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Chirac's First Major Decision an Unpopular One


Article # : 11275 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 5 / 1986  1,025 Words
Author : Bernard Mitjavile
Bernard Mitjavile is a Paris-based correspondent for the New York City Tribune.

       The first major foreign policy decision of new French Prime Minister Jacques Chirac, denying permission for U.S. bombers to overfly France on their way to Libya, came as a surprise to many who expected him to have a more pro-American attitude.
       
        After all, only the month before, he had firmly emphasized the need to increase cooperation among Western countries in order to fight terrorism.
       
        The decision was taken jointly with Socialist president Francois Mitterrand, but Chirac had to face alone the criticism of conservative politicians who had expected that his coming to power would bring a change in foreign affairs.
       
        "French people voted for a change, but was it worth changing the government if it conducts the same foreign policy?" Philippe Malaud, a conservative deputy, told THE WORLD & I, expressing a mood shared by many.
       
        In the days following the U.S. raid, the first serious division emerged within the conservative coalition that had won a majority in parliament in the March elections.
       
        Of the two parties forming the coalition, deputies from the neo-Gaullist Rally for the Republic, Chirac's party, generally backed the government's decision not to allow overflights. But most members of the Union for French Democracy (UDF), led by former president Valery Giscard d'Estaing and acting UDF president Jean Lecanuet, strongly criticized the lack of solidarity of the government with France's key ally.
       
        Giscard d'Estaing said, in an indirect criticism of the government, that "the Western world should have expressed its solidarity in such circumstances." The former president recalled that "in a similar situation" in 1978, when he decided to send paratroopers to free Kolwezi, a mining town in Zaire that had been seized by Cuban-backed rebels, he received the support of the United States. (French forces were sent to Zaire in American military planes.)
       
        Lecanuet spoke of the "fluctuating French foreign policy" and said he was not satisfied by the explanations given by the government to defend its decision.
       
        Most opposed
       
        Surprisingly, in the parliamentary debate following
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