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The possible participation in a coalition against Russia gives cold sweats to the French armies. How long would they last?
By Jean Guisnel
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Sounds of boots that are heard in eastern Europe; China’s stated ambitions in space and naval matters in particular; Turkey’s strategic initiatives in the Eastern Mediterranean among others; significant rise in power of many Middle Eastern states, from Egypt to the Emirates, which are buying modern and powerful equipment with all their might: the signs of a return to the risk of symmetrical confrontations between technologically comparable armies are multiplying.
These risks are added, moreover, to real difficulties for the Western powers – when they do not suffer flagrant failures – to impose their will on “asymmetrical” adversaries. For anyone who doubts it, the recent example of the American defeat in Afghanistan reminds us of this…
De Gaulle – Think, resist, govern
His name has become synonymous with a free and powerful France. De Gaulle, the man of the appeal of June 18, has established himself in history first as a rebel, a resistance fighter and then as a charismatic political leader, in France and abroad. Adored, hated during his presidency, he became after his death a myth, an ideal politician that on the right and on the left we begin to regret.
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