Desk Report
Publish: 23 Sep 2021, 01:28 pm
The US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron || Photo; Collected
The US and French presidents moved to mend ties on
Wednesday, with France agreeing to send its ambassador back to Washington and
the White House acknowledging it erred in brokering a deal for Australia to buy the US instead of French submarines without consulting Paris.
In a joint statement issued after US President Joe Biden
and French President Emmanuel Macron spoke by telephone for 30 minutes, the two
leaders agreed to launch in-depth consultations to rebuild trust, and to meet in
Europe at the end of October.
They said Washington had committed to step up "support
to counter-terrorism operations in the Sahel conducted by European states"
which US officials suggested meant a continuation of logistical support
rather than deploying U.S. special forces.
Biden's call to Macron was an attempt to mend fences after
France accused the United States of stabbing it in the back when Australia
ditched a $40 billion contract for conventional French submarines, and opted
for nuclear-powered submarines to be built with US and British technology
instead.
Outraged by the US, British and Australian deal, France
recalled its ambassadors from Washington and Canberra.
"The two leaders agreed that the situation would have
benefited from open consultations among allies on matters of strategic interest
to France and our European partners," the joint US and French statement
said.
"President Biden conveyed his ongoing commitment in that
regard."
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and his French
counterpart Jean-Yves Le Drian, interacting for the first time since the
submarine crisis erupted, had a 'good exchange' on the margins of a wider
meeting at the United Nations on Wednesday, a senior State Department official
told reporters in a call.
The two top diplomats were likely to have a separate
bilateral meeting on Thursday. "We do expect that they’ll have some time
together bilaterally tomorrow," the official said, and added that
Washington 'very very much welcomed' France and European Union's deep
engagement in the Indo-Pacific.
Earlier on Wednesday, White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki
described the call as "friendly" and sounded hopeful about improving
ties.
"The president has had a friendly phone call with the president of France where they agreed to meet in October and continue close consultations and work together on a range of issues," she told reporters.
Asked if Biden apologized to Macron, she said: "He
acknowledged that there could have been greater consultation."
The new US, Australian and British security partnership
(AUKUS) was widely seen as designed to counter China's growing assertiveness in
the Pacific but critics said it undercut Biden's broader effort to rally allies
such as France to that cause.
Biden administration officials suggested the US commitment to
"reinforcing its support to counter-terrorism operations in the
Sahel" region of West Africa meant a continuation of existing efforts.
France has a 5,000 strong counter-terrorism force fighting
Islamist militants across the Sahel.
It is reducing its contingent to 2,500-3,000, moving more
assets to Niger, and encouraging other European countries to provide special
forces to work alongside local forces. The United States provides logistical
and intelligence support.
Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the US military would
continue to support French operations, but declined to speculate about
potential increases or changes in US assistance.
"When I saw the verb reinforce, what I took away was that we're going to stay committed to that task," he told reporters. (Reuters)
Subscribe Shampratik Deshkal Youtube Channel
© 2024 Shampratik Deshkal All Rights Reserved. Design & Developed By Root Soft Bangladesh