The Mediterranean infested by a French love bug
By Linda S. Heard
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jul 16, 2008, 00:15
The French president is a man in love and by the looks of it,
he wants to spread it around. Last week he was serenaded by his new bride Carla
with the launch of her new album, as if nothing happened to the irritation of
the more conservative members of French society. But he had no time to worry
about small minded, anti-bling-bling, ‘tut-tutters’ during the week his dream,
the Mediterranean Union would finally be launched with the goal of learning ‘how
to love each other in the Mediterranean, instead of continuing to hate and wage
war.’
By extension the Carla effect appears to have infected
delegates to the inaugural Mediterranean Union summit held in Paris last
weekend. Firstly, Arab leaders whose countries have had no dealings with Israel
to date have been willing to sit at the same table as Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert, which is a coup for Sarkozy in itself.
And secondly, when Olmert and the Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas shook hands they could have been mistaken for lottery winners
thanking a grinning Sarkozy for a big cheque. We “have never been this close”
to a peace deal Olmert is quoted as saying.
Even the Syrian President Bashar Assad was brought in from
the cold after years of diplomatic isolation to engage in a love-peace fest
with Lebanon’s new President Michel Suleiman, while the Emir of Qatar, Shaikh
Hamad Bin Khalifa Al Thani, and Sarkozy played joint matchmaker.
Diplomatic ties
The outcome was described by Sarkozy as “historic.” Syria
and Lebanon have finally agreed to form diplomatic ties leading to embassies
being opened in both capitals for the first time since both countries achieved
independence in the 1940s. Although judging by Bashar’s facial expressions, his
enthusiasm didn’t match that of his French host. Nevertheless, Suleiman and
Sarkozy have both accepted Syria’s invitations to visit Damascus later this
year.
Bashar is, however, said to be pleased that the French president
has agreed to act as co-broker (with Turkey) between Syria and Israel on
conditions for direct peace talks that may go ahead once there’s a new tenant
in the White House. “Quite frankly, this American administration is not
interested in the peace process,” the Syrian leader said. In turn, he has been
asked to relay France’s concerns to Tehran over its nuclear enrichment
programme.
Another sign that Syria is no longer being ostracised came
from EU Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana. He lauded the summit as marking a
new détente between Damascus and Europe, while hinting that a partnership pact
between the EU and Syria that was stalled following the assassination of former
Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri could be signed before the end of this
year.
France’s Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner is delighted at
the progress on both Israeli-Syrian and Syrian-Lebanon fronts. “There’s a wind
of hope. Something appears to be starting,” he said.
He may be right. In the meantime, Syria and Egypt are said
to be working to convince the leadership of Hamas to accept conditions that
would end Palestinian divisions.
Also Hamas chief Khalid Mashal says he has asked Shaikh
Hamad to broker dialogue between Hamas and Fatah aimed at “restoring the
situation in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank to what it was before and
remedying all the causes that led to the Palestinian dispute.”
And where does Washington stand among these Kumbaya-singing
tree-huggers superbly conducted by a Frenchman in love in the city of love, who
appears to cast off his neoconservative mantle, temporarily at least?
There’s no doubt that Sarkozy has achieved more in a few
hours than the Bush administration has achieved in seven years in terms of
bringing foes together. His policy of dialogue and inclusion has probably
caught the White House and State Department off guard, for while Bashar was
given the red carpet treatment in Paris, his country is still considered a
rogue state by the US.
Moreover, throughout decades of US-brokered
Israeli-Palestinian talks, the respective leaders of those nations have never
looked so enthusiastic or sounded as positive as they did on Sunday. There will
no doubt be certain people in Washington who fear France is not only muscling
in on their territory, but doing a better job of melting intransigent hearts
using friendly diplomacy instead of cold threats.
The Mediterranean Union has got off to a good start with 43
nation members representing 800 million diverse people but the challenge is
where does it go from here?
“We will build peace in the Mediterranean together in the
way we built peace in Europe yesterday,” Sarkozy promised. But one leader
remains immune from the love bug.
Libya’s leader, President Muammar Gaddafi, boycotted the
launch and described the union as a “frightening and dangerous” imperialist
project that will force Arab countries into a relationship with Israel via the
backdoor and will be perceived by extremists as “a crusade against Islam.”
He would have to go and spoil it all. Seems that love can’t
conquer all after all.
Linda
S. Heard is a British specialist writer on Middle East affairs. She welcomes
feedback and can be contacted by email at heardonthegrapevines@yahoo.co.uk.
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