Macron channels Lawrence of Arabia on Lebanon-Iraq visit



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Emmanuel Macron returned to Paris on Wednesday night after a three-day trip to Beirut and Baghdad during which he played the role of a modern-day Lawrence of Arabia, promising sovereignty to the long-suffering citizens of Lebanon and Iraq.

“This battle for the sovereignty of Iraq is essential,” said the French president, “to ensure that these people who have suffered so much are not subjected to the domination of regional powers and Islamist terrorism.”

Iraq has been divided between the United States and Iran since Saddam Hussein was deposed by a US-led coalition in 2003. US President Donald Trump reiterated on August 21 that he would withdraw some 5,000 US troops from Iraq. Macron sees an opportunity for France to step into the void left by America’s disengagement.

Both countries are decomposing, imploding. Neither has developed a civilized and inclusive sense of national belonging.

Macron on Wednesday became the first foreign leader to meet with the new Iraqi prime minister, Mustafa al-Kadhimi, a former Muslim Shiite Iraqi intelligence chief who was appointed in May. He also met with Iraqi Kurdish President Barham Salih, the Sunni president of the assembly, Mohammed al-Halbousi, and Nechirvan Barzani, president of the Kurdish autonomous region.

The resurgence of the Islamic State terror group and French rivalry with Turkey have also spurred Macron’s new interest in Iraq, says Adel Bakawan, head of research at the French Middle East think tank Iremmo.

Macron is in conflict with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan over Libya, Syria, energy resources in the eastern Mediterranean, and now Iraq. “Thousands of Turkish soldiers and special forces have gone to northern Iraq to fight the [Kurdish] PKK, which Turkey considers a terrorist group, ”Bakawan said. “When Macron evokes Iraqi sovereignty, he is criticizing the Turkish offensive.”

Repressed

There are similarities between the two countries that Macron has taken under his wing. Both saw violent street protests put down by Iranian-backed militias last fall. Both economies are in shambles. And both have confessional systems of government in which positions are attributed based on religious origins.

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