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Viewing cable 06PARIS5555, MEDIA REACTION REPORT - Lebanon - U.S. Stance - GWOT

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06PARIS5555 2006-08-18 08:04 2011-08-24 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Paris
null
Lucia A Keegan  08/21/2006 10:11:07 AM  From  DB/Inbox:  Lucia A Keegan

Cable 
Text:                                                                      
                                                                           
      
UNCLAS        PARIS 05555

SIPDIS
cxparis:
    ACTION: PAO
    INFO:   POL AMB ARS DCM

DISSEMINATION: PAOX
CHARGE: PROG

APPROVED: PRS: LPLATT
DRAFTED: PR:  FTHOMAS
CLEARED: NONE

VZCZCFRI545
OO RUEHC RUEAIIA RUEATRS RHEFDIA RUEKJCS RHEHAAA
RUCPDOC RUEHRL RUEHRO RUEHMO RUEHNO RUEHVEN RHMFIUU
DE RUEHFR #5555/01 2300804
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 180804Z AUG 06
FM AMEMBASSY PARIS
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 0465
INFO RUEAIIA/CIA WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY WASHDC
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC//ASD/ISA//
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC
RHEHAAA/WHITE HOUSE WASHDC
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC
RUEHRL/AMEMBASSY BERLIN 6281
RUEHRO/AMEMBASSY ROME 7911
RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 5544
RUEHNO/USMISSION USNATO 3595
RUEHVEN/USMISSION USOSCE 3137
RHMFIUU/COMSIXTHFLT
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 PARIS 005555 
 
SIPDIS 
 
 
DEPT FOR INR/R/MR; IIP/RW; IIP/RNY; BBG/VOA; IIP/WEU; 
AF/PA; EUR/WE /P/SP; D/C (MCCOO); EUR/PA; INR/P; INR/EUC; 
PM; OSC ISA FOR ILN; NEA; WHITE HOUSE FOR NSC/WEUROPE; DOC FOR 
ITA/EUR/FR AND PASS USTR/PA; USINCEUR FOR PAO; NATO/PA; MOSCOW/PA; 
ROME/PA. 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OPRC KMDR FR
 
SUBJECT: MEDIA REACTION REPORT - Lebanon - U.S. Stance - GWOT 
PARIS - Thursday, August 17, 2006 
 
 
(A) SUBJECTS COVERED IN TODAY'S REPORT: 
 
Lebanon - U.S. Stance - GWOT 
 
B) SUMMARY OF COVERAGE: 
 
Today's top international story which is featured on the front page 
of Le Figaro is that "France would take command of the international 
force in Lebanon until next February," as announced on FR2 
television last evening by MOD Alliot-Marie. Asking that the force's 
mission be defined, she is quoted in several outlets: "It is not 
about when and how many, but about what and how." Le Figaro says her 
position is appropriate given that the UNSCR does not "specify how 
to go about disarming Hezbollah." "No country in Europe, and least 
of all France, is ready to send troops where everything could 
explode any minute," writes the Beirut correspondent Lamia Oualalou, 
who quotes Alliot-Marie: "When one sends troops without a clear 
mission and without proper or sufficient means, it can lead to a 
catastrophe." 
 
Le Parisien titles its report: "France Wants a Well-Defined Mission" 
while on FR2 televisions MOD Alliot Marie said that "France is 
playing its traditional role in Lebanon, which is to protect the 
population." She asked the UN to "be more specific about the UNIFIL 
mission in Lebanon and to give soldiers the necessary means to 
protect themselves and to react if they are attacked." She added it 
would be very positive to include Muslim countries in the UNIFIL, 
"to avoid giving the image of the West against the Muslim world." 
 
FM Douste-Blazy's visit to Beirut yesterday is widely reported. In 
Le Figaro the article notes his attempts to get Israel to "lift the 
air and sea blockade" as well as get assurances from Lebanon that 
"no weapons would be delivered to Hezbollah." The report indicates 
that the French delegation was at an impasse: "The Lebanese PM is 
incapable of disarming Hezbollah:  disarmament must be voluntary... 
and will necessarily require associating Hezbollah's two patrons, 
Syria and Iran." On FR2 television, the reporter said: "Lebanon 
seems unable to disarm Hezbollah which is now more popular than 
ever." For Liberation, "Hezbollah is Complicating the Post-War 
Scenario." The editorial by Pierre Haski is a harsh criticism of 
President Bush and his remarks about Lebanon being a "third front" 
in the war against terror. (See Part C) 
 
Le Figaro interviews Former Socialist FM Vedrine, "who denounces the 
'fiasco' of the U.S. policy in the Middle East." According to 
Vedrine, Hezbollah can "still strike... and has managed to elicit 
greater resentment towards Israel in the Arab-Muslim world. On the 
Lebanese scene, it has garnered prestige..." Vedrine judges the U.S. 
action in this crisis as "negative. The Bush administration has a 
schematic vision which has led it to the situation in Iraq... and 
left it handicapped when it comes to dealing with all other Arab 
issues. Never was a U.S. administration as aligned with the Likud as 
this one... We are looking at the fiasco of the so-called GME... 
America's idea of fighting against terrorism leaves no room for a 
political approach... It is counter-productive because it has 
consolidated the wave of anti-west feelings... when in fact we 
should be separating the fundamentalist wave from the large majority 
of moderate Muslims. We need to break away from this policy... We 
must negotiate with Hamas and Hezbollah... America's 'boycotting' of 
Hamas renders our message of democratizing the Middle East 
inaudible. The Bush administration is condemning itself to failure." 
 
 
The security situation in Iraq is reported by Le Figaro: 
"Self-defense Shia groups are taking on the Sunni guerrillas, which 
have been targeting civilians... 'Inter-religious' fighting has led 
150,000 Iraqis to flee in the past four months. Delphine Minoui 
comments in Le Figaro that "the political class is impotent in the 
face of the daily violence which has caused the deaths of close to 
6,000 civilians in the past two months." The report indicates that 
the security plan, "other than causing huge traffic jams, is 
essentially ineffective." 
 
Le Figaro carries an op-ed jointly penned by the British and French 
Interior Ministers, John Reid and Nicholas Sarkozy, on fighting 
terrorism: "We share the belief that the best way to win the war 
against terrorism is international cooperation and shared vigilance 
from everyone." 
 
A Figaro op-ed by Alexandre Adler contends that "after Joe 
Lieberman's defeat, it remains to be seen whether the American 
people will be able to recognize itself in a Democratic Party which 
is pacifist, anti-Zionist and narcissistic, and is influenced by 
Hollywood's star system." 
 
Economic daily Les Echos, in its continuing series on the "Saga of 
Black Gold" examines "The Bush, Such a Powerful Family..." "The Bush 
family is of course oil and power. But it is also an extraordinary 
network of relations in the U.S., which for the past century has 
interwoven the mysterious 'Skull and Bones' society, high finance, 
steel, energy and Congress, with an important 'I scratch your back, 
you scratch mine' philosophy." 
 
(C) SUPPORTING TEXT/BLOCK QUOTES: 
 
Lebanon - U.S. Stance - GWOT 
 
"Unwelcome" 
Pierre Haski in left-of-center Liberation (08/17): "With friends 
like President Bush, who needs enemies? Just when the conflict in 
Lebanon is on the brink of being resolved through a fragile 
equilibrium, the U.S. President has made remarks which will at best 
complicate the implementation of UNSCR 1701. By speaking of Lebanon 
as the 'third front' of the war against terror, along with Iraq and 
Afghanistan, he is inscribing the Israeli conflict with its Arab 
neighbors into the wider confrontation against the 'axis of evil.' 
Most countries about to send troops to bolster the international 
force in Lebanon do not recognize themselves in this crusade. First 
among them France. The American President's stance has the merit of 
ideological coherence, but not of diplomatic logic. What is the use 
of voting a resolution which is to rely on cooperation, if some of 
the essential parties are already characterized as mortal enemies... 
If one follows the Bush line of thinking, it is not a UNIFIL force 
which is needed, but the U.S. helping Israel to squash its 
indomitable enemy. The American President's logic is all the more 
unwelcome because his unilateral Iraq policy is a resounding 
failure, with his own military chiefs predicting a civil war. The 
international operation in Afghanistan under the auspices of the UN 
is also facing difficulties. It is obvious that the new UNIFIL 
mission in Lebanon will not be a walk in the park and that Hezbollah 
is not ready to be disarmed. All the more reason to keep from 
turning an already impossible mission into an ideological crusade. 
Failure is ensured if we follow Bush's logic." HOFMANN