France needs to rework its foreign policy

France needs to rework its foreign policy
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Highlights

There are demands from various political leaders that France should rebuild its relationship with not only Russian President Vladimir Putin but also with beleaguered Syrian President Basahar Al Assad, whom the French have been trying so hard to dislodge since at least 2010.

Sarkozy had recently visited Moscow and met Putin, a leader with whom he had enjoyed warm relations when he was in office between 2007 and 2012. “We need everyone and especially the Russians, in order to exterminate the ISIS,” he told Hollande

Paris : French foreign policy is under severe pressure following the 13/11 Paris terror attacks. Barely had the impact of Friday’s attacks sunk in, when a number of leaders, arrayed over the entire spectrum of French politics – ranging from the extreme left to the extreme right – began calling for France to dramatically alter the course of its foreign policy. There are demands from various political leaders that France should rebuild its relationship with not only Russian President Vladimir Putin but also with beleaguered Syrian President Basahar Al Assad, whom the French have been trying so hard to dislodge since at least 2010.

French President François Hollande (left) and former President Nicolas SarkozyFormer French president Nicolas Sarkozy met Hollande and asked his successor to urgently repair the relations with Russia, which have hit a historic low in the last two years. Not only do Russia and France find themselves on the opposing sides in Syria and Iraq, but France has been harshly critical of the Russian position on the Ukraine and the Crimea as well. A few months ago, the French unilaterally cancelled the purchase by Russia of two Mistrals, technologically the most advanced ships in the French navy.

For the past many months, there had been already been calls for a realignment of the French foreign policy and a reality check on it. But the 13/11 attacks have brought the issue to the fore. Sarkozy had recently visited Moscow and met Putin, a leader with whom he had enjoyed warm relations when he was in office between 2007 and 2012. “We need everyone and especially the Russians, in order to exterminate the ISIS,” he told Hollande. Sarkozy’s party member and Member of Parliament Jacques Myard echoed his boss and went further.

“It is time that France reviewed its foreign policy, notably in Syria. I think we have been following a wrong policy. Today, the one who has been fighting the jihadists and the ISIS is the one in Damascus (Bashar Al Assad), with the help of Iran and Russia. Even if Assad is not a saint and has blood on his hands, we must choose between the two evils. The enemy today is not Mr. Assad, but the Islamists, the ISIS, the Al Qaeda," said Myard, who ignored the French foreign ministry’s advice and recently visited Damascus and met Assad.

Jean Frederic Poisson, of the centre-right Christian Democrats party, criticisesd the heavy reliance of French diplomacy in the Middle East on Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. “It is clear now that these countries and notably Saudi Arabia finance numerous cells, especially of the Wahabbis. These countries have to come out of the ambiguity of their position on terror. I don’t know whether we should cut off our ties with them or apply sanctions, but at the very least we should ask them for a clarification," Poisson said.

This view found strong support from a powerful member of the parliament, Bruno Le Maire, who also called for review of French ties with the GCC nations and an immediate patch up with Russia and Syria. The GCC nations, mainly Qatar and Saudi Arabia, are amongst the largest buyers of French defence and other products and services and also some of the biggest investors in France.

For many years now, France has been following a foreign policy that has supported the Qatari and Saudi Arabian positions on the situation in the Middle East. “It had begun to look like the French foreign policy was more aimed at protecting the interests of GCC nations like Saudi Arabia and Qatar, rather than serving the real interests of France,” is how a French security expert based in Paris presented the issue.

By Ranvir Nayar

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