France Is An Enemy Of America



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Topic: Politics > Politics-USA
User: "TR"
Date: 01 Nov 2004 09:26:39 PM
Object: France Is An Enemy Of America
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/timmerman200411011653.asp
November 01, 2004, 4:53 p.m.
French Fables
France's propaganda machine is working to undermine U.S. interests.
By Kenneth R. Timmerman
Every American who still has illusions that a Kerry administration would
succeed in convincing "Old Europe" to help us in Iraq should spend a few
days reading and listening to the French media as they report on the U.S.
elections.
The French, of course, believe that they will elect the next U.S. president.
(In fact, they believe they already have.) The center-right daily Le Figaro
published the results of a poll it commissioned on Friday, Oct. 29, showing
that 71 percent of Frenchmen support Senator Kerry while 82 percent believe
President Bush has made the world a more dangerous place.
Daniel Mermet of French state-run radio is just one of many well-known
French journalists who have abandoned all pretense of reporting the
elections. Instead, he and others of his ilk present blatant campaign
commercials that would make even Mike McCurry and George Stephanopoulos
blush.
"French politicians running for president in 2007 can take heart from the
U.S. elections," Mermet began a recent screed from West Virginia. "The U.S.
election shows you can run on a catastrophic record - that's the case for
Bush - and succeed completely. It shows you can be in the pay of the big oil
companies, you can pass a totally unfair tax cut, you can devastate the
poor, gut social security, ravage the health care system and throw 600,000
people out of work, but that's ok."
I can add a personal experience to the mix. State-run France-3 television
recently invited me to participate in a panel discussion on the U.S.
elections. While I had few expectations of fairness, the extent of the lies
and distortions I encountered was astonishing even by French standards.
The show began with a 52-minute pseudo-documentary, which France-3 producers
claimed they had filmed while embedded with the 1st Calvary Division in
Iraq. I learned the next day from the U.S. embassy officials who process
French media requests for Iraq that the French TV crew never requested to be
embedded. Instead, they had gone to Baghdad on their own, where apparently
they found a public-affairs officer willing to accommodate their request to
accompany troops on non-vital patrols.
Now, I have great respect for "seat of the pants" journalism, having done it
myself - it's gutsy and full of risks. But that's not what French TV viewers
saw.
"They say we're here to fight terrorism," one of the handful of U.S.
soldiers interviewed told the French crew. "I've been here three months and
I haven't seen a terrorist." Asked his opinion of the war and of the U.S.
president, this soldier said that he hated both.
And that was the only opinion French TV viewers heard for 52 minutes of
footage that was remarkable only for a total lack of contact between U.S.
troops and bad people with guns. Without exception, all the soldiers
interviewed expressed opposition to the war, hostility to President Bush,
and said they planned to vote against him. To watch France-3 television, you
would never have guessed that 75 percent of U.S. troops in Iraq have told
U.S. polling firms that they planned to vote for the president.
Even back in Washington, all France-3 could find were opponents of the war,
from Wayne Smith, executive director of Vietnam Veterans of America, to Pat
Gunn, an anti-war mother featured on Socialist Worker Online.
After this bit of Pravda on the Seine, moderator Elise Lucet launched a live
panel discussion. My fellow talking heads were Nadia McCaffrey - a
French-American woman whose 34-year-old son had enlisted in the National
Guard and was killed in Balad, Iraq, on June 22 - and a spokesman for
Democrats Abroad. Mrs. McCaffrey arrived in the studio wearing a huge
Kerry-Edwards button, which she took off just before the show. I wore an
American flag. I was identified as a representative of the Republican party
(which I had told producers I was not). She was introduced as a grieving
mother, who blamed President Bush for the death of her son.
Our moderator oozed sympathy for Mrs. McCaffrey, and encouraged her for
nearly 15 minutes to tell her son's story. Then she turned to me and asked
whether I believed that Patrick McCaffrey was a hero.
"Of course, he's a hero. He was defending our freedom," I said. "But I'd
like to point out that if your hope was to explain the American political
debate to a French audience, you've done our listeners a tremendous
disservice with a 52-minute film of unadulterated bias that gives the
impression not a single U.S. soldier in Iraq supports the war or the
president."
Ms. Lucet didn't let me get even half-way through that sentence. When I
watched the show later with French friends, they burst out laughing. It was
actually comic to see how quickly she transformed from smarmy, caring
hand-holder to partisan attack-dog.
I might still be laughing were it not for the fact that so many Americans
have fallen for Mr. Kerry's absurd contention that under his presidency the
French, the Germans, and the rest of "Old Europe" would come to America's
aid, just as we came to their aid during WWII.
Two nights later, my wife and I were having a splendid dinner in a
15th-century castle on the outskirts of Avallon, a small but beautifully
preserved city at the northern gates of the Burgundy wine country.
Among our table-mates in the giant stone kitchen was a sophisticated and
agreeable French couple. The man had traveled the world on business, and had
set up companies in the United States and in the Arab world. His views - all
so reasonable, all so normal and matter of fact - give a better idea of why
I believe France is becoming the enemy of freedom.
Saddam was a secular leader, he argued. If the United States had wanted to
attack Islamic fundamentalism after 9/11, it should have hit Saudi Arabia.
??
The United States didn't go to Iraq to find WMD, but to gain control of
Iraq's oil and win contracts for Halliburton.
France will never be a target of terrorists, because France is not their
enemy.
And anyway, the core of the Middle East problem not radical Islam, but
Israel. If there were no Israel, everything would return to normal.
Of course, Hitler also believed that Germany's real problem was the Jews.
His "final solution" was applauded by the Arab leaders of the day, the most
prominent of whom was the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, a man whom Yasser Arafat
admired and occasionally claimed was his uncle.
While Kerry supporters in the U.S. may still believe Halliburton is the
great beneficiary of the war in Iraq (tell that to the families of the dozen
Halliburton employees who have been brutally murdered by terrorists), most
thinking Democrats who know the facts know better. We have a debate in the
U.S. over the wisdom of the war, but in France such a debate is taboo. After
all, there are all those Oil-for-Food bribes to hide.
But France, an enemy? When it comes to military power, France doesn't count
for much these days. But they do still have a veto at the U.N., where Mr.
Chirac rallied a coalition of the coerced and the bribed (literally) with
the aim of defeating us and preserving Saddam. Added to that is a formidable
diplomatic and propaganda machine, which is working intensely to undermine
U.S. interests around the world. Radio France International broadcasts
anti-American venom throughout the Arab and Muslim world, and ranks along
with al Jazeera in its incitement of hatred and delegitimizing of the state
of Israel.
To help those French patriots who believe their country still treasures the
values of liberty, free speech, and representative government, we should
consider launching a French language service of Radio Free Europe. Six years
after the fall of the Berlin wall, the French have erected a new wall of
propaganda and anti-American filth. The next American president should help
tear it down.
- Kenneth R. Timmerman is a senior writer for Insight Magazine and author of
The French Betrayal of America. He lived for 18 years in France.
--
http://thereactionary.home.mindspring.com
.

User: "Dermot Donovan"

Title: Re: France Is An Enemy Of America 01 Nov 2004 10:18:28 PM
Isn't pretty much the entire world an enemy of America?
Still, I would suggest to wait until we are thrown out of Iraq and
Afghanistan, before we invade France. I think we should learn from the
valuable experience of Germany, when it tried to bang on too many nations at
once.
DD
"TR" <TR@aol.com> wrote in message
news:P7Dhd.1517$O11.1473@newsread3.news.pas.earthlink.net...

http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/timmerman200411011653.asp

November 01, 2004, 4:53 p.m.
French Fables
France's propaganda machine is working to undermine U.S. interests.

By Kenneth R. Timmerman

Every American who still has illusions that a Kerry administration would
succeed in convincing "Old Europe" to help us in Iraq should spend a few
days reading and listening to the French media as they report on the U.S.
elections.

The French, of course, believe that they will elect the next U.S.

president.

(In fact, they believe they already have.) The center-right daily Le

Figaro

published the results of a poll it commissioned on Friday, Oct. 29,

showing

that 71 percent of Frenchmen support Senator Kerry while 82 percent

believe

President Bush has made the world a more dangerous place.

Daniel Mermet of French state-run radio is just one of many well-known
French journalists who have abandoned all pretense of reporting the
elections. Instead, he and others of his ilk present blatant campaign
commercials that would make even Mike McCurry and George Stephanopoulos
blush.

"French politicians running for president in 2007 can take heart from the
U.S. elections," Mermet began a recent screed from West Virginia. "The

U.S.

election shows you can run on a catastrophic record - that's the case for
Bush - and succeed completely. It shows you can be in the pay of the big

oil

companies, you can pass a totally unfair tax cut, you can devastate the
poor, gut social security, ravage the health care system and throw 600,000
people out of work, but that's ok."

I can add a personal experience to the mix. State-run France-3 television
recently invited me to participate in a panel discussion on the U.S.
elections. While I had few expectations of fairness, the extent of the

lies

and distortions I encountered was astonishing even by French standards.

The show began with a 52-minute pseudo-documentary, which France-3

producers

claimed they had filmed while embedded with the 1st Calvary Division in
Iraq. I learned the next day from the U.S. embassy officials who process
French media requests for Iraq that the French TV crew never requested to

be

embedded. Instead, they had gone to Baghdad on their own, where apparently
they found a public-affairs officer willing to accommodate their request

to

accompany troops on non-vital patrols.

Now, I have great respect for "seat of the pants" journalism, having done

it

myself - it's gutsy and full of risks. But that's not what French TV

viewers

saw.

"They say we're here to fight terrorism," one of the handful of U.S.
soldiers interviewed told the French crew. "I've been here three months

and

I haven't seen a terrorist." Asked his opinion of the war and of the U.S.
president, this soldier said that he hated both.

And that was the only opinion French TV viewers heard for 52 minutes of
footage that was remarkable only for a total lack of contact between U.S.
troops and bad people with guns. Without exception, all the soldiers
interviewed expressed opposition to the war, hostility to President Bush,
and said they planned to vote against him. To watch France-3 television,

you

would never have guessed that 75 percent of U.S. troops in Iraq have told
U.S. polling firms that they planned to vote for the president.

Even back in Washington, all France-3 could find were opponents of the

war,

from Wayne Smith, executive director of Vietnam Veterans of America, to

Pat

Gunn, an anti-war mother featured on Socialist Worker Online.

After this bit of Pravda on the Seine, moderator Elise Lucet launched a

live

panel discussion. My fellow talking heads were Nadia McCaffrey - a
French-American woman whose 34-year-old son had enlisted in the National
Guard and was killed in Balad, Iraq, on June 22 - and a spokesman for
Democrats Abroad. Mrs. McCaffrey arrived in the studio wearing a huge
Kerry-Edwards button, which she took off just before the show. I wore an
American flag. I was identified as a representative of the Republican

party

(which I had told producers I was not). She was introduced as a grieving
mother, who blamed President Bush for the death of her son.

Our moderator oozed sympathy for Mrs. McCaffrey, and encouraged her for
nearly 15 minutes to tell her son's story. Then she turned to me and asked
whether I believed that Patrick McCaffrey was a hero.

"Of course, he's a hero. He was defending our freedom," I said. "But I'd
like to point out that if your hope was to explain the American political
debate to a French audience, you've done our listeners a tremendous
disservice with a 52-minute film of unadulterated bias that gives the
impression not a single U.S. soldier in Iraq supports the war or the
president."

Ms. Lucet didn't let me get even half-way through that sentence. When I
watched the show later with French friends, they burst out laughing. It

was

actually comic to see how quickly she transformed from smarmy, caring
hand-holder to partisan attack-dog.

I might still be laughing were it not for the fact that so many Americans
have fallen for Mr. Kerry's absurd contention that under his presidency

the

French, the Germans, and the rest of "Old Europe" would come to America's
aid, just as we came to their aid during WWII.

Two nights later, my wife and I were having a splendid dinner in a
15th-century castle on the outskirts of Avallon, a small but beautifully
preserved city at the northern gates of the Burgundy wine country.

Among our table-mates in the giant stone kitchen was a sophisticated and
agreeable French couple. The man had traveled the world on business, and

had

set up companies in the United States and in the Arab world. His views -

all

so reasonable, all so normal and matter of fact - give a better idea of

why

I believe France is becoming the enemy of freedom.

Saddam was a secular leader, he argued. If the United States had wanted to
attack Islamic fundamentalism after 9/11, it should have hit Saudi Arabia.

??
The United States didn't go to Iraq to find WMD, but to gain control of
Iraq's oil and win contracts for Halliburton.

France will never be a target of terrorists, because France is not their
enemy.

And anyway, the core of the Middle East problem not radical Islam, but
Israel. If there were no Israel, everything would return to normal.

Of course, Hitler also believed that Germany's real problem was the Jews.
His "final solution" was applauded by the Arab leaders of the day, the

most

prominent of whom was the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, a man whom Yasser

Arafat

admired and occasionally claimed was his uncle.

While Kerry supporters in the U.S. may still believe Halliburton is the
great beneficiary of the war in Iraq (tell that to the families of the

dozen

Halliburton employees who have been brutally murdered by terrorists), most
thinking Democrats who know the facts know better. We have a debate in the
U.S. over the wisdom of the war, but in France such a debate is taboo.

After

all, there are all those Oil-for-Food bribes to hide.

But France, an enemy? When it comes to military power, France doesn't

count

for much these days. But they do still have a veto at the U.N., where Mr.
Chirac rallied a coalition of the coerced and the bribed (literally) with
the aim of defeating us and preserving Saddam. Added to that is a

formidable

diplomatic and propaganda machine, which is working intensely to undermine
U.S. interests around the world. Radio France International broadcasts
anti-American venom throughout the Arab and Muslim world, and ranks along
with al Jazeera in its incitement of hatred and delegitimizing of the

state

of Israel.

To help those French patriots who believe their country still treasures

the

values of liberty, free speech, and representative government, we should
consider launching a French language service of Radio Free Europe. Six

years

after the fall of the Berlin wall, the French have erected a new wall of
propaganda and anti-American filth. The next American president should

help

tear it down.

- Kenneth R. Timmerman is a senior writer for Insight Magazine and author

of

The French Betrayal of America. He lived for 18 years in France.


--
http://thereactionary.home.mindspring.com


.
User: "TR"

Title: Re: France Is An Enemy Of America 01 Nov 2004 11:06:42 PM
"Dermot Donovan" <dnd@dnd.net> wrote in message
news:oUDhd.16732$ta5.10108@newsread3.news.atl.earthlink.net...

Isn't pretty much the entire world an enemy of America?

A special back stabbing distinction goes to France.

Still, I would suggest to wait until we are thrown out of Iraq and
Afghanistan, before we invade France.

There is nothing to gain from invading France. It will soon be a
backwards Muslim state of no interest to anyone.

I think we should learn from the
valuable experience of Germany, when it tried to bang on too many nations
at
once.

Who said anything about banging anything. Do any of you left wing
loosers ever read beyond the title?


"TR" <TR@aol.com> wrote in message
news:P7Dhd.1517$O11.1473@newsread3.news.pas.earthlink.net...

http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/timmerman200411011653.asp

November 01, 2004, 4:53 p.m.
French Fables
France's propaganda machine is working to undermine U.S. interests.

By Kenneth R. Timmerman

Every American who still has illusions that a Kerry administration would
succeed in convincing "Old Europe" to help us in Iraq should spend a few
days reading and listening to the French media as they report on the U.S.
elections.

The French, of course, believe that they will elect the next U.S.

president.

(In fact, they believe they already have.) The center-right daily Le

Figaro

published the results of a poll it commissioned on Friday, Oct. 29,

showing

that 71 percent of Frenchmen support Senator Kerry while 82 percent

believe

President Bush has made the world a more dangerous place.

Daniel Mermet of French state-run radio is just one of many well-known
French journalists who have abandoned all pretense of reporting the
elections. Instead, he and others of his ilk present blatant campaign
commercials that would make even Mike McCurry and George Stephanopoulos
blush.

"French politicians running for president in 2007 can take heart from the
U.S. elections," Mermet began a recent screed from West Virginia. "The

U.S.

election shows you can run on a catastrophic record - that's the case for
Bush - and succeed completely. It shows you can be in the pay of the big

oil

companies, you can pass a totally unfair tax cut, you can devastate the
poor, gut social security, ravage the health care system and throw
600,000
people out of work, but that's ok."

I can add a personal experience to the mix. State-run France-3 television
recently invited me to participate in a panel discussion on the U.S.
elections. While I had few expectations of fairness, the extent of the

lies

and distortions I encountered was astonishing even by French standards.

The show began with a 52-minute pseudo-documentary, which France-3

producers

claimed they had filmed while embedded with the 1st Calvary Division in
Iraq. I learned the next day from the U.S. embassy officials who process
French media requests for Iraq that the French TV crew never requested to

be

embedded. Instead, they had gone to Baghdad on their own, where
apparently
they found a public-affairs officer willing to accommodate their request

to

accompany troops on non-vital patrols.

Now, I have great respect for "seat of the pants" journalism, having done

it

myself - it's gutsy and full of risks. But that's not what French TV

viewers

saw.

"They say we're here to fight terrorism," one of the handful of U.S.
soldiers interviewed told the French crew. "I've been here three months

and

I haven't seen a terrorist." Asked his opinion of the war and of the U.S.
president, this soldier said that he hated both.

And that was the only opinion French TV viewers heard for 52 minutes of
footage that was remarkable only for a total lack of contact between U.S.
troops and bad people with guns. Without exception, all the soldiers
interviewed expressed opposition to the war, hostility to President Bush,
and said they planned to vote against him. To watch France-3 television,

you

would never have guessed that 75 percent of U.S. troops in Iraq have told
U.S. polling firms that they planned to vote for the president.

Even back in Washington, all France-3 could find were opponents of the

war,

from Wayne Smith, executive director of Vietnam Veterans of America, to

Pat

Gunn, an anti-war mother featured on Socialist Worker Online.

After this bit of Pravda on the Seine, moderator Elise Lucet launched a

live

panel discussion. My fellow talking heads were Nadia McCaffrey - a
French-American woman whose 34-year-old son had enlisted in the National
Guard and was killed in Balad, Iraq, on June 22 - and a spokesman for
Democrats Abroad. Mrs. McCaffrey arrived in the studio wearing a huge
Kerry-Edwards button, which she took off just before the show. I wore an
American flag. I was identified as a representative of the Republican

party

(which I had told producers I was not). She was introduced as a grieving
mother, who blamed President Bush for the death of her son.

Our moderator oozed sympathy for Mrs. McCaffrey, and encouraged her for
nearly 15 minutes to tell her son's story. Then she turned to me and
asked
whether I believed that Patrick McCaffrey was a hero.

"Of course, he's a hero. He was defending our freedom," I said. "But I'd
like to point out that if your hope was to explain the American political
debate to a French audience, you've done our listeners a tremendous
disservice with a 52-minute film of unadulterated bias that gives the
impression not a single U.S. soldier in Iraq supports the war or the
president."

Ms. Lucet didn't let me get even half-way through that sentence. When I
watched the show later with French friends, they burst out laughing. It

was

actually comic to see how quickly she transformed from smarmy, caring
hand-holder to partisan attack-dog.

I might still be laughing were it not for the fact that so many Americans
have fallen for Mr. Kerry's absurd contention that under his presidency

the

French, the Germans, and the rest of "Old Europe" would come to America's
aid, just as we came to their aid during WWII.

Two nights later, my wife and I were having a splendid dinner in a
15th-century castle on the outskirts of Avallon, a small but beautifully
preserved city at the northern gates of the Burgundy wine country.

Among our table-mates in the giant stone kitchen was a sophisticated and
agreeable French couple. The man had traveled the world on business, and

had

set up companies in the United States and in the Arab world. His views -

all

so reasonable, all so normal and matter of fact - give a better idea of

why

I believe France is becoming the enemy of freedom.

Saddam was a secular leader, he argued. If the United States had wanted
to
attack Islamic fundamentalism after 9/11, it should have hit Saudi
Arabia.

??
The United States didn't go to Iraq to find WMD, but to gain control of
Iraq's oil and win contracts for Halliburton.

France will never be a target of terrorists, because France is not their
enemy.

And anyway, the core of the Middle East problem not radical Islam, but
Israel. If there were no Israel, everything would return to normal.

Of course, Hitler also believed that Germany's real problem was the Jews.
His "final solution" was applauded by the Arab leaders of the day, the

most

prominent of whom was the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, a man whom Yasser

Arafat

admired and occasionally claimed was his uncle.

While Kerry supporters in the U.S. may still believe Halliburton is the
great beneficiary of the war in Iraq (tell that to the families of the

dozen

Halliburton employees who have been brutally murdered by terrorists),
most
thinking Democrats who know the facts know better. We have a debate in
the
U.S. over the wisdom of the war, but in France such a debate is taboo.

After

all, there are all those Oil-for-Food bribes to hide.

But France, an enemy? When it comes to military power, France doesn't

count

for much these days. But they do still have a veto at the U.N., where Mr.
Chirac rallied a coalition of the coerced and the bribed (literally) with
the aim of defeating us and preserving Saddam. Added to that is a

formidable

diplomatic and propaganda machine, which is working intensely to
undermine
U.S. interests around the world. Radio France International broadcasts
anti-American venom throughout the Arab and Muslim world, and ranks along
with al Jazeera in its incitement of hatred and delegitimizing of the

state

of Israel.

To help those French patriots who believe their country still treasures

the

values of liberty, free speech, and representative government, we should
consider launching a French language service of Radio Free Europe. Six

years

after the fall of the Berlin wall, the French have erected a new wall of
propaganda and anti-American filth. The next American president should

help

tear it down.

- Kenneth R. Timmerman is a senior writer for Insight Magazine and author

of

The French Betrayal of America. He lived for 18 years in France.


--
http://thereactionary.home.mindspring.com




.


User: "js"

Title: Re: France Is An Enemy Of America 01 Nov 2004 09:55:14 PM
Then why aren't we refusing to import the bulk of our flu vaccine from
France?
.
User: "TR"

Title: Re: France Is An Enemy Of America 01 Nov 2004 11:02:44 PM
"js" <js@js.com> wrote in message
news:CyDhd.1543$O11.1149@newsread3.news.pas.earthlink.net...

Then why aren't we refusing to import the bulk of our flu vaccine from
France?

And where is the logic in that?
.
User: "js"

Title: Re: France Is An Enemy Of America 01 Nov 2004 11:08:16 PM

Then why aren't we refusing to import the bulk of our flu vaccine from
France?


And where is the logic in that?

It's called having the cajones to stand by your statement.
.



User: "LastDance"

Title: Re: France Is An Enemy Of America 01 Nov 2004 10:44:11 PM
YOU are the ENEMY = You and your PAL = WE are walking George Bush out the
Back Door!!!
"TR" <TR@aol.com> wrote in message
news:P7Dhd.1517$O11.1473@newsread3.news.pas.earthlink.net...

http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/timmerman200411011653.asp

November 01, 2004, 4:53 p.m.
French Fables
France's propaganda machine is working to undermine U.S. interests.

By Kenneth R. Timmerman

Every American who still has illusions that a Kerry administration would
succeed in convincing "Old Europe" to help us in Iraq should spend a few
days reading and listening to the French media as they report on the U.S.
elections.

The French, of course, believe that they will elect the next U.S.
president. (In fact, they believe they already have.) The center-right
daily Le Figaro published the results of a poll it commissioned on Friday,
Oct. 29, showing that 71 percent of Frenchmen support Senator Kerry while
82 percent believe President Bush has made the world a more dangerous
place.

Daniel Mermet of French state-run radio is just one of many well-known
French journalists who have abandoned all pretense of reporting the
elections. Instead, he and others of his ilk present blatant campaign
commercials that would make even Mike McCurry and George Stephanopoulos
blush.

"French politicians running for president in 2007 can take heart from the
U.S. elections," Mermet began a recent screed from West Virginia. "The
U.S. election shows you can run on a catastrophic record - that's the case
for Bush - and succeed completely. It shows you can be in the pay of the
big oil companies, you can pass a totally unfair tax cut, you can
devastate the poor, gut social security, ravage the health care system and
throw 600,000 people out of work, but that's ok."

I can add a personal experience to the mix. State-run France-3 television
recently invited me to participate in a panel discussion on the U.S.
elections. While I had few expectations of fairness, the extent of the
lies and distortions I encountered was astonishing even by French
standards.

The show began with a 52-minute pseudo-documentary, which France-3
producers claimed they had filmed while embedded with the 1st Calvary
Division in Iraq. I learned the next day from the U.S. embassy officials
who process French media requests for Iraq that the French TV crew never
requested to be embedded. Instead, they had gone to Baghdad on their own,
where apparently they found a public-affairs officer willing to
accommodate their request to accompany troops on non-vital patrols.

Now, I have great respect for "seat of the pants" journalism, having done
it myself - it's gutsy and full of risks. But that's not what French TV
viewers saw.

"They say we're here to fight terrorism," one of the handful of U.S.
soldiers interviewed told the French crew. "I've been here three months
and I haven't seen a terrorist." Asked his opinion of the war and of the
U.S. president, this soldier said that he hated both.

And that was the only opinion French TV viewers heard for 52 minutes of
footage that was remarkable only for a total lack of contact between U.S.
troops and bad people with guns. Without exception, all the soldiers
interviewed expressed opposition to the war, hostility to President Bush,
and said they planned to vote against him. To watch France-3 television,
you would never have guessed that 75 percent of U.S. troops in Iraq have
told U.S. polling firms that they planned to vote for the president.

Even back in Washington, all France-3 could find were opponents of the
war, from Wayne Smith, executive director of Vietnam Veterans of America,
to Pat Gunn, an anti-war mother featured on Socialist Worker Online.

After this bit of Pravda on the Seine, moderator Elise Lucet launched a
live panel discussion. My fellow talking heads were Nadia McCaffrey - a
French-American woman whose 34-year-old son had enlisted in the National
Guard and was killed in Balad, Iraq, on June 22 - and a spokesman for
Democrats Abroad. Mrs. McCaffrey arrived in the studio wearing a huge
Kerry-Edwards button, which she took off just before the show. I wore an
American flag. I was identified as a representative of the Republican
party (which I had told producers I was not). She was introduced as a
grieving mother, who blamed President Bush for the death of her son.

Our moderator oozed sympathy for Mrs. McCaffrey, and encouraged her for
nearly 15 minutes to tell her son's story. Then she turned to me and asked
whether I believed that Patrick McCaffrey was a hero.

"Of course, he's a hero. He was defending our freedom," I said. "But I'd
like to point out that if your hope was to explain the American political
debate to a French audience, you've done our listeners a tremendous
disservice with a 52-minute film of unadulterated bias that gives the
impression not a single U.S. soldier in Iraq supports the war or the
president."

Ms. Lucet didn't let me get even half-way through that sentence. When I
watched the show later with French friends, they burst out laughing. It
was actually comic to see how quickly she transformed from smarmy, caring
hand-holder to partisan attack-dog.

I might still be laughing were it not for the fact that so many Americans
have fallen for Mr. Kerry's absurd contention that under his presidency
the French, the Germans, and the rest of "Old Europe" would come to
America's aid, just as we came to their aid during WWII.

Two nights later, my wife and I were having a splendid dinner in a
15th-century castle on the outskirts of Avallon, a small but beautifully
preserved city at the northern gates of the Burgundy wine country.

Among our table-mates in the giant stone kitchen was a sophisticated and
agreeable French couple. The man had traveled the world on business, and
had set up companies in the United States and in the Arab world. His
views - all so reasonable, all so normal and matter of fact - give a
better idea of why I believe France is becoming the enemy of freedom.

Saddam was a secular leader, he argued. If the United States had wanted to
attack Islamic fundamentalism after 9/11, it should have hit Saudi Arabia.

??
The United States didn't go to Iraq to find WMD, but to gain control of
Iraq's oil and win contracts for Halliburton.

France will never be a target of terrorists, because France is not their
enemy.

And anyway, the core of the Middle East problem not radical Islam, but
Israel. If there were no Israel, everything would return to normal.

Of course, Hitler also believed that Germany's real problem was the Jews.
His "final solution" was applauded by the Arab leaders of the day, the
most prominent of whom was the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, a man whom Yasser
Arafat admired and occasionally claimed was his uncle.

While Kerry supporters in the U.S. may still believe Halliburton is the
great beneficiary of the war in Iraq (tell that to the families of the
dozen Halliburton employees who have been brutally murdered by
terrorists), most thinking Democrats who know the facts know better. We
have a debate in the U.S. over the wisdom of the war, but in France such a
debate is taboo. After all, there are all those Oil-for-Food bribes to
hide.

But France, an enemy? When it comes to military power, France doesn't
count for much these days. But they do still have a veto at the U.N.,
where Mr. Chirac rallied a coalition of the coerced and the bribed
(literally) with the aim of defeating us and preserving Saddam. Added to
that is a formidable diplomatic and propaganda machine, which is working
intensely to undermine U.S. interests around the world. Radio France
International broadcasts anti-American venom throughout the Arab and
Muslim world, and ranks along with al Jazeera in its incitement of hatred
and delegitimizing of the state of Israel.

To help those French patriots who believe their country still treasures
the values of liberty, free speech, and representative government, we
should consider launching a French language service of Radio Free Europe.
Six years after the fall of the Berlin wall, the French have erected a new
wall of propaganda and anti-American filth. The next American president
should help tear it down.

- Kenneth R. Timmerman is a senior writer for Insight Magazine and author
of The French Betrayal of America. He lived for 18 years in France.


--
http://thereactionary.home.mindspring.com

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