TOUGH TIMES FOR FRENCH LEADERS:

TOUGH TIMES FOR FRENCH LEADERS: Like a bad hangover, the French obstructionism of February and March is coming back to haunt the Chirac administration. [Hey, doesn’t this support your argument about the limits of anti-Americanism in established democracies?–ed. Huh. What a felicitous coincidence.] The Guardian reports: “Nearly half the French electorate believes that France was ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

TOUGH TIMES FOR FRENCH LEADERS: Like a bad hangover, the French obstructionism of February and March is coming back to haunt the Chirac administration. [Hey, doesn't this support your argument about the limits of anti-Americanism in established democracies?--ed. Huh. What a felicitous coincidence.] The Guardian reports:

TOUGH TIMES FOR FRENCH LEADERS: Like a bad hangover, the French obstructionism of February and March is coming back to haunt the Chirac administration. [Hey, doesn’t this support your argument about the limits of anti-Americanism in established democracies?–ed. Huh. What a felicitous coincidence.] The Guardian reports:

“Nearly half the French electorate believes that France was isolated diplomatically because of its opposition to the invasion of Iraq, according to an opinion poll yesterday…. In the poll, in the newspaper Libération, 46% of those questioned said President Chirac’s attempts to block Anglo-American moves to topple Saddam Hussein had isolated Paris, although 59% still thought the war was wrong. The poll also contained the first signs of a slide in Mr Chirac’s popularity, which dropped by four points to 70% from a month earlier. Since that survey, leading members of his party, the UMP, have criticised the president for failing to congratulate British and American troops.”

A slide from 74% to 70% ain’t that big of a comedown. The key thing, however, is that French elites are just starting to criticize Chirac for his position on Iraq. Consider this from the Voice of America:

“Some French media have also cautioned the government against following a confrontational diplomacy – most recently by insisting that the United Nations, not Washington, should assume interim administration of Iraq. An editorial in Le Monde called on Paris to work with Washington in finding a diplomatic solution. Other experts, such as Philippe Moreau Defarges, Special Advisor at the French Institute of International Relations in Paris, believe the anti-war coalition, which includes Germany and Russia, may soon crumble, leaving France isolated. ‘It’s clear this coalition between Paris, Berlin and Moscow was really an artificial coalition,’ said Mr. Defarges. ‘It’s certain that Russia and Mr. [Vladimir] Putin will want to play its own game and to reconcile with the United States. Particularly, but not only, because of Iraq and the oil contracts. Concerning Germany, it’s clear the German chancellor is not a very strong man, and he will try at the end of the day to reconcile with Washington.'”

You know France is screwed, however, when Tom Friedman writes this paragraph:

“For me, the best argument for pressuring Syria is the fact that France’s foreign minister, Dominique de Villepin, said on Sunday that this was not the time to be pressuring Syria. Ever since he blocked any U.N. military action against Saddam, Mr. de Villepin has become my moral compass: whatever he is for, I am against. And whatever he is against, I am for.”

Ouch. UPDATE: Glenn Reynolds has more on France’s current woes.

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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