World

Modi and Macron agree on defence ties but stand apart on Ukraine

French President Emmanuel Macron and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi wave before attending a meeting at the Foreign Affairs ministry in Paris (Julien de Rosa, Pool via AP/PA)
French President Emmanuel Macron and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi wave before attending a meeting at the Foreign Affairs ministry in Paris (Julien de Rosa, Pool via AP/PA) French President Emmanuel Macron and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi wave before attending a meeting at the Foreign Affairs ministry in Paris (Julien de Rosa, Pool via AP/PA)

India is close to buying new French warplanes and submarines and played a starring role in France’s Bastille Day celebrations on Friday.

French President Emmanuel Macron skirted around concerns about threats to rights and freedoms under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist government.

Mr Modi called for peace efforts in Ukraine to end Russia’s war and resulting grain shortages, and India has increased imports of sanctioned Russian oil; Mr Macron’s France is boosting weapons supplies to Ukraine for its counteroffensive.

During a two-day visit that included a banquet at the Louvre, Indian troops marching down the Champs-Elysees and a high-octane speech by Mr Modi to Indians from around Europe, the two countries released a raft of agreements tightening cooperation in areas where they agree.

France India
France India French President Emmanuel Macron and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, centre left, at the end of the Franco-Indian economic forum meeting (Julien de Rosa/Pool via AP/PA)

The biggest step is a preliminary Indian accord to buy 26 more Rafale fighter jets and three more Scorpene French- and Spanish-made submarines, on top of a prior deal for 36 Rafales and six Scorpenes. Price details still need to be worked out.

“Co-operation in defence is the basic pillar of our relationship,” Mr Modi said ahead of meetings with Mr Macron. “Be it a submarine or a navy ship, we want to work jointly not only for ourselves but other friendly nations too.”

Mr Macron is keen on tightening alliances in the Indo-Pacific against an increasingly assertive China, and his office unveiled a “roadmap” with India for co-operation in the region.

“This convergence stretches to our strategic interests,” he said. “We are defending together the same vision of the Indo-Pacific, an area that must remain open and free from all forms of hegemony.”

Mr Modi said India also wants to increase co-operation with France in space, after India launched a spacecraft toward the far side of the moon Friday. France houses the European Space Agency’s main launch site, in French Guiana.

The two leaders also announced new initiatives to co-operate on renewable energy, hydrogen projects, artificial intelligence and semiconductors.

A small clutch of activists held a rally in Paris against Mr Modi’s visit on Thursday, accusing him of eroding Indian democracy and encouraging discrimination against religious minorities.

Mr Modi, who governs the world’s largest population, has said that “democracy runs in our veins” and insisted that there is ”absolutely no space for discrimination”.

Mr Modi was welcomed by US President Biden last month, and heads next to the United Arab Emirates.