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FRANCE: The Sarkozy Revolution?
By Lieutenant Colonel Deborah Hanagan
He may be the most pro-American French leader since the Marquis
de Lafayette, but the new president is still . . . French. By Deborah
Hanagan.
Nicolas Sarkozy’s first year as president of France has been notable—whether
facing down public sector unions over pension reform, divorcing his second
wife and honeymooning with his third, a former supermodel, or rolling out
the red carpet for a high-profile state visit by Libyan leader Muammar Gadhafi.
Sarkozy, dubbed l’hyperprésident (the hyperactive president) for his frenetic
pace and tendency to micromanage everything and everyone, has kept
himself in the limelight. U.S. journalists and political pundits once predicted
that a new era in U.S.-French relations would emerge from the so-called
Sarkozy revolution. But although he has improved the tone of the U.S.-
France relationship, he has not transformed it.
Sarkozy still must operate within the confines of the largely anti-American
French political establishment, and he has had to remain internally
focused. His most important political priorities are France’s domestic problems—
a moribund economy, high budget deficits and national debt, a
vocal Socialist opposition, and a restive, unassimilated Muslim immigrant
population—and he is trying hard to break with the past to reform France’s
economy and business/work environment. On the other hand, he supports
continued European integration, and so far his foreign policy agenda is not radically different from his predecessor’s. At most, Sarkozy’s foreign policy
goals represent not a revolutionary but an evolutionary change from previous
French administrations, and in many ways he resembles the previous
French president, Jacques Chirac.
Sarkozy still must operate within the confines of the largely anti-American French political establishment.
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Although Sarkozy began his political career as a party activist and has
always belonged to the same political party as Chirac, he does not share
Chirac’s anti-American Gaullist tendencies, which arise from a political philosophy
originating with Charles de Gaulle, France’s president in the late
1950s and 1960s (he was also the provisional president from the fall of
1944 to January 1946). De Gaulle was a fierce believer in France’s destiny
as a great power and shared many Europeans’ criticism of U.S. political,
economic, and cultural influence in Europe. When de Gaulle regained the
presidency in 1958, he overtly campaigned for the restoration of French
global influence and European greatness and directly challenged U.S. influence
in Europe. Rejecting the bipolar Cold War world, he was an ardent
advocate for French independence from both the United States and the
Soviet Union. This desire for autonomy ultimately led to French withdrawal
from NATO’s integrated military structure because de Gaulle did
not want NATO to have ultimate control of French military forces
(although France remained a member of the alliance), and to the creation
of the French nuclear weapons program.
Chirac shared de Gaulle’s desire for French international greatness; he
also overtly challenged American global power and attempted to act
autonomously whenever possible. He differed from de Gaulle in supporting
the loss of some French sovereignty to supranational EU institutions,
but he paralleled de Gaulle in his faith in a strong French-led Europe, able
to act independently on the world stage.
FOLLOWING DE GAULLE—TO A POINT
Sarkozy openly admires de Gaulle. He often speaks of France’s need to
make a clean break from its past so that it can reform and modernize, following de Gaulle’s example. Sarkozy, as a long-standing member of the
French political establishment and product of the French political scene,
shares the previous political leaders’ faith in French exceptionalism and destiny
for leadership. Sarkozy recognizes, however, that the world has
changed, that politics and international relations are different, and that
institutions like the EU are here to stay. In particular, he speaks openly
about the declining reputation of France in the global arena because of its
“arrogance,” as well as the folly of opposing the United States. Because both
countries have similar democratic values and systems, he maintains, it is in
France’s strategic interest to develop the best possible relations with the
United States. Thus, Sarkozy does not advocate developing the European
Union as a counterweight to the United States.
Sarkozy has consistently stated that he does not support the use of
military force to resolve the Iran crisis. He has referred to “the Iranian
bomb or the bombing of Iran” as equally catastrophic.
Sarkozy is a unique French political actor. He did not follow most other
politicians’ path into politics, which is to graduate from the National
Administration School (ENA) and gain appointment to a position in a
ministerial cabinet. Rather, Sarkozy began in 1974 as a grassroots party
organizer for the Chirac-led Gaullists and worked his way up, supporting
Chirac and the Gaullist parties and then competing for elective office. He
has been involved in French politics his entire adult life (more than thirty
years), holding elected positions in Parliament and as mayor of Neuilly. His
first ministerial job was as minister of the budget in 1993, and he went on
to serve as Chirac’s interior minister and finance minister. Sarkozy’s genius
has been to capitalize on his family’s Hungarian roots so as to foster his
image as an outsider, making it possible for him to criticize French weaknesses
and propose sweeping reform at a time when change is desperately
needed, and allowing him to align himself more closely with America.
Chirac and Sarkozy have much in common in their stance toward foreign
policy. Both have publicly stated their admiration for the United States
but insist that friends do not always have to agree. Both have carefully cultivated
the image of a France that will not slavishly follow all of Washington’s policies. Sarkozy’s establishing a commission to study the possibility of
rejoining NATO’s integrated military structure echoes Chirac’s efforts in
1996–97, as does Sarkozy’s indication that reintegration would depend on
France’s being given a significant leadership position in NATO. This
French proposal for a “return to NATO” is also predicated on strengthening
the European Security and Defense Policy; thus, like Chirac, Sarkozy
favors strong European defense.
Despite improved U.S.-French relations, Sarkozy’s government has not
reversed France’s position on Iraq. He said in August, “France was and
remains hostile to this war.”
Both men also support the concept of a greater Euro-Mediterranean
partnership. In October 2007, Sarkozy took Chirac’s policy position a step
further during a visit to Morocco, where he called on the Mediterranean
countries “to build a Mediterranean Union.” (This ambitious French proposal
has been greeted by other EU leaders as tepidly as they greeted
Chirac’s Mediterranean vision.) Finally, Sarkozy has continued the policy,
begun by Chirac, of working with the United States and the United
Nations to eject Syrian influence from Lebanon and support the pro-Western
government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora.
MEETING THE IRAN PROBLEM WITH DIPLOMACY
However, it is the parallels between Chirac’s Iraq policy and Sarkozy’s Iran
policy that are most striking. Until the invasion of Iraq in March 2003,
Chirac had consistently called for a diplomatic solution to the crisis. The
French government repeatedly had emphasized its opposition to the use of
military force and said it would countenance a resort to force, sanctioned
by the international community, only if U.N. weapons inspections could
definitively be shown as a failure. The government also continued to insist,
up until the U.S. invasion of Iraq, that inspections were working.
Sarkozy has consistently stated that he does not support the use of military
force to resolve the Iran crisis. In February 2007, he stated that he was
“absolutely, totally and completely opposed to nuclear weapons for Iran,”
but when asked whether he would join Washington in military action, his reply was a flat no. In August, in his first major foreign policy address, he
emphasized again his opposition to the idea of a nuclear-armed Iran, calling
for a stronger diplomatic push and urging the international community
to continue “incrementally increasing sanctions against Tehran while
being open to talks if Iran suspended nuclear activities.” Most important,
he referred to “the Iranian bomb or the bombing of Iran” as equally catastrophic.
Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner’s statement on September 16
that “the world should prepare for the worst, that is, the possibility of a war
with Iran, if Tehran persisted in its refusal to suspend its nuclear program”
was interpreted by many, including the Iranians, as a French hint that it
considered military action an option. But a few days later, Kouchner clarified
his comment, saying France does not want war. Prime Minister
François Fillon further played down the war rhetoric, stating: “Everything
must be done to avoid war. France’s role is to lead the way to a peaceful
solution.”
In an interview on September 24, Sarkozy followed up on the issue when
he rejected the use of the word “war.” When asked about the U.S. position
that “all options are on the table,” referring to the possibility of military
force, Sarkozy said, “This expression is not mine. . . . We are not condemned
to two extremes. Between submission [to an Iranian nuclear
weapon] and war there is a whole range of options.”
The U.S. National Intelligence Estimate on Iran, published in December,
has not changed Sarkozy’s position. He still calls Iran a threat (commenting,
“Everyone is fully conscious of the fact that there is a will among
the Iranian leaders to obtain nuclear weapons”) and continues to insist that
the international community must keep up the pressure with strong sanctions.
But, like Chirac, Sarkozy prefers to resolve the crisis through diplomacy,
multilateralism, and international institutions.
French opposition to the use of military force against Iraq and Iran is
based partially on fear of France’s Muslim population. France has the largest
Muslim immigrant population in Europe, and French Muslims now number
about 6 million. According to the Wall Street Journal, a member of
Chirac’s inner circle warned the president that “if he backed the United
States over Iraq, he would face nothing short of an ‘insurrection’” by Muslims
in France. Given the concern over the persistent exclusion of Franco-Islamic communities from the economic, political, and social life of the
state, Sarkozy worries about a violent backlash if another Muslim country
were to be attacked.
His position is based on experience. For twenty-five nights, in October
and November 2005, riots exploded across France after two Muslim youths
of North African descent electrocuted themselves while hiding in an electric
power station. Sarkozy, as interior minister, was responsible for national
law enforcement and was directly involved in quelling the violence, which
was perpetrated primarily by immigrant Muslim youth and spread to 274
towns. Some 10,000 vehicles and 300 buildings and schools were burned,
4,700 people were arrested, and 8,000 police officers and 1,500 police
reservists were deployed. Given the volatility of the “Muslim street” in
France, no French political leader can ignore the possible domestic reactions
to foreign policies.
STRONGER VIEW ON SANCTIONS
French trade relations with Iraq and Iran historically have been extensive,
but this is where the Iraq/Iran similarities between Chirac and Sarkozy end:
they have taken radically different positions on sanctions and trade.
Before the Iraq invasion, Saddam’s government was in debt to the French
government to the tune of $8 billion. French defense sales were in the billions
of dollars and French-Iraqi nuclear cooperation was extensive. Moreover,
when Chirac was France’s prime minister in the mid-1970s, he signed
an agreement with Saddam under which France was to sell Iraq two nuclear
reactors. Private sector cooperation in the oil industry was also extensive.
France not only undermined the U.N. sanctions regime in the 1990s but
also lobbied for its lifting; French government officials were also implicated
in the U.N. Oil-for-Food Program scandal.
French trade with Iran is also in the billions of dollars; it peaked in 2004
and has slowly decreased as sanctions have been tightened under two U.N.
resolutions, UNSCR 1737 in 2006 (which banned the supply of nuclearrelated
materials and technology and froze the assets of individuals and
companies related to the enrichment program) and UNSCR 1747 in 2007
(which expanded the freeze and imposed visa restrictions and an embargo
on Iranian arms exports). Sarkozy’s position has been surprisingly strong in supporting sanctions. At the September 2007 U.N. General Assembly meeting,
he called for tougher U.N. sanctions and later commented that “if the
U.N. Security Council were unable to agree on further financial sanctions,
the European Union should take its own measures to raise pressure on
Iran.” The French government has subsequently called for French divestment
from Iran: it has told French companies not to seek new markets in
Iran, and in the banking and financial arena, the government has proposed
stopping new export credit guarantees. France also began to press its European
Union partners, in mid-October at a meeting of EU foreign ministers,
to institute tough EU sanctions that would complement and
strengthen U.N. sanctions. In particular, France has worked hard to overcome
German and Italian resistance, which is crucial because Italy is the
biggest European trading partner with Iran, and Germany is by far the
largest European exporter to Iran.
Sarkozy openly admires de Gaulle. He often speaks of France’s need to
make a clean break from its past so that it can reform and modernize,
following de Gaulle’s example.
The lengths Chirac’s government went to in an effort to prevent the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 resulted in a great deal of bad blood
between the United States and France. The Iraq disagreement, however,
did not prevent France and the United States from subsequently finding
common ground in other foreign policy areas—namely, joint cooperation
at the United Nations in September 2004 to pass Security Council Resolution
1559, which called for Syria to withdraw its troops from Lebanon.
Despite improved U.S.-French relations, Sarkozy’s government has not
reversed France’s position on Iraq. In September 2007, Kouchner called the
U.S. intervention in Iraq a failure and commented that he would prefer
that the United States establish a timetable for withdrawal. His statements
echoed Sarkozy’s August foreign policy speech, in which the president said
that “France was and remains hostile to this war.” To date, France has not
offered any military support to coalition operations in Iraq.
Sarkozy has, however, taken a significantly different tack from his predecessor
on Israel and the Middle East. Chirac was known for his “Arab policies” and his consistently pro-Arab positions, many of which were often
detrimental to Israeli interests. Although his stance may not have been anti-
Semitic, his overt support for the Palestinians encouraged an anti-Jewish
political environment.
In fall 2005, Sarkozy, as interior minister, was directly involved in quelling
a paroxysm of violence perpetrated primarily by immigrant Muslim
youth—the dreaded “Muslim street.”
But Sarkozy calls the concept of an “Arab policy” nonsense because the
Arab and Muslim worlds are not uniform. He supports policies tailored to
each region of the world: “We cannot make our relations with Israel conditional
on the ups and downs of our interests in Arab societies.” He is also
an unapologetic supporter of Israel, maintaining that the tiny democracy
has the right and duty to defend itself. Citing the Holocaust, Sarkozy maintains
that all democracies must be accountable for Israel’s security; he supports
the right of Palestinians to an independent state, but not at the
expense of Israel’s existence. Sarkozy’s position on the Israel-Lebanon war
in the summer of 2006 was similar to that of the United States: he condemned
Hezbollah as the aggressor in the war and defended Israel’s right
to self-defense (although he also cautioned Israel to act proportionately).
This Middle East foreign policy divergence is potentially significant: if
future French positions continue to parallel those of the United States, it
will further encourage freedom, democracy, and constitutional government
throughout the Middle East.
A FRIEND, NOT A PUSHOVER
Under Sarkozy’s leadership, French-U.S. relations seem unlikely to descend
into acrimony, as they did under Chirac. But Sarkozy’s pro-American orientation
does not mean that French and U.S. foreign policy positions will
always align or that relations will always proceed smoothly. For example, it
will be difficult for France to balance strengthening European defense with
rejoining NATO’s integrated military structure because, as European
defense develops, it will become more autonomous. If France fully rejoins
NATO, it will be giving back to NATO (that is, the United States) control over French military forces. The negotiation over a new NATO leadership
position for France could also break down. To his credit, Sarkozy is proceeding
openly in this area, and the official he appointed to study the issue
has already held talks with European partners and representatives of the
United States, the European Union, and NATO.
As a protégé of Chirac and an admirer of de Gaulle, Nicolas Sarkozy is
unsurprisingly an advocate for a strong and influential France. He talks
about the benefits of globalization, foreign trade, and the market economy,
but he does not want to import the “Anglo-Saxon” economic model of free
market capitalism. He is still a believer in the benefits of state intervention,
the welfare state, and the French social model. Although Sarkozy talks constantly
of a crisis in confidence in France and of making a clean break, of
restructuring, reforming, and modernizing, he insists that the French people
“don’t want a radically different France.” U.S. policy makers should not
have any illusions about Sarkozy. He does not represent a revolution, but
rather a desperately needed evolution.
Available from the Hoover Press is Anti-Americanism in Europe: A Cultural Problem, by Russell
A. Berman. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
Lieutenant Colonel Deborah Hanagan is a national security affairs fellow for 2007–2008 at the Hoover Institution. LTCOL Hanagan represents the U.S. Army.
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