International opinion condemned Israel over its attacks on the Iraqi and Syrian reactors only for those opinions to be reversed when it became clear the danger to world peace these reactors represented. Whilst many are deligitimising Netanyahu's warnings over Iran, it now appears that France (not a reputed friend of Israel), is seeing a lot of sense in Netanyahu's warnings to the American Congress - see below
Anne-Elisabeth
Moutet March 17, 2015
French leaders think the U.S. president is dangerously
naïve on Iran's ambitions, and that his notion of making Iran an
"objective ally" in the war against ISIS, or even a partner, together
with Putin's Russia, to find a political solution to the Syrian crisis, is both
far-fetched and "amateurish."
When Claude Angéli says that both France's Foreign
Minister, Laurent Fabius, and its President, François Hollande, have told
friends that they rely on "the support of the US Congress" to prevent
Obama from giving in to Iran's nuclear ambitions, it is the kind of quote you
can take to the bank.
French diplomats worry that if Iran gets nuclear weapons, every
other local Middle East power will want them. Among their worst nightmares is a
situation in which Turkey, Egypt and Saudi Arabia join the Dr. Strangelove
club.
French diplomats may not like Israel, but they do not believe that
the Israelis would use a nuclear device except in a truly Armageddon situation
for Israel. As for Egypt, Saudi Arabia or Turkey going nuclear, however, they
see terrifying possibilities: irresponsible leaders, or some ISIS-type
terrorist outfit, could actually use them. In other words, even if they would
never express it as clearly as that, they see Israelis as "like us,"
but others potentially as madmen.
The Quai d'Orsay (the French Foreign Ministry) may
loathe, on principle, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: any briefing
by French diplomats will, as a matter of course, explain how very wrong Israel
is to alienate its "American ally." All the same, France's political
stance on the projected U.S.-Iran deal is astonishingly close to that of the
Israeli PM, as he outlined to the U.S. Congress on March 3.
Laurent Fabius -- once François Mitterrand's youngest
Prime Minister; today's François Hollande's seasoned Foreign Minister -- is
"fed up with Barack Obama's nuclear laxity" regarding Iran, a Quai
senior diplomat told Le Canard Enchaîné's usually well-informed
Claude Angéli, who can be relied on to give the unvarnished French view on matters
foreign. "Just as in 2013, France will oppose any agreement too favorable
to Iran if this turns out to be necessary. Fabius made this very clear to John
Kerry when they met on Saturday March 7th."
This, Angéli points out, is far from the "soothing
communiqué" issued at the end of the Kerry-Fabius meeting in which both
men supposedly "shared" the same view of the Iran negotiations. The
communiqué itself may have come as a surprise to a number of French MPs and
Senators from their respective Foreign Affairs Committees. Fabius himself, in a
meeting last week, made extremely clear his deep distrust ("contempt,
really," one MP says) of both John Kerry and Barack Obama. Another of the
group quotes Fabius as saying: "The United States was really ready to sign
just about anything with the Iranians," before explaining that he himself
had sent out, mid-February, a number of French 'counter-proposals' to the State
Department and White House, in order to prevent an agreement too imbalanced in
favor of Iran.
Le Canard Enchaîné ("The
Manacled Mallard") is France's best-informed political gossip weekly. Long
before the rest of the French press, away from General de Gaulle's paralyzing
shadow, started investigative reports of their own, Le Canard,
using a contact network second to none, used to break scoops only rarely picked
up by the rest of a servile media pack.
We owe it the story of conservative President Giscard
d'Estaing's ill-gotten gifts of diamonds (from Central Africa's self-styled
Emperor Bokassa). An equal-opportunity hitter, Le Canardalso broke
the story of the Socialist Mitterrand's wiretaps of some 5,000 journalists and
personalities, only stopping short of explaining why: Mitterrand wanted to hide
from the public the existence of his mistress and their daughter Mazarine.
Newer brash French tabloids have only very recently started to examine the
private lives of politicians, and Le Canard still doesn't care
to do so. More recently, it revealed that the head of France's Communist union
CGT had his new luxury apartment entirely refurbished at the ailing union's
expense, complete with a home cinema: this cost him his job after an
undignified couple of weeks of useless stonewalling.
So when Claude Angéli says that both Fabius and
President François Hollande have told friends that they rely on "the
support of the US Congress" to prevent Obama from giving in to Iran's
nuclear ambitions, it's the kind of quote you can take to the bank. French
leaders think the U.S. president is dangerously "naïve" on Iran's
ambitions, and that his notion of making Iran an "objective ally" in
the war against ISIS, or even a partner, together with Putin's Russia, to find
a political solution to the Syrian crisis, is both far-fetched and amateurish.
The French are still smarting from the last-minute
reprieve Obama granted Syria, as the French air force was about to bomb the
Assad regime's military positions back in 2013, because the U.S. President had
been convinced by Russia that they had succeeded in making Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad give up on the use of his chemical weapons. "Our Rafale
fighters were about to scramble," a French air force officer is quoted as
saying; "Hollande was furious."
When Laurent Fabius briefed members of the French
parliament last week, he was, according to Angéli, quite precise, mentioning as
conditions necessary in any agreement a "reconfiguration" of the Arak
nuclear site, where Iran enriches the heavy water necessary to produce
plutonium bombs, as well as a sharp limit to the number of Iranian centrifuges,
and complete access to all nuclear sites for International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) inspections.
French diplomats are no angels, and they haven't
suddenly turned 180 degrees from their usual attitude of reflexive dislike
toward Israel. They worry, however, that if Iran gets nuclear weapons, every
other local Middle East power will want them. Among their worst nightmares is a
situation in which Turkey, Egypt and Saudi Arabia join the Dr. Strangelove
club. French diplomats may not like Israel, but they do not believe Israelis
would use a nuclear device except in a truly Armageddon situation.for Israel.
As for Egypt, Saudi Arabia or Turkey going nuclear, however, they see
terrifying possibilities: irresponsible leaders, or some ISIS-type terrorist
outfit, could actually use them. In other words, even if they would never
express it as clearly as that, they see Israelis as "like us," but
others potentially as madmen.
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