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October 30, 2006
French History, Just Forget It

France maintains her good opinion of herself by the expedience of forgetting. Whether her murderous police work at home, her inept and murderous peacekeeping, her murderous colonial conduct, her shabby treatment of the less-than-French who fought her causes, or her policy of warehousing an underclass in concrete shoeboxes in her banlieues -- France just forgets.

AFTER 50 YEARS, SUEZ VETS FIGHT FOR RECOGNITION

PARIS October 26, 2006 (AFP) - On the 50th anniversary of the Franco-British airborne invasion of Egypt that is known as the Suez crisis, French veterans of the campaign are still pushing for official recognition from the state which they say has airbrushed them out of the history books. Some 17,000 French servicemen were involved...according to the Association of Veterans of Suez and Cyprus, but the government refuses to grant them the status of war veteran.

"The government says we were only 60 days in the war-zone — so we don't qualify because the law says you have to be there 90 days to get social and pension rights as veterans," said the association's president André Painsecq, 72.

"But it is rubbish. Many of us were there for much more than 90 days — and just after the crisis the defence minister even published a decree fixing the duration at 113 days. It is scandalous. Our British colleagues got far better treatment," he said.

Enquiry at the ministry of veterans' affairs in Paris confirms that there is no record of those who took part.

... Widely seen as a fiasco, the crisis led to the resignation of British Prime Minister Anthony Eden, severely strained trans-Atlantic relations and undermined both France's and Britain's standing in the Arab world, where the invasion is still known as the "Tripartite Aggression" [because of Israeli collusion].

But if in Britain the anniversary on October 29 is being marked by much historical comment and analysis — as well as a three-part drama documentary on the BBC — in France the forgotten servicemen reflect a general amnesia about a conflict that has all but slipped from the national consciousness.

"Perhaps in Britain people are more honest. They wanted the truth so they talked about what happened. After all even if it was a disaster, it is history. But here it is just forgotten," said André Jesupret, 71, who served an a mechanic on French aircraft in Cyprus.

"In Britain Suez became the symbol of the end of the imperial destiny. It had huge resonance. But in France it was lost in the rush of events in the dying phase of the Fourth Republic," [historian Philippe Vial] said.

... Another factor is that many of those involved in Suez — for example defence minister Maurice Bourges-Maunoury — disappeared from political history with Charles de Gaulle's Fifth Republic in 1958. "A generation of leaders simply vanished from the national memory," said Vial.

A third reason for official amnesia may be that Suez marked the high point of a close alliance between France and Israel, which could not be further at odds from Paris's current policy of engagement in the Arab world. It was France in the 1950s that was Israel's main arms supplier — providing Mirage jets as well as the technology for the Israeli nuclear programme.

"It is ironic because what everyone has forgotten is that France was much more gung-ho about Suez than the British were," said Vial.

PFFT (What is this?): Suez, huh? 5 | Rayonnement français 0

posted by Damian at 11:00 AM
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