Saturday, May 16, 2009

Chad against Sudan: French missiles and crocodile tears!

Chad; the poorest country in Africa, but it always seizes the top of the list of French loyalists. A small army supported by French forces. Three major French bases in the country and an obedient president, even after his son had been found dead in Paris!
What we have in the new news now?
Sudanese foreign ministry conveyed a strong message to the ambassador of Chad protesting the air strike. Khartoum said: "Three jet fighters from Chad had violated Sudanese air space and bombarded the area of Jabal Sindo which is 60 km inside the Sudanese territory and west of the city of Janiniya, the capital of West Darfur."
We have been hearing these hostilities between Chad and Sudan for several years, and the French role became very obvious, I think we need a deeper view, let us jump to a strange question that I found it in a Sudanese chatting website; DO you expect a black president for France? Because Nicolas Sarkozy now is tracing Bush's steps! Instead of arrogant America we have arrogant France. It seems that western powers go around in circles! Their heads in the clouds, they do not want to listen to any advice, they do not want to live peacefully at all. But their dreams usually turn to nightmares; destroying Somalia cause a chain of regional and international problems ends with piracy. American occupation of Iraq is a disaster and going out suddenly means giving Iran a huge gift!
Fighting in Afghanistan means stirring up a hornet's nest.
Now Sarkozy cooking his own goose, playing a defective role in the Sub-Sahara region, he completely changed Idris Déby in to new African Nouri al-Maliki,
It means that he invited Chadian people to fight against colonization! And for indefinable reasons he is always against Sudan, and his government gives Abdul Wahid El Nur full support and linked him with Talaviv, just to make a contradictory situation that stops any motion towards peace in Darfur!
Moreover, with this defective, French role no hope for normal relation between Khartoum and N'Djamena. The French government unfortunately achieved its goal; more than for years Sudan and Chad have been trading accusations that one backed the other's rebels. Up to seven agreements signed by them to end hostilities, but there is no success, the last of which signed in Qatar, has failed after the late air strike.
The problem of Iraq began in Washington, it ended dramatically with financial crises and political-social change! Now Paris in the same road!
Now I think my question is not strange at all!