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The French Betrayal of America

Posted on 03/31/2004 5:09:16 PM PST by SandRat

The French Betrayal of America by Kenneth Timmerman (Author)

Hardcover: 320 pages Publisher: Crown Forum; (March 16, 2004) ISBN: 1400053668

Inside Flap Copy Can we trust France? Apparently not. After more than 200 years of shared history and interests, the U.S.-France marriage looks as if it's ending in an acrimonious divorce. Here is the shocking insider account.

In the wake of French behavior at the United Nations, where Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin systematically undermined the efforts of Secretary of State Colin Powell to convince the Security Council to authorize force against Iraq, Americans have at best come to suspect our ally of double dealing, and at worst come to view them as the enemy. Almost daily over the past year, new stories have emerged of how the government of French President Jacques Chirac has sought to undermine the U.S. war on terror, publicly sniping at America and inciting other countries to do the same. What's wrong with France? What's behind their recent perfidy? According to best-selling author Kenneth R. Timmerman, the American public doesn't know half the story. After they read The French Betrayal of America, American anger at France will turn to outrage.

Timmerman, who worked as a journalist in France for eighteen years and knows the players on both sides, lifts the veil of Jacques Chirac's scandalous love affair with Saddam Hussein, beginning in 1975, when he took him on a tour of top-secret French nuclear facilities. The French attitude toward the dictator, which seemed to baffle American politicians, was in fact entirely predictable. Put bluntly, it was all about money, oil, and guns. Chirac needed Saddam's oil and Saddam's money, and Saddam needed French weapons and French nuclear technology.

Despite this, the relationship between France and America was not only amicable but at times very mutually beneficial. That was until the most recent war on Iraq, where France turned the tables, engaging in dirty diplomacy and helping to sway other European countries to their side. French war coverage was not merely one-sided: It was viciously inaccurate, skewed, and openly anti-American. Timmerman also presents incredible new evidence of France's duplicity, including the fact that the French stood to gain $100 billion from secret oil contracts they had concluded with Saddam Hussein.

The French Betrayal of America raises questions of whether the nuclear cooperation agreements still in force with the French today should be canceled in light of France's behavior. Our security interests no longer converge, and our economic systems increasingly appear to be at loggerheads. The war in Iraq harshly exposed French treachery and their desire to do business with the worst of international tyrants, putting their economy, their international standing, and their relationship with a 200-year-old friend in severe jeopardy.

Shocking new revelations in The French Betrayal of America

The French president lied to Bush and to the public about the war in Iraq. President Jacques Chirac had personally told President George W. Bush well ahead of time that France would be at America's side.

France urged Saddam to commit genocide. Saddam launched his genocidal campaign against the Marsh Arabs in southern Iraq to make their region "safe" for French oil engineers.

France helped build Saddam's long-range missiles and nukes. Based on exclusive access to new documents, provided by Iraq to the United Nations -- that French defense companies were key partners in helping Saddam Hussein perfect the long-range missiles that killed U.S. soldiers in Saudi Arabia in 1991 and rained terror onto Israel.

Chirac has blocked cooperation on a high-profile terrorism case. France's top counter-terrorism judge was ordered to stop cooperating with the United States in the prosecution of Zacarias Moussaoui despite mounds of documents that would have helped the United States to convict Moussaoui of conspiracy to commit mass murder.

France illegally sold U.S. military secrets to Saddam Hussein. A prominent French defense company shipped U.S.-designed laser designator pods to Iraq in the 1980s that compromised the most high-tech weapons in the U.S. arsenal.

President Mitterrand, a Socialist, became Ronald Reagan's best ally in Europe. The French Betrayal of America reveals the extent of French strategic and intelligence cooperation with the United States at the peak of the Cold War, in areas that will surprise readers on both sides of the Atlantic. The French ran a key agent inside the KGB, whose "cosmic" reach -- right up to the general secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union -- hastened the collapse of the Soviet Union.

President Chirac almost went to jail for corruption. Chirac was on the verge of getting indicted on corruption charges in 1999 until he cooked up an immunity deal with the head of the French Supreme Court, former Socialist foreign minister Roland Dumas. While the French corruption scandals are well known in France, they have rarely been reported in the United States and will alternately shock and amuse American readers.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: america; betrayal; brookreview; france; french; frenchbetrayal; kennethrtimmerman; nonallyfrance
This is not an attempt to do anything other than let you all hear that there is an author out there that has got a book out there telling our side of the reason for the French Cowardice and duplicity. It was a war about oil for the French!
1 posted on 03/31/2004 5:09:17 PM PST by SandRat
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To: Ragtime Cowgirl; Radix; HiJinx; Spiff; JackelopeBreeder; Da Jerdge; MJY1288; xzins; Calpernia; ...
PING!

Time heat up the FRENCH BOYCOTT again.
2 posted on 03/31/2004 5:10:21 PM PST by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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To: SandRat
The french have been a pain-in-the-a88 since the dawn of western civilization. Why change now?
3 posted on 03/31/2004 5:12:35 PM PST by Spruce (Retreat? Hell! We just got here!)
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To: SandRat
The boycott slowed down?
4 posted on 03/31/2004 5:15:13 PM PST by olde north church (Barbarity has lost fewer wars than civility has won. ONC's alter-ego)
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To: SandRat
I listened to him on the Dennis Prager show yesterday. His discussion with Prager was very interesting including the part about the French authorities issuing not-so-veiled threats to him about how his wife's car might blow up someday after his wife and kids had gotten into the car and started it up.
5 posted on 03/31/2004 5:15:16 PM PST by vbmoneyspender
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To: SandRat
Can't be. CBSCNNABCNBCNPR says French opposition to the was "principled."

< /sarcasm>
6 posted on 03/31/2004 5:16:57 PM PST by Shermy
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To: SandRat
"After more than 200 years of shared history and interests, the U.S.-France marriage looks as if it's ending in an acrimonious divorce."

The French were unfaithful.

"It is good to hate the French" - Al Bundy

7 posted on 03/31/2004 5:21:15 PM PST by yooper (If you don't know where you're going, any road will take you there......)
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To: SandRat
to the war was "principled."
8 posted on 03/31/2004 5:26:29 PM PST by Shermy
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To: SandRat
After more than 200 years of shared history and interests

Actually the French turned on us immediately after the American Revolution, in a clash known by historians as "The Quasi War". Nothing new here with our fake friends the French.

9 posted on 03/31/2004 5:26:41 PM PST by rageaholic
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To: SandRat
My tagline says it all.
10 posted on 03/31/2004 5:32:04 PM PST by Seruzawa (If you agree with the French raise your hand - If you are French raise both hands.)
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To: SandRat
Got this book last week and will read right after I'm done with "Rumsfeld's War"
Did you guys see that French's UN ambassador DeVillapeepan was replaced with a "Pro-American" replacement?
Is there such a being in France?????
11 posted on 03/31/2004 5:38:40 PM PST by arbee4bush
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To: SandRat
After more than 200 years of shared history and interests, the U.S.-France marriage looks as if it's ending in an acrimonious divorce.

Hah!

Imperial France did not help the American Revolutionaries out of sympathy with the American wish for independence.

After the treaty of Paris which recognised US independance was signed with the UK, America's next conflict was the Naval war of 1798-1801

12 posted on 03/31/2004 5:41:49 PM PST by Oztrich Boy ("It is always tempting to impute unlikely virtues to the cute" - Reinstated Tagline)
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To: SandRat
I didnt know the boycott ended!! I have little use for any thing french outside of cusine, and by God I can cook that myself.
13 posted on 03/31/2004 5:43:40 PM PST by mylife
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To: SandRat; All
Time heat up the FRENCH BOYCOTT again.

Never slacked off in this house. They aided the enemy who was trying to kill my brother and my fellow countrymen. They will NEVER get my money again. EVER. This is not something I can forgive.

14 posted on 03/31/2004 5:46:17 PM PST by StarCMC (Kalen is home!!! Kalen is home!!! Thank you for all your prayers and support!!)
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Comment #15 Removed by Moderator

To: SandRat

16 posted on 03/31/2004 5:53:34 PM PST by Lady Jag (It's in the bag)
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To: mylife
Just sent off the recipe for "Vidalia Onion Soup" to a friend. Used that name for the same reason as "Freedom Fries," "Freedom Toast," "Sinful Chocolate Silk Pie," etc.
17 posted on 03/31/2004 6:00:26 PM PST by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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To: SandRat
bttt
18 posted on 03/31/2004 8:49:26 PM PST by lainde (Heads up...We're coming and we've got tongue blades!!)
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To: SandRat
We need to make sure that a copy of this book is in every Iraqi university.
19 posted on 03/31/2004 8:53:54 PM PST by McGavin999 (Evil thrives when good men do nothing!)
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To: SandRat
Bump!
20 posted on 04/01/2004 9:01:21 PM PST by Alamo-Girl (Glad to be a monthly contributor to Free Republic!)
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