Wednesday, July 07, 2004

Why the French Act Isn't Funny Anymore

From Time

Their resistance to helping in Afghanistan and Iraq is now downright dangerous

It is easy to make fun of the French and their pompous pretense to the grandeur they shed a half-century ago when their loss of honor under Vichy, and then their loss of empire, relegated them to the rank of second-class power. But the fun is over. Before Sept. 11, France's Gaullist anti-Americanism as a form of ostentatious self-aggrandizement was an irritant. With a war on — three, in fact: Afghanistan, Iraq and the larger war on terrorism — France's willful obstructionism becomes dangerous and deadly.

That obstructionism was on amazing display at the recent NATO summit in Istanbul. The supremely courageous President of Afghanistan, Hamid Karzai, flies there to beg for our troops to protect his country in the run-up to September elections. Two female election workers had already been murdered and some 16 men had been shot to death by insurgents for registering to vote.

NATO responds with an offer of a small number of troops to be sent around September. Karzai pleads for a more immediate deployment. Britain and the U.S. request deployment of NATO's new rapid-reaction force created precisely for such contingencies. France's President Jacques Chirac vetoes it, saying the force should not be used "in any old way."

Any old way? As if the NATO troops were off to visit the Kabul Disneyland. Afghanistan is the good war, remember. The war of undeniable necessity. The war everyone supported. It is hard to imagine a more important mission for NATO, or for the civilized world for that matter, than assuring free elections in Afghanistan, crucible for the worst terrorist attack in history. Yet with a flick of a hand, Chirac dismisses Karzai — and, of course, the U.S.

On Iraq, Chirac was similarly destructive of any realistic NATO help in democratic nation building. He spearheaded the vetoing of any NATO troops going to Iraq. The most that President Bush could get was an agreement to train Iraqi troops, but Chirac insisted the training be undertaken not by NATO as an organization (only by NATO countries individually) and not in Iraq itself. He suggested Rome. Nice for sightseeing, but hardly the most efficient and cost-effective way to train the Iraqi police and army.


Axis of weasels at work again.
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2 comments:

David said...

What really gets me, having served at HQ NATO is that the French were for years outside the structure and all was well. They then demand to come back into NATO and what do we get? They veto anything NATO does, their staff and officers have been caught helping the bad guys (Bosnia/Kosevo and Iraq 91) and we had to translate every single piece of paper into French even when they weren't part of the setup!

France thinks only of France. Anyone remember the Rainbow Warrior? What makes people think they won't do something similar if French interests demand it? Watch China and Iran over the next few months and see how much influence France gets there regardless of human rights etc.

Anonymous said...

I'd tend to agree that French opposition to NATO monitoring Afghani elections and training Iraqi troops appears unnecessarily obstructive. Whatever one might think of the basis of the wars that lead to these requirements, the reality of the issues now facing the countries needs to be faced.

The continued hysterical abuse of France by sections of US opinion does need to be addressed though. It is as pathetic as those who extrapolate objections to Bush's politics into all encompassing anti-Americanism. France is an independent, democratic nation that has been extremely successful in attaining a high quality of life for it's citizens and it has every right to adopt political positions not shared by the US. In the case of the Iraqi war the French position was arguably shared by the majority of the world's population and until the 'new' Iraq is proved to be viable nobody can say it was wrong.

 
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