Macron wants to lead Europe on Ukraine. France
may not let him.
French president faces blowback across the political
spectrum for not ruling out a Western military presence in Ukraine.
FEBRUARY
28, 2024 4:02 AM CET
BY CLEA
CAULCUTT
https://www.politico.eu/article/macron-wants-to-lead-on-ukraine-but-france-might-not-let-him/
PARIS —
There’s no doubt President Emmanuel Macron wants to take on a mantle of global
leadership and reverse faltering Western support for Ukraine, but French
politics will make that a hard role for him to pull off.
As
Ukrainian forces are pushed back on the battlefield and uncertainty persists
over Western military aid, Macron has made a combative pitch to turn the tide,
telling reporters that “Europe is at stake.” On Monday he promised a fresh push
for artillery shells, floated the idea of western boots on the ground, and
announced a new coalition on long-range missiles.
Macron is
clearly styling himself as a statesman who can step into the breach in the mold
of Italy’s Mario Draghi, who famously steadied the crisis-stricken eurozone
with his pledge to do “whatever it takes.” Indeed, Macron echoed that very
phrase on Monday: “We’re determined to do whatever it takes for as long as it
takes.”
The
question, then, is: How far is Macron truly ready to go this time? His previous
lofty rhetoric on Ukraine, after all, has not been matched by action. Most
significantly, can he hope to prevail as a galvanizing Western leader if he
fails to carry France with him?
All French
opposition forces have already rounded on him. Marine Le Pen, on the far right,
has pilloried his assertion that Western troops in Ukraine “shouldn’t be ruled
out” as toying with “the lives of [France’s] children,” while far-left leader
Jean-Luc Mélenchon said it was “madness” to pitch “one nuclear power against
another nuclear power.” More mainstream forces, such as the Socialist Party and
the conservative Les Républicains, also condemned the French president’s
muscle-flexing.
Those are
arguments that resonate strongly with voters in France — at a time when
Macron’s centrist liberal party is polling far beneath the far left and far
right ahead of June’s European election.
On news
channels on Tuesday the talking points were about whether France should prepare
itself for a war with Russia. And the answers were broadly: “No.”
“I really
don’t understand why he said that, it can be seen as quite a dangerous,
worrying idea, sending troops for the French. Especially if we don’t have any
agreement within the EU,” said OpinionWay pollster Bruno Jeanbart.
For
Jeanbart, Macron’s statement was more about “sending a message to diplomatic
partners” after facing criticism for “his proximity” to Russia’s Vladimir Putin
at the start of the war.
The
Ukrainians, however, are fed up with diplomatic messages from Macron and would
prefer weapons — an area where Paris, instead of leading, lags far behind the
U.S., Germany, Britain and Poland.
Macron’s Zeitenwende
Germany’s
defining moment at the beginning of the war was a Zeitenwende — a historical
turning point — in which Berlin vowed to revamp its long-forsaken military to
face the real danger from Russia.
The French
president has been under pressure to match words with action on Ukraine since
announcing his own personal Zeitenwende on Ukraine support during a speech in
Bratislava last June. There, he apologized for not heeding Central and Eastern
Europeans on the Russian threat.
But with
Ukraine running out of ammunition and France’s own lesser donations to Kyiv
under fresh scrutiny, Macron’s promises were starting to look empty. His
intervention on Monday was meant to rectify that impression, and his pledge to
take part in a Czech initiative to buy shells from providers outside the EU,
departing from France’s “Buy European” mantra, signals a major shift.
Macron’s
greatest challenge, though, is that his ambition appears out of sync with the
prevailing French mood on Ukraine.
For the
French, the war is not the great civilizational clash for Europe’s democracy
and freedom that it is to countries that still have bitter memories of Russia’s
murderous rule.
“Russia is
not seen as a direct threat to France, and the war is seen as a former USSR
consideration,” Jeanbart said. That’s in stark contrast to Poland, the Baltic
nations and even Germany and the Nordic countries, for whom the danger is more
imminent.
Recent
polling figures show a lukewarm — and rapidly cooling — sympathy for Ukraine in
France. While 58 percent of the French have a positive impression of Ukraine,
that’s down 24 points from the outbreak of the war, according to figures from
polling institute IFOP. Only 50 percent support arming Ukraine — to say nothing
of fighting for it — down 15 points from the early days of the fighting in
2022.
Furthermore,
only 62 percent of the French support sanctions against Russia, compared to 72
percent at the beginning of the war.
France’s
influential and increasingly obstreperous farmers are another major political
headache for Macron. Cheap Ukrainian poultry and cereals have become one of the
focal points of their rage, and their leaders are pressing Macron to restrict
imports.
In a
reflection of the lack of sympathy for Ukraine, Damien Radet, a regional
representative for France’s top farmers’ union, told POLITICO at the end of
last month that massive food inflows would have to be stopped as Ukraine was
“not a European country” and “has nothing to do with our history.”
That’s a
hard constituency for Macron to win round with his talk of Europe being at
stake.
Already,
Macron’s hint of western forces trudging round Ukraine and talk of grand
coalitions to secure long-range missiles have started to ring hollow.
On Tuesday,
French officials and politicians tried to recast what he said in the face of
pushback from European leaders including Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. The plan “is not to send French or European
troops to fight against Russia, but to contribute to deterrence,” said French
lawmaker Benjamin Haddad, who belongs to Macron’s Renaissance party.
France’s
Foreign Minister Stéphane Séjourné also appeared to downplay Macron’s words,
saying that new signs of support may involve a western presence in Ukraine,
such as demining or arms production. “Some of these actions would necessitate a
presence on Ukrainian territory without crossing the threshold of
belligerence,” Séjourné said.
French
Foreign Minister Stéphane Séjourné leaves after addressing the UN General
Assembly meeting on February 23 | Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images
The credibility gap
The risk
for Macron is that he will been seen as making another rhetorical reset, and of
politicking on the back of Ukraine — a point raised by veteran French columnist
Pierre Haski.
After a
barrage of criticism from the left and the right, Macron is now trying to turn
the tables on the opposition, with a debate and a vote on a security deal
struck with Ukraine. Such a move would force Le Pen’s National Rally to
position itself on Ukraine just as the French government is trying to cast the
far right as proxies for the Kremlin.
French
Prime Minister Gabriel Attal on Tuesday crossed swords with the National Rally
during questions in the National Assembly, hinting at “its real loyalties.”
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“When we
read the Washington Post’s investigation [on Russian infiltration of the French
far right], we ask ourselves whether Putin’s troops are not already in our
country,” he said.
Ultimately,
as foreign policy analyst Ulrich Speck notes, Macron’s allusions to boots on
the ground, or “strategic ambiguity” as the president called it, must be
credible.
As Speck
wrote on X: “Credibility comes with the steady massive military support for
Ukraine, which France hasn’t provided in the last two years.”
Victor Goury-Laffont contributed reporting
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