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Byline: Christopher Dickey; With Tracy McNicoll in Paris and Benjamin Sutherland in Treviso, Italy
Sarkozy attempts to transform the West's military alliances.
When Somali pirates hijacked a French yacht with 30 crew members aboard in early April, the French government took just over an hour to start organizing a counterattack. While negotiators talked about a ransom, French commandos parachuted directly into the Indian Ocean and joined up with ships from France, the United States, Britain, Canada, Germany and Pakistan already operating in the region as part of a naval task force set up in 2002. A week later the ransom was paid, the hostages freed, safe and sound. Then French Special Forces moved in. After intelligence located an SUV in Somalia carrying six of the alleged pirates, a sniper in a helicopter fired into the truck's engine, killing it dead. The men were captured alive, and are now in jail in France.
You couldn't really call the operation a battle, much less a war. But it's the kind of fighting Western armies are called on to do more and more: deploying relatively small and highly professional combat units over long distances, coordinating with military forces from different countries in varying alliances and trying to impose order amid chaos. It's the kind of thing the French do well, and it is key to their growing--perhaps pivotal--role in a North Atlantic Treaty Organization that has changed dramatically since the end of the cold war.
A year into his first term, in fact, French President Nicolas Sarkozy is using his warm relations with Washington and his military's strong record fighting in Africa and the Balkans to help re-establish France publicly and formally as a leading player in NATO, more than four decades after President Charles de Gaulle pulled out of the alliance's integrated command and kicked its offices out of Paris. At the same time, he's working to put France at the fore of a separate European Union defense force and extend its influence eastward to the Persian Gulf and South Asia. And if France really wants to project itself on the world stage this way, well, it couldn't happen at a better time. U.S. forces are stretched thin, and there are only a handful of other armies with the training, the bases, the organization and, most important, the political will to kill and die in far corners of the planet to keep local wars from emerging into global threats. The shortlist includes the Brits--and the French, and that's about it.
In fact, at a purely military level, French soldiers have been playing major roles in multinational operations since the early 1990s. But French "independence" from NATO decision-making was of almost theological importance in French politics, so the military got little credit. Now Sarkozy is integrating NATO cooperation and a European defense force into his government's plans to magnify its influence and multiply limited resources. Far from rejecting NATO decisions, he wants to be at the table making them. The result represents "a revolution of sorts in NATO and transatlantic relations," says French parliamentarian Pierre Lellouche, who wrote the defense and foreign-policy planks in Sarkozy's campaign platform last year.
Back in 1966, when the alliance was all about huge standing armies facing off against the Soviet Union on European battlefields, French President Charles de Gaulle claimed his Army would be weakened, and perhaps, he feared, humiliated or betrayed by reliance on U.S. protection. After he pulled out of NATO's command structure, French forces had no say in its military operations. But when the Soviet Union collapsed, NATO's purpose started changing. Instead of a big theoretical war where no shots were ever fired, it faced a proliferation of small, hot conflicts with a whole ...
Source: HighBeam Research, The French Revolution.(World Affairs; EUROPE)(Nicolas Sarkozy's...