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France: Political fallout from troop deployment to Afghanistan
By Alex Lantier
5 April 2008
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President Nicolas Sarkozys decision to send more troops
to bolster the US-led occupation of Afghanistan has become the
subject of heated debate in French political circles. The main
subject of contention is not support for the occupation, which
is unanimous inside the French ruling class. Rather, the French
bourgeoisie worries that, coming on the heels of the governments
defeat in the March 16 local elections, its open contempt for
democratic procedures in sealing a closer alliance with crisis-ridden
Anglo-American militarism risks further destabilising internal
French politics.
Sarkozy first announced the deployment to eastern Afghanistan
of another battalion of ground troopsroughly 700-1,000 men,
according to various press reportsin a March 26 speech to
the British Parliament, during his state visit to the UK. The
initial announcement was confirmed in his April 3 speech at the
NATO summit in Bucharest, at which Sarkozy added that France would
plan on rejoining NATOs military command structure in 2009,
which France left in 1966 at the initiative of then-President
Charles de Gaulle.
The deployment to Afghanistan, which would place the new troops
near already deployed French forces in the Afghan capital, Kabul,
would release US Marines to reinforce Canadian troops in the most
violent southern provinces, Kandahar and Helmand. France currently
has 1,600 troops, 280 military trainers and six fighter jets in
Afghanistan. It also has three ships in the US-led fleet in the
Indian Ocean, south of Afghanistan.
Sarkozy is sending troops to Afghanistan with total disregard
for the wishes of the French people. According to a BVA poll carried
out for Sud-Ouest, 68 percent of the population disapproves
of the troop deployment, with only 15 percent supporting it. The
poll found 65 percent opposition to the US-led occupation.
The government, recently weakened by its defeat in the March
16 municipal elections, decided to push the deployment through
without a parliamentary vote. The task of defending this unconstitutional
and antidemocratic decision fell to Prime Minister François
Fillon, in an April 1 speech to the National Assembly, asserting
unlimited executive power.
Fillon said: [Parliament] does not share responsibility
for engaging our armed forces. One reason explains this. The Constitution
of the Fifth Republic does not require it. Its Article 35 (the
declaration of war is authorised by parliament) has today
fallen into disuse. Modern forms of war have taken us away from
this article. The engaging of military forces depends on executive
authority and notably on the President of the Republic, who leads
the armed forces.
Fillon noted that this violation of the Constitution relied
on precedents set by the Socialist Party (PS), the main opposition
party to Sarkozys conservative UMP (Union for a Popular
Movement). In particular, he cited the 2001 decision by then-Prime
Minister Lionel Jospin of the PS, in collaboration with the conservative
parties led by then-President Jacques Chirac, to participate in
the initial US deployment to Afghanistan without a parliamentary
vote.
The PS responded by preparing a formal motion of censure against
the government to be submitted before the National Assemblya
move calculated to provide a simulacrum of real debate over government
policy, and to trap working-class opposition behind the PS.
It immediately split over the content of the motion, with PS
General Secretary François Hollande initially proposing
a general criticism of the governments social and foreign
policies. Ultimately, former Prime Minister Laurent Fabius carried
the day with a proposal to focus only on criticising Sarkozys
rapprochement with Washington and his plan to send troops to Afghanistan.
According to the conservative daily Le Figaro, a PS deputy
quoted Fabius as saying, This will allow us to split the
majority by tickling old-fashioned Gaullists and nationalists
hostile to NATO.
The PS was careful to emphasise its continued support for the
occupation of Afghanistan. Jean-Marc Ayrault, leader of the PS
group in the National Assembly, said, Lets not make
any false accusations: we are not trying to abandon Afghanistan.
Various PS figures, including former Prime Minister Lionel Jospin,
added that they were merely opposed to sending more French troops
to Afghanistan.
The PS submitted the motion of censure to the National Assembly
on April 3, citing Sarkozys departure from established French
foreign policy and his lack of consultation with the National
Assembly before announcing the Afghan troop deployment. The debate
and vote will take place on April 8. At the request of Bernard
Accoyer, head of the UMP group in the National Assembly, the debate
will be broadcast on national television.
The attempt by the PS to appeal to disaffected UMP elements
and simulate opposition to Sarkozys policies comes as the
governments popularity is again plunging, after its defeat
in the local elections. A CSA poll for Le Nouvel Observateur
found a further fall in Sarkozys approval rating, to 30
percent, with 60 percent indicating disapproval of his policies.
Significantly, 72 percent thought the PS would do no better or
even worse than Sarkozy, were it in power.
The French ruling class fears that an attempt to continue forcing
through Sarkozys unpopular social cuts risks triggering
an explosion of resentment in the working class, with unpredictable
consequences. Sarkozys limited ability to appeal to working-class
voters on the basis of promises to jump-start the economy with
US-style deregulation has evaporated in the face of growing inflation,
falling purchasing power, and an economic slowdown tied to the
US financial crisis.
The daily Le Monde titled its March 28 lead editorial
Social Impasse, noting that with stagnant employment
and falling projections for French economic growth, it was difficult
to finance certain limited measureshousing subsidies, income
supports, etc.that the government had hoped to propose in
order to win working-class acceptance for its anti-social reform
programme.
Though the PSs moves are largely designed to draw off
popular resentment of the government, they also expose significant
divisions inside the French ruling class over how to deal with
the increasingly unstable world economic and military situation.
Sarkozys decision to rejoin the NATO command structure
after 40 years is part of an overall strategy to bring France
more closely in line with Washington and London, which corresponds
to real political challenges facing the French bourgeoisie. On
the one hand, France is increasingly unable to compete with Germany
inside the EUwith German industrial predominance in cheap-labour
countries of eastern Europe, its closer ties to Russia, Europes
main supplier of petrochemicals, and its largely successful campaign
to hold down the wages of the German working class.
The French bourgeoisie has proposed a Mediterranean Union,
which would help it develop its access to cheap labour in North
Africa. It is also aggressively pursuing military basing rights
and oil and natural gas contracts in the Middle East, notably
in the United Arab Emirates. However, such a policy is predicated
on good relations with the US, which is the dominant military
power in the region. The current government is, moreover, very
aware that the crisis of US imperialism in the Middle East could
lead to larger struggles against imperialism that would be extremely
damaging to its interests.
As Prime Minister Fillon stated in his July 2007 inaugural
address to the National Assembly, For centuries, France,
and a few other nations, politically and economically dominated
the world. This unequaled power allowed us to build a rich and
prosperous civilisation. Today, the world is waking and taking
its revenge on history. Entire continents seek progress..... This
new historical reality, both anguishing and fascinating, has demanded
and demands more than ever that France make a long-delayed effort.
Along similar lines, in a September 2007 editorial that cited
the changing political climate in Middle Eastern countries, Le
Figaro claimed that the oil industrys balance
of forces promises to be increasingly unfavorable to industrialised
democracies like France.
Sarkozys solution to these growing difficulties has been
to attempt to bolster Washington, with various public visits and
the current troop deployment. However, there are few illusions
in French ruling circles that an extra 1,000 men could really
help the US reestablish its position in Afghanistan. US General
Dan McNeill, for instance, has repeatedly noted that standard
US counterinsurgency doctrine would call for 400,000 troops to
pacify Afghanistanover 300,000 more than the number currently
available to him.
The criticism of Sarkozys foreign policy reflects growing
nervousness that, although there is no obvious alternative course,
Sarkozy is hitching France to a country whose foreign policy has
been disastrously unsuccessful of late. Thus, the PSs Ayrault
criticised, in announcing the motion of censure, the risks of
sinking into the quagmire of a conflict with no goals and
no end in sight by sending French troops to Afghanistan
to satisfy Sarkozys Atlanticist obsession.
The conservative Le Figaros editorial on Bushs
trip to the Bucharest NATO summit was equally cutting: If
the US president is willing to draw up an honest balance sheet
of his policies, he will find that he leaves behind a weakened
Atlantic alliance, militarily in trouble in Afghanistan, politically
divided faced with an increasingly aggressive Russia, and still
hesitant about its missions.... This is a sad result for a presidency
which was in the beginning placed under the sign of the use of
force in the interests of a conquering ideology.
See Also:
Sarkozy strives to establish
French-British axis
[31 March 2008]
French local elections reveal
discrediting of political establishment
[18 March 2008]
French municipal elections:
A setback for President Sarkozy
[13 March 2008]
France considers sending more
troops to Afghanistan
[12 March 2008]
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