Re: At home, meanwhile, [France] has had to come to terms with a growing Arab underclass, one whose resentments and tendencies to violence have been whipped up in no small part by the inflexible hostility displayed by the French state to Jewish self-determination.
A contradiction in terms! How could "resentments" and "tendencies to violence" within the Arab immigrants constituency stem from France's overtly pro-Arab and pro-Palestinian policy? Truth is, just like the US' Sun Belt has a problem with Mexican immigration, France (and most other EU countries as well) has difficulties integrating her non-European minorities. However, it's basically a socio-economic challenge, not --as US and Israeli Judeofascists would love to have it-- a religious/ideological conflict....
Re: The pursuit of une puissance musulmane, fitting Arabs and Jews into a grand design on French terms, has evidently been an intellectual illusion all along, and highly dangerous to the interests of everyone concerned.
Wrong again... The "intellectual, highly dangerous illusion" is the one nursed by Judeofascists about France joining them into an all-out crusade against "Arab/Muslim barbarians". It's indeed a fantasy as suicidal for France as a holy crusade against Latino minorities would be for the US --because both entail civil war. That's why French intelligence has shrewdly concocted the AZF terrorist threat: conspicuously a non-Muslim, non-Arab terrorist group that routinely threatens French authorities with bomb plots(*). If France were ruled by Judeofascist freaks like the US, she too would have stoked the fires against bugbear Bin Laden, Al-qaeda, Zarqawi and co.
Gus
(*) AZF terror group threatens France anew
PARIS, March 25 (UPI) -- A shadowy group has sent threatening missives to France's president and interior minister, one containing a detonator.
Known as AZF, the little-known organization sent the threats Thursday to French President Jacques Chirac and Interior Minister Dominique de Villepin, French television announced Friday, citing a statement from the Paris prosecutor's office.
French officials have so far declined to detail the threats contained in the two missives, other than they sought to extort funds.
The public prosecutor's office has launched an investigation into the matter.
Last year, AZF sent several threatening letters, warning that it would set off explosives on French rail lines if its demands for roughly $6.2 million from the government were not met.
Several unexploded bombs were later discovered on the rail lines at different points of time. [...]
sciencedaily.com |