The uncomfortable truths revealed by Emmanuel Macron’s meeting with Vladimir Putin
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron paid a visit to Moscow to meet with
his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, at the Kremlin, before flying to Kyiv
for talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. What does it say about
Paris’ and Europe’s position toward Moscow? Nothing that establishment
Washington would find acceptable, frankly. And that’s a major dilemma for Macron
who purports to strive for diplomatic independence while getting frequently
caught up in anti-Russian rhetoric.
On the surface, the meeting serves as a convenient opportunity for Macron to
burnish his image domestically as a world leader ahead of France’s presidential
election in April, and for which the incumbent still hasn’t declared his
candidacy. Who could pass up the opportunity for a photo op showing oneself
going mano a mano diplomatically with the global leader constantly painted as a
Bond villain by Washington and its allies, particularly when it gives Macron an
advantage over his domestic political opponents who can’t benefit from the same
imagery?
Personally, Macron has everything to gain in meeting with Putin. Despite the
perennial hype about some future potential Russian invasion of Ukraine, the
appetite for conflict with Russia in Ukraine itself and in most of Europe is
simply not there. Macron knows this. So, the high stakes in the Ukrainian
conflict are mostly just an optical illusion ginned up by the same Washington
establishment hacks who benefit from promoting the idea of a persistent threat
of war. Naturally, that threat would necessitate endless spending to the benefit
of the national security apparatus and their think-tank activist enablers.
So, the French taxpayer is picking up the bill for Macron’s Moscow jaunt,
enabling his party to save its war chest for the second round of presidential
voting or subsequent legislative elections, while Macron gets to play concerned
peacemaker for a non-war. That’s certainly the tip of the iceberg — at least
from here in Paris.
But there’s a bit more to it. Macron isn’t just the president of the French
Republic he’s also the president of the six-month rotating Council of the
European Union. And Washington sending troops into Eastern European countries
under the pretext of conflict prevention is precisely the kind of undermining of
European sovereignty that caused former French President and World War II-era
General Charles de Gaulle, a figure for whom Macron has repeatedly claimed
admiration, to kick out U.S. troops and pull France out of NATO.
What some Americans fail to understand is that France and French people
generally don’t have a negative view of Russia. Many French and Western
Europeans see Russia as an important business and trade partner and consider the
country to be primarily culturally and geographically European, despite its
proximity to (and relationship with) Asia.
Washington has to understand that Western Europeans (notably the nations that
dominate the EU) don’t have any interest in fighting with Russia in a military
sense, and they certainly have no real appetite for defending the interests of a
country (Ukraine) whose own president doesn’t seem interested in conflict with
Russia either. President Zelensky, who appears to be mostly reacting to the
usual internal corruption-driven pressure placed on him by oligarchs in bed with
western economic and political interests, seemingly couldn’t give a toss about
the average Ukrainian citizen.
And while Eastern European nations still frequently evoke their history with the
former Soviet Union, they’re also the Achilles heel of European autonomy. Siding
with their fellow European Union member states to reap the benefits of that
association isn’t always compatible with supporting Washington-driven NATO.
Because although these nations may technically be members of both, the EU’s best
interests and those of Washington are not aligned when it comes to Moscow in
this post-Cold War era.
Macron himself has exemplified this schizophrenic mindset of wanting to be a
partner of Russia while nonetheless falling in line to do Washington’s bidding
against it. The French president has long promoted the notion of an EU
independent from both global powers, but in practice his actions and positions
have suggested that he cares more about what Washington and special interests
that underpin the transatlantic alliance think. Often, the result of this has
been anti-Russian rhetoric that betrays Macron’s purported wishes of true French
and European independence, as well as a pragmatic, agnostic approach that places
equal value in relationships with both the U.S. and Russia.
Macron is pretending to dissipate a conflict that Europe really isn’t interested
in fighting. And Americans really don’t want to, either. So, perhaps it’s time
for our leaders to stop the constant warmongering that serves only a few greedy
elites who thrive on endless war, chaos, and conflict.
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN