had warned French President Emmanuel Macron back in June the deal was in at risk of collapse because of cost blowouts and delays.


A report by Politico said the project had been in trouble for years, and the delays meant Australia risked being left without proper defence capabilities given their existing Collins class submarines were to be retired in the next five years.


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Australia was also worried that cyber attacks on Naval Group would undermine the top-level security it had demanded for the deal, which was for France provide a fleet 12 Barracuda submarines.


Instead, the new alliance announced with the US and the UK - known as Aukus - will see Australia commission at least eight nuclear-powered submarines, at a cost that has yet to be revealed.
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