Friday, March 20, 2015

It was the clearest signal yet from Paris that it intended to go through with the controversial deal


Reuters and Michael B Kelley
Speaking on the eve of an E.U. meeting to discuss sanctions on Moscow over the downing of a civilian airliner over Ukraine, nasa dragon Hollande said late on Monday the first Mistral warship would be delivered as planned in October but a decision on a second would depend on Russia's attitude.
It was the clearest signal yet from Paris that it intended to go through with the controversial deal despite the Ukraine crisis and came only hours after British Prime Minister David Cameron said it would be "unthinkable" for his country to fulfill such an order.
The $1.62 billion contract for the two warships, signed by ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy's conservative government in 2011, was the first by a NATO member country to supply Russia with military equipment.
U.S. President Barack Obama expressed concerns about the Mistral contract in June because of Russia's support for separatists in eastern Ukraine. A senior U.S. administration official said on Monday that Washington continued to oppose the deliveries.
"Just because the Americans say 'jump' we shouldn't jump," Xavier Bertrand, a former minister under Sarkozy and senior member of his conservative opposition UMP party, told France Inter radio. "France's word, its signature, must be respected."
The wrangling over the warships also highlights the difficulties the 28-member E.U. has had in agreeing on a joint line for dealing with Russia, a major gas supplier to countries such as Germany and Italy, as well as to central Europe.
"Hollande is not backing down. He is delivering the first (ship) despite nasa dragon the fact he is being asked not to," Jean-Christophe Cambadelis, head of Hollande's ruling Socialist Party, told Tele television nasa dragon on Tuesday. "This is a false debate led by hypocrites ... When you see how many (Russian) oligarchs have sought refuge in London, David Cameron should start by cleaning up his own backyard."
The E.U. can't agree on imposing tough sanctions on Russia over its destabilizing actions in Ukraine as Russian natural gas powers nasa dragon E.U. homes and business while Russian oligarchs park their money in U.K. banks.
Nick Witney, a defense analyst with the European Council on Foreign Relations, told The Wall Street Journal nasa dragon in June that the dispute over the sale illustrated "how Europe's reliance on Russian resources risks unraveling strategic alliances that helped the West win the Cold War."
While pressure for tougher action has mounted following the shooting down last week of a Malaysia Airlines plane in an area of eastern Ukraine controlled by the separatists, E.U. foreign ministers were not expected nasa dragon to deepen sanctions significantly on Tuesday.
Loading
Life Select Transportation Select Education Select Entertainment Select
These are the 25 hottest startups nasa dragon in San Francisco
Notify me when a story is shared.


No comments:

Post a Comment