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Wimps, weasels and monkeys - the US media view of 'perfidious France'
Guardian ^ | 2/11/03 | Gary Younge in New York and Jon Henley in Paris

Posted on 02/10/2003 11:14:49 PM PST by kattracks

The "petulant prima donna of realpolitik" is leading the "axis of weasels", in "a chorus of cowards". It is an unholy alliance of "wimps" and ingrates which includes one country that is little more than a "mini-me minion", another that is in league with Cuba and Libya, with a bunch of "cheese-eating surrender monkeys" at the helm.

Welcome to Europe, as viewed through the eyes of American commentators and newspapers yesterday, as Euro-bashing, and particularly anti-French sentiment, reached new heights. In a barrage of insults and invective which ranged from the basest tabloid rants to the loftiest columnists on the most respected newspapers, European-led resistance to America's war plans in Iraq was portrayed not as a diplomatic position to be negotiated as a genetic weakness in the European mindset which makes them reluctant to fight wars and incapable of winning them.

The front page of Rupert Murdoch's New York Post yesterday shows the graves of Normandy with the headline: "They died for France but France has forgotten." "Where are the French now, as Americans prepare to put their soldiers on the line to fight today's Hitler, Saddam Hussein?" asks the pugnacious columnist Steve Dunleavy. "Talking appeasement. Wimping out. How can they have forgotten?" A cartoon in the same paper shows an ostrich with its head in the sand below the words: "The national bird of France."

If such language is proving a headache for the diplomats, then spare a thought for the French translators, who have struggled for words to convey the full force of the venom. "Cheese-eating surrender monkeys" - a phrase coined by Bart Simpson but made acceptable in official diplomatic channels around the globe by Jonah Goldberg, a columnist for the rightwing weekly National Review (according to Goldberg) - was finally rendered: " Primates capitulards et toujours en quête de fromages ". And the New York Post's "axis of weasel" lost much of its venom when translated as a limp " axe de faux jetons " (literally, "axis of devious characters").

American wrath has been reserved for those nations which oppose their leadership, particularly following the decision to oppose shifting Nato resources to Turkey. "Three countries - France, Germany and their mini-me minion, Belgium - have moved from opposition to US policy toward Iraq into formal, and consequential obstructionism," argued the Wall Street Journal in an editorial yesterday. "If there is a war [the Turks] will face the danger of direct attack that is not feared in the chocolate shops of Brussels." The front page of the National Review blares "Putsch" with a sub-headline: "How to defeat the Franco-German power grab."

While the jibes may be puerile, the possibility that the Bush administration and commercial outlets might follow them up with punitive measures has struck some as pernicious. An ad, due to come out soon, shows three German-made cars, including an Audi and a BMW, driving towards the camera with a voice saying: "Do you really want to buy a German car?"

If there has been any European country that has attracted more contempt than others, it is France. In the Wall Street Journal, Christopher Hitchens described Jacques Chirac as "a positive monster of conceit _ the abject procurer for Saddam ... the rat that tried to roar". In the Washington Post, George Will opined that the "oily" foreign affairs minister, Dominique de Villepin, had launched France into "an exercise for which France has often refined its savoir-faire since 1870, which is to say retreat - this time into incoherence".

And in the New York Times, Thomas Friedman argued that France should be removed from the security council and be replaced with India: "India is just so much more serious than France these days. France is so caught up with its need to differentiate itself from America to feel important, it's become silly." The Wall Street Journal editor, Max Boot, argues: "France has been in decline since, oh, about 1815, and it isn't happy about it." What particularly galls the Gauls is that their rightful place in the world has been usurped by the gauche Americans."

At its ugliest, the transatlantic bile is becoming increasingly personal. When France Inter radio's correspondent in Washington, Laurence Simon, started to explain her government's position to Fox News (owned by Murdoch) she was interrupted by the presenter. "With friends like you, who needs enemies," she was told as she was taken off air.



TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: capitulatingfrogs; cheeseandwhine; cheeseeating; france; french; surrendermonkeys; whiteflag
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To: metesky
No, it's the part where you kiss my Greek a$$.

Careful, I had a horrible crush on a Greek girl in HS. :-)

121 posted on 02/11/2003 4:52:54 AM PST by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Kip Lange
The one that always wore black and had a mustache?

He liked you too.

122 posted on 02/11/2003 4:53:56 AM PST by metesky (My retirement fund is holding steady @ $.05 a can.)
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To: Kip Lange
Who owned that barbor shop? You must know that name- that is where Wellesely cops placed there bets. Do you know where the bet sheet was stowed? Initials were VC.
123 posted on 02/11/2003 4:54:02 AM PST by Burkeman1
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To: Burkeman1
Right down near where Goobellini's used to be. I think the barber shop is gone now. BTW, Wellesley succumbed to hand-wringing suburban white guilt liberalism. IMO, it's worse than Berkeley (I can't stand rich white liberal guilt syndrome).
124 posted on 02/11/2003 4:55:04 AM PST by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Kip Lange
How about that one greek girl at the Maugus? In fact- even though some of them were portly they looked good.
125 posted on 02/11/2003 4:55:24 AM PST by Burkeman1
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To: Burkeman1
Who owned that barbor shop? You must know that name- that is where Wellesely cops placed there bets. Do you know where the bet sheet was stowed? Initials were VC.

Ahem. Don't know what you're talking about. Have two friends on the force.

P.S. In the "weird" category, Colin Greineder was my valedictorian. Now, I wager you'll remember that name. I was same class as Rich Young, btw. ;-)

126 posted on 02/11/2003 4:58:00 AM PST by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: metesky
No, this one asked me to the prom. Definitely didn't have a mustache. Last I heard she was working for JP Morgan in NYC (although she was leaving at the time, I think).
127 posted on 02/11/2003 4:59:10 AM PST by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Kip Lange
It was Victor Corte's place. That was the Wellesley "maffia" link in that he paid a fee to operate to the family we won't mention that paid another fee. But I will tell you this- wellesley yankee police came in there and placed bets. My father even felt he had to explain it to me.
128 posted on 02/11/2003 4:59:21 AM PST by Burkeman1
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To: Burkeman1
Burkeman, some things are worth fighting for. Some are worth dying for.

We've seen how Israel is forced to live in the midst of suicide bombers and terrorist attacks.

The new weapons of choice for these enemies of America and Christianity are not suicide bombers. They are light bulbs and coke bottles filled with biological and chemical weapons. They are explosives wrapped with contaminated radiated material.

Now, the INS, for whatever reason, has not kept close track of immigration here. We have possibly twelve million people living here on expired visas.

Using the long held truth that decay starts from the head, you have to eliminate (in grandiose fashion) any ally or conduit of our enemies. Today, Iran is making overtures for nuclear "power". Do you feel good inside that somebody like the Ayatollah Khomeni could have HIS finger on the button of a nuclear weapon?

Do you remember the long gas lines of the 70's? This points out the validity of separation of religion and government. These enemies of the West must be destroyed or incapacitated.

Our close relationship with Israel is mereing an excuse for these 15th Century despots. And incidentally, Israel, only fifty-something years old has progressed head and shoulders above the rest of the Middle East. Why? Maybe it's because it is a Democratic form of government and not a Dictatorship?

Bush is simply ensuring that your grandchildren can someday, live their lives as you and I are living our lives...in the greatest country the planet has ever seen.

God Bless President Bush. God Bless America!

129 posted on 02/11/2003 5:00:25 AM PST by DCPatriot
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To: Burkeman1
Shhhhhhhhhhh! :p
130 posted on 02/11/2003 5:00:37 AM PST by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Kip Lange
Greineder. Sorry. Knew his dad guilty.
131 posted on 02/11/2003 5:01:47 AM PST by Burkeman1
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To: Burkeman1
Our reaction to these ingrates is our way of saying enough is enough. It's over. We're through with the French. We're not "naive" anymore. If anyone wants France, we won't defend them...

Doesn't work that way. We have only ourselves to blame for being morons. That they don't support us now should only surprise the naive.

132 posted on 02/11/2003 5:02:47 AM PST by GOPJ
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To: Burkeman1
Will the chances of a suitcase nuke being let off in New York be more or less likely after a war with Iraq?

Exactly the same.

133 posted on 02/11/2003 5:04:28 AM PST by ez ("The course of this nation does not depend on the decision of others." GWB)
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To: nutmeg

134 posted on 02/11/2003 5:05:50 AM PST by metalboy
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To: kattracks
spare a thought for the French translators, who have struggled for words to convey the full force of the venom. "Cheese-eating surrender monkeys" -

Maybe this will help:


135 posted on 02/11/2003 5:07:29 AM PST by Overtaxed
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To: Burkeman1
We all knew his dad was guilty. I met the Dad. He was a *freak*. And May (the victim/mother) was a sweetheart (ask Rich). That family is devastated. Not to mention "through the looking glass" after several TV specials and non-stop coverage of the trial on Court TV. Watching Colin testify in defense of his father was one of the hardest things I've ever watched...
136 posted on 02/11/2003 5:09:30 AM PST by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Burkeman1
Let's not forget another upstanding Wellesley resident: HOWIE CARR! :-)
137 posted on 02/11/2003 5:13:51 AM PST by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Kip Lange
How sad. The sisters were absolute bueaties. One, I hear is an alcoholic with her loser live in boyfriend in town. So sad. But I heard the scuttle butt about the father from the McCauley family as well. That "doctor" Grenidier was a pompous ass and a little weird. I actually was in the midst of finally dealing with a drinking problem (stemming from a DUI) at the same courthouse in Deedham that the trial was held. I learned from my PO- that the cops suspected him from almost the first second.
138 posted on 02/11/2003 5:28:14 AM PST by Burkeman1
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To: Burkeman1
The "one girl" is not an alcoholic; the Globe kindly slandered her as one. She also, I think, sold the house. The reason she fell into drinking is obvious...she was the odd one out (the only non-valedictorian and non-doctor) and when the fit met the shan the family laid on her to take care of everything...but she is not, I repeat, an alcoholic. I don't know about the boyfriend.

McCauley? *Steve* McCauley?
139 posted on 02/11/2003 5:32:00 AM PST by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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To: Burkeman1
On an ironic note, Rich and I had...French class together. ;-) (CHEESE-EATING SURRENDER MONKEYS I HEREBY TAKE YOUR SUCKY LANGUAGE AND CHUCK IT IN THE BLEEPING WASTEBASKET)
140 posted on 02/11/2003 5:33:31 AM PST by Kip Lange (The Khaki Pants of Freedom)
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