French Warships in Doldrums

13 Jan 2015

Should France work closer with its allies to secure buyers for its Mistral warships, which were originally earmarked for the Russian Navy? Andreas Kuersten believes so. The customers could include Paris’ NATO and European Union partners, as well as the likes of Canada and Japan.

This article was external pageoriginally published by external pageYaleGlobal Online on 1 January 2015.

Over the past nine months, as Europe was shaken by Russian adventurism, France’s contract to build and deliver two Mistral-class helicopter carriers to Russia underwent from routine to intense scrutiny. The pressure on the French government to scrub the deal, however, could be unfair and even counterproductive. Rather, the United States and European Union should focus on practical solutions to the problem because of the cost incurred by France in building the vessels and possible penalties for breach of contract.

In 2011, France signed the contract with Russia. Three years later, Russia backed Crimean and eastern Ukrainian separatists, annexed Crimea, and now supplies militants in East Ukraine. The West responded with ever-increasing sanctions. France initially stated that this would have external pageno impact on the Mistral deal. As pressure mounted, France offered that it external pagemight withhold the second carrier, and then put the contract external pageon hold. France subsequently stated that it would not hand over the completed carrier until Russia met external pagenewly imposed conditions: a permanent ceasefire in Ukraine and roadmap for the permanent settlement of the dispute. Russia responded by setting a external pagedeadline: the end of November for the first ship’s delivery, or it would initiate legal proceedings. external pageRebuffing this move, France indefinitely suspended the agreement.  

France’s continued refusal to cancel the contract reveals its struggle to complete it without offending its allies. Yet France’s true warship problem is offsetting costs, not completion of the contract. It cannot supply the Russian military while simultaneously denouncing its actions. In this vein, the US and its allies should take a much more serious and active role in finding alternative destinations for the Mistrals. While it is hypocritical of France to maintain the viability of its warship contract, it is also unfair for the US and others to demand cancellation without concerted efforts to mitigate resulting costs. This situation is made vivid by showing the weakness of every argument for contract completion.

  • The carriers are not that strong. Some, mainly Russians, have external pagedownplayed the strength of the carriers and any meaningful military advantage they could give Russia. US officials are even reported to have external pagediscounted the Mistral sale because of its lack of armoring, redundant systems, extensive compartmentalization and commercial design. Yet the vessels are external pagepowerful with regard to their intended purposes: force projection and command. They offer extensive capacity as helicopter carriers, transports, staging grounds for amphibious assaults, and operational command centers. Given the relatively weak military capabilities of Russia’s recent targets, Georgia and Ukraine, and other former Soviet republics and satellite states, the Mistrals are formidable warships. Russian Admiral Vladimir Vysotcky has external pagestated that, with these vessels, the 2008 invasion of Georgia would have taken “40 minutes instead of 26 hours.” Perhaps hyperbole, but the ships would expand Russia’s ability to external pageproject power over its neighbors.
  • Possession of the carriers is the main issue. The French-Russian deal includes a substantial transfer of technology and construction capability. While the first two ships are to be built in France, Russia possesses an external pageoption to build another two in domestic shipyards. Technology and designs for the Mistrals are to be external pagetransferred to Russia, including sensitive combat information control and communications systems. This deal is a chance for Russia to substantially increase its domestic naval construction capabilities. Currently, it is external pageonly capable of producing submarines and ships up to the size of frigates. The ability to construct larger and more powerful warships is a skill it would pick up through the the Mistral deal. This is a troubling proposition given Russia’s continuous aggressive actions in the region and increasing military displays external pagebeyond its borders
  • France’s reputation will suffer. It’s been external pageconsistently put forth that France’s reputation as a reliable military supplier will deteriorate if the Mistral contract is cancelled. Other nations may fear that France will cancel deals for political reasons or as a result of pressure from allies. This concern, however, is mainly advanced by external pageRussians, external pageRussian news sources and the external pageFrench – and not other potential buyers. They likely see Russia’s actions as rather drastic, and France displaying remarkable stubbornness to maintain the deal. Furthermore, preliminary data for external pageFrance’s 2014 arms exports, despite the contract disagreement, suggests a substantial increase over external page2013 sales, from roughly $7.75 billion to $9.5 billion. In fact, France could face a more substantial loss of reputation by fulfilling the deal. It could be seen as an unprincipled business partner and send negative signals to external pageallies and potential buyers opposed to Russian actions.
  • France will lose jobs and face repayment and penalties. A big issue for France is the potential external pageloss of jobs and external pagerepayment and penalty payments to Russia if the contract is cancelled. The deal is worth approximately external page$1.5 billion, not including possible additional punitive costs for breach. Defense sector employment matters in French domestic politics as an economic bright spot. The external pageFrench economy is barely growing, unemployment is on the rise, and powerful unions strongly external pagesupportfollowing through with the contract.

The last point illuminates France’s real problem: finding an alternative buyer and offsetting costs. It has several possible avenues for this. external pageUS lawmakers have pressed NATO to purchase or lease the vessels. external pageRussian news has argued that NATO lacks funds, but those are derived from member contributions. Were members, and particularly the US, to ramp up funding for this purchase, it would be a substantial show of solidarity, consequence for Russia, and limitation on Russia’s military capabilities.

The EU is also a potential destination for the carriers. James Stavridis has external pageproposed a potential “lease to buy” agreement that would bring the ships under common EU ownership. Such an arrangement would boost EU humanitarian and defense capabilities. While even Stavridis admits that such a deal is a longshot, it is possible if European nations commit to punishing Russia, slowing its military buildup, and aiding France.

Another option is to sell to another country. external pageCanada has been offered in this regard. While a Canadian purchase interferes with domestic procurement goals, it need not be a major hit to local industry. The vessels are tailored to be attractive to Canada – Russia insisted they be designed for external pageArctic operations – but would still require substantial retrofitting before delivery to the Royal Canadian Navy. Such work could be contracted to domestic shipyards. The US also has a strong interest in this, having long pushed Canada to external pageincrease its military capabilities.

Japan, one of the external pagemost vocal non-European opponents to the French-Russian deal, is another external pagepossible destination. If delivered to Russia, one or both of the carriers would be based at Vladivostok, a worry for Japan. Additionally, Japan has consistently external pageincreased defense spending in recent years in response to rising tensions in East and Southeast Asia, and the Mistrals could be part of this. The US is also keen on Japan taking external pagemore responsibility for regional defense. Japan would, however, have to weigh any purchase against involvement in European squabbles and damaged Russian relations.  

Ultimately, it is no longer viable for France to sell the Mistrals or any arms to Russia until the latter signals an end to expansionism. France’s lingering plan to deliver military hardware to Russia while decrying Russian military action is the epitome of hypocrisy. While France faces harsh realities in the event of cancellation, it and its allies must firmly and openly agree that the deal must be scrapped and come together to find alternatives.

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