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Wednesday, November 16, 2005

French Offered Forces for Iraq War

We all know that the French stayed out of the Iraq War even though they participated in the Persian Gulf War twelve years earlier and were even participants in the no-fly zones over Iraq for several years after the war was suspended.

I expected the French to ultimately participate in 2003 and was surprised when France did not.

Strategypage has the goods on this:

Pentagon rumor, however, might explain why the French came to oppose the overthrow of Saddam Hussein's dictatorship. In December, 2002, a French staff officer visited the Pentagon with a proposal from his government. France would send 18,000 troops (about what they contributed in 1991) to join the Iraq invasion force. However, France wanted a specific area of occupation after the war, with full authority in that area for as long as Iraq needed to be occupied. The American State Department backed the French proposal, but the Department of Defense didn’t trust the French, and were suspicious of their motives. So the French officer went home empty handed, and the French government decided that invading Iraq was really an evil thing to do.


But before you go all "unilateral" and complain about how we blocked French participation in the war, consider who the French would have really been fighting for:

What exactly were the French up to? No one is sure, but the most plausible theory was that the French wanted to be in Iraq, after Saddam fell, to make sure no embarrassing documents, or witnesses, showed up. France had been supplying Saddam with weapons, and other assistance, for over three decades. Moreover, how better to help get the Sunni Arabs back in power, than to have 18,000 French troops occupying, say, western Iraq. This sort of arrangement is nothing new for the French. Although France participated in the Balkans peacekeeping of the 1990s, France was known to be pro-Serb, and French officers were later caught helping out the Serbs in illegal ways. Very embarrassing, but not unexpected. The Pentagon was well aware of how the French pulled their pro-Serb stunts in the 1990s, and apparently wanted no more of that nonsense in Iraq.


Way too sophisticated for my tastes. Fortunately, we did not allow Paris to play their European games at our expense. I know there's an expression that it is better to have an opponent inside the tent p*ssing out rather than outside p*ssing into the tent, but that wasn't an option. Better the French outside Iraq p*ssing in, than France inside Iraq spinning around fouling everything as they did their business.