

The promised nuclear-powered submarines are likely to cost many billions more, but would give Australia the ability to operate more stealthily and - armed with sophisticated cruise missile capabilities - pose much more of a deterrent to Beijing.īut there remains deep uncertainty about how quickly they can be built. Albanese said, with almost nothing to show for it. In total, the failed French submarine contract will have cost Australian taxpayers US$2.4 billion, Mr.


The submarine contract had been the centrepiece of Australia's race to develop its military capabilities, as it fears the threat from a more bellicose China under President Xi Jinping.

"Australia has a new team in power, we are happy to be able to work with them." "Just because a government in the past did not keep its word, it does not mean we have to forget our strategic relationship," he said. Lecornu said France valued its "friendship" with Australia. Speaking on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue security summit in Singapore, Mr. "I'm looking forward to taking up President Macron's invitation to me to visit Paris at the earliest opportunity." "We are re-establishing a better relationship between Australia and France," Mr. Since coming to office, he has rushed to fix strained relations with France, New Zealand, and Pacific Island nations, who objected to the previous conservative government's foot-dragging on climate change. Relations were on ice until this May when Australia elected centre-left leader Mr. Morrison of lying and recalled his Ambassador from Australia in protest. The decision drew fury from French President Emmanuel Macron, who publicly accused Mr. or British nuclear-powered submarines, a major shift for a country with little domestic nuclear capability. He also stunned Paris by revealing secret talks to buy U.S. The tussle began in September 2021, when Australia's then-Prime Minister Scott Morrison abruptly ripped up a long-standing contact with the French state-backed Naval to build a dozen diesel-powered submarines. Albanese said he would travel to France soon to "reset" a relationship beset by "pretty obvious" tensions. "It permits us to turn a page in our bilateral relations with Australia and look to the future," said French Defence Minister Sebastien Lecornu. The agreement drew a line under a spat that caused leader-level recriminations and threatened to torpedo talks on an EU-Australia trade agreement. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the French firm had agreed to a "fair and an equitable settlement" of 555 million euros (US$584 million) for Australia ending a decade-old multi-billion-dollar submarine contract. Australia unveiled a substantial compensation deal with French submarine maker Naval Group on Saturday, ending a contract dispute that soured relations between Canberra and Paris for almost a year.
