March 12, 2005
YOU KNOW THE TIDE HAS TURNED WHEN...:
The French Definition of 'Help' (LA Times, March 12, 2005)
It's official: France is suddenly trying to help the United States in Iraq.President Jacques Chirac said to NATO leaders in late February that "France wants to contribute to stability" in Iraq. The contribution? Some $660,000 to a NATO fund for military and police training in Iraq and one French mid-level officer who's being assigned to the training mission at NATO headquarters in Brussels. Not 1,000 officers. Not 100. Just one.
It was perfectly legitimate for France to oppose the war (which this editorial page did as well). But it is now time for both sides of this debate to recommit to the transatlantic alliance. Moreover, though European nations disagreed among themselves about the wisdom of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, they all share an interest — arguably a greater interest than even the United States — in promoting peace and stability across the Middle East. It's churlish Gallic pique to begrudge the U.S. anything more than symbolic assistance in rebuilding Iraq into something more than a battleground for terrorists.
Then again, maybe it shouldn't be that surprising that France is sulking. Paris has never been that enthusiastic about the transatlantic alliance, and it has long been an axiom of French policy to undermine NATO at every turn.
Ever since Charles de Gaulle pulled France's military out of NATO in 1966, Paris has cherished the illusion that it is something more than a minor power. But the only thing that De Gaulle accomplished by bolting from NATO was having the alliance's headquarters moved from Paris to Brussels. France's attempt to carve out a distinct foreign policy has been distinguished by little more than rank opportunism. During the Cold War it tried to play the U.S. off against the Soviet Union, and in 1989, French President François Mitterrand even thought he could stop the steamroller of German reunification by traveling to East Germany and exhorting it to remain an independent state.
Even the reliably Francophile editorial pages turn phobic. Posted by Orrin Judd at March 12, 2005 10:45 PM
The EU project will be completely torpedoed once the other potential members understand that it is all about the French figuring out a way to magnify their own importance through the use of others' resources. While that is a great deal for France, it ain't so good for everyone else.
Posted by: Bart at March 13, 2005 8:18 AMQ. Name two things worse than a French officer helping you.
A. Two French officers helping you.
A breath of fresh air, still blowing from 2003 (via the Watch site):
http://watch.windsofchange.net/themes_48.htm
Posted by: Barry Meislin at March 13, 2005 9:34 AM