Posted on 11/05/2004 3:52:37 AM PST by Ginifer
Oh la la! This was the first reaction of the French elite yesterday as they learned about President George W Bush's re-election. Having spent much of Tuesday evening celebrating what they believed would be a landslide win for Senator John F. Kerry, the crème de la crème of chic Paris could not believe that Bush had been returned for four more years.
The European elite had been dreaming about how a President Kerry would ratify the Kyoto accords, sign up to the International Criminal Court, cut and run in Iraq, send flowers to Yasser Arafat, and, perhaps, open a dialogue with Osama Bin Laden.
When it became clear that the American voters wanted none of that, the chattering classes in Europe were left speechless.
One television anchor in Paris was literally struck dumb momentarily when, after hours of crowing over Kerry's victory and the American people's supposed liberation from Bushist tyranny, he had to admit that things had gone differently.
Greater shock
The shock felt in Europe was even greater because of the size of Bush's victory. The president won more votes than any candidate in the entire American history.
Dubya - as Bush is known in the Arab world - also became the first, since his father in 1988, to win the presidency with a majority of the popular vote.
People such as French President Jacques Chirac, whose party has won just 16 per cent of the votes in a series of recent elections, or German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder whose party has lost every election in the past two years, would look with envy at the clean sweep made by Bush and his Republican Party on Tuesday.
Until Tuesday the standard excuse by many Europeans who opposed key aspects of Bush's policies was that they were only anti-Bush, not anti-American.
They tried to justify that bit of sophistry with Michael Mooreseque lies about how Bush, having "stolen" the 2000 election, did not really represent the American people.
With Dubya's victory it would no longer be possible for the Hate-America international to pose as merely anti-Bush. Their claim that Bush and his gang of Likudniks had somehow hijacked the United States, has been swept away by American voters.
So, what is "old Europe" going to do? To start with not much of it is left. Schroeder has been trying hard to compensate for the crass opportunism he showed in 2003 over the liberation of Iraq.
He has sent more troops to Afghanistan to help relieve American forces there, and has assumed a major role in training Iraq's new security forces with help from other Nato allies.
The new Spanish government, too, has tried to modify its initial anti-American posture by sending troops to a number of places, including Haiti, to relieve the Americans.
Within the European Union only France, Belgium and Greece had been active on the anti-American front, at least until Tuesday's election. All three governments had made a strategic choice of systematically opposing Bush policies in the hope that a Kerry administration will adopt substantial parts of their foreign policies.
Yesterday, however, all three were making noises about working with the new Bush administration.
The second Bush administration should give them a chance to prove that they have changed course.
A first opportunity to do so would be at the international conference on Iraq, to be held in Egypt next month.
Chirac and company can prove their goodwill by endorsing the democratic process in Iraq and by writing off a substantial chunk of Iraq's foreign debt.
Chirac should also stop backing Yasser Arafat and his old guard in their opposition to the emergence of a new and moderate Palestinian leadership.
Chirac should also be invited to review his policies on a range of other issues, including Iran's nuclear ambitions.
A good part of Tehran's current defiant stance on the issue of uranium enrichment is based on the assumption that Chirac will sabotage any American attempt at taking the issue to the Security Council.
The Islamic Republic is not the only member of the notorious "Axis of Evil" to have played the Europeans against the United States. Syria, too, has counted on support from Paris.
Bush's massive victory strengthens the position of British Prime Minister Tony Blair who may now be persuaded to call an early general election, possibly by February, and is almost certain to win big. Another steadfast ally, Prime Minister John Howard of Australia, won a landslide victory of his own last month.
Bush's re-election is received differently in the Muslim world.
Moderate and democratic forces, from Indonesia to Morocco and passing by Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq will be encouraged by the prospect of four more years of the first US administration to threaten a status quo dominated by despotic regimes.
Bad news for some
Bush's victory, however, is bad news for reactionary despotic regimes, pan-Arabists and Islamofascists who had prayed for a Kerry victory.
Bush now has four full years in which to implement his ambitious plan for political and economic change in the greater Middle East area.
The new Bush administration would now have ample opportunity to help the Palestinians develop a new leadership and return to the peace talks.
The "roadmap for peace" that Bush introduced two years ago was sabotaged by Arafat and to some extent, the Europeans on the assumption that Dubya would be a one-term president.
Tuesday's message is clear: 9/11 changed America, and no one understands and represents that change better than George W. Bush.
The world will have four years in which to absorb that message.
Chirac and company can prove their goodwill by endorsing the democratic process in Iraq and by writing off a substantial chunk of Iraq's foreign debt.
It's odious debt. The Iraqis aren't required to repay it.
President Kerry would ratify the Kyoto accordsWow! In all the excitement of Bush winning this election I clean forgot about Kyoto!
One more thing to be ecstatic about!
No more talk about Kyoto!
Beats their usual reactions, upon being surprised, overtaken or cornered, of "We Surrender!" and "There! The Jews Are Over THERE, Herr Colonel!"
One television anchor in Paris was literally struck dumb momentarily when, after hours of crowing over Kerry's victory and the American people's supposed liberation from Bushist tyranny, he had to admit that things had gone differently.
Wait. Wait. So, what you're telling me, here, is: Dan Rather is FRENCH -- ?!? :)
on the assumption that Dubya would be a one-term president.
That was a serious mistake, wasn't it???
O la la.. merde! les Americains vont rester en Iraq pour toujours! Et nous? nous n'avons rien, rien...
Oh la la! And Viva Bush!
How the election played out during European time could not have been crueler to GW enemys. They all went to bed euphoric at his defeat, doubtless drunk from their premature celebrations.
To wake up with a major hangover and find out it was all a deception, really would have hurt.
One almost thinks a higher authority planned it that way.
Good article! Of course, Chirac has already shown his unwillingness to face reality by snubbing Allawi, who is currently in Belgium.
Knowing Bush...he'll graciously accept the overtures of these countries with a "By Gorsh, water under the bridge sort of way"!
Don't forget about the International Criminal Court. If the U.N. votes AGAINST a war then the U.S. would be viewed as a war criminal and soldiers tried in the International Court. The U.S. would not have passed the "global test" without the pink slip from the U.N..
Don't forget about the International Criminal Court.You're right!!
There's just so much to be ecstatic about.
Somebody should post a list.
Super! Not having to run a campaign during his second term should allow him to keep exerting pressure on the Dims in the Senate - might actually make some real inroads...
The Winners:
Tony Blair
John Paul II
Silvio Berlesconni
Vladimir Putin
The People of Poland
Allawi
Prime Minister of Japan
Ariel Sharon
John Howard
Hammad Karzai
Musharref
The Losers:
Chirac
Shroeder
Paul Martin
Vicente Fox
the Prime Minister of Spain
Tehran
Damascus
Kim Jung Il
Koffi Annan
Rowan Williams
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade
Hugo Chavez
Fidel Castro
Nobel Prize Committee
Only because he will be unable to miss the pile of crow feathers at their feet.
It must suck to be a part of "Old Europe", these days, and for the foreseeable future.
Great read.
I understand what effect the brain drain to the New World had on Europe now.
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