Barack ObamaÂ’s victory is synonymous with happiness and the French political class welcomes his election.
Among the first statesmen who reacted to Obama’s election, Nicolas Sarkozy (who had never hidden his preference for the Democrat candidate) conveyed his congratulations to the 44th president of the United States, welcoming the “determination to makes changes, opportunity and optimism". “This message from the American people finds echoes far beyond your boundaries,” he claimed, pleading for renewed cooperation between France and Europe with Washington.
In the words of the Prime Minister, François Fillon, the political classes, either left or right winged, warmly praised an “historical” election.
The only Black woman in the government, Rama Yade, State Secretary to Human Rights, confessed to an “emotion that makes me say that if life has to be so, then it’s worth living it”.
The Beijing summit did not produce a major agreement between the great powers on the region, but it firmly established that Middle Eastern crises are now deeply tied to the great-power dialogue.
The challenge for Washington is no longer whether it possesses sufficient capabilities, but whether the political system can align those capabilities behind a coherent long-term priority.
The Beijing summit did not produce a major agreement between the great powers on the region, but it firmly established that Middle Eastern crises are now deeply tied to the great-power dialogue.
During the Cold War, the United States occupied the apex of this triangular dynamic, pitting China and the USSR against each other. Today, it is Beijing that occupies that apex.
European autonomy - military, technological, economic, and financial - is beginning to take shape as Europe hedges against current and future fluctuations in [U.S.] policy.