Submit your comments on this article |
International |
Still think France is an ally? |
2003-04-12 |
edited for length... March 31, Villepin spoke with Libyan Foreign Minister Abd-al-Rahman Muhammad Shalqam. Had the BBC not monitored Libyan radio, the conversation might have gone unnoticed in the English-speaking world. "During the contact," said Libyan radio, "they [Villepin and Shalqam] discussed the American-British aggression on Iraq, the need to stop this war, the massacres targeting the sons of the Iraqi people and their severe suffering, the need to launch an international initiative to put an end to the aggression, return to international legality and prevent America and Britain from persisting in this aggression." Was France pretending in the English-speaking world to support the American cause and in the Arabic-speaking world to support the anti-American cause? I sent the BBC transcript to the French Embassy in Washington with two questions:
"Our Minister had a conversation with his Lybian (sic) counterpart on March 31," it said. "Indeed what the BBC reported is the way Lybian (sic) radio and media in general characterized this phone call.France is keeping its powder dry. But for what? The pattern of French diplomacy suggests an answer. France is seeking rapprochement with Libya. Jacques Chirac recently became the first French president in 40 years to visit Algeria. France coordinated its actions throughout the Iraq crisis with Syria. Chirac is promoting discredited Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, in anticipation of post-war action on the Israeli-Palestinian issue. He sent Arafat, anathematized by the Bush Administration, a friendly letter on March 20, and talked to him by phone March 25. In October, Chirac attended a "Francophone Summit" in Beirut with many Arab leaders. Lebanese President Emile Lahhud opened it with a speech the National Post of Canada described as "a screed against Israel's existence." Sheikh Nasrallah, chairman of the terrorist group Hezbollah, sat in the front row. At the end of the event, reported Beirut's Tele-Liban TV, "Chirac congratulated President Lahhud again on his exceptional performance during the Francophone Summit." The Arab press was ecstatic. Lebanon's As Safir credited France for promoting "an attitude of defiance toward U.S. hegemony." "Unquestionably," said the Omani newspaper Al Watan, "France has succeeded in using the summit for its political interests in the Middle East as it wants to build political and diplomatic strongholds in the region to confront the U.S. policy on the Middle East." Opposing the Iraq war was but a prelude. France has mounted the world stage again using the Middle East as its footstool. It will now seek to lead willing reactionary Arab states against U.S. policy in post-war Iraq as well as in negotiations on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. |
Posted by:Baba Yaga |
#6 Also sitting in that front row in Beruit was Jean Chretien, who immediately denied he knew who Nasrullah was. There is a pattern forming here (although it is entirely possible he does not know who Chirac is either). |
Posted by: john 2003-04-12 19:25:53 |
#5 Won't be long before Paris is the Beirut of Europe. |
Posted by: Dick Saucer 2003-04-12 18:02:51 |
#4 The "sons of Iraq" already learned to put down their weapons...at least when the military is looking at them. Now they attack the journalists instead. |
Posted by: Shana 2003-04-12 17:18:07 |
#3 good catch: this was also on the Washington Times online commentary section, so I expect it will get some needed attention among the influential sorts |
Posted by: Frank G 2003-04-12 17:02:03 |
#2 --massacres targeting the sons of the Iraqi people -- If the "sons" would put down their weapons, they wouldn't be targeted, would they? |
Posted by: Anonymous 2003-04-12 16:31:41 |
#1 Sorry, hit the enter key before I could sign this and clean it up a little. |
Posted by: Baba Yaga 2003-04-12 16:27:47 |