27.12.07

The assassination of Benazir Bhutto and neocolonial politics


I was reading few days ago the excellent portrait written by Tariq Ali in the LRB of Benazir in particular and the Bhuttos and Pakistani politics in general. I was struck by the level of resemblance between Pakistani and Lebanese politics, and by the similarities of the trajectories of politicians from both countries.

I thought that this is the fate of countries who are still very much under disguised and sometimes not so much disguised colonial rule. Well, today, learning of the assassination of Benazir, I thought that the resemblance with Lebanese politics was taken to its extreme. Let's then meditate this citation from Benazir's father which figured in Ali's article:

I entirely agree that the people of Pakistan will not tolerate foreign hegemony. On the basis of the self-same logic, the people of Pakistan would never agree to an internal hegemony. The two hegemonies complement each other. If our people meekly submit to internal hegemony, a priori, they will have to submit to external hegemony. This is so because the strength and power of external hegemony is far greater than that of internal hegemony. If the people are too terrified to resist the weaker force, it is not possible for them to resist the stronger force. The acceptance of or acquiescence in internal hegemony means submission to external hegemony.


Also:
William Dalrymple on Pakistan's flawed and feudal princess
Bhutto's son, 19, to take over his mother's role as Pakistan opposition leader. The game of internal nad external hegemony continues in Pakistan.
Jason Burke: his journey with Benazir.
The day I spent on the campaign trail with her this month was vintage Benazir. At first I interviewed her in a relatively formal fashion. Then I put my notebook away and we simply talked - about her ambitions, Pakistan, the coming elections and, of course, the various threats against her. As ever, I was impressed by her intelligence and courage and depressed by her delusions and ego

23.12.07

Please help this children charity


Aldea de ninos Cristo Rey, Guayaquil, Ecuador, is a children charity run, since its inception more than thirty years ago, by the same man and the same local team, with the goal of keeping a capacity of up to fifty children orphans or abandoned, educating them and caring for their well being until adulthood. They don't do adoptions and they have never been in this business, that's the main aspect of this charity.

The man behind Aldea de ninos is a Belgian doctor, a laic missionary, who devoted all his adult life to this organisation in Ecuador. He never practised Medecine for a living. He is a wonderful human being who is everything for these children, a doctor, an educator, a counselor, and a surrogate father.

The charity receives most of its money from European donors in Belgium, France, and Germany, and from local donors. That's why you won't find an English version to their website which is quite new. I hope that my readers can visit their site, judge by themselves, and help this big family in raising their children.

Joyeux Noël Bruno à toi et aux enfants de Cristo Rey.

22.12.07

Another Sad Christmas in Palestine

The following video montage is from SteveLeicesterUK.

Happy Christmas to all my readers, friends, parents in Lebanon and Montreal, to the peoples of the Middle East and other conflict areas in the world, and all those who are trapped behind walls. My thoughts are with them.
Thanks Steve. Video found through Dr. Norman Finkelstein's site.

21.12.07

'Sheherazade at the white house'

Le Monde Diplomatique is a great read every month. But it is available only through subscription. Here is an excerpt from one of January's 2008 issue articles:

The image becomes the story

For Bush's speech on the first anniversary of 9/11, in which he prepared US public opinion for the Iraq invasion by glorifying the "great struggle that tests our strength and even more our resolve", Sforza rented three barges to take
the team to the foot of the Statue of Liberty, which he had lit from below. He chose the camera angles so that the statue appeared in the background during the speech. Frank Rich, commenting on this, quoted Michael Deaver, who stage-managed Ronald Reagan's declaration of candidacy speech in 1980 with
the Statue of Liberty in the background. According to Deaver, people understood that what was around the speaker's head was
as important as the head itself (5).

What is around the head turns an image into a legend: "Mission accomplished", the Founding Fathers, the Statue of Liberty - over time the image becomes the story. But the event must resonate with the viewer, must make two moments interact: what is represented in the image and the actual moment it is seen. This resonance produces the desired emotion. For Americans in 2002 nothing could have had a greater emotional impact than a speech on war on the first anniversary of 9/11. The country had just come back from summer holidays and was ready to concentrate on important matters.

According to Ira Chernus, professor at the University of Colorado, Karl Rove applied the "Scheherazade strategy": "When policy dooms you, start telling stories - stories so fabulous, so gripping, so spellbinding that the king (or, in this case, the American citizen who theoretically rules our country) forgets all about a lethal policy. It plays on the insecurity of Americans who feel that their lives are out of
control" (6). Rove did this with much success in 2004 when Bush was re-elected, diverting voters' attention away from the state of the war by evoking the great collective myths of the US imagination.

As Chernus explains, Rove was "betting that the voters will be mesmerised by John Wayne-style tales of real men fighting evil on the frontier - at least enough Americans to avoid the death sentence that the voters might otherwise pronounce on the party that brought us the disaster in Iraq." Chernus believed that Rove invented simplistic good-against-evil stories for his candidates to tell and tried to turn every election into a moral drama, a contest of Republican moral clarity versus Democratic moral confusion. "The Scheherazade strategy is a great scam, built on the illusion that moralistic tales can make us feel secure, no matter what's
actually going on out there in the world. Rove wants every vote for a Republican to be a symbolic statement" (7). This August Rove was forced to resign by Democrat members of Congress. He announced his decision with an admission which could have applied to all his work: "I feel like I'm Moby Dick... they're after me."
________________________________________________________

Christian Salmon wrote Storytelling, la machine à fabriquer
des histoires, La Découverte, Paris, 2007

20.12.07

Lebanon and The Puppeteers

Read carefully this interesting press review from Syria Comment on the deadlock in the Lebanese crisis to elect a president and tell me how many puppeteers can you count in these stories ?

The only sense we can make of such news is that Lebanese Politcians are puppets and seem happy with the fact, especially those of March 14th who let Bush and Sarkozy speak on their behalf. I have one objection however, the role of the puppeteer Syria is exaggerated by Sarkozy and Bush. That's to hide their own role as puppets masters.

I mean read the title at Syria Comment: 'Bush, Sarkozy, and Mualem face off'. That's hilarious because to make sense of this you have either to inflate Mualem or to deflate Bush and Sarkozy. And Mouallem seems to be more than happy to play the game.

On the recently assassinated Lebanese general



Photo courtesy UrShalim

From the Lebanese blogosphere
Remarkz:
'Does this look like a guy the "Syrian-Iranian axis" would try to kill?' Only if they want to shoot themselves in the foot.
And on François El-Hajj at UrShalim
Syria Comment: 'Anti-March 14th general assassinated'
FPW: 'When In Doubt, Blame Syria'

Amira Al Husseini at Global voices: 'Who killed François Hajj and why ?'
My post on the killing of François El-Hajj.

Oh and one last thing, even if it means for me not being able to return to Lebanon in the future, Samir Gea'gea shouldn't have been pardoned by the Lebanese parliament, including the Hezbollah and Aounist MPs, and let out from prison, for his crimes during the civil war, especially the crimes he committed eliminating any potentiel rival from the Christian camp. He is a very bad apple, among many in Lebanon, but probably the most dangerous and unprincipled one. The man used to claim that the virgin Mary speaks to him.

18.12.07

Islam and Modernity: The interrupted Dialogue

The paradox of recent western intellectual interest for Islam is that it is embedded in contradiction; there is a strong call for the secularisation of Islam and, at the same time, a deliberate verging on Racism and hysteria from self appointed western liberals and secularists, making the dialogue, between Islam and modernity, Islam and secularism, illusory, if not impossible.

Some may argue that there was never a dialogue between Islam and modernity. This is a gross misinterpretation of history, and of the geography of Islam and its multiplicity. History tells us that Islam was the west's intellectual portal to modernity and that Arabic translations of Greek philosophers formed the basis for the first true enlightenment, well before the 18th century enlightenment . There is little common ground between these different Muslim individuals: a Saudi Muslim, a Syrian Muslim, a Palestinian Muslim, an Iranian Muslim, an Indian, a Lebanese, an Indonesian, a Turkish Muslim, and so on...
Some may argue that it is Muslim immigration to the west, and the lack of integration to their host countries, that is the problem behind the 'clash of civilisation'. However, demographic data show us that Muslims in the west and in most Muslim countries have completed their demographic transition toward a more secular society, they have high levels for the education of their children, boys and girls included, lower fertility and birth rates, better birth control, and so on...

The current question for a dialogue between Islam and the West is best formulated by Parvez Manzoor:

The unspeakable horrors of 9/11 and the subsequent ‘war on terror’ have put a big question mark on the future of Islam’s dialogue with modernity. The total collapse of moral order in the gruesome chain of kidnappings and decapitations in Fallujah and the annulment of war ethics and sanctioning of sadistic savagery in Abu-Ghuraib are hardly likely to promote further conversation. Any Muslim reflection on modernity as a universal insight into the human condition has therefore little meaning in a world where the Muslim has to run constantly for cover. Modernity’s claim for authority has now been eclipsed by the imperial demands for compliance and acquiescence – not only politically but also ideologically, not only militarily but also morally. What cogency then can an Islamic critique of modernity have, when the authority of modernity now simply reads as the power of Empire?


Mr. Manzoor concludes that the best way to resume the dialogue is through Faith and a dialogue on Transcendance. While I do not agree, as an atheist, that Faith is the best route for Tolerance and dialogue between religions, I am forced to admit that secular western intellectuals have been unheard advocating a dialogue. On the contrary, they have been embracing the imperial enterprise of the west on Muslim countries in the name of values, values, they insist, are part of the Judeo-Christian culture, promoted by nobody else than Zionist Jews and Christians alike ,on the basis of the fact that the US was founded only on Judeo-Christian principles. It is as if History starts with the foundation of the Americas and the new empire. If we are to take History seriously, one may speak of a Judeo-Muslim-Christian culture before promoting this false dichotomy between Judeo-Christian values and Islamic values, because this is the history of the people of the Middle East and Europe. There was no such a dichotomy before the new empire, the US, was even born. However, self appointed liberals are espousing this dichotomy in the name of western secularism whose only assumption is a false and contradictory one; the assumption that Christianity and Judaism are secular religions while Islam is not. Therefore, Islam should secularise or cease to exist. No self appointed secular is ready to recognise that Judaism and Christianity were never forced to secularise at a fast pace and without economic development and individual freedoms. So, our self appointed western secularists call islamic regimes who opress their people as moderate while they oppose any Islamic liberation movement from the inside. This is the contradiction at the heart of secular western critiques of Islam and one that is understood by Ordinary Muslims as a call for submission; Submission to the secular 'God' instead of submission to their faith. This is definitely an imperial enterprise supported by secularists either with their full knowledge or with an implicit bias toward the cultural roots of their own religion, in which case they are not true secularists.

I have therefore to admit, in the face of the failure of modern western secularism to promote Tolerance, a failure for which secularism is not the only responsible ( and this could be the subject of yet another lenghty post), that a dialogue on Transcendance and Faith is all we are left with in order to end this modern war of religions.

It is in this spirit that the atheist in me, and the midlle eastern Christian from a minority culture in the ME, recognises the role of Faith in society to end the non sensical ongoing religious war. And it is in this spirit that I wish my fellow bloggers and readers, Christians, Jews, and Muslims, and people from other Faith or non faith, a happy Christmas and peace for the new year.

Tariq Ali: Mullahs and Heretics, a secular history of Islam

Turkey's secularism and the resurgence of eligion in the public sphere in the UK, the US, and France.

14.12.07

Al-Qaida attacks Annapolis peace conference

My first thought: Who cares ?
My second thought: that's too much honor for Annapolis.

My two thoughts pulled together: Everything Bush does is a failure and everything Al-Qaida does is a failure too, and each party's media appearances are meant to save the other from its repeated failures.

Thanks the media.

Annapolis Blues

12.12.07

Lebanon: bomb kills senior general


I had the intuition that the talks about the next president weren't going anywhere. My assumption was that USrael and its Lebanese clients, March 14th, did not have any interest in the stabilisation of the country.

The man tipped to be the next head of Lebanon's army, Brig Gen Francois Hajj, was killed today by a car bomb in a Beirut suburb.


And as the hopes of the Lebanese were hanging on the only institution in the country that is not involved in dirty politics and clientelism, the army, to save the country from a civil war and a political deadlock, I had the intuition that the army was going to be a target. You see, Lebanese Politics is as simple as this: any time a solution is profiled, it is bombed, in the metaphorical and real senses of the word. And the culprits are designated immediately by March 14th: Syria, Iran, Syria-Iran, Iran-Syria, and now for the first time, the Syria-Iran AXIS. It doesn't matter for them that the bomb went on in a Christian neighbourhood, their theory is immune to refutation by facts, logic and pretty much anything else.

When I was a child learning about God and the bible in school I was told by the nuns that God is everywhere. And in my child's mind I wondered if God was living in my fridge or sleeping in my bed. Sometimes I would wake up at night fearful and implore God to let me sleep alone.
Like God and the primitf christian cathechism destined to make children obediant, we are told by March 14th and the Sanyura government that Syria and Iran are everywhere in Lebanon, they so much fill the air and the space that they live in our organs, they occupy our houses and sleep in our beds, and eventually bomb the hell out of us any time it is convenient for March 14th or their mentors !

Lebanon is the new middle earth, a country of doom, full of Nazgûls, ghosts, and dark masters, without the necessary counterpart of hobbits and courageous wizards.

The Syrian-backed opposition party Hizbullah condemned the attack, saying Hajj was a "friend" of the Lebanese people, al-Jazeera television reported.

However, the telecommunications minister, Marwan Hamadeh, accused the "Syrian-Iranian axis" of hitting the military - "the only body in Lebanon who can balance the power of Hezbollah and other militias in the country."


Related: Israel increasingly concerned with Lebanese elections, In January 2007, March 14th officials told Al-Siyassah, a koweiti newspaper known for its March 14th propaganda, among other, that François El-Hajj should be tried foir siding with the Aoun-Hezbollah opposition. Those March 14th who are mourning El-Hajj today by pointing fingers at the Syria-Iran axis know very well that they are just shedding crocodile tears...

In a larger context, what may be at stake now in Lebanon is the ability of those Neo-cons who still want to attack Iran (understand those who take their orders from Israel) to keep Lebanon as an open front for civil war, pulling the rug under the feet of those in Washington who want to talk to Iran. There is definitely a rift among the Neo-cons and any step Lebanon makes toward civil war away from consensus and stability will serve the pro war camp.

11.12.07

The Trials of Guantanamo

Since its debut in 2002, Guantanamo bay detention center for alleged terrorists, operated by the US, drew criticism. Indeed, everything was outside the basic norms for Human and legal rights there from the beginning. But we were in uncharted territory, and everybody was willing to see terrorists tried. And so Guantanamo was, as were Bush's popularity scores, and the international sympathy for the US after 9/11, for those who supported the War On Terror but were unwilling to give up the rule of law and the basics for Human rights, a mere possibility for the triumph of natural justice on the debris of 9/11 and over the new world chaos. A possibility to discipline this chaos and quell our fears and our angst. And not to discard the skeptics, among them myself, despite all its initial flaws, Guantanamo was, for the believer, at the same time, a window of opportunity and a test. An opportunity to show terrorists and the world how free and democratic societies uphold their values and a test on the intentions of the leaders of the whole business of the War On Terror.

Unfortunately for both the skeptics and the believers, as much as the War On Terror has gone awry from the very beginning by displacing itself quickly from Afghanistan to Iraq, Guantanamo did not cease drifting into tragic nonsense, dramatic excess, torture memos, suicide of detainees, unhuman treatment of prisoners, psychological terror, lack of evidence, amateurish justice, resignation of military prosecutors, and the latest, political maneuvering of the prosecution and sentencing processes coinciding with national elections and in countries involved in The War On Terror like Australia and the US, or with how warm a country's relations are with the US, like Saudi Arabia.

I am sure everybody has heard by now about the recent resignation of chief military prosecutor Morris Davis. His comes in a string of other resignations from military personnel having served in the military court in Guantanamo, starting as early as 2005, or as when the justice set up there by the Bush administration started to move toward trying the detainees.

Colonel Davis for instance refused to consider as evidence testimonies acquired by waterboarding. He was uneasy with the secrecy of the tribunal. And he refused political maneuvering and direct intervention in the judicial process. He cites two cases as clear political maneuvering:
The hasty prosecution and sentencing, through a deal struck between the 'prosecution' and the defense, without his knowledge as chief prosecutor, but with the proper pressure from the Pentagon, of Australian David Mattew Hicks to 9 months in Prison, while the same charges have resulted in a 20 years sentence for John Walker Lindh, the American Taliban. As an insider to the process, colonel Davis told today's CBC's 'The Current' host Anna Maria Tremonti that the only explanation to this nonsense is that the Bush adminstration wanted to take the heat off Australian John Howard before the elections because the detention of Hicks in Guantanamo drew wide criticism against Howard. Colonel Davis told Mrs Tremonti some other examples of gross political maneuvering, over Guantanamo detainees and the due process of justice, made by the Bush administration and its politically appointed henchmen in the judiciary like Susan Crawford and William Haynes. Listen to the interview in The Current, part.2, here.

This maneuvering is being made with the sixtysomething remaining potentially chargeable detainees, from the initial 775 allegedly guilty but later proven innocent detainees, most of them have been freed from Guantanmo, and the others will be, one day, if the US can find them a homeland again, and if they are not dead of despair. These detainees were amassed with much zeal and little regard to anything else than political or financial motives by the Pakistani secret services in the wake of 9/11. Michael Winterbottom has made a great documentary style movie about the capture, detention, interrogation, and the liberation of three Britons , or the Tipton Three, who were held in Guantanamo. The testimonies of the Tipton three show how the Pakistani secret service collected men from mosque and delivered them to the US under pressure to create the impression that the War On Terror was a success in Afghanistan.

And so when we think of Guantanamo and the stain it has brought on our western society we will have to add one more shameful fact, not only we torture there, not only we disprespect Human life and the rule of law, but we have also created, with the manipulation of justice for political ends, a new form of slavery, political slavery, the slavery of those who don't have rights and who exist only in a unlawful and moral space created to serve our leaders' political ambitions and agenda. Old slavery was for economic and domestic comfort. This newly created form of slavery is a political comfort zone.
Who is Bush's god ? The one who speaks to him when he needs inspiration ? The answer is clear. It is Satan himself. And what did the Bush administration prove to the believers in the War On Terror like colonel Davis ? At best, that the War On Terror is a farce. I prefer not to think about the worse.

UPDATE, february 21st 2008: Ex-chief prosecutor at Guantanamo, Col. Morris Davis, to aid defense by appearing as a witness for political interference in the judiciary process.

Related:

Pierre Tristam: The courtly Gore of Gitmo
My review of Michael Winterbottom's 'The Road To Guantanamo'
Torture and Terror: Bush's and Bin Laden's victories, everybody Else's defeat.

9.12.07

Italy's former president to Corriere della Sera: 9/11 is an inside job

"Former Italian President and the man who revealed the existence of Operation Gladio Francesco Cossiga has gone public on 9/11, telling Italy's most respected newspaper that the attacks were run by the CIA and Mossad and that this was common knowledge amongst global intelligence agencies."
..."Cossiga's new revelations appeared last week in Italy's oldest and most widely read newspaper, Corriere della Sera. Below appears a rough translation.
"[Bin Laden supposedly confessed] to the Qaeda September [attack] to the two towers in New York [claiming to be] the author of the attack of the 11, while all the [intelligence services] of America and Europe ... now know well that the disastrous attack has been planned and realized from the CIA American and the Mossad with the aid of the Zionist world in order to put under accusation the Arabic Countries and in order to induce the western powers to take part ... in Iraq [and] Afghanistan."
Cossiga first expressed his doubts about 9/11 in 2001, and is quoted in Webster Tarpley's book as stating that "The mastermind of the attack must have been a “sophisticated mind, provided with ample means not only to recruit fanatic kamikazes, but also highly specialized personnel. I add one thing: it could not be accomplished without infiltrations in the radar and flight security personnel
.”
...Cossiga is the one who revealed "the existence of, and his part in setting up, Operation Gladio - a rogue intelligence network under NATO auspices that carried out bombings across Europe in the 60's, 70's and 80's.
Gladio's specialty was to carry out what they coined "false flag operations," terror attacks that were blamed on their domestic and geopolitical opposition.
Cossiga's revelations contributed to an Italian parliamentary investigation of Gladio in 2000, during which evidence was unearthed that the attacks were being overseen by the U.S. intelligence apparatus.
In March 2001, Gladio agent Vincenzo Vinciguerra stated, in sworn testimony, "You had to attack civilians, the people, women, children, innocent people, unknown people far removed from any political game. The reason was quite simple: to force ... the public to turn to the state to ask for greater security
."

Related:

What did Israel know before 9/11 ?, 9/11: The French Knew Too Much, Boston 9/11 Truth Tea Party and Conference
, Movie: Romanzo Criminale

Other blogs discussing the story:
Chimes of Freedom, Prison Planet, AfterMathNews, Media Monarchy, Chycho, Veterans for 9/11 Truth

7.12.07

Gaza Calling

A video from Blogger Haitham Sabbah.


Gaza is becoming quickly another Warsaw Ghetto. Medical services, fuel, electricity, food, and other life sustaining items are being cut by Israel amidst international silence, Fatah's criminal complicity, and Israeli supreme court approval. Please watch Haitham's video and spread the word. Palestinians in Gaza need urgent help.

Related:
Old Brit's post on the Red Cross appeal and the humanitarian crisis in Palestine

My articles about Gaza:
Deaths on a Gazan beach
Forgetting Gaza.1
Beit Hanoun: Another Palestinian Tragedy
Forgetting Gaza.2
What really happened in Gaza ?

Also from Haitham: Anthem for someone's child

5.12.07

Palestine and Israel: One State to end the conflict

The School for Oriental and African Studies, London, organised a conference on the One State Solution for Israel and Palestine last November.

"Over the past several years the failure of the two-state approach has led to a resurgence of interest in a one-state solution and the London conference brings together many who have written or spoken in favor of it."


The conference gave way to a declaration on the One State Solution, published in Counterpunch. The declaration is worth reading because its clarity contrasts with the vague agenda of the two state solution. People who are still promoting the two state solution, not only failed many times, but were never specific about what a Palestinian state could or should be.
"The two-state solution ignores the physical and political realities on the ground, and presumes a false parity in power and moral claims between a colonized and occupied people on the one hand and a colonizing state and military occupier on the other. It is predicated on the unjust premise that peace can be achieved by granting limited national rights to Palestinians living in the areas occupied in 1967, while denying the rights of Palestinians inside the 1948 borders and in the Diaspora. Thus, the two-state solution condemns Palestinian citizens of Israel to permanent second-class status within their homeland, in a racist state that denies their rights by enacting laws that privilege Jews constitutionally, legally, politically, socially and culturally. Moreover, the two-state solution denies Palestinian refugees their internationally recognized right of return.

The two-state solution entrenches and formalizes a policy of unequal separation on a land that has become ever more integrated territorially and economically. All the international efforts to implement a two-state solution cannot conceal the fact that a Palestinian state is not viable, and that Palestinian and Israeli Jewish independence in separate states cannot resolve fundamental injustices, the acknowledgment and redress of which are at the core of any just solution."


Thanks, But No Thanks: A wonderful defence of the One State solution.
"But statehood as such is a relatively recent addition to Palestinian aspirations. The main Palestinian impetus after the disaster of 1948 was that of "return"; it was more about reversing the loss of Arab land and patrimony, than the fulfilment of classical post-colonial self-determination, via statehood."

4.12.07

Question à Sarkozy: Y-a-t-il un système colonial juste ?

Je suis atterrée par les déclarations successives de Sarkozy à l'étranger. A l'image de ses amis Néo-cons américains et internationalistes, Sarkozy n'a que du mérpis pour les pays du tiers monde. Pour lui, ces pays et leurs peuples ne sont qu'une commodité économique, de nouveaux horizons pour les multinationales françaises. Du haut de sa certitude sur tout, y compris même sur la génétique et les maladies mentales, Sarkozy nous assène ses vérités. Combien jusqu'à maintenant ont osé interrogé les vérités fallacieuses de Sarkozy ? Bernard Henri-Lévy s'est empressé de le disculper quant au ton raciste de son discours de Dakar, en l'attribuant à sa plume, Henri Guéant. Sa rhétorique sur la génétique et les maladies mentales fut critiquée seulement par quelques spécialistes. Ségolène Royal, en pleine campagne électorale, s'est même montrée incapable de la juger: "Je laisse cela aux spécialistes", a-t-elle dit, feignant une fausse prudence, comme si les implications dangereuses de ce discours pour la société française lui échappaient totalement, comme si l'idéologie dangereuse d'un homme à la tête de l'état ne devait être que l'affaire des 'spécialistes', des académiciens, des experts, non en idéologies dangereuses, mais en matières académiques détournées pour des idéologies dangereuses.

Sarkozy continue, avec le discours d'Alger, à nous livrer une vision du monde dangereusement néocolonialiste. La dernière 'perle' est là: il semblerait qu'il y ait des sytèmes coloniaux injustes. De cette déclaration découle qu'il existerait nécessairement des systèmes coloniaux justes. Lesquels ? L'Iraq ? Israel ? Et qui définit ce qui est juste et ce qui ne l'est pas ? Le colonisateur ou le colonisé ? Quelqu'un, un journaliste qui a du cran, poserait-il la question à Sarkozy ?

Je suggère que M. Sarkozy en fasse le sujet de la prochaine encyclique envoyée aux enseignants dans les écoles françaises: "Nommez un système colonial juste et dites pourquoi ce système est-il juste."

Ou peut-être fonder un colonialisme 'juste' sera la marque de la politique étrangère de M. Sarkozy ? Tout, jusqu'ici, tend à montrer que Sarkozy travaille dans ce sens.

Mise À jour en date de mercredi 5 décembre 2007: "L'histoire n'est pas morale", a dit M. Sarkozy dans les ruines romaines de Tipaza en Algérie, en réponse à une question sur les demandes de repentance pour le passé colonial de la France en Algérie, formulées par les autorités Algériennes aux autorités Françaises et à Sarkozy en particulier. Dira-t-il la même chose à son ami André Glucksman en parlant de la Shoah et du droit d'Israel à l'existence ?

"A Alger, le président Sarkozy évoque "un système colonial profondément injuste""






Plus sur la position de Bernard Henri Lévy vis-à-vis de la nouvelle morale bon teint bon chic de la gauche.

France and Israel: "When leaders fall in love, so do the people"

Photo AFP

"Sarkozy did not hide his great support for Israel and openly expressed how impressed he was by the young country's achievements," the diplomat said.


"Throughout his presidential campaign, Sarkozy unabashedly declared he was an admirer of Israel. To his inner circle he spoke of a real affinity and on the occasion of his acceptance speech of his party's candidacy for president he described his visit to the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial as one of the two most important events in his life.

"A French diplomat talking on condition of anonymity said the French were rediscovering Israel, and Israel was rediscovering France. "The music sounded by France is very pleasing to Israel, particularly on the Iranian issue. We see eye-to-eye on the issue of Iran nuclear armament," he said.

Israel's ambassador to France, Daniel Shek, also sounded upbeat about the warming of relations.

"I wouldn't say there was a fundamental shift on the basic policies of France toward Israel, but the tone has certainly changed," the ambassador said. "Sarkozy is stating clearly and openly that he is pro-Israel, pro-America and against Iran. What more can you ask for?" "
 
Since March 29th 2006