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I FRONT PAGE I  JEWISH SOCIETY & STYLE SECTION 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10  I  JEWISH ARTS, CULTURE, STARS & ENTERTAINMENT SECTION 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 I  WORLD JEWISH THEATER: NEWS & REVIEWS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 I JEWISH & ISRAEL POLITIC HEADLINES 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10  I  THE ARAB  AND MUSLIM WORLD NEWS SECTION 1  2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10I  NEWS & GOSSIPS FROM AROUND THE WORLD 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10  I  FANCY LIVING MAGAZINE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10  11 12 I  LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10  I CONTACT US  I ARCHIVES 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10  11 I TO ADVERTISE...SEE RATES I TO DONATE I

 

EPSILON MAGAZINE. OCTOBER ISSUE 2005. P 10

INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING                                                                    

112 REASONS WHY  SINCE 1944, THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT AND THE PENTAGON  SECRETLY HATED THE FRENCH.

 
112 REASONS WHY  SINCE 1944, THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT AND THE PENTAGON  SECRETLY HATED THE FRENCH.

THE MOST DISGRACEFUL AND EMBARRASSING BOOK EVER PUBLISHED BY THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT AND THE ARMY

By MAXIMILLIEN de LAFAYETTE

 

In 1945, the United States,   'Information & Education Division' of the US Occupation Forces, secretly published in Paris, France a book called "112 Gripes about the French ". We have reprinted a major part of the book on the following pages.

 

AdvertisementPublished in Paris in 1945 by the 'Information & Education Division' of the US Occupation Forces.

AMERICANS believe in the right to criticize. We defend our right to "beef" or "gripe" or "sound off". We insist upon the right to express our own opinions. But we also believe in the right of others to express their opinions. For the right to speak involves the duty to listen. The right to criticize involves the responsibility of giving "the other side" a fair chance to make its point. We know that the truth can only be found through open and honest discussion, and that the common good is served through common attempts to reach common understanding. In one way, Democracy is the long and sometimes difficult effort which free men make to understand each other. This booklet tries to help some of us understand an ally - the French. It is not meant either to "defend" the French or to chastise those Americans who do not like the French. It is intended simply to bring into reasonable focus those irritations, dissatisfactions and misunderstandings which arise because it is often hard for the people of one country to understand the people of another. The booklet uses the Question-Answer form.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Conde Nast Traveller (UK)It lists the criticisms, misconceptions and ordinary "gripes" which American troops in Europe express most frequently when they talk about the French. Each comment, or question, is followed by an answer -- or discussion. Some of the answers are quite short, because the question is direct and simple. Some of the answers are quite long, because the "questions" are not questions at all, but indictments which contain complicated and sweeping preconceptions. The purpose of the present publication is to present facts and judgments which even the well-intentioned may tend to overlook. There may be those who will consider this booklet a catalogue of (( excuses )) or (( justifications )). To them it can only be said that the truth is not denied by giving it a derogatory label. There may be others who will seize upon the questions with triumph - ignoring the discussions entirely. That kind of reader will ignore the truth anyway - in whatever form it is offered. This booklet may not convince those who are hopelessly prejudiced, but it may help to keep others from being infected by the same lamentable virus.

 

1. "We came to Europe twice in twenty-five years to save the French."

We didn't come to Europe to save the  French, either in 1917 or in 1944. We didn't come to  Europe to do anyone any favors. We came to Europe because we in America were threatened by a hostile, aggressive and very dangerous power. In this war, France fell in June of 1940. We didn't invade Europe until June of 1944. We didn't even think of "saving the French" through military action until after Pearl Harbor - after the Germans declared war on us. We came to Europe, in two wars, because it was better to fight our enemy in Europe than in America. Would it have been smarter to fight the Battle of the Bulge in Ohio? Would it have been smarter if D-Day had meant a hop across the Atlantic Ocean, instead of the English Channel, in order to get at an enemy sending rocket bombs into our homes? Would it have been smart to wait in America until V bombs, buzz bombs, rocket bombs, and - perhaps - atomic bombs had made shambles of our cities? Even the kids in Germany sang this song: "Today Germany, tomorrow the world." We were a part of that world. We were marked for conquest. When France fell, our last defense on the Continent was gone.  France was the "keystone of freedom" on land from the Mediterranean to the North Sea; it was a bulwark against German aggression. France guarded the Atlantic, and the bases the Germans needed on the Atlantic for submarine and air warfare. American security and American foreign policy have always rested on this hard fact: we cannot permit a hostile power on the Atlantic Ocean. We can not be secure if we are threatened on the Atlantic. That's why we went to war in 1917; that's why we had to fight in 1944. And that's why, as a matter of common sense and the national interest, President Roosevelt declared (November 11, 1941): "The defense of any territory under the control of the French Volunteer Forces (the Free French) is vital to the defense of the United States."

2. At first, when we came into Normandy, and then into Paris, the French gave us everything - wine, cheese, fruit, everything. They threw their arms around us and kissed us every time we turned around. They gave us the biggest welcome you ever saw. But they've forgotten. They're ungrateful."

 

Perhaps the French ran out of wine, cheese, fruit and cognac to pass out free. Perhaps the French depleted the stocks they had hidden in their cellars from the Germans. We Could not a Frenchman who read the question above ask, "Are the Americans so ungrateful? Have they so soon forgotten how much we gave them from what little we had?"

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