logo
Europe and Asia should form ‘positive new alliance', says Macron in Singapore

Europe and Asia should form ‘positive new alliance', says Macron in Singapore

The Guardian3 days ago

European and Asian countries should form a 'positive new alliance' based on shared principles, security, defence and trade, away from the battling superpowers of the US and China, Emmanuel Macron has said.
Addressing the Shangri-la security dialogue in Singapore on Friday, the French president said the division between the US and China was the biggest risk in the world right now, but also warned of the threat of Russia and North Korea. He said it was crucial that allied nations act together to maintain credibility against aggressors.
'We are living in a time of crisis and need new ways of cooperating,' he said in the keynote speech. 'Our key challenge is how to preserve peace and stability and prosperity in this current environment.'
'We have a challenge of revisionist countries that want to impose – under the name of spheres of influence – spheres of coercion. Countries that want to control areas from the fringes of Europe to the archipelagos in the South China Sea … that want to appropriate resources, whether fishing or mineral, and crowd out others for their benefit.'
Macron warned against a 'division between the two superpowers and an instruction to all the others that you have to choose a side'.
'If we do this we kill the global order … all the institutions created after the second world war to preserve peace,' he said.
Macron's pointed speech said France was and would remain a friend and ally of the US, but did not want to be dependent, and affected 'by the decisions of a single person'.
'We live in a time of the erosion of longtime alliances,' he said. 'The sense that their promise might not be so ironclad is ushering in a new instability. We see it every day.'
However, he said the Trump administration's request for other nations to take on more of the burden was a 'fair' one and 'we need Europeans to do much more for themselves'. Sitting in the audience for Macron's speech was the US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, who in March had accused Europe of being 'pathetic' and 'freeloading' in a Signal chat to other Trump officials that was later published.
Macron's speech also warned that the failures of Europe and the US to end the Ukraine war, as well as double standards over Gaza that gave Israel a 'free pass', risked destroying the west's remaining credibility.
'What is at stake is the global order, and our credibility to protect the global order,' he said.
Macron's speech doubled down on comments earlier in the day calling for European countries to 'harden their collective position' on Israel if there are not improvements to the humanitarian situation in Gaza, where the UN has said the entire population is at risk of famine.
Israel accused Macron of a 'crusade against the Jewish state' with his remarks. The defence minister, Israel Katz, said Israel vowed to build a 'Jewish Israeli state' in the occupied West Bank, in a 'clear message to Macron and his associates'.
The Shangri-la dialogue draws senior officials from governments and militaries around the world for three days of speeches, expert panels and closed-door discussions. Hegseth is scheduled to speak on Saturday.
Historically, the conference has also hosted significant bilateral meetings, including between the US defence secretary, Lloyd Austin, and his Chinese counterpart, Dong Jun, in 2024. However this year Beijing sent just a single delegate, from the People's Liberation Army National Defense University. It is the first time since 2019 that China has not sent its defence minister.
China-US relations have plummeted again since Trump took office this year, and many military-to-military channels have been suspended.
Some analysts have suggested Dong's absence is a missed opportunity for China, which could use the conference to further strengthen ties with nations that are perhaps more suspicious of the US. Others have noted that previous conferences have just seen China criticised on panel after panel.
Zhou Bo, a retired senior Chinese army colonel and conference attendee, told the Guardian the absence was not unusual, as China had only sent defence ministers five times in the past.
Zhou said he did not know why China had sent a smaller delegation, but dismissed rumours that the minister was embroiled in corruption investigations, noting that Dong was traveling overseas.
'Will the world change much because the Chinese defence minister will not come? Or are there not other occasions for China to talk about its own views? Yes, there are.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Novartis' Pluvicto shown to slow prostate cancer in earlier setting
Novartis' Pluvicto shown to slow prostate cancer in earlier setting

Reuters

time16 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Novartis' Pluvicto shown to slow prostate cancer in earlier setting

FRANKFURT, June 2 (Reuters) - Novartis (NOVN.S), opens new tab said on Monday that its targeted radiotherapy Pluvicto was shown to slow progression of a certain type of prostate cancer, raising the prospect of treatment in an earlier disease stage for a drug technology that the drugmaker has pioneered. The Swiss drugmaker reported a late-stage trial showed a "clinically meaningful benefit" in progression-free survival with a positive trend in overall survival in patients with metastatic prostate cancer that still responds to standard hormone therapy. Almost all of those patients ultimately progress to a form of cancer that no longer responds to hormone therapy, a setting where Pluvicto is already approved, the company added. "These data suggest using (Pluvicto) in an earlier disease setting," Novartis said, adding that this could address a significant unmet need. Novartis only provided a brief summary of trial results and said details would be presented at a medical conference and that it would likely request regulatory approval for wider use in the second half of the year. Pluvicto is part of a class of drugs that combines cell-killing radioactive particles with molecules that attach themselves to tumours, where Novartis has a leading position. The drug saw first-quarter revenue gain 20% to $371 million.

British digital bank Monzo's annual profit surges, revenue tops $1.35 billion
British digital bank Monzo's annual profit surges, revenue tops $1.35 billion

Reuters

time16 minutes ago

  • Reuters

British digital bank Monzo's annual profit surges, revenue tops $1.35 billion

June 2 (Reuters) - British digital bank Monzo reported revenue above 1 billion pounds ($1.35 billion) for the first time and a sharp rise in annual pretax profit on Monday, driven by strong growth in personal and business customer numbers. The fintech company, which is reportedly gearing up for an initial public offering, posted a pretax profit of 60.5 million pounds for the year ended March 31, 2025, compared with 13.9 million pounds a year earlier. Fiscal year 2024 marked the company's first profitable year. The mobile app-based bank, launched in 2015, is one of several digital banks that have emerged in Britain to challenge the dominance of HSBC (HSBA.L), opens new tab, Lloyds (LLOY.L), opens new tab, Barclays (BARC.L), opens new tab and NatWest (NWG.L), opens new tab - the country's Big Four. Monzo, which has more than 12 million customers, last year outlined plans to expand into Europe through Ireland and strengthen its presence in the United States. Customer deposits increased 48% to 16.6 billion pounds for the year, the lender said. Monzo has considered listing in either Britain or the United States but has not set a firm timeline or chosen a venue for an IPO, a person familiar with the company's plans told Reuters in March. Sky News reported earlier this month that the lender was preparing to appoint bankers to spearhead its planned stock market floatation. Last October, the British bank was valued at 4.5 billion pounds in an employee share sale to a group of investors, including Singapore's sovereign wealth fund. ($1 = 0.7388 pounds)

MoD plots £1.5bn radar upgrade as wind farms threaten to conceal attacks
MoD plots £1.5bn radar upgrade as wind farms threaten to conceal attacks

Telegraph

time18 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

MoD plots £1.5bn radar upgrade as wind farms threaten to conceal attacks

Military chiefs are planning a £1.5bn upgrade of Britain's radar defences amid fears that the growing number of wind farms risks leaving the country blind to attacks. Under the Ministry of Defence's 'Njord' programme, named after the Norse god of sea and wind, seven air defence radar stations around the country will be replaced or improved to ensure they are not confused by interference from turbines. There are already 3,352 operational or under-construction wind turbines in UK waters, according to the Crown Estate, with another 1,000 at least set to be deployed by 2030 to meet the Government's net zero targets. Without measures to tackle the problem, military chiefs fear the interference will impede the ability of the Royal Air Force to detect enemy missiles and aircraft. Each radar station upgrade will be worth up to £210m and the Ministry of Defence opened the bidding process earlier this year, with several unnamed defence companies in the running. An industry source said: 'They are concerned that, without mitigation, you are going to see a deterioration of radar coverage if you build all the wind farms envisaged under the 2030 targets. 'That would potentially reduce the time you have to respond to threats, as well as the probability of detecting them, and so would leave the country more vulnerable to attacks.' 'A unique and detrimental impact' The interference problem occurs when turbine blades reflect the electromagnetic pulses pinged out by radar stations, generating unhelpful background noise for the system operators. Each blade on a turbine can generate a false return, creating the potential for massive disruption from some sites.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store