By ELIZABETH BRYANT in Paris and CELESTE KATZ in New York
DAILY NEWS WRITERS
Vive la France?
Not as far as New York is concerned, mon ami.
As tensions build between the U.S. and France over Iraq, many New Yorkers are acting out their irritation with the French with fighting words - and their wallets.
"I had a call two days ago saying my country was 'unspeakable and disgusting,'" said one worker at the French Consulate. "It's hard not to take it personally."
The consulate has gotten "many E-mails and calls from Americans supporting our position," said spokesman R?gis Blain. But he acknowledged there have been many more Bronx cheers for France's refusal to back a U.S.-led war. "Most of the criticism focused on the fact that the U.S. helped save France in World War II and now we are 'ungrateful,'" he said.
Au contraire, said noted French strategic analyst Francois Heisbourg. He said the French remember D-Day well, but they also remember President Bush (news - web sites)'s "axis of evil" speech.
"They see Bush on TV at Crawford [Tex.], in a Marlboro-man-type setting, trying to explain why North Korea (news - web sites) is so incredibly different from Iraq," Heisbourg said. "That simply went over very, very badly here."
So far, the French press has mostly taken the high road in the war of words. The France-Soir newspaper merely called "humorless" the anti-French vitriol in the British and American press, including the often-repeated barb dubbing the French "cheese-eating surrender monkeys."
Still, France-Soir suggested it might be worth sealing the Channel Tunnel.
After hearing and reading countless anti-French cracks in recent days, Paris newspaper vendor Richard Halden has had enough. "It's infantile," he sniffed. "It's astonishing the U.S. press seems 100% behind Bush."
In Washington, Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-Queens) told a House hearing this week that France's reluctance to back the U.S. course on Iraq was stunning. "Most of us believe that they'd all be speaking German today if it were not for U.S. military intervention" he said.
Customers at American stores selling French exports expressed similar sentiments, rejecting all things Gallic.
"If it's made in France, I don't want it," said Marty Laufer, a manager at Garnet Wine and Liquors on Lexington Ave. on the upper East Side.
Former Mayor Ed Koch said New Yorkers should not only pass on a fine Bordeaux - but on France itself. "Americans are now standing up and giving the French the Bronx cheer," Koch said. "I encourage everybody in America: Do not go to France. These people were Nazi [collaborators] in large part. We saved them - and they turned on us." Originally published on February 14, 2003
Please do check out this link, lol....
http://www.fuckfrance.com/
Long distance- The next best thing to being there.
Edited by - m21 Sniper on Feb 17 2003 04:34 AM