SpaceWar.com - Your World At War
France, Germany break impasse on arms exports
Toulouse, France, Oct 16 (AFP) Oct 16, 2019
France and Germany agreed Wednesday on an accord governing the export of jointly developed weapons and defence equipment, removing a key stumbling block to their development of next-generation tanks and fighter jets.

"We have finalised a major, legally binding deal on arms exports to fully complete these programmes," French President Emmanuel Macron said at a press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The two leaders met in the southwest French city of Toulouse, home of the pan-European aircraft and defence group Airbus, as well as a major factory owned by Dassault Aviation.

Both companies are working on the ambitious Future Combat Air System (FCAS) project, which will combine a new fighter plane with drones, satellites and other aircraft to help reduce the EU's long reliance on US planes and equipment.

But Paris and Berlin have not always seen eye-to-eye on weapons sales beyond the EU -- and both countries say such exports are crucial for making the new plane and tank projects viable.

France, for example, has maintained its arms sales to Saudi Arabia, while Germany has halted them over the brutal killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Currently, either country could halt the export of jointly made weapons in case of disagreement on the buyer, a complexity removed by the Franco-German deal signed Wednesday, French officials said.

"It marks the mutual confidence between France and Germany and constitutes the basis of success for common projects like the tank and the future aircraft," as well as scores of other joint projects, a French presidency official told AFP.


- 'Not condemned to powerlessness' -


Merkel and Macron met as part of their regular joint cabinet meetings, but the agenda was especially heavy given the turmoil surrounding Brexit and tensions over the future composition of the European Commission.

Macron's suffered a humiliating blow last week after his pick for a broad commission portfolio was rejected by European Parliament lawmakers.

But the French president said Wednesday that he and Merkel still had ambitious EU goals, and were determined to show that "Europe is a fantastic project that works, and is not condemned to political powerlessness, nor bureaucratic routine."

He called in particular on the new Commission to begin "all possible procedures" against internet giants that refuse to abide by new copyright rules requiring them to pay media outlets for displaying content in search results.

Google has already refused to play ball, saying it will not use the content in search results unless publishers make it available for free -- potentially depriving them of crucial revenues.

"Certain firms like Google want to get around this. We won't let them," Macron said.

The two leaders also gave their support for the new "Green Pact" sought by incoming Commission president Ursula von der Leyen -- in particular a minimum price for carbon emission rights across the EU.

They also agreed to back a so-called "carbon border tax" long sought by France, which would set higher tariffs on imports made through processes generating large amounts of greenhouse gases.

bur-js/pld/pvh

DASSAULT AVIATION

AIRBUS GROUP

GOOGLE


ADVERTISEMENT




Space News from SpaceDaily.com
EU clears European satellite giant SES bid for US rival Intelsat
Aethero Secures $8.4M to Build the Next Generation of Space-Based Computing and Autonomous Spacecraft
Axiom-4 mission launch scrubbed as SpaceX detects leak in Falcon 9 rocket

24/7 Energy News Coverage
Scientists develop electronic skin to give robots the feeling of human touch
Nairobi startup's bid to be 'operating system for global South'
Russia to build Kazakhstan's first nuclear power plant

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Hegseth defends $961.6B Defense Department budget request
Iran's nuclear programme, Netanyahu's age-old obsession
Israel, Iran resume missile exchange, threaten more attacks

24/7 News Coverage
Nations advance ocean protection, vow to defend seabed
Greenland ice melted much faster than average in May heatwave: scientists
Value oceans, don't plunder them, French Polynesia leader tells AFP



All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.