BusinessLogrBusinessLogr
  • Home
  • Stocks
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Company
  • Economy
  • Industry
  • Investing
  • Car News
  • Contact Us!
Reading: Australian prime minister attacks French president’s credibility over scrapped submarine deal
Share
Aa
BusinessLogrBusinessLogr
Aa
  • Home
  • Stocks
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Company
  • Economy
  • Industry
  • Investing
  • Car News
  • Contact Us!
Follow US
© 2023 BusinessLogr News Network.
BusinessLogr > Business > Australian prime minister attacks French president’s credibility over scrapped submarine deal
Business

Australian prime minister attacks French president’s credibility over scrapped submarine deal

Loknath Das
Last updated: 2021/11/02 at 6:54 AM
Loknath Das Published November 2, 2021
Share
6 Min Read
SHARE
  • An Australian newspaper cast doubt on President Joe Biden’s explanation to Macron last week that the U.S. leader thought the French had been informed long before the September announcement that their 90 billion Australian dollar ($66 billion) submarine deal with Australia would be scrapped.
  • Morrison told Australian reporters that he made clear to Macron at their dinner in June that conventional submarines would not meet Australia’s evolving strategic needs.
  • But, French officials said their government had been blindsided by the contract cancellation which French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian described as a “stab in the back.”
Australia's Prime Minister Scott Morrison presents his national statement as part of the World Leaders' Summit of the COP26 UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland on November 1, 2021.
Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison presents his national statement as part of the World Leaders’ Summit of the COP26 UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland on November 1, 2021.
Ian Forsyth | AFP | Getty Images

Australian Prime Scott Morrison attacked the credibility of French President Emmanuel Macron as a newspaper quoted a text message that suggested France anticipated “bad news” about a now-scuttled submarine deal.

An Australia newspaper cast doubt on President Joe Biden’s explanation to Macron last week that the U.S. leader thought the French had been informed long before the September announcement that their 90 billion Australian dollar ($66 billion) submarine deal with Australia would be scrapped.

Macron this week accused Morrison of lying to him at a Paris dinner in June about the fate of a 5-year-old contract with majority French state-owned Naval Group to build 12 conventional diesel-electric submarines. Australia canceled that deal when it formed an alliance with U.S. and Britain to acquire a fleet of eight nuclear-powered submarines built with U.S. technology.

Morrison told Australian reporters who had accompanied him to Glasgow, Scotland, for a U.N. climate conference that he made clear to Macron at their dinner in June that conventional submarines would not meet Australia’s evolving strategic needs.

Two days before Morrison, Biden and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced the nuclear submarine deal, Morrison attempted to phone Macron with the news, but the French leader texted back saying he was not available to take a call, The Australian newspaper reported.

Macron asked: “Should I expect good or bad news for our joint submarines ambitions?” the newspaper reported Tuesday.

A journalist asked why Morrison decided to leak the text message after Macron accused him of lying, but the prime minister did not directly answer.

“I’m not going to indulge your editorial on it, but what I’ll simply say is this: We were contacted when we were trying to set up the … call and he made it pretty clear that he was concerned that this would be a phone call that could result in the decision of Australia not to proceed with the contract,” Morrison said.

French officials said their government had been blindsided by the contract cancellation which French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian described as a “stab in the back.”

Macron said this week the nuclear submarine deal was “very bad news for the credibility of Australia and very bad news for the trust that great partners can have with Australia.”

Morrison said Macron’s accusation of lying, which the prime minister denies, was a slur against Australia. Most Australian observers see it as a personal insult against Morrison.

“I don’t wish to personalize this, there’s no element of that from my perspective,” Morrison said.

“I must say that I think the statements that were made questioning Australia’s integrity and the slurs that have been placed on Australia, not me — I’ve got broad shoulders, I can deal with that — but those slurs, I’m not going to cop sledging of Australia. I’m not going to cop that on behalf of Australians,” Morrison said. Sledging is a cricketing term for abusive needling of opponents.

Biden told Macron that the handling of the Australian submarine alliance was “clumsy” and “not done with a lot of grace.”

“I was under the impression that France had been informed long before that the (French) deal would not go through. I honest to God did not know you had not,” Biden told Macron.

But a 15-page document negotiated by the White House National Security Council with Australian and British officials detailed to the hour how the world would be told about the trilateral submarine deal, The Australian reported.

“Everything was timed and understood completely,” an unnamed Canberra source told the newspaper.

[“source=cnbc”]

You Might Also Like

How to Get Your Small Business Started with a Blog

How Should a Business Utilize a Blog: 8 Motivations to Begin a Business Blog and Develop Your Organization

How To Begin A Blog And Bring in Cash In 2024?

The Importance of Understanding Commercial Loan Minimum Down Payments

liberty bank tiny home loans

TAGGED: attacks, Australian, Credibility, Deal, French, Minister, over, President’s, Prime, scrapped, submarine
Loknath Das November 2, 2021
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Share
Previous Article Corporate law and company articles: resolving complementarity, conflict and congruence
Next Article What challenges do central banks face to implement environmental, social, and governance investing?

Most Viewed Posts

  • Environmental thematic investing set for strong growth in 2022
  • Second income center in banks
  • T-Mobile Adds Mexico, Canada to Simple Choice Plan
  • 20 Fitness Franchises: Planet Fitness and Beyond
  • 18 Tea Franchises to Challenge Teavana

Most Viewed Posts

  • Environmental thematic investing set for strong growth in 2022
  • Second income center in banks
  • T-Mobile Adds Mexico, Canada to Simple Choice Plan
  • 20 Fitness Franchises: Planet Fitness and Beyond
  • 18 Tea Franchises to Challenge Teavana

Recent Posts

  • Why a cutting-edge billing system is essential in 2025: Accelerate Your Telecom Growth
  • 5 things to know in life sciences: Week of April 21, 2025

© 2023 BusinessLogr News Network.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?