"Under the new French leadership, [France and Russia] have to strengthen our cooperation in several important areas for the peace in the world such as anti-terrorism, multipolar world, security and development in Africa to defeat Boko Haram. We can cooperate in security and defense questions as permanent members of the United Nations, tighten economic cooperation amid the euro zone crisis," Jean-Luc Schaffhauser said.
On Thursday, Le Pen visited Russia at the invitation of senior Russian lawmaker Leonid Slutsky as part of cooperation program between Russian parliamentarians and French political circles. During her trip, Le Pen met with Russian President Vladimir Putin and held meetings the senior Russian parliamentarians. She became the first French presidential candidate to meet Putin.
"Le Pen’s trip was not a matter of partisan politics in a bid to boost her support among electorate but a trip to show that Russia and France are speaking common values and have common interests as countries," Schaffhauser noted.
In one of her speeches, the French politician also highlighted that the two main challenges facing the world, namely, globalism and fundamentalism, threatened "peace and security through terror acts," promising to promote cooperation with Russia on all available levels, if elected.
The National Front candidate is one of the main presidential competitors in the French election, the first round of which is scheduled for April 23. According to the recent polls, Le Pen has good chances of winning the first round, but is unlikely to win the second one.