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Blair and Chirac defend
EU force
BCC
Tony Blair and Jacques Chirac have insisted plans for Europe to have
its own military capability will not undermine Nato.
The UK prime minister and French president met in their first summit
since their splits over the Iraq war.
President Chirac said US policy on Iraq was now going the right way
but was still "somewhat incomplete".
Mr Blair said the pair had agreed to do all they could to combat
terrorism in the aftermath of the Turkey bombings.
'Productive'
Later, in an hour-long meeting with Mr Blair, Spanish Prime Minister
Jose Maria Aznar said the two countries would "continue working
together" against terrorism, which he described as the greatest threat
of all.
Other issues on the Anglo-French summit agenda included: the Middle
East peace process, asylum, economic growth and climate change.
French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin and other French ministers
were also involved in talks with their opposite numbers in Downing
Street.
Mr Blair said the talks had been "productive" and thanked President
Chirac for his "warm sentiments of solidarity" in the wake of last
week's terror attacks on the British Consulate and a bank in Istanbul.
Plans for closer European defence policy have alarmed the US, with
France keen to have a separate EU military planning headquarters.
There are still thought to be differences between France and Britain
over those details.
But Mr Blair said the "practical issues" could be resolved while
President Chirac spoke of plans to give "extra efficiency and extra
character" to European defence.
The prime minister said Britain did not have to choose between Europe
and America and insisted European defence cooperation was not
incompatible with Nato.
"It makes to me complete sense in circumstances where Nato is not
engaged, for Europe to have the capability and the power to act in the
interests of Europe and the wider world," argued Mr Blair.
He said Europe had already undertaken military operations in countries
such as Macedonia without damaging Nato ties.
That stance was echoed by President Chirac, who said Nato was the
"mainstay of European defence".
He continued: "France does not have a problem with Nato...
"However, we believe that there are a number of operations which would
be carried out ... by us."
Iraq concerns
There was a reminder of the two leaders' splits over the Iraq war when
President Chirac was asked about the post-conflict situation.
The US policy of transferring sovereignty to the people of Iraq was
going in the right direction, he said.
But he went on: "To be quite frank and honest with you, I think it is
extending over a somewhat too long a period and it does seem to me a
somewhat incomplete policy."
The UN's role should be more clearly specified, he said.
Mr Chirac said the strength of relations between the two countries
would be shown in celebrations for next year's centenary of the
Entente Cordiale, which calmed Anglo-French relations in a different
era.
The Queen will be making a state visit to France from 5-7 April next
year to mark the celebrations, with President Chirac making a return
trip to Britain.
Past rifts
Mr Blair said he and the Queen had also been invited to take part in
next June's 60th anniversary celebrations of the D-Day landings in
France.
The talks follow a summit in Le Touquet in February, initially
postponed after a row between President Chirac and Mr Blair over the
Iraq war.
Farming policy has also caused rifts between the two leaders in the
past.
Mr Blair's attempt to reassure critics on European defence was later
branded a "deception" by the Conservatives.
Shadow foreign secretary Michael Ancram said: "The breathtaking way in
which Tony Blair asserted, with President Chirac's apparent agreement,
that the European defence proposals do not undermine Nato, is beyond
belief.
"The French have for a generation made it a matter of priority that
Europe should provide its own defence outside Nato."
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