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Europe
Ex-Iron Curtain Nations Scold Chirac
2003-02-19
Bulgaria's president angrily summoned the French ambassador Wednesday as critics across the former Soviet bloc lashed out at French President Jacques Chirac for telling Europe's eastern newcomers to ``keep quiet'' on their pro-Washington stance on Iraq.
"And pray tell, what was M. le President thinking when he shot off his mouth like a drunk in a beer joint?"
Their indignation, coupled with a refusal to withdraw support for the U.S. threat of force against Saddam Hussein, underscored how the ex-communist countries of the ``new Europe'' are finding strength, solidarity and unprecedented influence by sticking together. ``This is no longer Napoleon's Europe but the Europe of dissidents like (former Czech President) Vaclav Havel,'' an editorial in Latvia's Diena newspaper read.
"Just hop on this here tumbrel, M. le President. This won't take long, and you'll hardly feel a thing..."
``Chirac is doing exactly what he criticizes the United States of doing: telling other countries what to do,'' said Guntars Krasts, head of the European affairs committee in Latvia's parliament.
Our president's sober.
The French president made the comments Monday after many of the 10 ex-communist countries invited to join the European Union in May 2004 signed declarations of support for the United States' tough position against Iraq. ``It is not well brought-up behavior,'' Chirac said of the declarations. ``They missed a good opportunity to keep quiet.'' He warned that those nations were on ``dangerous'' ground because the parliaments of the 15 western European countries that now make up the EU still must formally vote to admit the eastern newcomers.
Made a good show of throwing his weight around. Sure looks like everybody was properly impressed, doesn't it?
In Bulgaria, which has offered a 150-member non-combat unit in case of war, President Georgi Parvanov summoned France's ambassador Wednesday in a show of displeasure. At a meeting with the envoy, Jean-Loup Kuhn-Delforge, Parvanov ``expressed concern about ... the emotional statement'' by Chirac, his office said.
"Has M. le President been working too hard lately? Perhaps he should consider taking a few weeks off..."
``Bulgaria insists on mutual respect between EU members and applicant countries, between big and small states,'' Parvanov said. ``Pressure by one state on another should not be allowed.''
Have a good look at Mom before you marry the daughter...
French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, in Sofia for discussions on countering illegal immigration, sought to smooth over the controversy. Chirac only wanted to tell prospective EU members that joining ``gives a lot of rights but also creates a lot of obligations, including solidarity,'' he told reporters.
Oh, I'm sure that smoothed it over. Didn't Leonard Brezhnev used to say things like that?
But as Chirac's remarks sank in Wednesday, fury erupted. ``Chirac's outburst must be understood as the recognition that a dream is beginning to unravel. The Holy Roman Empire New Europe imagined and created from rubble after the last war will not gravitate necessarily around the Paris-Berlin axis,'' the Romanian newspaper Ziua said in an editorial headlined ``Le Petit Big Brother.''
"I think we went through quite enough of that spit for 50 years, thank you."
Not all of Chirac's targets took him to task. A Hungarian official sought to play down the fuss, and Polish Foreign Minister Wlodzimierz Cimoszewicz said his government respected France's right to express its opinion, and he warned against ``too much emotional rhetoric.''
"He was obviously in his cups. Cut him some slack."
But reaction elsewhere was ferocious. In many countries, Chirac's remark was translated as ``shut up'' rather than ``keep quiet,'' only fueling the collective sense of outrage.
Most of us aren't subtle enough to see the difference...
The Lithuanian newspaper Lietuvos Rytas said in an editorial: ``It looks like Chirac has forgotten that eastern European countries broke free from communism and ... will not be the silent servants of Paris.''
"Maybe not of anyone, but certainly not of Paris..."
In tiny Slovakia, the daily Pravda wrote Wednesday in a commentary that ``neither Slovakia nor any other candidate country will enter the EU to keep silent, but in order to make their voice be heard more.''
Bet that remark made Jacques' hangover worse...
Romanians, who have been fascinated by French language, culture and architecture for more than 150 years, snapped at Chirac as a ``hypocrite'' and accused the French leader of misreading its support for a quick and decisive end to the Iraq crisis. ``What Chirac ... doesn't understand is that Romania is not pro-American, nor anti-French, nor anti-German, and least of all bloodthirsty for Iraq,'' said Cristian Tudor Popescu, editor-in-chief of the daily Adevarul. ``Did the Europeans and especially the French ever understand what Romania endured under communism? Romania is desperate ... Romania sees in the United States at this time the strongest guarantee that it won't have to return to the quagmire.''
Well, so much for your plan to run Europe, Jacques. Ain't payback a bitch?
Posted by:Steve

#7  Bomb France? Wouldnt we achieve the same result by sneaking up behind Chirac and blowing up a g a paper sack with air and popping it?

I heard a good one today from my Dutch friends:
The English say "cheers", Americans say "good bye", germans say "auf weidersein" and the french say "we surrender"
Posted by: Frank Martin   2003-02-19 23:09:34  

#6  On second thought, could we bomb France first?
Posted by: John   2003-02-19 22:07:43  

#5  After Iraq, could we bomb France, too?
Posted by: John   2003-02-19 21:47:52  

#4  My, what long teeth you have Mr. Chirac...

I hope the East Euros left a trail of breadcrumbs...
Posted by: phil   2003-02-19 19:00:57  

#3  Jacques, appears the "peasants" are revolting. Pity they don't know their place, isn't it?
Posted by: tu3031   2003-02-19 14:53:59  

#2  It's looking more and more like Chiraq is a bigger threat to world peace than Saddam.
Posted by: Dishman   2003-02-19 14:31:23  

#1  ``It is not well brought-up behavior,'' Chirac said of the declarations. ``They missed a good opportunity to keep quiet.''

They missed a good opportunity to keep quiet is a gem of a phrase. It will be the inscription on Chirac's political tombstone. Thanks, Jacques, for the great quote!
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2003-02-19 14:26:53  

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