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Harris met with Macron on Wednesday evening at the Elysee presidential palace, as part of a weeks-long effort by Washington to mend relations with France, America’s oldest ally.
Harris’ four-day trip to Paris comes after President Joe Biden told Macron the US had been ”clumsy” in handling the submarine issue, during a meeting in Rome, Italy on October 29. Biden didn’t formally apologise to Macron, but conceded the US should not have caught its oldest ally by surprise. The secretly negotiated US-British submarine deal with Australia led to a prior deal with France being scrapped.
Macron on Wednesday said he had ”a very fruitful meeting” with Biden. ”We do share the view that we are at the beginning of a new era and our cooperation is absolutely critical for this one,” he said.
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She said that they were to discuss the COVID-19 pandemic, cooperation on space and climate change, amid other topics.
Earlier Wednesday, Harris paid her respects to Americans who died in the two world wars and are buried in a cemetery overlooking the Paris skyline. To the notes of Taps, Harris laid a wreath in their honour and met with US military service members at the Suresnes American Cemetery and Memorial.
Among the more than 1,500 graves was that of Inez Crittenden, a World War I switchboard operator from Harris’ hometown of Oakland. Noting that was ”one of the few jobs women could have” at the time, Harris said, ”We’re very proud of her memory and her service.” Crittenden died on Armistice Day — November 11, 1918 — from pneumonia, likely caused by the flu pandemic of the era. Harris will attend Armistice Day commemorations in France on Thursday.