The French had not specifically informed their U.S. friends about their initiative on Palestine at the U.N.
Before the bilateral meeting of the two presidents at the Waldorf Astoria, Barack Obama was asked about the French proposal (a plan leading to the recognition of the Palestinian state by the General Assembly in one year, with intermediate steps of negotiations without preconditions).
The U.S. president declined to comment.
The matter is delicate. The French initiative — rather well received by the Palestinians, while the Israelis have limited themselves to "acknowledging" it — is likely to pull a thorn from the foot of everyone, especially the Americans — who will not have to use their veto.
But in its second phase, the Sarkozy plan will end up quite simply turning the page — one where the Americans reigned supreme over the peace process (at one time, they barely tolerated the quartet whose praises they sing today).
The French idea would amount to "multi-lateralizing" the process. The Americans, even if they are exhausted and in an electoral campaign, can only let go of their turf with difficulty.
Rasool’s expulsion deepened an already deteriorating relationship between the two countries, one that had been on a downward spiral since Trump returned to office.
The shift now underway is unlikely to take the form of a dramatic collapse of American power in the Gulf. It is more likely to be subtler and, for the region, more unsettling.
Rasool’s expulsion deepened an already deteriorating relationship between the two countries, one that had been on a downward spiral since Trump returned to office.
America’s Achilles’ heel is internal. If it loses this war, it will likely be because much of the media, politicians, and even some of Trump’s allies do not fully understand his policies.
European autonomy - military, technological, economic, and financial - is beginning to take shape as Europe hedges against current and future fluctuations in [U.S.] policy.