What about Macron?
It is fair to assume that he also acted with strong domestic political motivations: a martial posture on the international stage tends to bolster any French president’s stature — something Macron desperately needs.
Hower, besides internal factors, the French president never misses an opportunity to sprinkle a little of the salt of his “strategic autonomy” onto whatever dish he happens to be serving. The paradox is that the more he insists on this refrain, the more reality disproves him: with each passing day, Europe demonstrates that it possesses neither autonomy nor strategy — indeed, that it is not even truly “Europe”. Politically speaking, “Europe” simply does not exist. Moreover, as we will see, Macron himself recently dealt the coup de grâce to the project of European unification — at least in words.
Die-hard Euro-optimists claim that the French president, in his
address to the nation on March 3, partially redeemed himself from the weak statement issued three days earlier with Merz and Starmer. Macron stated that the “military operations” carried out by the United States and Israel were conducted – surprise, surprise – “in violation of international law.” Yet at the same time he argued that “the Islamic Republic of Iran bears the primary responsibility for this situation”: an assertion that echoes the American and Israeli justifications and which — precisely regarding “this situation” — is simply false.
(Lest anyone mistake my meaning, I would remind them that the Islamic Republic of Iran bears grave responsibility in many situations — first and foremost regarding the plight of its own people — but it certainly does not in “this situation.”)
We should also note that, among the 1,063 words of Macron’s televised address, he did not find a way to include the word “war” even once, effectively adopting a form of newspeak — first associated with Putin and
now also with the Americans — which employs the miraculous power of euphemism to create the appearance of good faith. Through this technique, wars are conveniently transformed into “military operations” or even, as Trump has said, “excursions.”
Macron is the latest of France’s Fifth Republic presidents to champion the notion of Europe’s “strategic autonomy,” even before the Fifth Republic existed. The reason is simple: from Charles de Gaulle onward, French heads of state — with greater or less conviction — have consistently viewed “Europe” as a continuation of France by other means. When they speak of Europe’s “strategic autonomy,” therefore, they are effectively thinking of the “strategic autonomy” of a France extended to the borders of what is now the European Union (if not farther).
Let us summarize.
In 1943, when Germany’s eventual defeat had become evident, de Gaulle called for a revision of the
Treaty of Verdun(843 CE) and the “
reunification of the Western Franks with the Eastern Franks.” To do so – to join a France that de Gaulle envisioned as victorious in the conflict to a Germany already de facto defeated – meant establishing from the outset a relationship in the future reunification of the “Franks” that was clearly skewed in Paris’s favor.
Later, de Gaulle described the European process as being led by the Franco-German partnership, but with a specific division of roles between Paris and Bonn (then the West German capital), in which “
Germany would be the horse and France the coachman.”
De Gaulle’s decision to make France a nuclear power, at the very moment he was vetoing British membership in the European Common Market, meant not only endowing “strategic autonomy” with a powerful bargaining chip, but also further elevating France’s status as the sole “coachman” of the Six-Nation Europe.
In 1969, just six years after the Franco-German treaty of perpetual friendship was signed at the Élysée Palace, Henry Kissinger asked how France could prevent Germany from one day dominating Europe. De Gaulle, as Kissinger himself recalled, “did not consider this query to merit an extensive reply. ‘
Par la guerre’, he replied curtly.”
Twenty years later, at the time of the fall of the Berlin Wall, François Mitterrand
strongly opposed German reunification, though he later conceded that the only way to prevent it would have been “
through the application of force.”
French Presidents Nicolas Sarkozy and François Hollande did not hesitate to launch operations in Africa while automatically counting on European support — and German support in particular — clearly assuming that, even after German reunification, Berlin could not refuse lest it offend Paris, the second indispensable pillar of Europe’s fragile framework.
The conviction — well-founded, moreover — that France is too big to fail has driven every European policy in Paris for decades; governments of both the right and the left (as well as Macron’s supposed “center”) have
shamelessly drained public coffers to sustain a system of electoral patronage for an electorate compulsively attached to the teat of the state, knowing full well that Germany and the other “frugal” Europeans would foot the bill.
Most agreements with Italy, including the ethereal “Quirinale Treaty,” have had the not-so-hidden aim of uniting the group of chronic debtors in order to force creditors to loosen the purse strings and, if possible, to sign formal commitments to continue doing so
ad libitum. The recurring proposal to begin the federalization of Europe by first federalizing debt is a ploy that everyone — including “sovereigntists,” who are fiercely protective of national prerogatives in other matters — enthusiastically supports in France (and in Italy).
That is for the past. Returning to the present – and setting aside for the moment the nonetheless important issue of the EU’s free-trade pact with the South American countries in
Mercosur – we come to Emmanuel Macron’s “muscle-flexing” moves over the war in Iran, including the rapid redeployment of the aircraft carrier
Charles de Gaulle from the Baltic to the eastern Mediterranean.
Now transformed into a
chef de guerre, Macron has delivered a series of speeches with a distinctly warlike tone, starting with the one that concerns us here, given before Keir Starmer at the Île Longue base at the tip of Brittany, where France’s four nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines are stationed. On that occasion, Macron revisited a proposal for “advanced nuclear deterrence,” that is, the sharing of strategic air forces and nuclear weapons with other European countries (including the United Kingdom).
The
Financial Times, among others, enthusiastically welcomed the “novelty” of this: France’s proposal “exceeds all expectations,” it said; it is “a nuclear offer never seen before.” Adding significance was Macron’s simultaneous announcement of an increase in the number of nuclear warheads Paris plans to add to its arsenal.
Courrier international, a weekly publication of the
Le Monde group, reported with ill-concealed pride on many other positive reactions across half of Europe.
For those who find satisfaction in even a few drops of water, this is the glass half full.
The glass half empty, which worries the rest of Europe, is Macron’s repetition in that very speech of a concept — or rather, a principle — that the French president has made clear every time the question of “advanced nuclear deterrence” has been raised: “There will be no sharing of the ultimate decision, nor of its planning, nor of its execution.”
In other words, the finger on the button will be French, and Paris alone will decide if, how, when, and against whom to deploy its atomic weapons stationed in Germany, Denmark, Poland, Greece, and elsewhere. Put even more simply: Paris is positioning itself to have the final say over German, Danish, Polish, Greek, and other foreign policies — essentially, over the foreign policy of all Europe.
The “nuclear umbrella” — the guarantee by a nuclear-weapons state to defend a non-nuclear allied state — is an American invention that served a dual purpose: to deter potential nuclear powers from attacking a country under U.S. protection, while also constraining that country’s foreign policy so that it not exceed the limits set by the provider of the umbrella — in this case, the United States. What the current administration in Washington and the overwhelming majority of American voters fail to understand is that the “protection” offered under the umbrella is also a means of control — one that helps guide strategic choices of the so-called “allies”, and maintain U.S. supremacy.