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Sarkozy pledged to send more troops to fight the Taliban in Afghanistan
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March 27, 2008, 06:30
French President Nicolas Sarkozy pledged in a speech to Britain's parliament on Wednesday to send more troops to fight the Taliban in Afghanistan and called for a "new Franco-British brotherhood".
The United States and Britain have repeatedly called on Nato allies to boost their contributions to the force in Afghanistan, where they are battling a Taliban that seems to be growing in strength.
On a two-day state visit aimed at improving awkward ties, Sarkozy and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown both vowed to boost co-operation on the international economy and immigration.
In a passionate speech, Sarkozy sketched a vision of far-reaching economic and defence co-operation and said France would send more troops to fight the Taliban if Nato backed its proposals. Paris has not yet made public its plans or gone into detail about troop numbers.
Foreign Secretary David Miliband told Reuters after the speech: "I think there's a very clear signal that France wants to fulfil all of its responsibilities, diplomatic and military, in Afghanistan and that's obviously extremely welcome."
Sarkozy said he would for ask Brown's help in getting Washington to halt a plunge of the dollar making European exports more expensive. Britain rejects the idea of managing foreign exchange levels, saying markets are the best guide.
Brown, who will hold talks with Sarkozy on Thursday, said a new era was dawning for the "entente cordiale" -- a treaty signed by the two countries in 1904 -- in which Britain and France would speak as one on international economic reform.
The neighbours, though bound together by mainstream European institutions like the European Union and NATO, have a love-hate relationship and mutual suspicion goes back centuries. But in an increasingly global world their economies now overlap everywhere.
"I have come to propose to the British people that together we write a new page in our common history, that of a new Franco-British brotherhood," Sarkozy told members of parliament. - Reuters
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