|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: France
French President Sarkozy visits Afghanistan
By Kumaran Ira and Alex Lantier
2 January 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
French President Nicolas Sarkozy made an unannounced one-day
visit to Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, on December 22. His
visit was the first trip by a French president since the US-led
invasion of Afghanistan more than six years ago. He pledged his
support to the US-led occupation and the war against terrorism,
though he did not commit to more involvement of French troops
there.
He was accompanied by Defence Minister Hervé Morin,
Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, who had visited India before
joining Sarkozy in Afghanistan, Human Rights Minister Rama Yade
and the philosopher André Glucksmann.
During his visit, he met with Afghan President Hamid Karzai
and US General Dan McNeill, commander of the NATO-led International
Security Assistance Force (ISAF). He also met with some of the
1,600 French troops deployed in the capital, Kabul, and its surrounding
areas.
After talks with Karzai, Sarkozy said, Whats at
stake is a war, a war against terrorism, which we cannot and must
not lose. He stressed the importance of the strength
of agreements between allies and the need to present a united
front to prevent Afghanistan from becoming a terrorist
state.
Sarkozys visit reaffirms his political support for the
US-led occupation of Afghanistan, which is generally seen within
the French ruling elite as necessary for the advancement of Frances
imperialist interests in Central Asia.
The Afghan presidential office issued a statement saying: The
French president emphasized the long-term political and military
presence of his country in supporting the Afghan people and government.
Sarkozy did not, however, acquiesce to US requests for further
European military participation in the occupation of Afghanistan.
NATO officials have sought more troops to station in the south,
where anti-occupation fighting is the fiercest, but France, Germany,
and other European powers have refused to commit substantial ground
troops to the region.
Sarkozy avoided any commitments to increase French troop numbers
or move French forces into the south. He said that French reinforcements
would be qualitative rather than quantitative,
and added that he did not think the solution will be purely
military.
France has already lost 14 soldiers in Afghanistan, and there
is strong popular opposition in France to US policy in the Middle
East and Central Asia. While a presidential candidate, Sarkozy
made statements suggesting that a pull-out of French troops from
Afghanistan might be imminent, though his subsequent policy has
been to adhere closely to Washingtons wishes.
On April 26, just a few days after the first round of the French
presidential elections, then-candidate Sarkozy said: It
was certainly useful to send [troops] to the extent that there
was a struggle against terrorism. But the long-term presence of
French troops in that part of the world does not seem to me to
be decisive.
Since the US-led occupation of Afghanistan started in 2001,
France has been actively involved in Afghanistan as a major partner
of the United States. It has about 1,600 troops and roughly 1,500
airmen and sailors there.
In 2001, France offered its military resources and capabilities
to support the American-led military campaign. It was the only
country outside the United States to fly bombing missions over
Afghanistan in support of American ground troops.
French forces currently operate an air base in Dushanbe, in
nearby Tajikistan, with three Mirage and three Rafale jets, in
addition to heavy transport planes. They have also deployed several
fighters to an air base in Qandahar, in war-torn southern Afghanistan.
France also plays a significant role in training the Afghan
national army, having provided 50 special operations trainers,
alongside those from the US and the United Kingdom, and trained
three Afghan battalions of 500 men each. According to a statement
by the French embassy in the US, France is presently involved
in the training of all Afghan officers.
Though Sarkozy did not announce substantial new military measures,
his visit to Afghanistan had definite political significance.
By trailing a coterie of ministers and bourgeois intellectuals
talking about democracy and human rights, Sarkozy gave political
cover to the Bush administration and its occupation of Afghanistan.
Sarkozy knew that he could rely on French bourgeois left
partiesbeginning with the Socialist Party, which essentially
agrees with his Afghan policyto not point out his hypocrisy
in posing as a defender of human rights while proclaiming himself
an ally of the Bush administration.
French imperialism has significant economic interests in the
region, with the French oil firm Total having made major oil,
gas and pipeline investments in Turkmenistan, Iran and the other
Persian Gulf countries. The French bourgeoisie lives in fear of
the possibility that the revolutionary consequences of a serious
defeat for US imperialism in Iraq and Afghanistan will make the
region untenable for its economic and strategic interests. It
is to protect these interests that Sarkozy has swung behind Washingtons
foreign policy.
The point was implied in a September 14 editorial in the right-wing
daily Le Figaro, entitled The New Petrochemical Yalta.
Figaro lamented that third world producers are determined
to drive hard bargains in exchange for access to their oil,
and foresaw that the oil industrys balance of forces
promises to be increasingly unfavorable to industrialized
democracies like France.
The swing behind Washington has, however, an unstable and even
desperate character. As most clearly shown by the initial stages
of the US occupation of Iraq, when French energy companies were
completely excluded from the country, the French bourgeoisies
interests will come distinctly second to those of the US, should
US imperialism embark on further attempts at conquest in the Middle
East. French investments in Iranian oil and gas fields, as well
as in pipelines linking Iran and Central Asia, are all at risk.
In a broader sense, US Middle East policy is largely grounded
on implicitly threatening the energy supply of all its capitalist
rivals, including France. The spiraling geopolitical tensions
provoked by US interventions in Southwest Asia are bound up with
the struggle for control of oil and gas and its delivery to the
major markets of EurasiaWestern Europe and East Asia. By
occupying Iraq and threatening Iran, the US is blocking the most
direct pipeline routes to move oil and gas to Western Europe:
through Iran or Iraq, and then to Turkey and the Balkans.
Even greater risks are posed in the longer term. Barely a month
after French Foreign Minister Kouchners September announcement
that the French military was planning for strikes on Iran in conjunction
with the US, Bush said that the Iranian nuclear question raised
the threat of World War III.
Fearing the French and Middle Eastern masses more than US imperialism,
the French bourgeoisie has placed its bets on Washington. Sarkozy
implicitly acknowledged the unpopularity with French workers of
a pro-US foreign policy by downplaying Frances Afghan engagement
during the election campaign.
The fact that Sarkozy felt the need to trail around an intellectual
charlatan like Glucksmann on his trip to Afghanistan further underlines
the unpopularity of his policies. There was no military or administrative
reason to bring Glucksmanna writer and former radical academic
whose main specialty has long been anti-communism, and who has
no official positions in the French military or government. His
main purpose was to provide a democratic coloration to Sarkozys
policy of subordination to and collaboration with US imperialism.
Glucksmann fulfilled the role intended for him in a December
24 interview with Le Figaro on the trip to Afghanistan.
He described Western heads of state, including
Bush, as men who seek peace, who are not necessarily perfect
democrats, but who go in the right direction. He proceeded
to a potted account of recent Afghan history, saying, It
was the invasion of the Russian communists, and the destruction
that followed, that allowed the installation of the fanatical
Taliban.
He praised Sarkozy for meeting French soldiers [in Afghanistan],
whose courage we must salute. Speaking of Sarkozy, Glucksmann
added, He also gave his support to Hamid Karzai who is,
for Al Qaeda, the number one target, and a very courageous figure.
The fact that Glucksmann can give such interviews and continue
to be treated as an intellectual figure is a symptom of the crisis
of intellectual and political life in France. His assertion of
the democratic and humanitarian credentials of Western heads of
state is ludicrous and sinister in the light of the US invasions
of Afghanistan and Iraq and the construction of US torture camps
like Guantánamo Bay.
As for his history of Afghanistan, it is a travesty. One does
not have to sympathize with the Kremlins 1979 intervention
in Afghanistan to recognize the preeminent role of the US and
its European allies in promoting and arming right-wing Islamists
and international terrorists during the Soviet-Afghan war. In
fact, as was first officially revealed by current US Defense Secretary
Robert Gates in his 1997 book From the Shadows, the US
funded the Islamic resistance to the Peoples Democratic
Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) regime starting in early 1979, months
before the Soviet intervention, with a view to giving the USSR
its own Vietnamese quagmire. The US and its allies
continued funding and arming anti-Soviet Afghan warlords until
1992.
The rise of the Taliban, amid the civil war that followed the
1992 implosion of the PDPA and its capitulation to the anti-Soviet
mujahedin resistance, was likewise promoted by US imperialism,
and particularly its local proxiesthe Pakistani armed forces
and the Saudi royal family. Karzaiwhom Glucksmann improbably
praises as some sort of democratic exemplarwas, in fact,
one of the Talibans earliest backers.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |