A new conflict is brewing between Russia and a top U.S. ally
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — As approval for any further billions of American taxpayer cash to
Ukraine stalls in Congress, one of Washington’s top allies sees an opportunity
for its own military industrial complex to cash in on the racket.
“The war economy is an opportunity for our industrialists. They have every
interest in these tensions, because the ability to quickly deliver equipment
will become one of the criteria for export success,” French Defense Minister
Sébastien Lecornu told Le Parisien last week, saying the quiet part out loud in
announcing the production of 78 new CAESAR howitzers for Kyiv within 15 months,
alongside the 40 French made SCALP missiles just announced for Ukraine by French
President Emmanuel Macron.
Who’s going to pay for them? Not France, apparently. Lecornu says they want to
crowdfund $305 million for them from among Ukraine’s other allies. Won’t some
generous souls please step up and stick it to Russia by stuffing the coffers of
French weapons manufacturers and their shareholders?
“The logic of ceding materiel taken from the armies’ stocks is reaching its
end,” Lecornu said.
Translation: We can’t use European Union taxpayer money anymore under Brussels’
scheme of giving EU nations the cash equivalent of any hand-me-down weapons that
they gift to Ukraine.
And it’s not just the French state that’s looking at the Ukraine conflict as a
cash cow, but some French civilians, too. The Russian Ministry of Defence
announced that it had liquidated a nest of 60 foreign mercenaries in Kharkov —
most of whom they qualified as French.
“France has no mercenaries, neither in Ukraine nor elsewhere,” the French
Foreign Ministry said, calling it another “clumsy manipulation.”
Spare a thought for poor Stéphane Séjourné, who was just appointed Defence
Minister on January 11. He was probably still trying to find the washroom and
coffee machine and didn’t yet have a chance to open the kimono on all the
classified files to discover the extent to which the rhetoric peddled by him and
his establishment pals is largely bunk. Like the notion that there cannot
possibly be mercenaries in Ukraine because mercenary activities are illegal
under French law, punishable by up to five years in prison and an €75,000 fine.
It wasn’t long before French Defence Minister Lecornu had to break it to
everyone that, indeed, there are “French civilians who went to fight in
Ukraine.” It’s not like he could really hide it. Mediapart, widely regarded as
France’s top investigative news outlet, reported last year that some 400 French
nationals — at least 30 of whom are considered neo-Nazis — have gone to fight in
Ukraine, citing the French domestic intelligence service that has been tracking
them.
The phenomenon has been discussed and amplified in the mainstream French press,
so it’s not like anyone paying attention is going to now believe these fighters
simply don’t exist. In one instance, a couple of 20 year olds were convicted of
weapons offenses and imprisoned on arrival by bus in Paris from Lviv last April,
with Mediapart describing one as a neo-Nazi who was fired from the French army,
and another as ultra-right.
Yet another French neo-Nazi pulled over by Hungarian police said that he was en
route to fight in Ukraine, according to Le Parisien.
Seems that those Azov battalion neo-Nazis that had Canadian military trainers
worried when they spotted Nazi symbol tattoos during training of Ukrainian
fighters in 2018, according to the Ottawa Citizen, are a real Disneyland-style
draw.
So how, you might ask, could France possibly weasel out of this mercenary
accusation leveled by Russia? Well, it turns out that much like sparkling wine
isn’t officially C hampagne under French law if it isn’t specifically from the
Champagne region of France, hired guns aren’t actually mercenaries if French law
says that they aren’t. And French law allows for French civilians to go fight a
foreign war for money, as long as they’re made part of the official army of
another country. And it just so happens that Ukraine threw together a new “
International Legion for the Defense of Ukraine” that covers this particular
formality.
“These people have no connection with the French armed forces, do not wear
French uniforms and are not associated with French military institutions,”
Lecornu said. These hired guns are not from Champagne, so are not mercs. Case
closed! Lecornu kindly asks everyone to please buzz off now, adding that any
further discussion only serves Russia’s “information war.” Ah yes, the old “if
you don’t agree with my version of reality, then you’re a Russian tool” line.
Meanwhile, Russia has summoned the French ambassador for a little chat, and
perhaps an interpretive dance to explain why France’s much-vaunted
anti-mercenary law, meant to secure peace, has a hole big enough for several
French neo-Nazis to drive right through. Russia also apparently wants to know
why France is getting more deeply involved in the conflict. But ultimately, for
both the French state and its civilian hired guns in Ukraine, business is
business.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN