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    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Nicolas Sarkozy is the new George W Bush

    Nicolas Sarkozy is the new George W Bush

    By Alex Spillius World News
    Last updated: April 12th, 2011
    41 Comments

    France’s intervention in the Ivory Coast is further proof of Nicolas Sarkozy’s growing appetite for muscular intervention.

    French and UN troops have helped arrest Laurent Gbagbo, whose refusal to let president-elect Alassane Ouattara was plunging the country into civil war.

    It was Sarkozy who first recognised the Libyan rebels and France who fired first on Muammar Gaddafi’s forces. He took a tougher line on Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak than Britain or the United States. He has been aggressive against Iran’s nuclear weapons plans and personally intervened in the crisis in Georgia in 2008 as president of the European Union, helping ensure that Russia did not invade.

    What is he up to? There are plenty of domestic critics who think he is trying to boost flagging poll numbers ahead of what promises to be a difficult re-election. Supporting the youth of the Arab spring will be useful with France’s North African minorities given Marine Le Pen’s challenge from the Right.

    Sounding a great deal like George W Bush, the French president has spoken of asserting France’s role as a shaper of history and a protector of liberty and democracy. Who is running the freedom agenda now? Although as Arthur Goldhammer says here, Charles de Gaulle he is not.

    But his search for grandeur has been conducted with an impatience, reactiveness and love of risk which has marked his career. In Tunisia, he had to make amends for his then foreign minister suggesting that France could send over riot troops to train the police, while in Libya he has wanted to erase the embarrassment of courting Gaddafi more than any other Western leader. It is tempting to wonder what would have happened if he, and not Jacques Chirac, had been in power when George W Bush and Tony Blair invaded Iraq. The answer is probably nothing, for France’s military is easily stretched. It will be interesting to see how strong is stomach is for an extended fight in Libya. The US, despite Barack Obama preferring to take a back stage role, is likely to do most of the heavy lifting in the long run.

    http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/alexs ... ge-w-bush/
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    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Sen. Inhofe: France Wants Colonial Order in Ivory Coast



    Wednesday, 13 Apr 2011 10:18 AM

    WASHINGTON – A leading Republican senator has accused France of seeking to impose a neo-colonial order in Ivory Coast and called for the toppled leader Laurent Gbagbo to be sent into exile for his own safety.


    In a speech from the floor of the Senate on Tuesday, Senator James Inhofe said French and UN troops who took part in military operations against Gbagbo in the country's main city Abidjan had blood on their hands.

    "I renew my call for hearings before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, on the bombings and killing by the UN, French, and the Ouattara rebels," said Inhofe.

    "I've warned the UN and the French on the floor four times in the past week that they would have blood on their hands if they continued supporting the rebel forces of Alassane Ouattara and continued the bombing" of Abidjan.

    Ouattara, widely regarded by the international community as having beaten Gbagbo in a November presidential poll, was finally able to take power on Monday after his rival was captured in an assault on his residence.

    Although France has denied its troops were present at the capture, Gbagbo's supporters say that it was an operation led by French special forces.

    France also took part in air raids on pro-Gbagbo targets in the build-up to Monday's capture, along with UN forces, and it announced Wednesday that French troops would patrol Abidjan as Ouattara tries to quell resistance.

    Speaking to AFP, Inhofe said he wanted the US government to intervene to prevent further violence and called for Gbagbo -- who is now under house arrest -- to be transferred to another country.

    "I want the State Department to get a ceasefire to stop the murdering, which they could do. And get the UN to do the same thing. And secondly send Gbagbo in exile in some place where he's not going to be murdered," Inhofe said.

    "I love the French, it's just that they are so dead wrong in their attitude toward sub-Saharan Africa," Inhofe told AFP.

    In his speech in the Senate, Inhofe insisted that "this is not about Gbagbo."

    "This is about the modern days return to French colonial imperialism. And this time with the help of the United Nations, they were doing this."

    US President Barack Obama on Tuesday called Ouattara to congratulate him on taking power, and called for justice for the victims of the bloody political crisis.

    The White House said Tuesday that Obama and Ouattara reiterated the need to ensure that alleged atrocities during weeks of political turmoil were investigated and that those responsible should be held accountable.

    http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/JamesI ... /id/392709
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