Compteur des visites

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Nicolas Sarkozy and David Cameron, arrived in Libya

Nicolas Sarkozy and British Prime Minister, David Cameron, arrived in Libya Thursday, September 15 in the morning. They met in Tripoli, Benghazi before leaving for the seat of the Transitional National Council of Libya.

This visit marks the culmination of Nicolas Sarkozy for a very personal war, conducted through NATO, in which he was invested as a rare Western head of state has done for twenty years. He has initiated and completed on a daily changing front lines. He saw an opportunity to revive the history of the relationship between France and the Arab world and to put his presidency in French history.
>> Read "The War of Nicolas Sarkozy"
In the story that the French authorities are of the war, however, some points seem inconsistent. Mr Sarkozy has made the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi an a posteriori justification of his decision to re-engage France in NATO. The Elysée had however been first tried to enter Libya outside the Atlantic Alliance, alongside the United Kingdom. The Head of State there was not resolved after a British refusal. The French narrative also tends to minimize the actual role played by the United States in this war, including technology support and discreet military has been crucial.
>> Read: "The War of Libya and the temptation of 'storytelling' French '
>> Read the New York Times: "Libyan War Goes a Long Way to Improve the Pentagon's View of France as Ally year"
The visit of Nicolas Sarkozy and David Cameron also raise speculation about the post-war and redistribution of oil wealth by the new Libyan government following the rebellion. Privately, the French president refuses to hear of a war "for oil." But French companies including Total, could be supported by political and military support to the rebellion in February 2011.

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