Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
September 2, 2023
France Can Only Be An Independent Power If It Learns To Push Back

The AUKUS deal was an illogical strategic submission of Australia as it will bankrupt the country by buying U.S. nuclear submarines. They are only nominally for Australia's security but will stay at least informally under U.S. command.

A major point of the deal was that it screwed France which had a big contract with Australia to build conventional submarines for it. The French Foreign Minister said it was "a stab in the back". France wasn't even informed of the deal but learned of it from the press.

That the U.S. would screw France, a big European NATO ally, for its own political and economic purpose is not necessarily unprecedented, but to do it as publicly and open as the AUKUS deal did should have been a big wake-up call.

Unfortunately the French President Macron and his government went back to sleep and gave the U.S. the opportunity to screw France again.

It did so with AFRICOM, the U.S. instrument to undermine African countries through military 'cooperation'.

France has big interest in Africa where some of its former colonies, Françafrique, are bound to it by using a currency, the CFA Franc, that is solely under French government control.


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The U.S. used its training of African officer to subtly find and train people it could work with. An astonishing number of these officer were later involved in coups which often turned out to be anti-French and pro-American:

[S]ince 2008 U.S.-trained officers have attempted at least nine coups, and succeeded in at least eight in five West African countries alone: Three times in Burkina Faso; three times in Mali; and once each in Guinea, Mauritania, and the Gambia.

U.S. training and support to the region flows through the State Department and Africa Command, an arm of the Department of Defense, in charge of military operations across the continent.

Since the above was written Niger has followed:

Brig. Gen Moussa Barmou, the American-trained commander of the Nigerien special operations forces, beamed as he embraced a senior U.S. general visiting the country’s $100 million, Washington-funded drone base in June.

Six weeks later, Barmou helped oust Niger’s democratically elected president.

For U.S. military officers and diplomats, it’s become an all-too-familiar — and deeply frustrating — story.

Niger is one of several West African countries where U.S. military-trained officers have seized control since 2021, including Burkina Faso, Guinea, and Mali. Some coup leaders have had close relationships with their American trainers, whose mentorship included lessons on safeguarding democracy and human rights along with military tactics.

Ohh – please spare me the 'safeguarding democracy' crocodile tears. They are really over the top. The U.S. has a big military base in Niger and that, and the influence it brings with it, is all that counts.

After the coup the French military contingent in Niger and its ambassador were told to leave while the big U.S. drone base is likely to stay.

Is that a bad outcome for the U.S. or the result of a plan?

The U.S. has strategic interests in Africa and, as the former RAND and CIA analyst and senior fellow of the Atlantic Council Michael Shurkin writes, it wants France to move out:

I have cheered French efforts to help the countries of the Sahel — most notably Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger — to defend themselves against jihadist insurgencies affiliated with Al Qa’eda or the Islamic State.

And yet, the only reasonable conclusion to draw now is that France should close its bases and go.

The problem, as has been made clear by recent events in Niger, is that whatever France does, good or bad, provokes an allergic reaction from populations long conditioned to be suspicious of French motives and assume the worst.

Whether this anti-French sentiment is fair or not is entirely beside the point. Ties with France have now become a kiss of death for African governments — a phenomenon demonstrated by the fate of Niger’s President Mohamed Bazoum.

Oh well. Who has created Al Qa’eda and the Islamic State? Who has moved them from west-Asia into Africa?

Yes, France has kept some of its colonial bad habits and influences and some people really do hate it for that. But who's propaganda has pushed them into that direction?

The plan is obvious. France has to be pushed out so the U.S. can walk in:

Meanwhile, the threat of Russia filling the vacuum is overstated and should not justify [France's] further involvement. Indeed, part of of Russia’s appeal is that many Africans see it as a sort of anti-France. And the less France lives “rent-free” in the popular imagination, the less Russia’s symbolic appeal will become.

Another part of Russia’s draw is that some African governments, Mali among them, are frustrated by France’s reticence to assist them in a strategy that all too often involves targeting certain ethnic communities — above all Fulanis but also Arabs and Tuaregs. And if that’s what they want help for, then France and other Western powers are right to refuse.

The fact that the U.S. and other European partners like Germany don’t provoke the same reaction does provide them an opening, a way to help fill the vacuum to keep Russia out and help African states defend themselves. But that will require them to care, and to exercise a greater degree of creativity than they have shown thus far.

It will also mean that France will have to trust them in its former Empire. This was a stumbling block as late as the 1990s, but at this point, Paris is ready.

And, really, it has no choice.

Poor France. It is told to leave and let the U.S. take over its former colonies. It has no choice.

It took a long time for the French to wake up to that plan. But it is finally sinking in. The leading French geopolitical magazine, Conflits, discusses the Shurkin piece and asks:

Pourquoi l’Amérique veut-elle chasser la France d’Afrique ?
Why does America want to drive France out of Africa?

It concludes correctly:

Americans want to sacrifice the French presence to replace and sustain them.

Since France rejected the U.S. invasion of Iraq the U.S. has done its best to deny France any independent international role. The magazine discusses various global places and plans where and how France can reasonably prevent that. It concludes (edited machine translation):

What is at stake is not simply the presence of France in the Sahel or in Africa. It is maintaining it as a global sovereign power or its reduction to a power in Europe. By extension, is its natural relation to be one of the major U.S. dependent democracies, which form a rigid frame, imperial, behind the United States, or will it be able to form a loose alliance in a multilateral framework, a much better position to defend its interests and values?

Without a doubt, America and the Europeans, they need a voice to remind them of the dangers of the respective hubris or of their weakness. Undoubtedly, the world has a need for medium stand-alone powers and for France to find a new balance, helping emerging nations, supporting them without stifling the fragile states and avoiding the logic of direct confrontations between the blocks.

I agree. An independent multilateral France with global influence will be good for balancing the world.

But to reach and stay in that place France needs to counter further U.S. plans to push it out from where the U.S. wants to be.

Will France finally learn how to do that?

Comments

Ed 85
I’m a bit miffed you missed UK 2019.

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 3:13 utc | 201

Ed 85
I’m a bit miffed you missed UK 2019.

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 3:13 utc | 202

Scorpion 97
Poetry

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 3:17 utc | 203

Scorpion 97
Poetry

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 3:17 utc | 204

Just last night I read Pepe Escobar’s latest at The Cradle
https://new.thecradle.co/articles/no-respite-for-france-as-a-new-africa-rises
No respite for France as a ‘New Africa’ rises
A little bit different perspective from b but additive to the discussion of the geopolitical war going on
Posted by: psychohistorian | Sep 2 2023 17:47 utc | 12
Very informative article.
It is a good time to point out that Dr V V Putin’s doctoral thesis is titled (English translation) – MINERAL AND RAW MATERIALS RESOURCES AND THE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY FOR THE RUSSIAN ECONOMY
From Pepe’s article
“..Assorted Mali tribes continue the merry smuggling of anything they fancy. AQIM still extracts illegal taxation. ISIS in Libya is deep into human and narcotics trafficking. And Boko Haram wallows in the cocaine and heroin market. ..”
How do the cocaine and heroin get to Africa? I imagine synthetic “drugs” also get smuggled. Hashish and opiates are an ancient cargo.

Posted by: Ново З | Sep 3 2023 3:25 utc | 205

Just last night I read Pepe Escobar’s latest at The Cradle
https://new.thecradle.co/articles/no-respite-for-france-as-a-new-africa-rises
No respite for France as a ‘New Africa’ rises
A little bit different perspective from b but additive to the discussion of the geopolitical war going on
Posted by: psychohistorian | Sep 2 2023 17:47 utc | 12
Very informative article.
It is a good time to point out that Dr V V Putin’s doctoral thesis is titled (English translation) – MINERAL AND RAW MATERIALS RESOURCES AND THE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY FOR THE RUSSIAN ECONOMY
From Pepe’s article
“..Assorted Mali tribes continue the merry smuggling of anything they fancy. AQIM still extracts illegal taxation. ISIS in Libya is deep into human and narcotics trafficking. And Boko Haram wallows in the cocaine and heroin market. ..”
How do the cocaine and heroin get to Africa? I imagine synthetic “drugs” also get smuggled. Hashish and opiates are an ancient cargo.

Posted by: Ново З | Sep 3 2023 3:25 utc | 206

Just last night I read Pepe Escobar’s latest at The Cradle
https://new.thecradle.co/articles/no-respite-for-france-as-a-new-africa-rises
No respite for France as a ‘New Africa’ rises
A little bit different perspective from b but additive to the discussion of the geopolitical war going on
Posted by: psychohistorian | Sep 2 2023 17:47 utc | 12
Very informative article.
It is a good time to point out that Dr V V Putin’s doctoral thesis is titled (English translation) – MINERAL AND RAW MATERIALS RESOURCES AND THE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY FOR THE RUSSIAN ECONOMY
From Pepe’s article
“..Assorted Mali tribes continue the merry smuggling of anything they fancy. AQIM still extracts illegal taxation. ISIS in Libya is deep into human and narcotics trafficking. And Boko Haram wallows in the cocaine and heroin market. ..”
How do the cocaine and heroin get to Africa? I imagine synthetic “drugs” also get smuggled. Hashish and opiates are an ancient cargo.

Posted by: Ново З | Sep 3 2023 3:26 utc | 207

Just last night I read Pepe Escobar’s latest at The Cradle
https://new.thecradle.co/articles/no-respite-for-france-as-a-new-africa-rises
No respite for France as a ‘New Africa’ rises
A little bit different perspective from b but additive to the discussion of the geopolitical war going on
Posted by: psychohistorian | Sep 2 2023 17:47 utc | 12
Very informative article.
It is a good time to point out that Dr V V Putin’s doctoral thesis is titled (English translation) – MINERAL AND RAW MATERIALS RESOURCES AND THE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY FOR THE RUSSIAN ECONOMY
From Pepe’s article
“..Assorted Mali tribes continue the merry smuggling of anything they fancy. AQIM still extracts illegal taxation. ISIS in Libya is deep into human and narcotics trafficking. And Boko Haram wallows in the cocaine and heroin market. ..”
How do the cocaine and heroin get to Africa? I imagine synthetic “drugs” also get smuggled. Hashish and opiates are an ancient cargo.

Posted by: Ново З | Sep 3 2023 3:26 utc | 208

The right to self determination for the Peoples of Africa can no longer be ignored. I say this openly, and, I would like to add, that even my own family tree is guilty of exploiting the African continent for its resources. The Reid Family, who are actually quite wealthy and are prominent in Denver Colorado, have interest in diamond mines, among other things, on the continent.

Posted by: Joshua | Sep 3 2023 3:45 utc | 209

The right to self determination for the Peoples of Africa can no longer be ignored. I say this openly, and, I would like to add, that even my own family tree is guilty of exploiting the African continent for its resources. The Reid Family, who are actually quite wealthy and are prominent in Denver Colorado, have interest in diamond mines, among other things, on the continent.

Posted by: Joshua | Sep 3 2023 3:45 utc | 210

By my paternal Grandmother’s Mother.

Posted by: Joshua | Sep 3 2023 3:46 utc | 211

By my paternal Grandmother’s Mother.

Posted by: Joshua | Sep 3 2023 3:46 utc | 212

The following comment needs to be repeated until all barflies understand Western social organization reality

What is missing in this discussion is that the countries, like France and USA, no longer exist for the protection and benefit of their citizens. The owners are the Globalists, and the countries are just shells in their shell game. Transfering assets, like African countries, between “countries,” like France and US, is just moving the bean under a different shell. The people under the shells don’t matter except for being targets for taking their assets.
Posted by: barstool | Sep 2 2023 23:20 utc | 83

Posted by: psychohistorian | Sep 3 2023 3:53 utc | 213

The following comment needs to be repeated until all barflies understand Western social organization reality

What is missing in this discussion is that the countries, like France and USA, no longer exist for the protection and benefit of their citizens. The owners are the Globalists, and the countries are just shells in their shell game. Transfering assets, like African countries, between “countries,” like France and US, is just moving the bean under a different shell. The people under the shells don’t matter except for being targets for taking their assets.
Posted by: barstool | Sep 2 2023 23:20 utc | 83

Posted by: psychohistorian | Sep 3 2023 3:53 utc | 214

Love Donbass 21
‘ Creating the demand to provide the supply is one thing that America has elevated to an art form.’
Saddam Hussain being selected by the CIA for his brutality being the perfect example. But it was Winston Churchill who asked the French for Mosul because of its oil, and it was Israel’s Greater Israel fantasy that provided spiritual legitimacy for the project because of their long knowledge of the region since the Captivity 600 BC.
So, more like ballet, coordinated music, dancing, colour and fantasy , than painting, in terms of art form.

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 4:02 utc | 215

Love Donbass 21
‘ Creating the demand to provide the supply is one thing that America has elevated to an art form.’
Saddam Hussain being selected by the CIA for his brutality being the perfect example. But it was Winston Churchill who asked the French for Mosul because of its oil, and it was Israel’s Greater Israel fantasy that provided spiritual legitimacy for the project because of their long knowledge of the region since the Captivity 600 BC.
So, more like ballet, coordinated music, dancing, colour and fantasy , than painting, in terms of art form.

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 4:02 utc | 216

psychohistorian 107
But , but. When I look at pagan stones at Avebury by a religion imported from the Middle East, that’s how it’s always been. We are no more gullible now than we have always been

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 4:12 utc | 217

psychohistorian 107
But , but. When I look at pagan stones at Avebury by a religion imported from the Middle East, that’s how it’s always been. We are no more gullible now than we have always been

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 4:12 utc | 218

I tend to disagree. The US is beyond overstretch at this point. It does not have resources to exploit Africa even if it is in fact behind the push against France. This new serge of independence movement is another headache that the US does not need and cannot handle. I think this is very much the result of a weakening EU and France as part of it. The decline in EU power and wealth is palapable, and now you see the knock on effect in Africa. This is especially true when you note that these African countries are tied to France’s currency, which is inflating away because of the sanction failure. When the white people in Europe show themselves to be fools and idiots, the colonials will start to ask why share with Europe when I can have it all for myself? There was a report recently that Victoria Nuland was in S. Africa begging for help on this issue. The center is collapsing and what you are seeing is the knock on effect on the periphery.

Posted by: deepblue | Sep 3 2023 4:32 utc | 219

I tend to disagree. The US is beyond overstretch at this point. It does not have resources to exploit Africa even if it is in fact behind the push against France. This new serge of independence movement is another headache that the US does not need and cannot handle. I think this is very much the result of a weakening EU and France as part of it. The decline in EU power and wealth is palapable, and now you see the knock on effect in Africa. This is especially true when you note that these African countries are tied to France’s currency, which is inflating away because of the sanction failure. When the white people in Europe show themselves to be fools and idiots, the colonials will start to ask why share with Europe when I can have it all for myself? There was a report recently that Victoria Nuland was in S. Africa begging for help on this issue. The center is collapsing and what you are seeing is the knock on effect on the periphery.

Posted by: deepblue | Sep 3 2023 4:32 utc | 220

Another question for the Pentagon, of dozens: is anyone in NATO doing independent monitoring and auditing of Ukraine’s compliance with the Law of Armed Conflict? What consequences are there for Ukrainian units found to be committing war crimes?
Answers: no and none, apparently.
Ukrainians have official orders to EXECUTE Russian paratroopers on the spot when they surrender
Posted by: Dr. George W Oprisko | Sep 2 2023 21:23 utc | 42
A question that doesn’t seem to get asked or answered: why has Selensjy been insisting on “all-for-all” prisoner exchanges pretty much from day one of the war? (And why is all-for-all now featured in his “peace plan?)
Clearly, Ukraine doesn’t hold anywhere near the number of prisoners Russia does.
Either Russia is much more successful on the battlefield. Or Selensjy has prisoners of war killed systematically.
Either way, it is surprising that Ukraine advertises it’s lack of prisoners. And that nobody asks for the reason.

Posted by: Marvin | Sep 3 2023 4:49 utc | 221

Another question for the Pentagon, of dozens: is anyone in NATO doing independent monitoring and auditing of Ukraine’s compliance with the Law of Armed Conflict? What consequences are there for Ukrainian units found to be committing war crimes?
Answers: no and none, apparently.
Ukrainians have official orders to EXECUTE Russian paratroopers on the spot when they surrender
Posted by: Dr. George W Oprisko | Sep 2 2023 21:23 utc | 42
A question that doesn’t seem to get asked or answered: why has Selensjy been insisting on “all-for-all” prisoner exchanges pretty much from day one of the war? (And why is all-for-all now featured in his “peace plan?)
Clearly, Ukraine doesn’t hold anywhere near the number of prisoners Russia does.
Either Russia is much more successful on the battlefield. Or Selensjy has prisoners of war killed systematically.
Either way, it is surprising that Ukraine advertises it’s lack of prisoners. And that nobody asks for the reason.

Posted by: Marvin | Sep 3 2023 4:49 utc | 222

Should France pray for a new Robespierre?

Posted by: Immaculate deception | Sep 3 2023 6:25 utc | 223

Should France pray for a new Robespierre?

Posted by: Immaculate deception | Sep 3 2023 6:25 utc | 224

The issue makes no sense, american control over western countries is total. At the end of the day everyone in the block will fight for or hand over all of his wealth to the US if the order comes.
The Ukraine war proves it beyond doubt.

Posted by: Satepestage | Sep 3 2023 7:34 utc | 225

The issue makes no sense, american control over western countries is total. At the end of the day everyone in the block will fight for or hand over all of his wealth to the US if the order comes.
The Ukraine war proves it beyond doubt.

Posted by: Satepestage | Sep 3 2023 7:34 utc | 226

the frenchs are the best ideological allies of the usa, cause their national philosphical stance is centered on the notion of individual and universal “human rights”. such a notion allows colonialism, it causes “just wars” to bring back human rights, and fule chauvinism, that’s another trait of modern french. the relationship between france and italy are really poor. they almost always sided with germany against italy, while italy and france got lot of things in common. but they consider italian as africans: inferior people not elnghtened by the civilization. the main obstacle to a mediterranean union is france as it’s now, and colonies contributes a lot to made it as it is now. so i won’t miss french colones and i fdon’t fear usa ones, cause africa is a difficult environment, and usa usually avoided it for this reason, not cause there was the strong france that keeps usa away. then ther’s also the news of a strange character, giuliano amato, that yesterday accused france of shooting italian civilian planes and so killing peoople, but he was just throwed away from an high istitutional postion and got probably some bile problems. apart that amato is famous here cause he taken money in every bank account in italy for dubious fiscal reasons and caused a recession with this brilliant move, so nobody like him

Posted by: Giandavide | Sep 3 2023 8:35 utc | 227

the frenchs are the best ideological allies of the usa, cause their national philosphical stance is centered on the notion of individual and universal “human rights”. such a notion allows colonialism, it causes “just wars” to bring back human rights, and fule chauvinism, that’s another trait of modern french. the relationship between france and italy are really poor. they almost always sided with germany against italy, while italy and france got lot of things in common. but they consider italian as africans: inferior people not elnghtened by the civilization. the main obstacle to a mediterranean union is france as it’s now, and colonies contributes a lot to made it as it is now. so i won’t miss french colones and i fdon’t fear usa ones, cause africa is a difficult environment, and usa usually avoided it for this reason, not cause there was the strong france that keeps usa away. then ther’s also the news of a strange character, giuliano amato, that yesterday accused france of shooting italian civilian planes and so killing peoople, but he was just throwed away from an high istitutional postion and got probably some bile problems. apart that amato is famous here cause he taken money in every bank account in italy for dubious fiscal reasons and caused a recession with this brilliant move, so nobody like him

Posted by: Giandavide | Sep 3 2023 8:35 utc | 228

Posted by: karlof1 | Sep 2 2023 18:47 utc | 26

Clearly, one of the goals in weakening the EU economically via the proxy war against Russia was to limit its ability to act imperially in Africa and elsewhere–to remove it as a competitor.

The EU is not a competitor of the USA in any realm, either economic or geopolitical. The EU and all its institutions are an extension of the USA.
So the USA in its decline is starting to cannibalize its extensions, as it should do, because that’s what extensions of empires partially are for, that’s one of their main roles, to serve as buffers for the centre in situations of decline or danger to the empire.

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Sep 3 2023 9:11 utc | 229

Posted by: karlof1 | Sep 2 2023 18:47 utc | 26

Clearly, one of the goals in weakening the EU economically via the proxy war against Russia was to limit its ability to act imperially in Africa and elsewhere–to remove it as a competitor.

The EU is not a competitor of the USA in any realm, either economic or geopolitical. The EU and all its institutions are an extension of the USA.
So the USA in its decline is starting to cannibalize its extensions, as it should do, because that’s what extensions of empires partially are for, that’s one of their main roles, to serve as buffers for the centre in situations of decline or danger to the empire.

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Sep 3 2023 9:11 utc | 230

Marvin 111
Senselessly

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 9:26 utc | 231

Marvin 111
Senselessly

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 9:26 utc | 232

I have not commented recently – a period of ill health – but I have read the main posts by “b” but not the comments.
A general comment here:
To be an “ally” of the US has its drawbacks ..
example (1 becoming too powerful economically
Japan: the US forced Japan to undertake monetary polices which were not in its interest – result – a weaker Japan and less of an economic threat to US
More recently – forcing further defense spending by Japan – buy from US – result- less for general welfare in Japan and profits for US MIC
example (2 becoming too close to Russia on trade. US sees the danger of alliance between tech savvy Germany and resource rich Russia
Maidan – anti Russia propaganda – Russia no choice but to intervene to protect Russian Donbass – blow up NS2 to make sure; result cheap Russian gas replaced with much more expensive US LNG – deindustrialization – some German companies moving to US – inflation – Germany much weaker economically – hence EU weaker ; Russia isolated from Western Europe as its cowardly Leminesque political leaders take their cue from US State Dept and are not acting for the benefit of European Citizenry who are now much poorer.
example (3 An ally not supporting the US line – France and Iraq
France screwed on the Australian submarine deal – Australia also screwed as it has to pay exorbitant sums to US MIC for tackle over which it has no overall control and which it really does not need- result for Australia – less money for citizen welfare – Perth now a target in future conflict with its “major” trading partner
Africa – French kicked out – it has major resource links – and the US moves in etc.

Posted by: Don Firineach | Sep 3 2023 10:03 utc | 233

I have not commented recently – a period of ill health – but I have read the main posts by “b” but not the comments.
A general comment here:
To be an “ally” of the US has its drawbacks ..
example (1 becoming too powerful economically
Japan: the US forced Japan to undertake monetary polices which were not in its interest – result – a weaker Japan and less of an economic threat to US
More recently – forcing further defense spending by Japan – buy from US – result- less for general welfare in Japan and profits for US MIC
example (2 becoming too close to Russia on trade. US sees the danger of alliance between tech savvy Germany and resource rich Russia
Maidan – anti Russia propaganda – Russia no choice but to intervene to protect Russian Donbass – blow up NS2 to make sure; result cheap Russian gas replaced with much more expensive US LNG – deindustrialization – some German companies moving to US – inflation – Germany much weaker economically – hence EU weaker ; Russia isolated from Western Europe as its cowardly Leminesque political leaders take their cue from US State Dept and are not acting for the benefit of European Citizenry who are now much poorer.
example (3 An ally not supporting the US line – France and Iraq
France screwed on the Australian submarine deal – Australia also screwed as it has to pay exorbitant sums to US MIC for tackle over which it has no overall control and which it really does not need- result for Australia – less money for citizen welfare – Perth now a target in future conflict with its “major” trading partner
Africa – French kicked out – it has major resource links – and the US moves in etc.

Posted by: Don Firineach | Sep 3 2023 10:03 utc | 234

This was the same scenario in Rwanda in the early 1990’s. The US-trained and supplied rebel army overthrew the Belgian colonial government culminating in the ethnic genocide in April 1994.

Posted by: ronmac | Sep 3 2023 10:38 utc | 235

This was the same scenario in Rwanda in the early 1990’s. The US-trained and supplied rebel army overthrew the Belgian colonial government culminating in the ethnic genocide in April 1994.

Posted by: ronmac | Sep 3 2023 10:38 utc | 236

From Gareth Evans, former Australian Foreign Affairs Minister and CEO of theInternational Crisis Group from 2000 to 2009: “Our defence & security policy is running off the rails & demands a fundamental rethink.” He commends Sam Roggeveen’s new book that argues we are exaggerating China threat, getting too close to the US, neglecting diplomacy esp w SE Asia
“A compelling voice for rethinking Australia’s national security”
https://johnmenadue.com/a-compelling-voice-for-rethinking-australias-national-security/

Posted by: Menz | Sep 3 2023 10:57 utc | 237

From Gareth Evans, former Australian Foreign Affairs Minister and CEO of theInternational Crisis Group from 2000 to 2009: “Our defence & security policy is running off the rails & demands a fundamental rethink.” He commends Sam Roggeveen’s new book that argues we are exaggerating China threat, getting too close to the US, neglecting diplomacy esp w SE Asia
“A compelling voice for rethinking Australia’s national security”
https://johnmenadue.com/a-compelling-voice-for-rethinking-australias-national-security/

Posted by: Menz | Sep 3 2023 10:57 utc | 238

The US chased France out of the Great Lakes Region in 1994 when it installed Paul Kagame after supporting him against Rwanda/France for the better part of 4 years. France came back recently and is still in RWanda.
I am not convinced that the rebellions in West Africa are undertaken to help the USA take over from France although the risks are real.

Posted by: John Philpot | Sep 3 2023 11:07 utc | 239

The US chased France out of the Great Lakes Region in 1994 when it installed Paul Kagame after supporting him against Rwanda/France for the better part of 4 years. France came back recently and is still in RWanda.
I am not convinced that the rebellions in West Africa are undertaken to help the USA take over from France although the risks are real.

Posted by: John Philpot | Sep 3 2023 11:07 utc | 240

It seems there are only a handful of what I will call Tier 1 countries – having means and will to defend own sovereignty. Then there are those which have means (at least on paper) but not the will or will without means – Tier 2. And then those which have neither.
So Niger is something of a slap-fight between two Tier 2’s – if Niger were actually quailied as Tier 2.
Its two bad there is not some superior which could make peoples of different regions, behave cooperatively and respectfully.
Anyway back to real life:
Looks like France is having to learn its place – result of weak leadership, skilled only in following orders. US headed in same direction.
One needs to recognize difference between wishes and reality in analyzing circumstances. Its good to have a dream, however.

Posted by: jared | Sep 3 2023 12:42 utc | 241

It seems there are only a handful of what I will call Tier 1 countries – having means and will to defend own sovereignty. Then there are those which have means (at least on paper) but not the will or will without means – Tier 2. And then those which have neither.
So Niger is something of a slap-fight between two Tier 2’s – if Niger were actually quailied as Tier 2.
Its two bad there is not some superior which could make peoples of different regions, behave cooperatively and respectfully.
Anyway back to real life:
Looks like France is having to learn its place – result of weak leadership, skilled only in following orders. US headed in same direction.
One needs to recognize difference between wishes and reality in analyzing circumstances. Its good to have a dream, however.

Posted by: jared | Sep 3 2023 12:42 utc | 242

Sadly France is as weak as Germany as slightly less than Australia. Who did the Americans throw under the bus first?
Australia! They made Australia fight with China when even Britain ,France and Germany wouldn’t let out a squeek. Australia lost so much of its trade with China ..land guess who filled in the orders for China? The US! Official statistics showed it!
Then the US buried France by making it lose the Australian submarine orders and the former found out about it from the newspapers.Who will supply the submarines now? Mainly the US.
Washington then blew up Germany’s Nordstream pipelines and , who got most of the gas contracts for freedom molecules? The US!
Not enough backstabbing occurred , so who did they kill again? France ! Niger for the cheap uranium and wanting sole-influence of currency and military bases in West Africa.
So tell me..when will the US actually spill its enemy’s blood rather than that of its own friends?

Posted by: Wondrous | Sep 3 2023 12:46 utc | 243

Sadly France is as weak as Germany as slightly less than Australia. Who did the Americans throw under the bus first?
Australia! They made Australia fight with China when even Britain ,France and Germany wouldn’t let out a squeek. Australia lost so much of its trade with China ..land guess who filled in the orders for China? The US! Official statistics showed it!
Then the US buried France by making it lose the Australian submarine orders and the former found out about it from the newspapers.Who will supply the submarines now? Mainly the US.
Washington then blew up Germany’s Nordstream pipelines and , who got most of the gas contracts for freedom molecules? The US!
Not enough backstabbing occurred , so who did they kill again? France ! Niger for the cheap uranium and wanting sole-influence of currency and military bases in West Africa.
So tell me..when will the US actually spill its enemy’s blood rather than that of its own friends?

Posted by: Wondrous | Sep 3 2023 12:46 utc | 244

Well, I suppose I skimmed a little too hastily –
The take away from B’s post is that what’s happening in Niger is that USA is screwing France again. Change of management. France should be pissed.
But France/Macron too focused on trying to be head of what’s left of EU.

Posted by: jared | Sep 3 2023 12:58 utc | 245

Well, I suppose I skimmed a little too hastily –
The take away from B’s post is that what’s happening in Niger is that USA is screwing France again. Change of management. France should be pissed.
But France/Macron too focused on trying to be head of what’s left of EU.

Posted by: jared | Sep 3 2023 12:58 utc | 246

Posted by: Ed | Sep 2 2023 23:28 utc | 85
Regime changes?
Don’t forget to add
1967 Greece
1974 Cyprus
1975 Australia.

Posted by: Wondrous | Sep 3 2023 13:28 utc | 247

Posted by: Ed | Sep 2 2023 23:28 utc | 85
Regime changes?
Don’t forget to add
1967 Greece
1974 Cyprus
1975 Australia.

Posted by: Wondrous | Sep 3 2023 13:28 utc | 248

In response to Johan Kaspar@115,
Europe has been made an extension of the US artificially, and remains so primarily due to lack of political will to change the status quo. American strategic planners are right to worry about waning US influence in Europe in the long term, and Cookies Nuland was acting rationally in denying the EU a market expansion through Ukraine — Fuck the EU. While cannibalizing one’s vassals is an indication of decline, its primary function is to weaken them in order to make them easier to control, so it is also an indication of their potential power, real or perceived, relative to the suzerain.

Posted by: Skiffer | Sep 3 2023 13:41 utc | 249

In response to Johan Kaspar@115,
Europe has been made an extension of the US artificially, and remains so primarily due to lack of political will to change the status quo. American strategic planners are right to worry about waning US influence in Europe in the long term, and Cookies Nuland was acting rationally in denying the EU a market expansion through Ukraine — Fuck the EU. While cannibalizing one’s vassals is an indication of decline, its primary function is to weaken them in order to make them easier to control, so it is also an indication of their potential power, real or perceived, relative to the suzerain.

Posted by: Skiffer | Sep 3 2023 13:41 utc | 250

Look at the map again. Can you identify “former” British colonies on the Gulf of Guinea?
Pro-Tips:
1.First Guineas struck by the Royal Mint, 1663; British India, William IV, silver Rupee, 1835; IMF Articles 1945, Schedule A Quota p42, British India: George IV silver rupee
2. Louis d’Or Hundred Years War, 1640; Compagnie des Indes reserves; and BIS unit of account
3. Josep Borrell, the EU’s foreign policy chief, embraces Niger’s now ousted president Mohamed Bazoum back in early July (Photo: European Union)
4. irony
Continuity is not well understood.

Posted by: sln2002 | Sep 3 2023 13:42 utc | 251

Look at the map again. Can you identify “former” British colonies on the Gulf of Guinea?
Pro-Tips:
1.First Guineas struck by the Royal Mint, 1663; British India, William IV, silver Rupee, 1835; IMF Articles 1945, Schedule A Quota p42, British India: George IV silver rupee
2. Louis d’Or Hundred Years War, 1640; Compagnie des Indes reserves; and BIS unit of account
3. Josep Borrell, the EU’s foreign policy chief, embraces Niger’s now ousted president Mohamed Bazoum back in early July (Photo: European Union)
4. irony
Continuity is not well understood.

Posted by: sln2002 | Sep 3 2023 13:42 utc | 252

@ Ed | Sep 2 2023 23:28 utc | 85
US involved Coups Regime change
They also missed Greece
The Greek Civil War, 1944-1949
22 May 2020 … Britain formally withdrew from Greece in early 1947, but American military advisors tipped the tide in favor of the Greek government after … many deaths, mass imprisonment of WW2 Partisans, Communists and underground militias … they also took away all the guns.
American military advisors ? Much more than that ..
Greek junta – Wikipedia
The 1967 coup and the following seven years of military rule were the culmination of 30 years of national division between the forces of the left and the right, … INSTALLED BY USA

Posted by: Lavrov’s Dog | Sep 3 2023 14:30 utc | 253

@ Ed | Sep 2 2023 23:28 utc | 85
US involved Coups Regime change
They also missed Greece
The Greek Civil War, 1944-1949
22 May 2020 … Britain formally withdrew from Greece in early 1947, but American military advisors tipped the tide in favor of the Greek government after … many deaths, mass imprisonment of WW2 Partisans, Communists and underground militias … they also took away all the guns.
American military advisors ? Much more than that ..
Greek junta – Wikipedia
The 1967 coup and the following seven years of military rule were the culmination of 30 years of national division between the forces of the left and the right, … INSTALLED BY USA

Posted by: Lavrov’s Dog | Sep 3 2023 14:30 utc | 254

Don Firineach | Sep 3 2023 10:03 utc | 117, glad to read that you are well once more. Nice to have you back. I enjoy your summaries and most certainly the music links on a Sunday morning. ;o)

Posted by: Lantern Dude | Sep 3 2023 14:30 utc | 255

Don Firineach | Sep 3 2023 10:03 utc | 117, glad to read that you are well once more. Nice to have you back. I enjoy your summaries and most certainly the music links on a Sunday morning. ;o)

Posted by: Lantern Dude | Sep 3 2023 14:30 utc | 256

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 4:02 utc | 108
##############
Trust in man is always fleeting. We can only trust in Tawakkul.
One thing we can be reliably sure of is that if the West claims anything, it is likely a lie. Sometimes artful, often clumsy.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Sep 3 2023 14:51 utc | 257

Posted by: Giyane | Sep 3 2023 4:02 utc | 108
##############
Trust in man is always fleeting. We can only trust in Tawakkul.
One thing we can be reliably sure of is that if the West claims anything, it is likely a lie. Sometimes artful, often clumsy.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Sep 3 2023 14:51 utc | 258

France can only exercise power by colonizing undeveloped nations and peoples. Without its colonies France will have neither the natural resources or enough labor to succeed in an world dominated by market society.

Posted by: Wilikins | Sep 3 2023 18:30 utc | 259

France can only exercise power by colonizing undeveloped nations and peoples. Without its colonies France will have neither the natural resources or enough labor to succeed in an world dominated by market society.

Posted by: Wilikins | Sep 3 2023 18:30 utc | 260

Les élites politiques et cercles du pouvoir en France sont américanisées entre la dernière période de Chirac et la présidence Sarkozy. Les hauts cadres du Quai d’Orsay ont été renouvelé avec le changement de génération, avec les nouveaux ayant été biberonné à l’atlantisme infusé par les cercles d’agit-prop habituels reliés derrière les rideaux au NED et ses avatars. Y compris les organes de presse bien sûr.
Ce qui ce passe depuis environ 2009, sous Juppé au Quai. c’est que la classe politique ***croit*** tout bêtement dans le discours des yanquis. Et soit parce qu’ils sont achetés, ou vénals, soit qu’ils sont la mentalité du vassal soumis et tête à claques, rien ne change.
Un cas exemplaire était le racket avec otage économique opéré par les yanquis pour prendre le contrôle de Alstom. Dans n’importe quel pays ayant un minimum de sens civique et de sens de soi comme nation, il y aurait riposte contre des américains, et alliance avec les chinois et les russes, pour forcer Washington. Mais non … tout le monde s’est couché.
Ceci dit, le même mécanisme avec l’Allemagne depuis le racket infligé à Siemens, puis l’affaire montée contre Volkswagen.
Comme disait Poutine: l’UE sert de paillasson volontairement aux Etats-Unis.

Posted by: Timur | Sep 3 2023 18:52 utc | 261

Les élites politiques et cercles du pouvoir en France sont américanisées entre la dernière période de Chirac et la présidence Sarkozy. Les hauts cadres du Quai d’Orsay ont été renouvelé avec le changement de génération, avec les nouveaux ayant été biberonné à l’atlantisme infusé par les cercles d’agit-prop habituels reliés derrière les rideaux au NED et ses avatars. Y compris les organes de presse bien sûr.
Ce qui ce passe depuis environ 2009, sous Juppé au Quai. c’est que la classe politique ***croit*** tout bêtement dans le discours des yanquis. Et soit parce qu’ils sont achetés, ou vénals, soit qu’ils sont la mentalité du vassal soumis et tête à claques, rien ne change.
Un cas exemplaire était le racket avec otage économique opéré par les yanquis pour prendre le contrôle de Alstom. Dans n’importe quel pays ayant un minimum de sens civique et de sens de soi comme nation, il y aurait riposte contre des américains, et alliance avec les chinois et les russes, pour forcer Washington. Mais non … tout le monde s’est couché.
Ceci dit, le même mécanisme avec l’Allemagne depuis le racket infligé à Siemens, puis l’affaire montée contre Volkswagen.
Comme disait Poutine: l’UE sert de paillasson volontairement aux Etats-Unis.

Posted by: Timur | Sep 3 2023 18:52 utc | 262

@Lantern Dude | Sep 3 2023 14:30 utc | 128
Thank you!
I’ve been into softer sounds recently – not yet ready to dance a jig!
4 Hours Classical Music for Sleeping
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqJuVSu58oI&t=2199s

Posted by: Don Firineach | Sep 3 2023 19:49 utc | 263

@Lantern Dude | Sep 3 2023 14:30 utc | 128
Thank you!
I’ve been into softer sounds recently – not yet ready to dance a jig!
4 Hours Classical Music for Sleeping
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqJuVSu58oI&t=2199s

Posted by: Don Firineach | Sep 3 2023 19:49 utc | 264

in defence of the Americans, they always know a good cook (cuck) when they see one

Posted by: chris m | Sep 3 2023 22:22 utc | 265

in defence of the Americans, they always know a good cook (cuck) when they see one

Posted by: chris m | Sep 3 2023 22:22 utc | 266

Apparently, we Africans have no agency and cannot live without another white master. Nevermind that we’ve been organizing for years to end the France-Afrique système of monetary nazism and hegemonic french imperialism. This weak analysis totally skirts over the current rumbles of building a new fédération which would include Guinée, Faso, Mali and Niger that will serve as a springboard for a sovereign United States of Africa as was envisioned by Gaddafi before he was murdered by France and NATO. Should Cedeao and NATO attack Niger, it will only accelerate the process. Apparently, europeans lose all logical faculties when it comes to Africa. Why should we ask the USA to leave first ? You first attack the weakest amongst the hyenas and move on to tougher task…
Posted by: Im Lesage | Sep 2 2023 19:22 utc | 33
Hear, hear!

Posted by: farm ecologist | Sep 4 2023 0:08 utc | 267

Apparently, we Africans have no agency and cannot live without another white master. Nevermind that we’ve been organizing for years to end the France-Afrique système of monetary nazism and hegemonic french imperialism. This weak analysis totally skirts over the current rumbles of building a new fédération which would include Guinée, Faso, Mali and Niger that will serve as a springboard for a sovereign United States of Africa as was envisioned by Gaddafi before he was murdered by France and NATO. Should Cedeao and NATO attack Niger, it will only accelerate the process. Apparently, europeans lose all logical faculties when it comes to Africa. Why should we ask the USA to leave first ? You first attack the weakest amongst the hyenas and move on to tougher task…
Posted by: Im Lesage | Sep 2 2023 19:22 utc | 33
Hear, hear!

Posted by: farm ecologist | Sep 4 2023 0:08 utc | 268

Posted by: John Marks | Sep 2 2023 18:15 utc | 18
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guinea-Bissau
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_African_CFA_franc
They used the West African franc and effectively became an economic colony of France rather than Portugal.

Posted by: Colin | Sep 4 2023 2:42 utc | 269

Posted by: John Marks | Sep 2 2023 18:15 utc | 18
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guinea-Bissau
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_African_CFA_franc
They used the West African franc and effectively became an economic colony of France rather than Portugal.

Posted by: Colin | Sep 4 2023 2:42 utc | 270

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Sep 2 2023 20:25 utc | 50
The bourgeoisie will not allow anyone to do anything really different.
Elections are just circuses. Period.

Posted by: Colin | Sep 4 2023 2:43 utc | 271

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Sep 2 2023 20:25 utc | 50
The bourgeoisie will not allow anyone to do anything really different.
Elections are just circuses. Period.

Posted by: Colin | Sep 4 2023 2:43 utc | 272

France can only be independent if it fully understands and then acts on Henry Kissinger’s famous admission:
“To be an enemy of America can be dangerous, but to be a friend is fatal.”
France only needs to look at the horrific plight of Germany or, better yet, Ukraine to see what happens when you are an American “ally.”

Posted by: ak74 | Sep 4 2023 4:44 utc | 273

France can only be independent if it fully understands and then acts on Henry Kissinger’s famous admission:
“To be an enemy of America can be dangerous, but to be a friend is fatal.”
France only needs to look at the horrific plight of Germany or, better yet, Ukraine to see what happens when you are an American “ally.”

Posted by: ak74 | Sep 4 2023 4:44 utc | 274

Posted by: Skiffer | Sep 3 2023 13:41 utc | 125

While cannibalizing one’s vassals is an indication of decline, its primary function is to weaken them in order to make them easier to control, so it is also an indication of their potential power, real or perceived, relative to the suzerain.

Interesting point of view. But without a formal and complete political union, a ‘United States of Europe’, Europe cannot realize its potential power. And I don’t think the EU will evolve from its current status as an administrative extension of the USA. This is Europe’s final destination until something very big happens, like a collapse of the USA due to its gross economic mismanagement.

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Sep 4 2023 7:15 utc | 275

Posted by: Skiffer | Sep 3 2023 13:41 utc | 125

While cannibalizing one’s vassals is an indication of decline, its primary function is to weaken them in order to make them easier to control, so it is also an indication of their potential power, real or perceived, relative to the suzerain.

Interesting point of view. But without a formal and complete political union, a ‘United States of Europe’, Europe cannot realize its potential power. And I don’t think the EU will evolve from its current status as an administrative extension of the USA. This is Europe’s final destination until something very big happens, like a collapse of the USA due to its gross economic mismanagement.

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Sep 4 2023 7:15 utc | 276

I wish I could find the original source, but I recently read a study of regime change operations involving the United States since 1950. The total came to more than 60, some successful, some not, and IIRC, this did not include some of the more recent ones in Africa.
Posted by: Rob | Sep 2 2023 22:29 utc | 76
You may be thinking of William Blum’s Killing Hope, currently available from the Internet Archive:
https://archive.org/stream/pdfy-y_8iHigC3Ms5TngF/BLUM%20killing%20hope_djvu.txt
(Try to make a donation to support the Archive.)

Posted by: Gene Poole | Sep 4 2023 14:49 utc | 277

I wish I could find the original source, but I recently read a study of regime change operations involving the United States since 1950. The total came to more than 60, some successful, some not, and IIRC, this did not include some of the more recent ones in Africa.
Posted by: Rob | Sep 2 2023 22:29 utc | 76
You may be thinking of William Blum’s Killing Hope, currently available from the Internet Archive:
https://archive.org/stream/pdfy-y_8iHigC3Ms5TngF/BLUM%20killing%20hope_djvu.txt
(Try to make a donation to support the Archive.)

Posted by: Gene Poole | Sep 4 2023 14:49 utc | 278

@psychohistorian | Sep 2 2023 17:47 utc | 12:
In his piece in The Cradle, Pepe does not have a bad word about the US, does not expose its role in France’s African losses. I tell you for sure, this guy is a CIA controlled asset, limited-hangout operator.

Posted by: pepa65 | Sep 4 2023 23:50 utc | 279

@psychohistorian | Sep 2 2023 17:47 utc | 12:
In his piece in The Cradle, Pepe does not have a bad word about the US, does not expose its role in France’s African losses. I tell you for sure, this guy is a CIA controlled asset, limited-hangout operator.

Posted by: pepa65 | Sep 4 2023 23:50 utc | 280

2005 – DuctapeFatwa posted in Nov. 2005: US to Outsource Invasion of Syria to NATO.
2006 – Stephen Hadley announced Neocon playbook for regime change in Syria in conjunction with ME policy and Israel.
Post a number of colour revolutions …
2008 – Bush-Cheney @Bucharest Summit NATO a declaration of war as expansion of Georgia and Ukraine is mandated. In August, Russia foiled NATO attempt to establish a port in the Black Sea.
Interim years the war narrative and propaganda Russophobia takes form. Statements repeated by Ivo Daalder and John Kerry to make Russia a pariah state. See Atlantic Council and NATO General Breedlove … old fashioned hard-nosed anti-Communist motivator.
2011 – gross error by Russian president Medvedev not to veto UNSC Resolution 1973 for military intervention (regime change) by NATO in Libya under disguise of “R2P” dogma of 3 witches in the Obama administration. CIA man general Haftar moved from his exile in Virginia to oil rich district of Sirte.
From Libya the Arab states and Turkey supported jihadists and global AQ terrorists move with heavy arms into northern Syria. “Freedom fighters” to remove President Assad.
Attempt by US-UK-France plus NATO to oust Russia from its sole naval port of Tartus in the Mediterranean Sea. After slaughter of 400,000, Assad requested support from ally Putin and Russia in August 2015. The fighters of ISIL rooted in Anbar province and provoked by the US illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq, conquered large parts of the country before moving into Syria along the Euphrates river and valley into HQ Raqqa. US and NATO had to clean-up their own mess as the “freedom fighters” did their task too thoroughly … ask Saudi Prince Bandar who oversaw the terror in Syria against Assad.
After Georgia, the Ukraine was next on the agenda of (VP) Joe Biden … head of war crimes and mass murder. Where is Karim Khan?
In December 2017, former SG of NATO Jaap de Hoop Scheffer penned a revealing opinion piece in De Volkskrant stating NATO crossed Russia’s red lines by the decisions made in Bucharest in 2008.
All the events mentioned by b above, were well planned in the War Campaign to confront Russia and start a proxy war in the territory of the Ukraine. All meetings and visits by Biden-Blinken-Austin during 2021 were part of bullying resisting nations into submission and compliance. I called it Joe Biden’s Blitzkrieg across Europe. Waiting for Chancellor Angela Merkel to retire. So Germany got the tandem Scholz and Baerbock …. MORONS — SHAME.
Do not underestimate the importance of the intelligence coalitions of the Five – Nine – Fourteen Eyes in combination with the Jewish State of Israel. The Dutch are the Ears and Eyes of the NSA-GCHQ and Mossad. Israel has free reign inside the Netherlands for decades. The Dutch must have been using NSO Group’s Pegasus for many years. Close ally of Israel.

    The Netherlands tapped the phones of Mexican drugs baron Joaquin Guzman ’El Chapo’ for several months on behalf of the US, because Dutch privacy laws were not as strict as those in America or Canada. The Dutch used Net App of Verint in police investigation and prosecution of high crimes. No serious Islamic attacks have had success in the country.
    In December 2014, the Dutch MIVD infiltrated the Russian SVR HQ in Moscow … AIVD shared data on “Cozy Bear” with US, helping thwart a State Department hack.
    Mossad has an operational HQ at Schiphol airport according to a statement by Rafi Eitan in a documentary.

Successor to VVD leader Mark Rutte is Dilan Yeşilgöz-Zegerius with a strong pro-Israel bias. Can even be worse as Dutch politician. Born in Türkiye.

Posted by: Oui | Sep 5 2023 9:49 utc | 281

2005 – DuctapeFatwa posted in Nov. 2005: US to Outsource Invasion of Syria to NATO.
2006 – Stephen Hadley announced Neocon playbook for regime change in Syria in conjunction with ME policy and Israel.
Post a number of colour revolutions …
2008 – Bush-Cheney @Bucharest Summit NATO a declaration of war as expansion of Georgia and Ukraine is mandated. In August, Russia foiled NATO attempt to establish a port in the Black Sea.
Interim years the war narrative and propaganda Russophobia takes form. Statements repeated by Ivo Daalder and John Kerry to make Russia a pariah state. See Atlantic Council and NATO General Breedlove … old fashioned hard-nosed anti-Communist motivator.
2011 – gross error by Russian president Medvedev not to veto UNSC Resolution 1973 for military intervention (regime change) by NATO in Libya under disguise of “R2P” dogma of 3 witches in the Obama administration. CIA man general Haftar moved from his exile in Virginia to oil rich district of Sirte.
From Libya the Arab states and Turkey supported jihadists and global AQ terrorists move with heavy arms into northern Syria. “Freedom fighters” to remove President Assad.
Attempt by US-UK-France plus NATO to oust Russia from its sole naval port of Tartus in the Mediterranean Sea. After slaughter of 400,000, Assad requested support from ally Putin and Russia in August 2015. The fighters of ISIL rooted in Anbar province and provoked by the US illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq, conquered large parts of the country before moving into Syria along the Euphrates river and valley into HQ Raqqa. US and NATO had to clean-up their own mess as the “freedom fighters” did their task too thoroughly … ask Saudi Prince Bandar who oversaw the terror in Syria against Assad.
After Georgia, the Ukraine was next on the agenda of (VP) Joe Biden … head of war crimes and mass murder. Where is Karim Khan?
In December 2017, former SG of NATO Jaap de Hoop Scheffer penned a revealing opinion piece in De Volkskrant stating NATO crossed Russia’s red lines by the decisions made in Bucharest in 2008.
All the events mentioned by b above, were well planned in the War Campaign to confront Russia and start a proxy war in the territory of the Ukraine. All meetings and visits by Biden-Blinken-Austin during 2021 were part of bullying resisting nations into submission and compliance. I called it Joe Biden’s Blitzkrieg across Europe. Waiting for Chancellor Angela Merkel to retire. So Germany got the tandem Scholz and Baerbock …. MORONS — SHAME.
Do not underestimate the importance of the intelligence coalitions of the Five – Nine – Fourteen Eyes in combination with the Jewish State of Israel. The Dutch are the Ears and Eyes of the NSA-GCHQ and Mossad. Israel has free reign inside the Netherlands for decades. The Dutch must have been using NSO Group’s Pegasus for many years. Close ally of Israel.

    The Netherlands tapped the phones of Mexican drugs baron Joaquin Guzman ’El Chapo’ for several months on behalf of the US, because Dutch privacy laws were not as strict as those in America or Canada. The Dutch used Net App of Verint in police investigation and prosecution of high crimes. No serious Islamic attacks have had success in the country.
    In December 2014, the Dutch MIVD infiltrated the Russian SVR HQ in Moscow … AIVD shared data on “Cozy Bear” with US, helping thwart a State Department hack.
    Mossad has an operational HQ at Schiphol airport according to a statement by Rafi Eitan in a documentary.

Successor to VVD leader Mark Rutte is Dilan Yeşilgöz-Zegerius with a strong pro-Israel bias. Can even be worse as Dutch politician. Born in Türkiye.

Posted by: Oui | Sep 5 2023 9:49 utc | 282

Hi,
I’m a regular reader and this time I’m going to comment as I’m french. My uncle was a former director for half of subsaharan Africa for a worldwide beverage company. And let me summarize his explanations.
1 France has no strategic interest in french speaking African countries.
2 since the 1990s it has shifted from importing from such countries to a wiser mitigation (like now uranium from Niger accounts for less than 10% of french imports required for its power plants). So experts saying we don’t leave because of natural ressources are just ignorant.
3 the problem is a combination of failed states with elites that have access to their peers and alumni in France. Basically the elites don’t represent the countries and the ethnic borders are the ongoing effect of colonization. When twareg people seek independence, Bamako blamed France for not helping to suppress a legitimate popular claim and Bamako demands help from Paris. Let me remind that back in 1984 Mali asked to enter again the franc CFA as their economy was so weak that it couldn’t get any loan at the conditions offered and guaranteed by the french central banque.
3 the us is losing the world power race and its leadership had nothing left but weakening its closest allies to make sure they wouldn’t be tempted by an alliance with the enemy of the neocons. Same applied with the nord stream and Germanys economy. We can remind that Putin had once offered a defensive alliance to Macron.
4 as a conclusion. It costs to France a lot to keep “friendly” elites in power in countries which don’t bring anything strategically that cannot be found elsewhere (we now import more kazakh uranium than from Niger). Out elite hasn’t been aware of that and fuels anti french feelings instead of leaving and letting these failed African state handle their own fate by themselves even at the price of crisis or conflict. It’s their future not ours

Posted by: Sacha | Sep 8 2023 15:45 utc | 283

Hi,
I’m a regular reader and this time I’m going to comment as I’m french. My uncle was a former director for half of subsaharan Africa for a worldwide beverage company. And let me summarize his explanations.
1 France has no strategic interest in french speaking African countries.
2 since the 1990s it has shifted from importing from such countries to a wiser mitigation (like now uranium from Niger accounts for less than 10% of french imports required for its power plants). So experts saying we don’t leave because of natural ressources are just ignorant.
3 the problem is a combination of failed states with elites that have access to their peers and alumni in France. Basically the elites don’t represent the countries and the ethnic borders are the ongoing effect of colonization. When twareg people seek independence, Bamako blamed France for not helping to suppress a legitimate popular claim and Bamako demands help from Paris. Let me remind that back in 1984 Mali asked to enter again the franc CFA as their economy was so weak that it couldn’t get any loan at the conditions offered and guaranteed by the french central banque.
3 the us is losing the world power race and its leadership had nothing left but weakening its closest allies to make sure they wouldn’t be tempted by an alliance with the enemy of the neocons. Same applied with the nord stream and Germanys economy. We can remind that Putin had once offered a defensive alliance to Macron.
4 as a conclusion. It costs to France a lot to keep “friendly” elites in power in countries which don’t bring anything strategically that cannot be found elsewhere (we now import more kazakh uranium than from Niger). Out elite hasn’t been aware of that and fuels anti french feelings instead of leaving and letting these failed African state handle their own fate by themselves even at the price of crisis or conflict. It’s their future not ours

Posted by: Sacha | Sep 8 2023 15:45 utc | 284