What lurks behind Macron’s epiphany that angered US lawmakers?
By: Rachel Marsden
The French president has made bold statements about Europe asserting its independence from Washington’s belligerent foreign policy
En route back from China, the French president suddenly started singing the
praises of European independence vis-à-vis Washington. But words are cheap.
On the way back from his recent visit to Beijing aboard the presidential plane,
Emmanuel Macron revealed the apparent and sudden epiphany he had; that Europe
really doesn’t have to ride shotgun alongside Washington every time that it
decides to load up the warmobile and speed down the regime-change highway.
“The paradox would be that, overcome with panic, we believe we are just
America’s followers,” Macron said, according to Politico. “The question
Europeans need to answer … is it in our interest to accelerate [a crisis] on
Taiwan? No. The worse thing would be to think that we Europeans must become
followers on this topic and take our cue from the US agenda and a Chinese
overreaction.” So Macron just figured out that France can have a foreign policy
that’s independent of both East and West? Not sure how he managed to miss that
lesson earlier, since he claims to be a big admirer of former French President
Charles De Gaulle who kept France out of NATO, built a relationship with Moscow,
and kicked the Americans out of France when they wanted to stick around
indefinitely after the Second World War as they did in Germany.
“Europeans cannot resolve the crisis in Ukraine; how can we credibly say on
Taiwan, ‘watch out, if you do something wrong we will be there’? If you really
want to increase tensions that’s the way to do it,” Macron told the journalists.
If he realizes that the EU is useless in the Ukraine conflict, then why doesn’t
the bloc cut its losses? Why continue to commit personnel, weapons, and funding
to something viewed as unresolvable in Europe’s favor in light of all the
current efforts?
Had Macron come to this realization earlier, he may have been able to
convince his European counterparts and the EU not to jump off an economic cliff
over Ukraine. In doing so, they have harmed their own energy supply and
industries because the US wanted them to, thinking that it would bring the
Russian economy to its knees, as French economy minister Bruno Le Maire has
said.
Macron now also says that European nations should reduce their dependence on the
“extraterritoriality of the US dollar” and avoid becoming vassals. Incidentally,
the French multinational TotalEnergies just transacted with China in yuan for
the first time.
Some US lawmakers are now furious with Macron. “If, in fact, Macron speaks for
all of Europe, and their position now is they're not going to pick sides between
the US and China over Taiwan, maybe we shouldn't be taking sides either. Maybe
we should basically say we're going to focus on Taiwan and the threats that
China poses, and you, guys, handle Ukraine and Europe,” said Florida Senator
Marco Rubio.
Rubio is playing the “how could you, after everything we’ve done for you” card,
now that Macron is flirting with China. Because Washington has just done so much
for Europe in Ukraine? This is why Macron has pleaded with Washington for lower
prices on gas exports to Europe, now that the bloc is dependent on US LNG having
been encouraged by Washington to cut off their cheap Russian supply. And the
Ukraine conflict is so good for Europe that Macron was begging US lawmakers on a
visit to Washington last December to reconsider the impact of Biden’s
protectionist Inflation Reduction Act on European industry, which has become
vulnerable to energy shortages and skyrocketing prices as a result of
Washington’s agenda on Ukraine.
So if the US wants to let the EU handle Ukraine alone, as Rubio says, there’s a
pretty good chance of peace breaking out. Perhaps he didn’t think that through
very well. It’s worth recalling that Rubio was a strong advocate for killing off
Europe’s Nord stream pipeline with sanctions and hit the roof when Biden
considered lifting them. Then, when the pipelines were mysteriously blown up, he
claimed that it’s just “common sense” that Russia did it. This is weird because
there weren’t any Russian officials running around like Rubio and his fellow
American neocons demanding its demise.
Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton also attacked Macron on Monday on Fox News, over
the French president’s newfound disinterest in blindly following Washington into
a conflict with China at the risk of it kicking off militarily. Cotton was most
recently seen advocating sending American troops into US ally and next door
neighbor, Mexico, ostensibly to fix America’s own fentanyl drug problem.
But Macron went even further in his statements about China than simply
expressing disinterest in being dragged into a new US-led conflict over Taiwan –
and this has really been underreported. He also expressed an understanding of
China’s position vis a vis Taiwan. “As Europeans, our concern is unity. The
Chinese are also concerned with their unity, and Taiwan is a component of this
unity from their point of view,” Macron said, according to Deutsche Welle.
Macron sure has managed to get Washington’s attention fast. He goes over to
China, leaves with a massive new economic deal for Airbus to sell 160 new
commercial jets to China, leading to a foreign policy change of heart. This deal
doubles the French-headquartered multinational’s production in the country,
which ultimately amounts to a major victory over big global rival and Pentagon
contractor, Boeing.
It’s worth wondering, though, if there’s more to Macron’s recent proclamations
than meets the eye. Could he simply be using his new position on China as a ploy
to pressure the US to give Europe more to keep it on the team? After all, Macron
is president of a country synonymous with seduction games. This all sounds like
someone who was just given a pricey gift by a suitor and then flashes it to
everyone in town. All while hoping that it gets back to their partner who hasn’t
given them anything recently except headaches and a lower net worth. Now that
frustrated partner, Washington, is behaving exactly as you’d expect a possessive
lover to act.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN