logo
De Villepin Criticizes Again: 'The Iron Fist Does Not Work With Algeria!'

De Villepin Criticizes Again: 'The Iron Fist Does Not Work With Algeria!'

El Chorouk07-07-2025
Former French Prime Minister, Dominique de Villepin, said that the strategy of the French authorities to recover the Franco-Algerian writer, sentenced in Algeria to five years in prison, failed, because the iron fist policy that Interior Minister, Bruno Retailleau, tried to practice is not effective with a country like Algeria.
De Villepin, who is considered one of the brilliant French diplomats and who previously worked with former French President, Jacques Chirac, revealed a state of fragmentation suffered by decision-making institutions in Paris, calling for leaving the French President to work on the case of Sansal and journalist Christophe Glize, who was initially sentenced by the Algiers Court of First Instance to seven years in prison in a case related to terrorism.
Two currents are vying for decision-making in France: the first is represented by French President, Emmanuel Macron, and Foreign Minister, Jean-Noël Barrot, who cling to diplomacy as the only option, while Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau and Prime Minister François Bayrou tend towards escalation. It later became clear that the iron fist policy adopted by Retailleau had reached a dead end.
The former foreign minister explained, wondering in an interview with the French news channel 'LCI' on Sunday night to Monday: 'Who can provide the fastest and best solution for the release of the two French prisoners from Algerian prisons? It is the President of the Republic and the government. A unified government does not do one thing and its opposite. Confusion leads to paying a heavy price. The President must be allowed to work, as he is the one who has communication with President Tebboune, and they are the ones who understand the right moment to revive the mechanism of bilateral cooperation.'
He added: 'Today there are many files on the table, and these files involve complex disputes. These issues, including the Sansal case, must be raised,' stressing that the iron fist approach cannot yield results when it comes to intertwined and complex relations such as Algerian-French relations, due to considerations related to history and the wounds suffered by one party or the other.
The French official hinted that the policy pursued by Interior Minister Retailleau is what exacerbated the situation and complicated the task of releasing Boualem Sansal, whose French attachment remains suspicious and questionable, as he only obtained citizenship for one year, in contrast to an incomprehensible silence regarding the fate of sports journalist Christophe Glize, whose prison term exceeded Sansal's sentence, which De Villepin expressed when he addressed the journalist who was only asking him about Sansal: 'We have two prisoners in Algeria, Boualem Sansal and sports journalist Christophe Glize.'
In order to resolve the tense situation with Algeria, Dominique de Villepin called for a gesture towards Algeria to reduce tension and pave the way in the coming days and weeks.
Despite the campaign against the French writer and historian, Jean-Michel Abati, when he spoke about massacres suffered by Algerians at the hands of the French occupation army, and said that they resembled the massacres of Nazi Germany, De Villepin shared Abati's opinion, and spoke about the burning operations carried out by the French General Bugeaud against Algeria in the early years of the occupation.
The journalist asked him if he confirmed Jean-Michel Abati's description of the 'Oradour-sur-Glane' incident, to which De Villepin replied, 'When we besiege Algerians and burn them, the comparison becomes possible. I grew up near the Oradour-sur-Glane area, and I weigh my words carefully on this issue,' knowing that Michel Abati had been punished for those statements by 'RTL' radio, before the French audiovisual regulatory authority issued a comment criticizing those statements as well.
De Villepin stressed: 'History must move out of the double standards. The 2005 law harmed many African peoples, as it glorifies colonial practices. We are at a time when we must respect the memory of others. Recognizing the suffering of others… A new page must be written so that what we are experiencing today with Algeria does not recur.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

French Hold Macron Responsible for Losing in Algeria
French Hold Macron Responsible for Losing in Algeria

El Chorouk

time2 days ago

  • El Chorouk

French Hold Macron Responsible for Losing in Algeria

President Abdelmadjid Tebboune's visit to Italy last weekend received particular attention from political and media circles in France, given its proximity to an unprecedented political and diplomatic crisis between Algeria and Paris. Leading specialists and political analysts considered it a resounding failure of French diplomacy. The French discussed President Tebboune's visit to Rome from the perspective of Rome being Paris's main competitor in the struggle for influence in the former French colony. They focused on the economic and geopolitical gains the Italians have achieved from their rapprochement with Algeria, as well as the losses incurred by France due to the mismanagement of the crisis with it, which began, as is well known, last summer following France's biased position toward the Moroccan regime on the Western Sahara issue. The launch was based on the outcomes of President Tebboune's visit to Rome, the second of its kind in about three years. This visit, as is well known, culminated in the signing of numerous partnership agreements in various sectors, including industry, energy, agriculture, energy transition, and security. The distinguished reception President Tebboune received from officials in the capital of Roman civilisation was, in itself was a powerful message to the French side. Images and videos of President Tebboune walking alongside Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni were broadcast on the far-right CNews channel on Thursday, July 24, 2025. A journalist commented with regret on these scenes and protocols, saying, 'It's extremely humiliating to be French. It's unbearable,' according to Louis de Raguenel. The same political analyst added, 'It's a state visit, with all the usual protocols, not a secret visit.' He continued, 'If Giorgia Meloni is doing this, she's doing so because she feels empowered by the Italian people. She's not afraid of us at all.' He pointed out that Meloni is defending her country's supreme interests, as demonstrated by the outcomes of this visit, which generate economic benefits for the Italians at a time when the French should be defending their strategic interests, rather than continuing to display moral fanaticism and defend interests that do not belong to France. This was a reference to Macron's decision to side with the Moroccan regime in the Western Sahara issue. The visit also had a significant impact on the French, as it came just days after the European Union announced its intention to resort to arbitration in the case of the partnership agreement between Algeria and Brussels. This measure was intended to demonstrate European solidarity against Algeria, even though France was behind this sudden move, which came at a time when the two parties had begun negotiations to resolve differences and review the agreement under its provisions. The shock was also present for Bernard Cohen-Hadad, head of the Marcel Etienne think tank, who, on the same channel, discussed the excellent level of relations between Algeria and Rome, as well as the return of warmth to ties with Spain, which, he said, runs counter to French interests. He held the French side responsible for what was happening, due to the decision taken by Macron last summer regarding the Western Sahara issue. The spokesman described what happened to France after President Tebboune visited Rome as a 'slap in the face' delivered by Giorgia Meloni. Bernard Cohen-Haddad said, 'It doesn't make you happy to be French when you see this slap. It's a slap in the face for French diplomacy.' The French fear that Italy will become a pivotal player in relations between Algeria and the European Union, due to its diplomatic acumen in not siding with the Moroccan regime in the Western Sahara issue. This issue has cost some European countries, such as France and Spain, many of their interests and privileges in a country the size of Algeria, due to inaccurate calculations, as Bernard Cohen-Hadad has stated.

Algeria And Rwanda Sign Military Cooperation Protocol
Algeria And Rwanda Sign Military Cooperation Protocol

El Chorouk

time4 days ago

  • El Chorouk

Algeria And Rwanda Sign Military Cooperation Protocol

On Wednesday, the Deputy Minister of National Defense, Chief of Staff of the People's National Army, Army General Saïd Chanegriha, received in Algiers Rwandan Minister of Defense Juvenal Marizamunda, where a military cooperation protocol was signed. According to a statement from the Ministry of Defense, the two sides reviewed opportunities for bilateral military cooperation, as well as ways to develop and enhance coordination on issues of common interest. The two sides also discussed the security challenges facing the world in general, and the African continent in particular, and exchanged views on various current issues. In a speech delivered on the occasion, the Army General Said Chanegriha began by welcoming the Rwandan Minister of Defense, noting the new dynamic witnessed in bilateral relations, marked by the exchange of visits between officials of the two countries. The Army General also affirmed that the signing of the Algerian-Rwandan joint governmental agreement protocol for cooperation in the military field on the occasion of this visit reflects the determination of the leaders of the two countries to promote bilateral relations to be exemplary.

French Right Demands EU Halt Negotiations With Algeria!
French Right Demands EU Halt Negotiations With Algeria!

El Chorouk

time5 days ago

  • El Chorouk

French Right Demands EU Halt Negotiations With Algeria!

European MP and second-in-command of France's right-wing 'Les Républicains' party, François-Xavier Bellamy, revealed that the silence surrounding Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau for weeks, as he stopped attacking Algeria, was a result of a request from French authorities, hoping for Sansal's release. He also revealed that Retailleau would meet with French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday to clarify matters regarding the management of the crisis with Algeria. François-Xavier Bellamy stated: 'The Interior Minister, and generally in the European Parliament (…), were asked to remain silent (regarding Algeria), otherwise the fate of Boualem Sansal's release would be risked, which we were informed was imminent.' This is the second such statement in less than a week from 'Les Républicains,' following the tense statements made by party leader Bruno Retailleau last weekend. The French Interior Minister had announced the end of the undeclared truce with Algeria last Friday, when he said in press statements: 'The diplomacy of good intentions has failed… We must change our tone and rely on the balance of power chosen by the Algerian government itself,' he claimed. As symbols of the French right freed themselves from the political constraints imposed on them in dealing with Algeria, the threads of the conspiracy against Algeria from within the European Parliament began to unravel. On Monday evening, the vice-president of 'Les Républicains' demanded, in a statement to Agence France-Presse (AFP), that the European Union make the release of French-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal a 'fundamental condition' for the negotiations expected to begin soon between Algeria and Brussels. Like his party leader, the European MP strongly criticized his country's stance in dealing with the escalating crisis with Algeria, considering it 'negative,' noting that: 'What we are witnessing are the consequences of a form of submission (of France to Algeria),' while commenting on the positions of the Élysée Palace and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, saying that they preferred to return to 'a position of surrender and negativity, which will contribute to tarnishing France's reputation, not only before Algeria, but on the international stage in general.' It is known that Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot did not delay much in responding to Bruno Retailleau's demands. He expressed his complete rejection of what his government colleague said in a tweet on the 'X' platform, which read: 'There is no diplomacy of good feelings, nor diplomacy of resentment. There is only diplomacy.' Although he did not target Retailleau by name, the response was clear to the phrase 'the diplomacy of good intentions has failed.' Based on the statement by the European MP from 'Les Républicains,' Retailleau will meet with French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday to discuss the position the French government should adopt, given the Algerian side's adherence to the sovereignty of judicial decisions in Sansal's case, and thus its rejection of repeated French demands in this regard. The leader of 'Les Républicains,' who also holds the portfolio of the Ministry of Interior, demands the use of a balance of power logic with Algeria, due to the issue of migrants and the cancellation or revision of the 1968 agreement. These demands are rejected by the French President and the Foreign Minister, who consider them outside the Interior Minister's powers, which puts Retailleau's future in François Bayrou's government at a real test.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store