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French show their resentment at latest US invasion
The Times (U.K.) ^ | 05/27/2002 | Charles Bremner

Posted on 05/26/2002 5:22:27 PM PDT by Pokey78

THE Americans landed in force in France yesterday, from the seaside villages of Normandy to the heart of Paris. Their arrival stoked the anger of thousands of protesters who see President Bush as the world’s biggest bully and warmonger.

The presence of the huge presidential entourage for Mr Bush’s first visit to Paris offered France a chance to indulge in the extraordinary mixture of resentment and admiration that it has always held for the United States. It also prompted one of the biggest security operations France has ever mounted for one man, and contrasted starkly with Mr Bush’s warm reception in Russia.

In the capital’s Place de la République and in the Norman city of Caen, there were demonstrations against the “evil empire” of “le cowboy Bush”. The protesters included intellectuals, anti-globalisation champions and officials from the Green and Communist parties that were part of the last Government of Lionel Jospin. “Law not war!” one squad of protesters chanted, in English.

Police moved swiftly to halt one show of protest, clearing the Pont de Grenelle over the Seine after anti-death penalty demonstrators hung silhouettes from the bridge symbolising the 152 prisoners executed during Mr Bush’s governorship of Texas.

Mr Bush, seen as naive and dangerous by the Left in France, embodies the Republican, God-fearing side of America that French intellectuals love to despise.

But while the Left and the satirists lampoon the President, fewer than 10 per cent of French people say that they actively dislike America, a poll found this month.

In Caen, where Mr Bush will today pay homage to the American dead at the D-Day landing beaches, protesters shouted: “No to imperial America.” The President was accused of “using the memory of the soldiers killed fighting Nazism to promote his plan for world domination”.

Hundreds of US Secret Service agents and other personnel have been working for the past fortnight in Paris and Normandy to prepare for Mr Bush’s visit. In the capital, traffic was halted as 20 squadrons of riot police and mobile gendarmerie teams stood guard over the arriving President. Rooftops were searched, manhole covers welded down and snipers’ vantage points watched.

Fear of missile attack led the US Secret Service to reject a French plan to fly Mr Bush by helicopter from Orly airport to the Elysée Palace for his meeting with President Chirac. Instead, after the President stepped from Air Force One on to 80 yards of red carpet, he was driven along sealed roads in an armoured motorcade.

Tourists, café owners and residents chafed behind barriers around the Place de la Concorde, the American Embasssy and the Elysée Palace.

“We’ve never seen a fuss like this,” said one café owner in the Rue de Castiglione. “You’d think it was the Pope, President and the national football team all rolled into one.”

Other bystanders shrugged off the gargantuan security show. “You have to admit, this just reeks of American power,” said Marcel, a pensioner walking his dog. “They are like the Romans in conquered territory, but good luck to them. We have always liked the Americans.”

Pro-American sympathies were, as always, more evident in Normandy.“They came to save us and we can’t forget that,” said Jacques, 66, a resident of Lisieux whose father’s ironmongers’ shop was destroyed when American bombers almost razed the town.

At Saint Mère Eglise, where American parachutists landed before the beach invasion, residents were preparing for their first visit by an American President. Marc Lefèvre, the Mayor, said that the town would never forget its American connection. “Despite the difficulties over the years between France and the United States, we’ve always remained faithful to those who liberated us,” he said.

A mannequin representing an American soldier is permanently suspended from the church spire in memory of Private John Steele of the 82nd Airborne Division, whose parachute became entangled with the roof. Howard Manoian, 77, one of Steele’s former comrades, came from America to live at Saint Mère 18 years ago.

This weekend Mr Manoian said that Americans were no longer as welcome as they used to be.

“There was a time when Americans could do no wrong here,” the retired Massachusetts police officer told reporters. “We Americans stick our noses in everybody’s affairs. We push them around.”

Down the road near Caen airport, hundreds of residents were ordered to remove their cars from streets and told that all movement would be barred for most of today. Six Chinook US military helicopters were parked at the little airport.

“Don’t even think of trying to come here on Monday,” an airport manager told pilots who sought landing permission at the airport.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
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To: Pokey78
Death to the French . . .
21 posted on 05/26/2002 6:32:14 PM PDT by Arm_Bears
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To: Pokey78
I particularly love it when the French police get out the water cannons and break ribs.
22 posted on 05/26/2002 6:33:44 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: Pokey78
Why do the streets of Paris have trees on both sides?

So the Germans can march in the shade.

23 posted on 05/26/2002 6:41:13 PM PDT by Comus
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To: Pokey78
Why don't they have fireworks at EuroDisney?

Because the French Army surrenders every time they go off

24 posted on 05/26/2002 6:43:36 PM PDT by Comus
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To: Pokey78
What did the French say when the Germans marched into Paris?

Tables for 50,000?

25 posted on 05/26/2002 6:45:50 PM PDT by Comus
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To: Pokey78
What's the only country that has lost a war with Mexico?
26 posted on 05/26/2002 6:47:39 PM PDT by Comus
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To: Pokey78
This weekend Mr Manoian said that Americans were no longer as welcome as they used to be.

The father of one of my graduate school classmates fought his way across most of
France as part of the US Army during WWII.
He told my classmate that "if you meet any of the French at your fancy
international science meetings, please kick them in the @ss for me!"

(Personally, most French I've met I have liked...but they've been immigrants to the USA,
so maybe they are some mutant strain.)
27 posted on 05/26/2002 6:50:30 PM PDT by VOA
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To: Comus
What's the only country that has lost a war with Mexico?

Ouch!

28 posted on 05/26/2002 7:03:53 PM PDT by Jagdgewehr
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To: Utopia
Iceland is so wonderful. I am sure you will enjoy it much more than France. Volcanoes, geysers, beautiful people.
29 posted on 05/26/2002 7:09:28 PM PDT by crystalk
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To: VOA
My Uncle Jim was in Patton's 3rd as a tank driver. After the Battle of the Bulge, he spent some time in a Nazi prison camp before returning home.

I think the older generation in France understand their sacrifice. I also think the younger generation's scorn for Americans pales in comparison to Clinton's antics at Normandy.

30 posted on 05/26/2002 7:12:00 PM PDT by Gwaihir
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To: Pokey78
Howard Manoian, 77, one of Steele’s former comrades, came from America to live at Saint Mère 18 years ago. This weekend Mr Manoian said that Americans were no longer as welcome as they used to be. “There was a time when Americans could do no wrong here,” the retired Massachusetts police officer told reporters. “We Americans stick our noses in everybody’s affairs. We push them around.”

Good riddance. Why I am not suprised this appeasing suck-up is from Massachusetts?
31 posted on 05/26/2002 7:14:34 PM PDT by HDawg
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To: Pokey78
The WWII was a generation ago. The current French generation probably has no memory of it. What did their history say about it? That may be a clue to their attitude!
32 posted on 05/26/2002 7:19:58 PM PDT by Sen Jack S. Fogbound
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To: Pokey78;harpseal,Travis McGee,Squantos,sneakypete,Chapita
In Caen, where Mr Bush will today pay homage to the American dead at the D-Day landing beaches

I doubt he plies up stones like X-42.


33 posted on 05/26/2002 7:27:06 PM PDT by razorback-bert
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To: HDawg
You beat me to it. When have we poked our nose in French domestic affairs? Mr. Manoian (God bless him!) has developed Stockholm syndrome.
34 posted on 05/26/2002 7:34:51 PM PDT by Roy Tucker
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To: crystalk
Iceland is so wonderful.

I'm ready! Maybe its the Viking blood in my veins or all the Icelandic Sagas I've been re-reading of late .. but heck, Iceland is FAR more interesting to me than France.... Who cares for France? Just a bunch of pseudo intellectuals with a thimble full of courage.

35 posted on 05/26/2002 8:17:07 PM PDT by Utopia
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To: Pokey78
Pokey,
I am re-posting here about American dead in French cemeteries...American soldiers who gave their lives to save Europe

(The Times (London) 2/19/02 Irwin Stelzer)
"America’s special relationship with Britain is often contrasted with its ambiguous relationship with France. The story making the rounds is a reminder of Lyndon Johnson’s response to then-President Charles de Gaulle’s demand that America remove its soldiers from French soil."

"At Johnson’s instruction, his Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, inquired whether the demand applied to those buried in military cemeteries in France. Michael Barone, one of Washington’s leading pundits, says that Rusk once told this story to a young Donald Rumsfeld. No one doubts that the Defense Secretary remembers it."

36 posted on 05/26/2002 8:24:41 PM PDT by edwin hubble
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To: edwin hubble
"America’s special relationship with Britain is often contrasted with its ambiguous relationship with France. The story making the rounds is a reminder of Lyndon Johnson’s response to then-President Charles de Gaulle’s demand that America remove its soldiers from French soil." "At Johnson’s instruction, his Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, inquired whether the demand applied to those buried in military cemeteries in France.

That may very well be the one and only thing that LBJ and Rusk actually got right.

37 posted on 05/26/2002 9:01:00 PM PDT by Stefan Stackhouse
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To: Pokey78
When it comes to France, The Times really turns into a bunch of hateful liers. As a matter of fact, the "anti-American" demonstrations were barely existent in France, compared to how Bush is greeted in other large EU countries. These days, it seems that The Times' notorious francophobia does not have much to be fed with, and, rather than feeling orphan, this "newspaper" which reminds me in a way of antisemitic newspapers across Europe at the beginning of the 20th century, is sticking to its old lies and cliches.
38 posted on 05/27/2002 3:36:18 AM PDT by zefrog
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