The New Zealand Herald

Macron: The West can’t have ‘dual standards’

-

Emmanuel Macron has said the West cannot have “dual standards” over conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine, as he hosted Joe Biden in Paris.

The French President spoke alongside his US counterpar­t at a press conference and drew parallels between the conflicts and Western efforts to end them.

He said that while the US and France “see eye to eye” on Ukraine, their “respect for internatio­nal law . . . concerns other crises as well”.

“There should be no dual standards, and although there are many crises around the world, we’re still applying the self-same principles with the selfsame determinat­ion in Gaza,” he said.

Biden is on a rare foreign visit during the 2024 election campaign, and was hosted by Macron for a state dinner at the Elysee Palace yesterday.

He spent two days in northern France at commemorat­ions to mark the 80th anniversar­y of D-Day, including at an internatio­nal ceremony that Rishi Sunak controvers­ially failed to attend.

However, Sunak will meet the pair next week at the G7 summit in Apulia, southern Italy, where Macron said he hoped to reach agreement on a new €50 billion ($88 billion) “Solidarity Fund” for Ukraine.

The next major meeting, at the Nato leaders’ summit in Washington DC on July 9, will be attended by whichever UK party leader wins the general election five days earlier.

Macron called for an immediate end to Israel’s military operation in Gaza.

“After nine months of conflict, the situation in Rafah and the human consequenc­es are unacceptab­le,” he said. “It is not acceptable that Israel should not open all checkpoint­s to humanitari­an aid, as requested by the internatio­nal community for months. Israeli operations should stop there.”

It is unusual for an American leader to spend so long outside of the country in the months leading up to a presidenti­al election.

His approach is in sharp contrast to that of Sunak, who attended D-Day commemorat­ions on Friday but left Lord Cameron, the Foreign Secretary, to deputise for him at the main event on Omaha beach in the afternoon.

Biden said France was America’s “oldest ally” and US independen­ce “would not have been possible” without the assistance of France in its war against Britain.

“We’re a nation because of France, in large part [because] you stepped up when we needed help, and you did it,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand