France is not at war, but from Macron’s rhetoric you would think otherwise
By: Rachel Marsden
Putting the whole country on war footing – if only through rhetoric – makes it easier to get away with bad policies
Earlier this summer, French President Emmanuel Macron evoked the country's
“entry into a war economy in which I believe we will organize ourselves in the
long term.” It would have sounded familiar to anyone who paid attention during
the Covid-19 pandemic.
Announcing the first Covid lockdowns in March 2020, Macron said six times that
France was “at war” – with Covid. “Never has France had to take such decisions
in peacetime,” he said, persisting with the militaristic rhetoric that served to
justify locking an entire nation inside their homes for weeks on end.
It was a stretch, of course. France wasn’t ‘at war’ with a virus. But the
language was so hyperbolic coming from someone in a position of the utmost
national authority that people were either frightened or convinced they were
fulfilling a patriotic duty by sitting at home all day and watching Netflix. In
any case, if you questioned or opposed Macron's war framing, you were branded
self-centered and irresponsible by those on whom the rhetoric had worked.
The fear-mongering gave Macron and his government the wiggle room to limit
people’s liberties in the absence of substantial opposition. Poor domestic
policies and unpopular decisions apparently get carte blanche if they’re in
service of a war of some kind.
The pandemic has barely waned and Macron is already back to try the same
strategy of employing hyperbolic, militaristic rhetoric amid the conflict in
Ukraine, even though neither France nor the EU is at war with Russia.
What France and the EU have done, however, is sanction their own cheap energy
supply from Russia on which their economies are highly dependent. Initially,
they patted themselves on the back because they figured they could just snap
their fingers and switch to something greener. When that didn’t work, they
blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin for their own knee-jerk choices. And
now, they’re trying to portray themselves as being at war with Russia as a way
to explain to their own citizens why they’re heading for an energy and
cost-of-living crisis that was entirely avoidable.
So last week, Macron said during a commemorative address that “war has returned
a few hours from our borders on European soil.” There is, of course, no war on
French soil, or that of the European Union. France, like its EU allies,
voluntarily chose to deplete its military stocks to the detriment of its own
national security merely at the request of Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky.
It also chose to amputate a crucial economic lifeline without a viable backup
plan. French nuclear reactors have been eroding and neglected for so long under
the state's plan to move away from nuclear power (before Macron realized what a
bad idea that was) that it’s unclear whether France will have enough energy when
crunch time arrives. It’s kind of like when the government’s Covid panic and war
framing served to obscure the state's years of mismanagement of the now-eroded
health care system
French citizens entrusted the government to prioritize French national and
economic security above all else. Instead, Macron has compromised it by going
along with EU’s self-harming edicts. And now he seems to be playing the tired
game of trying to scare up some leeway from the people so they don’t rebel.
“I am thinking of our people, who will need the strength of soul to face the
coming times, to resist uncertainties…united, to agree to pay the price for our
freedom and of our values,”Macron said last week. Ukraine isn’t defending French
values or freedoms. But just like locking ourselves at home was sold to us as
the price to pay for saving lives during Covid, appealing to the French sense of
solidarity or fraternity – written into its national slogan – has been too often
used as a way to pacify the masses.
Some members of the political opposition are seeing through Macron’s
manipulation. “France's serious role is to encourage peace, not war, by
returning to the Minsk agreements which NATO and Macron flouted,” Tweetedformer
minister and French presidential candidate Ségolène Royal. “And let's urgently
identify the triggers and the profiteers of war, the values and priorities of
the French people.”
Clear definitions are important to avoid being fooled by fancy rhetorical
gymnastics. France isn’t at war with Russia. There is no war within the European
Union. Therefore there is no ‘war economy’ to justify. The EU and its leaders
(including Macron) are complicit in a self-imposed crisis as a result of their
own sanctions policy – which is still completely reversible.
Why is it important to get all of this straight? Because officials around Europe
are already framing the looming backlash against the pending crisis as the doing
of populists and extremists rather than of their own. If they succeed, it will
only be because their own constituents allowed them to get away with every
single other lie leading up to it.
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN