The
president just spoke before congress.
Not our
president, not our congress.
France.
He said
a lot of the things we should all have expected from him.
France
will stand firm. We have seen worse than this. Life will go on, the
elections will go on, the climate summit will go on and we will look to the
future. Everything one would expect from a president wrapped in the red
white and blue.
Unlike
another president, he was articulate.
He said
some things I should have expected, but after so many years living in the
United Stares, I no longer had those expectations.
He gave
a quick account of what happened.
He gave
a detailed account of what he has done so far.
He said
which part of international law they would base themselves on.
He made it clear that he will be calling in the military alliances France is member of.
And call a meeting of the security council of the UN asking for a resolution.
He told
us that he will be talking with Obama and Putin about a coalition against ISIS.
And he
said what expenditures will be and is asking congress for the money.
All
that makes a lot of sense, but it is not what we have gotten used to when our
own red, white and blue is being used as a wrapping. This speech was a
mix between good political skills, good administrative thinking and knowing how
to make an effective public address.
Salient
points for my American ears was the commitment to legal rights and procedures.
We are not asking to waive the law, we are asking for funds to enforce
it.
One
part of his request for constitutional changes was to have a different version
of the state of emergency. The current law allows the president and the
military to take over civilian authorities which Holland declared simply not
relevant to terrorism. The current law was written to deal with either an
armed uprising or a foreign invasion, both of which France knows about more
than we do.
He did
not call it that, but he asked for the French law to have lesser version of a
state of emergency to deal with this new kind of problem. To show some
national unity, he asked to have the commission of the last government serve as
a departure point for the discussions leading to the legal changes that he is
asking for.
I
thought when he said that this was not a clash of civilizations, but a fight
between civilization and terrorism he was making a good point, well spoken, had
it been true. He made it clear that some of the perpetrators are French
and that part of the problem was internal. The president acknowledged
that France is in middle of a confusing situation with many social factors in
France and overseas, yet nothing stopped ISIS from being a group that now
had to be defeated.
It was
hard to criticize anything he just put out there except for the idea that
French duel citizens born in France should be stripped of their citizenship if
found to be convicted of terrorism or other acts of war against their country.
I like the "convicted" requirement that our government has
replaced with at "determination" and a murderous air strike, but
anyone on our side of the Atlantic should shudder at the idea of anyone not
being a citizen in the nation where they were born. Our history with that
included chattel slavery and genocide against natives and the best it ever gave
us was Japanese internment and Mexican expulsions.
It is
not hard to criticize France, including this man's government. Have we
forgotten Libya? The first planes to hit the Gheddafi government were
French. That nation still does not have a government and a lot off it is
under extremist control. France had to step in with boots on the ground
so that Mali did not go the same way. France has been an ally of the US
with this anti Syrian government policy which has led to the same thing in two
countries.
When I
say under extremist control, I mean OTHER extremists than the extreme
imperialist policies running around Europe and the world in which France is a
partner. One could go back to Vietnam, Algeria and the cold war, but just
in more recent post Soviet times France was a big piece in shutting down the
elections in Algeria, supporting a military putsch run by the same people who
fought France for their independence in the 60's. You could call this one
of the first anti Islamist civil wars in the current period.
France
was a big help to the extremists of Kosovo, taking their independence
unilaterally from Serbia (and some un happy Serbs with it) after France and the
other Security Council members resolved in the UN that Serbia's territorial
integrity would be respected. What did they mean by respected? This
president of France seems to have no problem with reversing such politics when
it came to Serbs in Bosnia or when it comes to Russian speakers in the Eastern
Ukraine. It seems to have no problem with bombing the people of
Afghanistan or Yemen and never did. The whole support to extremists in
Afghanistan against the Soviets and again after the Russians left town never
happened despite French objections. Only slightly less silent is French
mention of anything critical of Israel whose treatment of the Palestinians is
part and parcel of what might cause a young French national to go
help ISIS.
The
racist idea that we westerners are civilization and that the radicals in the
desert are some kind of animal sounds good when ISIS does something this
radical, bloody, and outrageous. 132 dead, 300 wounded? That is any
slow day in the mid east. That is probably a peaceful day in Syria or
Yemen. There are any number of nations where France is a partner in
brutal killings from the air against people who dare to want a government that
the western powers have not "determined" have a right to live.
Those people don't have a right to live either and even if we do not see
it daily on our screens, they see it on their streets and in today's world, we
can all see it on line, if we dare to face this truth about our times.
France joins the US saying that the Syrian dictatorship is intolerable
and must go, yet any Arab knows that Saudi Arabia and Egypt are both just as
bad to their people, dictatorial and intolerant as any government in Damascus
or Kabul ever was.
At the
end of the 19th Century there was an inside group of major political powers who
would gang up together to impose their will on nations where they did
profitable business. At the time of the Opium wars, France was a full
partner, and France is a full partner today. Today we call it the G7.
We have civil rights and some kind of democracy at home, and citizens of
the dominated world have the right to do as they are told, or have our
governments impose their will with violence.
The
twentieth century gave us the transition from gunboat diplomacy to drone strike
diplomacy.
This
allows this modern French speaker to stream the president's speech from
Congress Hall, Versailles live, in-direct telling me the most effective old
lies. The lies of omission.
Don, thanks for filling in the blanks with a world videw at this important juncture. Also, I just Voted for you on KPFA for the Board!
ReplyDeletegood luck, pam
Thanks for the kudos Pam.
DeleteThanks for the analysis-you are so direct.
ReplyDeleteWhat do you feel about Anonymous directing efforts to undermine ISIS?-X M
Not sure. I am no friend of ISIS and have some sympathy for Anonymous. If any of us had to live with ISIS, we would probably be fighting them with a gun, no matter what kind of blame belongs to the big powers. That is how we got into this mess, and part o their game is to make it our job to get out of it offering us few good options left.
DeleteWell said.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.contretemps.eu/print/interventions/va-t-en-guerre
ReplyDelete