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Transcription Oudot – sequence b Let us now turn to the first of the critical issues. The choice of suppliers resident on the national territory or in another country is based on strategic and capacity considerations, under economic constraints. Depending on the type of equipment concerned, the strategic and capacity aspects will be more or less decisive, permitting, or not, the order to be opened to competition and the possible recourse to a supplier resident in another country. From 1983 to 2005 the British systematically opened orders to competition. The pressure exerted on the industry, called the tough love policy, was aimed at stimulating productivity in order to be more efficient, both at home and internationally. It also led to the destruction of part of the industrial and technological base of British defence, leading in 2005 to a change of practice in the framework of the industrial defence strategy. At the present time, around 50% of British defence investments are open to competition. Concerning procurement choices in nuclear deterrence, a sovereign domain par excellence, the British lean on American capacities for critical technologies and systems (submarines, strategic missiles, nuclear warheads). Bilateral agreements were signed in 1958 and 1962, and have so far always been renewed. France, on the other hand, guides her procurement options towards suppliers who are resident on national territory, in particular for strategic systems (fighter aircraft, missiles, submarines…), both for conventional and nuclear systems. The Direction Générale de l’Armement and the État-major des armées in particular hold a watching brief on State and industry competence in this respect. In France 90% of financial commitments in defence investment are negotiated with suppliers resident on national territory. A second structuring decision in terms of capacity that we will analyse together is the choice between national procurement and cooperation with other countries. There are many examples of cooperation programmes. In the United Kingdom: the A400M, the Joint Strike Fighter, the Typhoon. In France there are in particular the Tigre helicopter, the NH90, the A400M, the Horizon frigates, the FREMMs, and also the future ground-to-air missiles family. The decision to choose a cooperation programme is based on economic considerations, with strategic and capacity constraints. The aim is to cut the cost of equipment (or to limit its increase) by mutualising fixed costs, development costs in particular, and by achieving economies of scale; all this implies some degree of convergence of each country’s demands. Such an economic approach only works if strategic and capacity requirements are respected, concerning security of supply and control of technology in particular. During the period from 2006 to 2012, France and the United Kingdom adopted different approaches to international cooperation. In terms of quantity, in France the share of cooperation programmes in defence investments for the period was around 15%, while it reached 20% for the United Kingdom. In qualitative terms, during the same period the British had cooperation programmes outside the European Union to the tune of 12%, while for France such programmes were strictly limited to the EU.