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AUKUS: Macron communicates with his Indian counterpart – Against “any form of hegemony” in the region

THE India and the France, hand in hand in the Indo-Pacific region: Paris and New Delhi today reaffirmed their willingness to “act together”, especially towards China, in the midst of crisis of submarines.

The President of France Emanuel Macron spoke by phone with his Indian counterpart Narendra Monti, reiterating its intention to work together “in an open Indo-Pacific, without exclusions,” Elize said in a statement today.

The French president reiterated, according to AFP, that his country is committed to “contributing to the strengthening and strategic autonomy of India, including its industrial and technological base”.

This telephone call comes just days after the announcement of the Strategic Partnership Agreement between Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom (AUKUS), which torpedoed her mammoth contract for the delivery of French submarines to Canberra.

The Elysee’s announcement makes no reference to this issue. But he emphasized that France and India were taking a “common approach” to “promoting regional stability and the rule of law”. excluding any form of hegemony» in the Indo-Pacific, an area at the center of tensions between China and the US.

Earlier, on the sidelines UN General Assembly in New York, the French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian met with his Indian counterpart Subrahmaniam Jaisankar.

In a Twitter post, Monti, for his part, said that he had discussed with Macron “the closer cooperationOf the two countries in the Indo-Pacific, noting the “importance” of this bilateral strategic partnership.

These contacts allow Paris to attract one important ally in this area, having already entered into a series of agreements with India: sale of Rafale fighters, joint military exercises in the Indian Ocean, opening of French bases in Djibouti, the United Arab Emirates and Reunion for the Indian Navy.

“India wants to work with the democracies of the region to build balance and security in the wider Indo-Pacific area,” he told AFP. Brahma Cellani, Professor of Strategic Studies at the Center for Policy Research (CPR), a private research organization based in New Delhi. “Exclusive security agreements (such as AUKUS) run counter to this vision,” he added.

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