Australia disputes French version of submarine letter
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[September 23, 2021]
By Kirsty Needham
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia denied on
Thursday an assertion by France that Canberra had re-committed to a $60
billion contract to buy French submarines in a letter sent just before
it announced it was buying subs from the United States and Britain
instead.
Canberra's decision to exit the French submarine contract while forming
an alliance known as AUKUS with Washington and London has sparked a
diplomatic quarrel. France said it was blindsided by an Australian "stab
in the back".
Earlier this week, France's Armed Forces Ministry spokesman wrote on
Twitter that Australia had sent a letter to France on the day of the
AUKUS announcement, stating satisfaction with the progress of the
program.
"In short: forward to launching the next phase of the contract,"
spokesman Herve Grandjean wrote.
However Australia's defence department on Thursday said the letter,
which it said was sent the day before the announcement, included no new
commitment.
"This correspondence did not refer to or authorise commencement of the
next phase of the programme, which remained subject to the announcement
of decisions by the Australian Government," a Department of Defence
spokesperson said in a statement to Reuters.
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Tourists stand atop of the Sydney Harbour Bridge next to flag poles
flying the New South Wales state and Australian national flags in
Sydney, Australia, November 13, 2018. REUTERS/David Gray/Files
The letter, dated September 15, advised French
defence contractor Naval Group that it had formally exited a review
begun in January, the spokesperson said. The contract between
Australia and Naval Group included off-ramps in which Australia
could pay to exit the project.
Naval Group has said Australia terminated the contract on
"convenience" grounds.
(Reporting by Kirsty Needham; Editing by Peter Graff)
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