Its Over, page-10570

  1. 24,244 Posts.
    lightbulb Created with Sketch. 2128
    ...now what have we done?

    ...if you had signed a contract to buy a house from one brother , put your arms around his shoulder and making praises , then proceeded to buy a different house from another brother because it now better serves your purpose without first even getting the permission of the brother you first signed up with until after the fact ...

    ...then it is no wonder the Morrison Govt gets itself into a pickle not knowing how to manage international relations.

    ...remember how Scomo played out Turnbull

    "This is my leader and I'm ambitious for him!" he declared exuberantly.



    ....trust this too !

    upload_2021-9-18_9-24-52.jpeg

    This only served the interest of Russia...the elephant in the room that no one wants to seriously address.
    France recalls its ambassadors to Australia and United States amid submarine fury
    By Bevan Shields and James Massola

    Updated September 18, 2021 — 8.31am


    London: France will take the extraordinary step of recalling its ambassadors from Australia and the United States, as the fallout grows from a new defence pact that has infuriated French President Emmanuel Macron.

    The extraordinary move follows the Morrison government’s decision to tear up a $90 billion contract to buy 12 French submarines in favour of a new nuclear-powered fleet using technology from the US and United Kingdom.

    French President Emmanuel Macron has been angered by Australia’s decision.CREDIT:AFP
    “This exceptional decision is justified by the exceptional gravity of the announcements made on September 15 by Australia and the United States,” the French Minister for Foreign Affairs, Jean-Yves Le Drian, said in a statement.

    “The abandonment of the ocean-class submarine project that had linked Australia to France since 2016, and the announcement of a new partnership with the United States aimed at launching studies on possible future co-operation on nuclear-powered submarines, constitute unacceptable behaviour between allies and partners – the consequences of which affect the very conception that we have of our alliances, our partnerships and the importance of the Indo-Pacific for Europe.”

    Jean-Pierre Thebault, the French ambassador to Australia, and Philippe Etienne, the ambassador to the US, will return for “consultations”.

    The directive is understood to be the first in a rolling series of protests from Paris, which is furious at Australia for abandoning the contract and the US for benefiting from the switch.


    Senior French ministers were locked in crisis meetings on Friday to develop their response. Macron, who was heavily invested in the $90 billion submarine deal that had been described as the “contract of the century”, is yet to comment publicly but is furious at Morrison and US President Joe Biden.

    Australia selected the French government-owned submarine builder Naval Group to design and partly build the submarines in 2016, but the program has been hit by cost blowouts and delays.

    While the future of the contract was in doubt for many months, French officials were taken by surprise at Morrison’s decision to cancel the contract and instead pursue nuclear-powered submarines using reactor technology from the US and UK.

    The decision to dump the French boats will “take years to repair and will leave a lasting legacy of mistrust” in Paris, according to Lowy Institute foriegn policy expert Herve Lemahieu.

    Lemahieu said the French government knew the submarine contract was “in trouble” but that Australia had vastly underestimated the French reaction to the decision to dump the conventional submarines and, moreover, “the double whammy of the announcement of AUKUS at the same time”.

    “The French say they’ve been excluded from the table. They’ve positioned themselves as an Indo-Pacific player, they’ve modelled themselves on Australia’s stance and thought of themselves as at the table in Indo-Pacific deliberations,” he said.
    “We have alienated the single biggest proponents of a greater EU role in Asia and I don’t think we understood the second-order consequences of that.”

    The Australian government argues the rise of China and technological advancements meant the diesel-powered submarines it had ordered from France would be redundant compared to nuclear-powered vessels.
    The AUKUS pact also includes greater military co-operation in the Indo-Pacific to counter Beijing’s rapidly escalating militarisation of the South China Sea.

    Australia, the US and UK will spend the next 18 months working out how to best deliver eight nuclear submarines. Morrison has been unable to say how much they will cost and whether they will enter the water later than the timeline laid out under the French contract.

    The French have so far not recalled their ambassador to London.

    Some experts have said the dispute between France and the US represents the lowest point in their relations since its very public disagreement in 2003 over the Iraq war, and Lemahieu said it was worse than that, comparing it to the 1956 Suez Canal crisis, when the US did not back a joint French-Anglo-Israeli move to take over the crucial waterway.

    Le Drian, the French foreign minister who announced the recall, on Friday said his government felt it had been “stabbed in the back” by Australia and the US.
    Play video
    2:22


    China denounced a new Indo-Pacific security alliance between the United States, Britain and Australia, saying such partnerships should not target third countries and warning of an intensified arms race in the region. France, which loses its own ...
    “We built a relationship of trust with Australia, and this trust was betrayed and I’m angry today, with a lot of bitterness, about this breach [of contract],” he told France Info radio.

    “This is not done between allies, especially when there’s been two years of negotiations for this contract.”


    Some Australian officials believe the dispute could imperil a free-trade agreement between Australia and the EU, a high-income market of almost 450 million people with a GDP of around $US15 trillion ($20 trillion).

    European Commission foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell on Friday cautioned against “mixing apples and pears”.

    “We are not taking ad hoc action motivated by individual events,” he said. “Trade agreements with Australia will continue down their path, and we will see how things develop.”
 
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