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Columns
Molly Ivins
Don't boycott the French!
February 18, 2003
AUSTIN, Texas -- As our coaches used to say, "OK, people, settle down and listen up." We have been enjoying a lovely little spate of French-bashing here lately. Jonah Goldberg of The National Review, who admits that French-bashing is "shtick" -- as it is to many American comedians -- has popularized the phrase "cheese-eating surrender monkeys" to describe the French. It gets a lot less attractive than that.
George Will saw fit to include in his latest Newsweek column this joke: "How many Frenchmen does it take to defend Paris? No one knows, it's never been tried." That was certainly amusing. One million, four hundred thousand French soldiers were killed during World War I. As a result, there weren't many Frenchmen left to fight in World War II. Nevertheless, 100,000 French soldiers lost their lives trying to stop Hitler.
On behalf of every one of those 100,000 men, I would like to thank Mr. Will for his clever joke. They were out-manned, out-gunned, out-generaled and, above all, out-tanked. They got slaughtered, but they stood and they fought. Ha-ha, how funny. In the few places where they had tanks, they held splendidly.
Relying on the Maginot Line was one of the great military follies of modern history, but it does not reflect on the courage of those who died for France in 1940. For eighteen months after that execrable defeat, the United States of America continued to have cordial diplomatic relations with Nazi Germany.
One of the great what-ifs of history is: What would have happened if Franklin Roosevelt had lived to the end of his last term? How many wars have been lost in the peace? For those of you who have not read "Paris 1919," I recommend it highly. Roosevelt was anti-colonialist. That system was a great evil, a greater horror even than Nazism or Stalinism.
If you have read "Leopold's Ghost" by Adam Hochschild, you have some idea. The French were in it up to their necks. Instead of insisting on freedom for the colonies of Europe, we let our allies carry on with the system, leaving the British in India and Africa, and the French in Vietnam and Algeria, to everyone's eventual regret.
Surrender monkeys? Try Dien Bien Phu. Yes, the French did surrender, didn't they? After 6,000 French dead in a no-hope position. Ever heard of the Foreign Legion? Of the paratroopers, called "paras"? God, the trouble we could have saved ourselves if we had only paid attention to Dien Bien Phu.
Then came Algeria for the French. As nasty a war as has ever been fought. If you have seen the film "Battle of Algiers," you have some idea. Five generations of pieds noirs, French colonialists, thought it was their country. Charles de Gaulle came back into power in 1958, specifically elected to keep Algeria French. I consider de Gaulle's long, slow, delicate, elephantine withdrawal (de Gaulle even looked like an elephant) one of the single greatest acts of statesmanship in history. Only de Gaulle could have done that.
Those were the years when France learned about terrorism. The plastiquers were all over Paris. The "plastic" bombs, the ones you can stick like Play-Do underneath the ledge of some building, were the popular weapon du jour. It made Israel today look tame. For France, terrorism is, "Been there, done that."
The other night on "60 Minutes," Andy Rooney, who fought in France and certainly has a right to be critical, chided the French for forgetting all that sacrifice (100,000 Frenchmen died trying to stop Hitler in 1940, and 150,000 Allied troops died to liberate that nation in 1944.) But I think he got it backward: The French remember too well.
I was in Paris on Sept. 11, 2001. The reaction was so immediate, so generous, so overwhelming. Not just the government, but the people kept bringing flowers to the American embassy. They covered the American Cathedral, the American Church, anything they could find that was American. They didn't just leave flowers, they wrote notes with them. I read over 100 of them. Not only did they refer, again and again, to Normandy, to never forgetting, there were even some in ancient, spidery handwriting referring to WW I: "Lafayette is still with you."
Look, the French are not a touchy-feely people. They're more, like, logical. For them to approach total strangers in the streets who look American and hug them is seriously extraordinary. I got patted so much I felt like a Labrador retriever. I wish Andy Rooney had been there.
This is where I think the real difference is. We Americans are famously ahistorical. We can barely be bothered to remember what happened last week, or last month, much less last year. The French are really stuck on history. (Some might claim this is because the French are better educated than we are. I won't go there.) Does it not occur to anyone that these are very old friends of ours, trying to tell us what they think they know about being hated by weak enemies in the Third World?
To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2003 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Molly Ivins
"More issues in the business section" October 26, 2003
"Gully-washing, frog strangling..." October 22, 2003
"Stupefying" October 20, 2003
"Bush-hater strikes again " October 16, 2003
"Outrage and irony" October 8, 2003
"Why did we invade Iraq?" October 7, 2003
"Are you confused yet?" October 2, 2003
"Anyone but Bush" September 30, 2003
"George W. Bush's America" September 24, 2003
"A terrible president " September 23, 2003
"The Full Ostrich on Iraq" September 18, 2003
"These people don't want to govern, they want to rule" September 10, 2003
"Sigh." September 9, 2003
"I told you so again" September 4, 2003
"Arnold: Politics as showbiz" August 26, 2003
"Weathervanes for the wrong direction" August 21, 2003
"The All-American Blame Game!" August 19, 2003
"Hang in there, Texas Eleven" August 13, 2003
"National credulity fitness" August 11, 2003
"Utter degradation of political discourse" August 7, 2003
"One overwhelming impression: deception" August 5, 2003
"Iraq: The peace from hell" August 1, 2003
"It's not fair" July 31, 2003
"More intelligence" July 29, 2003
"The Other Great State" July 23, 2003
"Legal nonsense" July 21, 2003
"A stinging rebuke to the disgraceful level of journalism" July 14, 2003
"Recent Supreme Court action" June 30, 2003
"Global warming? Just edit it out!" June 26, 2003
"Medicare Prescription Drug Bill: 'This is soooo complicated'" June 24, 2003
"Iraqi gold rush" June 18, 2003
"'This perverse episode'" June 16, 2003
"Budget imbalance " June 12, 2003
"Psst, kids, there's money in the wind" June 10, 2003
"Like a bridge over troubled waters" June 5, 2003
"'Weapons of Mass Distortion'" June 2, 2003
"Media ownership" May 28, 2003
"The question remains: Why?" May 28, 2003
"The Texas Legislature" May 27, 2003
"Democrats With Cojones" May 15, 2003
"Straight from the pit of hell" May 14, 2003
"Bush is a liar" May 8, 2003
"Plastic flamingos" May 6, 2003
"Texas law" May 1, 2003
"What WMD 's?" April 29, 2003
"Another bad idea from the Republican Party" April 24, 2003
"Another big fight" April 8, 2003
"This is more than exciting" April 3, 2003
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"Bidding on societal change" March 18, 2003
"Bribery, blackmail and Bush" March 13, 2003
"Right and Wrong" March 11, 2003
"Taxes and Texas" March 5, 2003
"Spying on the UN and other US antics" March 4, 2003
"Axis of evil boomerang" February 27, 2003
"Bush has another plan" February 25, 2003
"Patriotic or Not?" February 20, 2003
"Don't boycott the French!" February 18, 2003
"What the hell is going on?" February 13, 2003
"Of tax evasion and denials" February 11, 2003
"Conservatives in Action" February 8, 2003
"Deficit at record high" February 5, 2003
"State of the Union" January 29, 2003
"Campaign donations and the State of the Union" January 28, 2003
"The Evil Q" January 23, 2003
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