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http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/feb2003/summ-f08_prn.shtml


WSWS : News & Analysis : Europe

Franco-British summit: Chirac signals Paris ready to back war vs. Iraq

By Julie Hyland
8 February 2003

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Any illusion that the European powers can be relied on to oppose a US-led
war in the Persian Gulf were dealt a blow by the Franco-British summit
that took place on February 3, and France’s subsequent responses on the
issue.

During the talks at the French resort of Le Touquet, President Jacques
Chirac made clear that he was not opposed on principal to an attack on
Baghdad. Making common cause with British Prime Minister Tony Blair,
Chirac emphasised his opposition to Saddam Hussein and stressed that
France “would not rule out” military force against Iraq.

His words were given additional weight by news that the French aircraft
carrier Charles de Gaulle had made an unscheduled departure for
exercises in the Mediterranean alongside America’s carrier, the USS Harry
S. Truman. Just days before, French Defence Ministry officials had
announced that 150 servicemen and a small number of warplanes were
being deployed to Qatar, in a move seen as indicating French
preparedness to line up with a US attack on Iraq.

If Chirac still felt it politic to reiterate French objections to a US-led
assault on Iraq not sanctioned by the United Nations, it is because he is
playing a cynical game in which the lives of tens of thousands of Iraqi
people are to be sacrificed, providing France’s own imperialist interests
are taken into account.

The summit was held on the eve of US Secretary of State Colin Powell’s
presentation of the American case against Iraq at the UN Security Council.
Despite the flimsy and fraudulent character of Powell’s case, the
presentation was aimed, in part, at enabling the UN’s reluctant objectors
to manoeuvre into position behind a war. This external US pressure helped
ensure that relations between Blair and Chirac at the summit were cordial,
even after months of tensions between the two countries.

The talks had originally been scheduled for December, but Chirac
postponed them after a bitter public row with Britain over reform of the
Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) governing farming subsidies. Paris and
Berlin had cut a deal on the matter, enabling France to maintain its
subsidies for an extended period, causing alarm in London at the prospect
of a strengthened Franco- German axis for the European Union.

The stepping up of US preparations for war against Iraq has changed the
balance of forces within Europe to the detriment of France and the
benefit of Britain. Efforts by Paris and Berlin to mark out a common
European position of resistance to US ambitions were undermined by the
“gang of eight” declaration in late January. The declaration, signed by five
EU members including Britain, and three prospective members from
eastern European countries not only supported US preparations for war,
but rejected France and Germany’s claims to be speaking for Europe,
leading US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to refer contemptuously to
Paris and Berlin as “old Europe”.

Chirac was also placed on the defensive by the heavy defeats sustained by
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder’s ruling Social Democratic Party in
local elections at the weekend. Although not occasioned by his antiwar
stance, which remains popular, the 15 percent swing to the Christian
Democrats was portrayed by Washington and London as a victory for their
line and a signal for a possible shift in position by Germany.

With Powell’s statement to the Security Council heralding the closing
stages of preparations for war, France does not relish being isolated on
the sidelines. Chirac therefore gave every indication that France’s position
will be subject to revision in the event of discussions on a second UN
resolution.

He hinted at Rumsfeld’s rebuke in his summit statement. France and Britain
“represent two ancient civilisations, two old nations, two old cultures”,
Chirac said, and this was a great strength. But otherwise the two leaders
studiously avoided past disagreements. Britain and France “have different
approaches” to war against Iraq, Chirac said, “but first and foremost we
have two convictions which are fundamental and are shared.” The two
countries were in fact far closer to one another, he continued, and were
“entirely in agreement” that Iraq must be disarmed and that “this has to
be undertaken within the Security Council of the United Nations.”

The demand for UN approval is favoured by sections of the European ruling
class and various antiwar groupings. The call has nothing to do with
principled opposition to an imperialist war against a small, impoverished
country for the purpose of occupying its territory and seizing strategic oil
resources. Politically it is aimed at chloroforming public opinion, especially
in Europe, where the vast majority of the population is opposed to war.

In France 75 percent of people are against an attack on Iraq. Chirac’s
apparent reluctance to join a US-led war is aimed at shoring up his
standing domestically as the true representative of the French nation. He
also hopes that his stance will underscore his claim to be the most
intransigent spokesman for Europe against the US. By insisting on UN
approval, the lesser imperialist powers hope to exercise some form of
control over the US, so as to ensure their share of any post-war carve up.
Paris, for example, is keen that the favourable deals struck by France’s
TotalFinaElf oil company with Saddam Hussein to develop the lucrative
Majnoon and Nahr Umar oil fields, are not abrogated or threatened by a
future US takeover of the country.

Chirac responded angrily when pressed to set out his disagreement with
the US and Britain. “Do not expect me to open heaven knows what
Pandora’s box or get into an argument with anybody,” he said, dismissing
claims that he was on a collision course with the US as “pie in the sky”.

Asked repeatedly whether France would make good its previous pledge to
wield its veto on the UN Security Council against war, Chirac refused to be
drawn. “France will assume its responsibility as it sees fit,” he said. The
President also refused to reiterate his demand for a longer timetable to be
extended to the UN weapons inspectors, as did Foreign Minister
Dominique de Villepin following Powell’s submission, referring instead to
the “Iraqi risk”.

For his part, having marked himself out as America’s key ally in Europe,
Blair felt in a position to be generous. If he was able to bring France on
board US war plans, he would again demonstrate his importance for
America whilst undermining criticisms that his gung-ho approach had left
him out on a limb in Europe, regarded as Bush’s poodle. Blair has made
great play of his own willingness to stick to the UN route and seek a
second resolution if possible before going to war, but has also insisted that
if one member of the security council uses its veto, then all bets are off.

Blair studiously avoided any mention of France’s invitation to Zimbabwean
President Robert Mugabe to attend an African summit in Paris this month,
apparently in breach of EU sanctions against his regime. Chirac also spoke
of the need for “give and take”, thought to be a reference to previous
British intransigence over CAP reform.

More significantly, the British Prime Minister endorsed the recent French
intervention into its former colony of Cote d’Ivoire where a rebel uprising
is underway. Some 3,000 French military personnel are currently in the
country, which could act as a staging post for renewed French
intervention across this important oil-producing region.

The two leaders also agreed to press ahead with plans for a common
European security and defence policy, including pooling military
equipment for “peacekeeping or humanitarian missions”. Differences over
EU defence had held up progress over the last months, with France
favouring an autonomous command independent of NATO and Britain
insisting it should be complimentary to the alliance.

Military cooperation between the two countries had been advanced by
Britain’s decision to award the French company Thales part of its new
aircraft carrier contract. At Le Touquet, moreover, Chirac won British
backing for strengthening the 60,000-strong European Rapid Reaction
Force (ERRF), which will replace NATO in Macedonia next month.

The decision does not end the force’s disputed status, but merely
postpones it. Nevertheless, it underscores that with war imminent, Britain
and France do indeed have much in common—not least hopes to
reinvigorate their colonial pasts. According to reports, the ERRF is
expected to play a significant role in Africa. British spokesman admitted
that further talks between Chirac and Blair “on Africa would include the
question of oil resources as a possible alternative source of energy”.







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