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Byline: Tracy McNicoll
Sarkozy aims to create a novel kind of transatlantic leader, proudly Christian with warm Muslim ties.
Since taking office last may, French president Nicolas Sarkozy has been on the move, appearing briefly in one spot after another and in a blaze of a flashbulbs. No wonder Saudi King Abdullah called him a "spirited thoroughbred" last September; by one count, France's chief exec has logged nearly 200,000km on the job.
All this movement can make it hard to pin down the core of Sarkozy's foreign policy. He has almost singlehandedly revived Europe's foundering campaign to write a new constitution, albeit in more modest form. Yet he
has also tested the European Union by questioning supposedly independent institutions like the European Central Bank, and seemed to go out of his way to annoy the largest EU member, Germany. Chancellor Angela Merkel has called his vague vision for a "Mediterranean Union"--an undefined economic, political and cultural bloc--a threat that could "disintegrate" the EU. And some of his recent gestures, particularly in the Muslim world, have surprised many. He has welcomed Muammar Kaddafi in Paris, pushed nuclear deals in the Arab world and recently announced the opening of a French military outpost in the United Arab Emirates--the first new French base abroad since the end of the colonial period.
Beneath the flash, however, Sarkozy seems to be aiming at something more profound: to reposition France as a full-blooded member of what he calls the "Western family" of nations. Francois Heisbourg, a French security specialist, says this idea is central to his world view. In practice it means a France that is ostentatiously chummy with the United States (witness Sarkozy's summer attendance at a Bush family barbecue), a friend of Israel and proud of its "Christian roots."
That's radical stuff for a country that has a growing Muslim population and a fiercely uncompromising tradition of laA[macron]citA[c], or secularism. Isabelle Lasserre, deputy chief of Le Figaro's foreign-policy service, says Sarkozy differs from his predecessors in that he doesn't define his foreign policy in opposition to the United States. His France is far less ambivalent about its place in the West than it was under Jacques Chirac, who saw it as a bridge between East and West (and a counterweight to Washington). Sarkozy has no doubt where France stands. If his occasional nods to Roman Catholicism, liberal economics or U.S. pop icons irk his countrymen, so be it.
Source: HighBeam Research, France's New Western Idea.(World Affairs)(Nicolas Sarkozy's foreign...