Warnings about French civil war are empty threats
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — I have lived in France for the past 13 years, and talk of a potential
civil war over discontent with the country’s societal balkanization and
resulting degradation has been prevalent for at least that long. Despite new
warnings about possible domestic conflict from current and former French
military officers, it’s highly unlikely.
The French political class hit the roof late last month when about 1,200 current
and former members of the military, including about 20 generals, published an
open letter to President Emmanuel Macron and the French government in the
right-wing news magazine Valeurs Actuelles. The letter warned of the potentially
deleterious consequences of historical revisionism, which supposedly could
further divide French society, and a growing Islamization leading to “detachment
of multiple plots of the nation for transformation into territories subject to
dogmas contrary to our constitution.”
If nothing is done, the letter warns, there will be “an explosion and the
intervention of our active-duty comrades in a perilous mission of protecting our
civilizational values and safeguarding our compatriots on the national
territory.”
French Defense Minister Florence Parly asked the army to impose sanctions on the
active-duty troops who violated their “duty of confidentiality.” The military
responded by doubling down.
On May 9, active-duty officers published yet another open letter in the same
magazine, this time withholding their names and calling on others to sign the
letter online. As of Monday, more than 211,000 signatories had been added to the
letter, which reads, in part: “All our elders, those who made our country what
it is, who designed its territory, defended its culture, gave or received orders
in its language, did they fight to let France become a failed state that
replaces [Macron’s] increasingly obvious powerlessness with a brutal tyranny
against those who still want to warn about it?”
There’s a link between the French military’s interventions on behalf of NATO and
the migration policy that has culturally reshaped France. We’re told these
military missions are humanitarian necessities — typically to dislodge a
strongman accused by Western leaders of mistreating his own people. Ten years
ago, for example, France and Britain led the charge to remove Libyan leader
Muammar Gaddafi from power, turning that country into a chaotic mess and
prompting massive migrant waves into France and the rest of Europe.
Meanwhile, in Chad, President Idriss Déby died mysteriously last month, and his
son simply took power — yet France couldn’t care less about democracy there. It
just may have something to do with the fact that Chad’s military is used as a
proxy army for French and NATO interests in Africa.
A French parliamentary report published in 2015 identified at least 60 French
military operations in Africa since 1960. The influx of migration from Africa
into France during that same period suggests that those military interventions
did little to foster stability.
France is now paying the price for its interventionist strategy and for blindly
following NATO on its misguided military adventures. The French military would
be better off protesting this root cause of the problem, although it wouldn’t do
anything to lessen the impact of this longstanding interventionist policy on the
fabric of French society.
But to assume that France is ripe for civil war is a stretch. French citizens
are indeed fed up with rampant insecurity and cultural fractures, but it’s been
a slow boil. And if the COVID-19 pandemic has proven anything, it’s that when
push comes to shove, no one here is really going to stand up for their own
rights. The French government is on the cusp of following the European Union
into a harmonized vaccine passport policy that would force citizens to disclose
personal, private medical information in order to travel and participate in
activities involving large numbers of people. The reaction of the French
populace to this creeping authoritarianism and curtailment of their basic
freedoms has been total complacency.
What on earth makes the French military think that these same citizens are going
to get up off their chaise lounges to fight some kind of civil war when they
can’t even be bothered to fight for the right to go about their daily lives
without being asked to show papers?
So bonne chance with your civil war pipedreams, mes amis. You’re going to need
it.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHELMARSDEN