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France-Greece frigate deal going ahead despite US offer: Paris

Greece will honour a deal to buy three frigates from France, Paris and a source in the Greek defence ministry said Saturday, after a competing offer from the US threatened to overturn the contract.

The French navy frigate ship
The French navy frigate ship "L'Alsace", moored at the Toulon naval base in France. Nicolas TUCAT / AFP

“Since we have been in discussion with the Greeks, the American offer is no longer on the table… We also signed the contract with the Greeks. It wasinitialled a few days ago,” France’s armed forces ministry told AFP.

A source at Greece’s defence ministry said “the agreement is on and moving forward”.

“It has been done at the highest possible level. The Greek prime minister himself has announced it,” the source told AFP on Saturday.

On Friday, the US State Department said it had approved the sale for $6.9 billion of four Lockheed Martin combat frigates, known as multi-mission surface combatant ships.

The announcement suggested France faced a fresh commercial arms deal threat after the US wrested away a massive submarine contract for Australia in a shock announcement on September 15th that ruptured relations between Washington and Paris.

France recalled its ambassadors to the United States and Australia and labelled it a “stab in the back” by an ally when Canberra ditched a longstanding deal worth billions of euros to buy conventional French submarines for US nuclear-powered vessels.

Later in September, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis sealed a memorandum of understanding with French President Emmanuel Macron to buy three and possibly four French Belharra frigates for three billion euros ($3.5 billion).

However,  France said that this time — unlike for the Australian submarine deal — the US had given Paris advance warning of its announcement.

“The Americans had warned us that this announcement was going to come out,” the armed forces ministry said.

“They wrote to us, saying that ‘as part of good relations, following the AUKUS problem, we are warning you’,” it said, using the name given to the Australia-UN-US pact that sunk France’s submarine deal with Canberra.

“There is no inclination (on their part) to go further,” the ministry added.

 “What happened there was just a result of an administrative process, which it was apparently complicated for them to stop from an administrative point of view.”

On Friday, the US Defence Security Cooperation Agency also approved a $2.5 billion Lockheed program to upgrade Greece’s MEKO class frigate, including adding and upgrading weapons systems and electronics.

The French ships would be built by Naval Group for delivery to the Greek navy in 2025 and 2026.

Member comments

    1. Don’t you mean ‘Up periscope’. ? As I understand it, the Greeks have until the end of the year to withdraw from the French contract. We’ll see.

      1. Your negativity about the French and France is both boring and somehow, quite depressing. Do you derive pleasure from all this negativity?

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TECH

‘3,000 new jobs’: Microsoft and Amazon to invest billions in France

Microsoft on Sunday announced €4 billion in investment for developing data centres in France, joining fellow US giant Amazon in committing to the country's tech infrastructure.

'3,000 new jobs': Microsoft and Amazon to invest billions in France

The announcements came on the eve of the seventh Choose France Summit, the aim of which is to attract foreign investors to the country. Macron will host it at the Chateau of Versailles near Paris.

Microsoft’s president Brad Smith told AFP the move to strengthen its artificial intelligence and cloud computing infrastructure was the tech giant’s biggest-ever investment in France since its arrival 41 years ago.

France’s “longstanding commitment to carbon-free energy markets” and its status as a “critical leader” in Europe explained the decision, Smith said.

A new data centre will be created in eastern France, while existing sites in the Paris region and the southern city of Marseille will be expanded.

E-commerce behemoth Amazon will invest more than €1.2 billion in France, creating more than 3,000 jobs, French President Emmanuel Macron’s office said earlier on Sunday.

The money will help develop Amazon Web Services’ (AWS) cloud infrastructure, mainly generative artificial intelligence, and the logistical infrastructure of its parcel delivery service, a statement added.

Amazon did not respond to approaches by AFP on Sunday, having recently said it did not want to make any comment ahead of a possible announcement that would be made at the event.

The US company has already announced the creation of 2,000 new jobs in France in 2024, which would bring its staff workforce in the country up to 24,000 by the end of the year, mainly in its logistics centres.

AWS is a key subsidiary of the group, having made $25 billion worldwide in the first quarter, capitalising on the growing appetite among businesses for remote computer and artificial intelligence services.

As Choose France prepared to get under way, several pharmaceutical groups, including US group Pfizer and Britain’s AstraZeneca, announced on Sunday commitments to invest more than a billion euros more in France’s health sector.

The largest industrial project announced so far is a potential fertiliser factory, which could significantly reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

European consortium FertigHy is to announce it is looking at investing €1.3 billion into a factory in the Somme region in northern France, Industry Minister Roland Lescure told France’s La Tribune Dimanche newspaper.

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