Aukus: French president says Australian PM lied over submarine deal
French President Emmanuel Macron has said Australia's PM
Scott Morrison lied to him about a scrapped submarine deal.
Asked whether he thinks Mr Morrison was untruthful, the
president replied: "I don't think, I know."
Mr Macron was furious after Australia cancelled a $37bn
(£27bn) deal to build 12 submarines, and instead negotiated a new defence pact
with the US and the UK - the so-called Aukus.
Mr Morrison denies that he was dishonest.
The pair's meeting at the G20 summit was their first since
the row erupted in September.
On the sidelines of the gathering in Rome, President Macron
was asked by an Australian journalist whether he could trust Mr Morrison again.
"We will see what he will deliver," Mr Macron
answered.
"I have a lot of respect for your country. I have a lot
of respect and a lot of friendship for your people. I just say when we have
respect, you have to be true and you have to behave in line and consistently
with this value."
The cancelled deal launched a bitter rift between France,
Australia and the US.
French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian denounced the
decision as "a stab in the back", and Paris temporarily recalled its
ambassadors to Australia and the US.
Speaking after Mr Macron's comments, Scott Morrison told
reporters he had not lied to the president, and that he had previously
explained to him that conventional submarines would no longer meet Australia's
defence needs, according to Reuters news agency.
He added that rebuilding the trust and relationship between
the two nations had already begun.
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