France agrees to 'fully reimburse' Russia, ending spat over collapse of warships' sale

France said it had agreed a compensation deal with Russia for failing to deliver two Mistral warships due to the Ukraine crisis, drawing to a close a months-long diplomatic and commercial spat.
The fate of the ships has plagued Franco-Russian ties since Paris’ decision in November to put the 1.2-billion-euro (US$1.3-billion) deal on ice as the West slapped sanctions on Moscow over its annexation of Crimea and backing of rebels in Ukraine.
The French presidency said in a statement on Wednesday that Russia would be “fully reimbursed” for the two helicopter carriers, which France will keep.
It added that all Russian equipment already installed on the ships will be removed and handed back to Moscow.
Russia, meanwhile, said France had already returned the money and considered the matter closed.
“The president of Russia and the president of France took a joint decision to annul the contract,” the Kremlin said in a statement after a phone conversation between the two leaders.
“France has already transferred the funds and after the return of the equipment will assume full right of ownership and can use the ships as it sees fit,” it added.