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France: Sarkozy calls for European military build up
By Antoine Lerougetel
3 September 2007
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Speaking to the Paris diplomatic corps on August 26, French
President Nicolas Sarkozy asserted the need for a strong France
in a strong Europe capable of dealing with the United States on
equal terms.
Europe must progressively affirm itself as a first-rank
player for peace and security, in co-operation with the United
Nations, the Atlantic alliance and the African Union.
Sarkozy referred explicitly to the struggle between the major
powers for the re-division of the worlds resources, particularly
energy, warning, The world has become multi-polar but this
multi-polarity, which could open the way to a new concert of the
great powers, is, rather, drifting towards the clash of power
politics.
His speech offered several measures to challenge the military,
economic and political hegemony of the US.
Sarkozy called for the expansion of the G8 group of the worlds
richest nations to a G13, including China, India, Brazil, Mexico
and South Africa. Similarly he proposed that the United Nations
Security Councils permanent members be expanded from the
present five (the US, Russia, China, France and Britain) to include
Germany, Japan, India, Brazil and a fair representation
from Africa.
However, his main answer to the risks of an antagonistic
multi-polar world was a new balance of power through the
militarization of Europe: Without Europe taking on its role
as a power, the world would be deprived of a necessary pole of
equilibrium, he insisted.
This required a powerful European Union military presence in
the world, with France taking a leading role: I hope that
in the next months, we will advance together towards a reinforcement
of Europe as a military power, and France will take very
strong initiatives.
He also called for the strengthening of NATO, the US-led military
alliance of which France and most EU countries are members, but
made it clear that he was envisioning a partnership of equals:
Both go together: an independent Europe de la défense
and an Atlantic organisation in which we will play a full
part.
While in full alliance with the United States to ensure that
the world remains safe for imperialist exploitation, he strongly
asserted the need for France and the EU to be able to vie for
their own share of the spoils. He has pledged to increase Frances
involvement in the occupation of Afghanistan with a contingent
of 150 military trainers and stressed that the EU has carried
out some fifteen operations on our continent, in Africa, in the
Middle East, in Asia.
Sarkozy called for the development of the European armament
and security capability. France and Germany have laid the
foundations: the Franco-German Brigade and then the European Corps,
he said. Pointing out that British and French military spending
represented two thirds of the total of the other 25 EU countries
combined, he urged that our other partners should participate
in this common effort.
The following day, addressing a commission set up to prepare
a defence white paper, Sarkozy said he had set the nations
defence effort at around two percent of the nations wealth:
This goal should make it possible for France to acquire
the capacities it needs to remain, with the United Kingdom, among
the leading European nations.
Sarkozys favourable references to the UK are a marked
departure in French foreign policy, which has long viewed Britain
as a proxy of the US and oriented itself on the basis of the Franco-German
alliance. It is an indication of the importance Sarkozy attaches
to military might to back up French and European economic interests.
France and Britain are the only EU countries possessing nuclear
weapons, an unspoken factor of Sarkozys speech. French imperialism
intends to maintain this advantage over its fellow EU members
and rivals in order to claim leadership rights.
But on the economic front also, Sarkozy wants Europe to carry
out the measures necessary to press forward its interests on the
world arena. An essential corollary of French and European imperialisms
drive to be a first-rank player is the intensification
of the exploitation of the working class and the ability to maintain
order at home. For this reason he is enacting a vast and ongoing
legislative programme to enhance the repressive power of the police
and the judiciary and diminish labour rights, while carrying through
major cuts in the social services.
In his speech he insisted that Frances message will
only be heard in the world if it is borne by an ambitious and
confident people, a society reconciled with itself and a successful
economy.
Sarkozy congratulated himself on getting the Modified Treaty,
a revamped version of the ill-fated free-market European Constitution,
adopted by the European Council. The rejection of the European
Constitution in the French and Dutch referendums in 2005 was a
dramatic setback for the forging of the EU as a single market-driven,
business-friendly region where social rights are dismantled. He
sees the Modified Treaty as means of consolidating the 27-member
EU.
Sarkozys turn to militarism, particularly his call for
Europe to play a larger role in Iraq, has been portrayed as reconciliation
with the US. It is certainly the case that he recognises that
a defeat for the US in Iraq would be dangerous for all the imperialist
powers. Nevertheless, France has its own interests in the Middle
East, particularly in Iran, which Sarkozy intends to uphold and
which still bring him into conflict with Washington.
He reiterated that the US-led invasion of Iraq had led to a
tragedy, stating that France was and remains hostile
to that war. Criticizing the US decision to invade without
UN approval, he asserted, The United States did not manage
to resist the temptation to have recourse to the unilateral use
of force, and on the issue of the protection of the environment,
does not demonstrate that capacity for leadership which it claims
elsewhere.
He called for a political solution and a clear timetable
for the withdrawal of troops... Only then will the international
community, starting with the countries of the region, be able
to act most usefully. France, for its part will be ready to do
so. This is the message which Bernard Kouchner [Foreign Minister]
has just taken to Baghdad, a message of solidarity and availability.
Sarkozy has also renewed relations with Syria, broken off by
the former president Jacques Chirac, putting him at odds with
the White House but giving France the opportunity to act as a
broker in the region.
His position as both an ally and a rival of the US, depending
on the circumstances, comes out most clearly on the question of
Iran which he described as the most serious crisis weighing
down on the international order. The country is a major
source of gas and oil supplies and field of investment and commerce
for France, Europe and other US rivals.
He is in full agreement with the Bush administration on the
need to pressure the Iranian regime into the complete abandonment
of a nuclear weapons programme, going so far as to warn that a
failure to do so might lead to Iran being bombed. Unless Iran
halted its nuclear programme, the alternative would be catastrophic:
the Iranian bomb or the bombardment of Iran.
But Sarkozy also made clear that he wanted a diplomatic solution,
promising, France will spare no effort to convince Iran
that it has much to gain from engaging in serious negotiations
with the Europeans, the Chinese and the Russians, and of course
the Americans. The placing of America last expresses Sarkozys
desire for Europe and other powers to act as a counterweight to
US dominance.
On Kosovo he again emphasised his desire to defend European
interests, appealing to both the Russians and the Americans
to understand that this affair is very difficult and first and
foremost a European affair... and that it is within the Union
that the long term future of the Balkan region resides.
Sarkozys speech was welcomed by the US as an indication
of a thawing of relations with France. Voice of America
stressed Sarkozys opposition to the possession by Iran of
nuclear weapons, adding that the president also reaffirmed
the importance of good relations with the United States.
The Wall Street Journal noted, He also signalled
that France means to be something more on the international scene
than an anti-American nuisance player. Thats worth applauding....
The US media calculates that, in the end, Frances ambitions
can be contained and his placatory noises towards America and
more important than his banging the nationalist drum for domestic
consumption. However, the US cannot reconcile itself to any genuine
effort to assert French and European interests. Future clashes
are inevitable, particularly in Africa and the Middle East where
Frances historical presence and interests are being challenged
not only by the US but also China.
The priority of American imperialism is to foil any challenge
to its economic supremacy by all means, including military. Washington
too wants Europe to play a greater role militarily, but only in
a subordinate position. For now the US believes it can afford
to be somewhat sanguine towards Sarkozys grandiose claims
for France and Europe, given its overwhelming military superiority
and ability to sow divisions in Europe through its own allies
such as the UK and Poland.
Libération noted the objective limitations on
Sarkozys dreams for France, editorialising that when
one leads a medium-sized country tied by numerous treaties to
groupings which are beyond it, diplomatic speeches are not the
essential thing.... To wish to make a break in all things is doubtless
excessively ambitious.
The response in Germany reflects powerful tensions within the
EU and the belief that France is setting out to challenge its
own hegemony over Europe. A venomous round up of the German press
in Der Spiegel, Rambo in the Elysée,
quotes the business journal Handelsblatt: The
more poorly he speaks about certain things, the more seriously
he takes himself. The speech that the head of state formulated
yesterday was simply a manifold claim for French leadership, both
in Europe and across the globe.
The conservative daily Die Welt wrote, Paris wants
to assert itself as a player on the global stage. One can interpret
his attempt to extend the European Union toward Africa as an answer
to Germanys increased influence following its reunification
and EU expansion.
The paper dismissed Sarkozys support for a German place
as a permanent member of the UN Security Council as belonging
to the realm of rhetoric. It will stir the Germans up, but
in the end it wont lead to anything.
The German political establishment has been angered by what
they perceive as excessive French nationalism and several unilateral
initiatives taken by Sarkozys government without reference
to the EU or Berlin: the intervention in Libya to free the Bulgarian
nurses combined with the sale of a nuclear power plant to the
oil-rich country, and the call for the European Central Bank to
act to reduce the value of the euro in order to boost French exports.
It is also possible that his rebuke to Russia, accusing it of
using its assets, notably oil and gas, with a certain brutality
was seen as endangering Berlins close relations with Moscow.
Germany relies on Russia for a third of all its oil and gas imports,
while France looks to Africa and the Middle East.
Financial Times Deutschland commented, Regarding
his idea to make the EU a strong player in global security politics,
he will soon have to learn this lesson: Several of his EU partners
will quickly rebuff the New Guy in Paris and his plan.
See Also:
French Foreign Minister Bernard
Kouchner visits Baghdad
[28 August 2007]
France: Sarkozy selects Socialist
Party's Bernard Kouchner as foreign minister
[25 May 2007]
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