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Sarkozy to end France's exile from the heart of Nato

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Published Date: 12 March 2009
PRESIDENT Nicolas Sarkozy said yesterday that France would rejoin Nato's integrated military command, more than 40 years after Charles de Gaulle pulled out of the alliance's inner circle.
Mr De Gaulle, the then president, quit the command structure in a row over the United States' influence in Europe, but Mr Sarkozy told a defence conference France needed to return to the heart of Nato.

"It is in the interest of France and i
n the interest of Europe," he said. "We have stop deluding ourselves that by burying our heads in the sand, we are capable of protecting anything."

France is Nato's fourth-largest contributor of troops, and officials have said its self-imposed exile was hindering its ability to influence decision-making in the 26-nation military bloc.

Yesterday's announcement will make little difference on the ground in missions such as Afghanistan, where France has 2,800 troops, but it is symbolically significant and will firmly tie European defence ambitions to the Atlantic alliance. Opinion polls show a majority of voters support the move, but many of Mr Sarkozy's political opponents have criticised it.

Many influential conservatives have also distanced themselves from any rapprochement with Nato, seeing it as a betrayal of Mr De Gaulle's vision of an independent France.

France was a founding member of Nato, but Mr De Gaulle argued that Paris did not want to be dragged into a war that was not of its own choosing. France left the command structure in 1966 amid the Cold War.

Although Mr Sarkozy could authorise the Nato reintegration without consulting parliament, he has called a confidence vote next week to give added legitimacy to his decision. He is expected to win the vote easily.



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  • Last Updated: 11 March 2009 10:13 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: France
 
1

Conan,

Moffat 12/03/2009 00:34:59
OK, well that's it then, we are agreed ... it will be surrender.
2

,

12/03/2009 01:30:27
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

,

12/03/2009 01:37:22
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
4

Jim A,

12/03/2009 04:35:58
After 40 years they should be told to get lost, however we need their troops so it's c'mon in boys.
5

écossais at heart,

france 12/03/2009 10:50:10
As the article itself states, it will not make much difference as the French already have troops under Nato command. If they want to be officially in again, it is to have more influence in the decision making process from which they are excluded today.
6

Wab,

Edinburgh 12/03/2009 14:39:09
I am reminded of the tale of the elderly Canadian gentleman going through passport control at Charles De Gaulle airport. He was having difficulty finding his passport and an unsympathetic Customs Official enquired
"Misseur have you been to France before" asked the Officer.
"Yes " replied the Canadian.
"Then you should know that you need your passport in order to gain entry. Was that not the case when you were last here? " he snidely enquired.
The Canadian OAP looked long and hard at the Officer.
" No he replied, the last time I was here was 1944 in Normandy on a beach and funnily enough I couldn't find a single Frenchman to speak to"
7

Conan,

Wab 12/03/2009 20:30:32
Wab - you deserve a medal - TY!
8

Polly Ann,

12/03/2009 20:51:41
I googled the headline + certain keywords which I often times do to go back and read deleted comments and to show you how silly the communist trolls are, they requested this comment to be removed.

"Sakozy has been slowly converting the lazy cheese eating surrender monkeys to somewhat viable candidates of society"

I can't tell which post # it was or who posted it but it was requested to be removed by a commie troll.
9

Leftie,

23/07/2009 16:14:41
Sarkozy is going to get France in a lot of trouble if he's not careful.

 

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