France sees larger role in the Pacific
French military is increasing its spend on tankers to be more places at once with a lighter permanent footprint.
France will likely shrink its operational footprint in Africa and increase its presence in the Pacific, Gen. Stéphane Mille, the chief of staff of the French air and space force, said Monday in conversation with reporters.
France will work with different governments to better understand what their specific needs are and possibly fly in forces when necessary for different contingencies and events, “for a certain period of time, for training, for things like that,” Mille said. “It's a good use of air force capability, especially transport aircraft.”
That’s one reason why the recently passed French defense budget allocates funds for three additional Airbus A330 Multi Role Tanker Transport aircraft.
Large transport aircraft also will play a key role in France’s developing Pacific strategy, Mille said, pointing to French air bases in French Polynesia and New Caledonia.
“We are a nation from the Pacific, so it's normal for us to be present in the Pacific,” he said.
The recently concluded Pegase 23 mission saw the deployment of five A330 MRTT transport planes, four A400M military transport aircraft, and 10 Rafale fighter jets, according to a press package from the French government on the mission. French forces also participated alongside the United States and other regional partners in several exercises such as Talisman Sabre and Northern Edge.
“We are covering more and more of the area” in the Pacific, Mille said. “We will be more present in the future.”
The new French defense budget also invests in new constellations of low earth orbit satellites for communication, he said.
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