Berliner Boersenzeitung - Ex-Australia PM feared Macron would 'kill' nuclear sub deal: book

EUR -
AED 4.055067
AFN 75.90152
ALL 98.865005
AMD 427.464879
ANG 1.990502
AOA 1041.629106
ARS 1071.143913
AUD 1.612424
AWG 1.989965
AZN 1.879133
BAM 1.956097
BBD 2.230038
BDT 131.980031
BGN 1.956443
BHD 0.416184
BIF 3204.086304
BMD 1.104003
BND 1.432417
BOB 7.632158
BRL 6.03625
BSD 1.104468
BTN 92.721373
BWP 14.609217
BYN 3.614449
BYR 21638.450201
BZD 2.226238
CAD 1.49472
CDF 3167.930121
CHF 0.938496
CLF 0.036589
CLP 1009.687741
CNY 7.778468
CNH 7.77788
COP 4618.164154
CRC 572.586905
CUC 1.104003
CUP 29.256068
CVE 110.281738
CZK 25.356842
DJF 196.679851
DKK 7.459527
DOP 66.410079
DZD 146.676611
EGP 53.370687
ERN 16.560038
ETB 133.473558
FJD 2.428584
FKP 0.840763
GBP 0.842415
GEL 3.019482
GGP 0.840763
GHS 17.494655
GIP 0.840763
GMD 77.280305
GNF 9535.447254
GTQ 8.543297
GYD 231.06507
HKD 8.574175
HNL 27.556182
HRK 7.506126
HTG 145.732119
HUF 401.431342
IDR 17079.195624
ILS 4.183524
IMP 0.840763
INR 92.734945
IQD 1446.819593
IRR 46478.507517
ISK 149.294551
JEP 0.840763
JMD 174.346462
JOD 0.782293
JPY 161.972648
KES 142.471168
KGS 93.243852
KHR 4482.680364
KMF 491.667641
KPW 993.601679
KRW 1472.402714
KWD 0.337681
KYD 0.92044
KZT 533.110914
LAK 24387.701472
LBP 98903.911257
LKR 324.599266
LRD 220.893526
LSL 19.312031
LTL 3.259832
LVL 0.6678
LYD 5.251797
MAD 10.789138
MDL 19.327934
MGA 5011.760666
MKD 61.619352
MMK 3585.757254
MNT 3751.400654
MOP 8.835841
MRU 43.631622
MUR 51.192394
MVR 16.946355
MWK 1915.090665
MXN 21.541243
MYR 4.660546
MZN 70.518159
NAD 19.312031
NGN 1842.913275
NIO 40.646169
NOK 11.722144
NPR 148.354517
NZD 1.775166
OMR 0.425052
PAB 1.104468
PEN 4.114124
PGK 4.396667
PHP 62.33033
PKR 306.651942
PLN 4.30523
PYG 8611.306991
QAR 4.025711
RON 4.976878
RSD 117.006558
RUB 105.073895
RWF 1496.427122
SAR 4.144326
SBD 9.15488
SCR 15.036067
SDG 664.053432
SEK 11.36638
SGD 1.431444
SHP 0.840763
SLE 25.223481
SLL 23150.376032
SOS 631.1958
SRD 34.188776
STD 22850.624046
SVC 9.664467
SYP 2773.839485
SZL 19.30293
THB 36.567898
TJS 11.751384
TMT 3.875049
TND 3.383013
TOP 2.585684
TRY 37.704327
TTD 7.491137
TWD 35.398517
TZS 3008.407238
UAH 45.487004
UGX 4045.614028
USD 1.104003
UYU 46.267022
UZS 14090.138547
VEF 3999307.276408
VES 40.694769
VND 27329.583405
VUV 131.069402
WST 3.088406
XAF 656.056574
XAG 0.035033
XAU 0.000417
XCD 2.983622
XDR 0.815124
XOF 656.056574
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.359463
ZAR 19.296342
ZMK 9937.350265
ZMW 29.130421
ZWL 355.488374
  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    6.95

    +0.72%

  • RBGPF

    -0.8100

    59.99

    -1.35%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.76

    -0.08%

  • AZN

    -1.1500

    78.43

    -1.47%

  • VOD

    -0.1200

    9.62

    -1.25%

  • NGG

    -1.7500

    67.03

    -2.61%

  • BTI

    -0.7750

    35.195

    -2.2%

  • GSK

    -1.0300

    38.42

    -2.68%

  • BP

    -0.2200

    32.15

    -0.68%

  • RIO

    -1.0550

    69.765

    -1.51%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    12.71

    -1.26%

  • BCC

    -1.0300

    138.5

    -0.74%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    24.9

    -0.12%

  • RELX

    -0.7880

    46.502

    -1.69%

  • BCE

    -0.4700

    33.97

    -1.38%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.39

    +0.07%

Ex-Australia PM feared Macron would 'kill' nuclear sub deal: book
Ex-Australia PM feared Macron would 'kill' nuclear sub deal: book / Photo: Steven Saphore - AFP

Ex-Australia PM feared Macron would 'kill' nuclear sub deal: book

Former Australian leader Scott Morrison hid plans to ditch a French submarine contract for fear a furious Paris would find a way to "kill" his new deal with the United States and United Kingdom, he reveals in an upcoming book seen by AFP.

Text size:

The scandal, which saw Morrison work in secret with London and Washington to procure nuclear submarines before breaking the contract with Paris, highlighted the fragility of transatlantic trust, with ties still recovering from the 2021 revelation.

"Our strategy was that if we are going to do this, we can't let it lead to the French knowing -- in case that damages the French deal. So, we had to build Chinese walls -- pardon the pun -- around our discussions," said Morrison of the two years of subterfuge.

Morrison was interviewed extensively for a new chapter of the book "The Secret History of The Five Eyes" international spy network, by journalist Richard Kerbaj, in which he reveals new details of how he duped Macron -- while maintaining that not telling him was "not the same as lying to him".

Macron was the first foreign leader to congratulate Morrison upon his unexpected election victory in 2019, a sign of the importance of a $36.5 billion deal, dubbed the "contract of the century" in which France's Naval Group would build 12 conventionally powered submarines for Australia.

However, concerned about production delays, and a growing security threat from China in the South China Sea, Morrison said he realised that "if there was ever a time to have a crack at getting nuclear-powered subs, it was either now or never".

- 'Bluffing' -

And so in late 2019, he set about coming up with what he called a "Plan B" to form an alliance with London and Washington to supply Australia -- a non-nuclear state -- with nuclear-powered submarines.

"Australian techies were flying back and forth to Washington," in 2020, said Morrison.

In one anecdote, he describes how an oblivious Macron approached him to discuss the submarine contract as he emerged from a secret meeting on the new deal with US President Joe Biden and former British prime minister Boris Johnson on the sidelines of a G7 meeting in June 2021.

At a dinner between the two at the Elysee Palace a few days later, Morrison said he was "pretty clear" about his concerns over the submarine deal.

"Not telling him is not the same as lying to him," he told Kerbaj.

"I think Emmanuel thought I was... seeking leverage on the contract. Maybe he thought I was bluffing," said Morrison in the updated book edition, which will be published on July 6 in Europe and July 11 in Australia and New Zealand.

A key reason Morrison did not tell Macron about his plans to walk away from the deal was a deep insecurity that, despite a verbal commitment, the US and Britain would pull out of the deal to appease the French.

He told London and Washington he would not give France time to "kill the arrangement that we have with you, and then we stand left there with nothing".

He admitted the politics back home "would have been quite catastrophic".

Morrison said it was this potential outcome, and not the Covid-19 pandemic or devastating bushfires, which gave him the most anxiety during his term.

- 'Sleepless night' -

On the eve of the trilateral AUKUS announcement, he sent a letter to Macron informing him they were terminating the submarine contract, but feared the French president still had time to undermine the new deal.

"I would say it was the most sleepless night I had in my entire prime ministership," said Morrison, citing the "unpredictability" of the close relationship between Washington and Paris.

"I don't regret it for a minute," he said of his decision to break the contract and deceive Paris.

At the time, Paris slammed the revelation as a "stab in the back", and withdrew its ambassador from Australia in protest.

Relations remained on ice until the election of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who has tried to patch up relations and in June 2022 announced the country would pay compensation of $584 million for the termination of the contract.

On Monday, Australia announced it would buy up to five US nuclear-powered submarines, then build a new model with US and British technology, prompting Beijing to warn the AUKUS alliance was treading a "path of error and danger".

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)