Sunday, August 28, 2016

Comment du Jour

Paris  Tourism Numbers Fall in Summer of Strikes, Floods and Terror


It's pretty obvious for anyone walking around Paris that there are noticeably far fewer tourists than usual.  Sadly the City of Light, and France for the most part, is still suffering from 
the media coverage fallout of strikes, floods and most especially a series of high profile terrorist attacks. 

Official numbers show one million fewer tourists visited Paris in the first six months of this year.  In fact about 16 million tourists visit Paris annually but the numbers have taken a dip.

There are 46 percent fewer Japanese, 35 percent fewer Russians, and 20 percent fewer Chinese.

These three groups make up the nouveau "big spenders" when it comes to shopping in boutiques and pricey shops.

The number Americans visiting surprisingly only dipped by 5.6 percent.    

We certainly felt safe in France but sadly were inconvenienced by an Air France strike.  

And despite all the bad news, Paris is still Paris!




Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Comment du Jour


France--Summer of Terror Lingers 
Imagine for a moment arriving at Sunday morning religious service only to see the doors of the church guarded by camouflage-clad soldiers with automatic weapons. Well, this was the stark reality when we arrived at our neighborhood church, a structure dating from the 15th century, but hardly a tourist nexus.  Indeed this was a necessary security precaution being taken across France, at synagogues and mosques too, for worshippers in the wake of Islamic State’s barbarous murder of a Catholic priest celebrating mass.
Security is tight at the Catholic shrine of Lourdes where special police and military units are protecting the pilgrimages.
During a Summer when Islamic jihadi fanatics used a truck to ram and kill 85 civilians in Nice, and others carried out shootings and a suicide-bombing in Germany, the violence  reached its sanguinary apotheosis in the sacrilegious crime of killing of an elderly priest, Jacques Hamel, while he was saying Mass near Rouen.
The terror has lingered since jihadi militants carried out the bloody Paris attacks last November.  France remains on edge but stoically sanguine.
Yves de Kerdrel opined in the conservative weekly Valeurs Actuelles, “To the fright of the entire country has been added the repugnance of the French against these barbarians who attacked a man of the Church of peace and of hope. Jacques Hamel has died as a martyr as millions of Christians of the Middle East.”
Speaking of the fanatics who attacked in Paris and Nice, Camille Pascal added in Valeurs, “They attacked God in the name of God…these bloody imbeciles demonstrated their nihilism and in their folly they believed themselves soldiers of God.”
To be sure the terrorist threat facing France is tragically cyclical as it is rooted in the shifting patterns of causes, ideologies and motivations. In the early 1960’s towards the end of the Algerian crisis, France endured a spate of violence.  The 1970’s saw the Palestinian issue spill over into Europe; by the 1990’s Islamic fundamentalists with Algerian connections carried out the infamous RER train bombing in St. Michel station.
Today we see the Middle East in chaos with Syria as the epicenter and the symbol for terrorist recruitment, motivation and violence.   Thousands of European “foreign fighters,” many of them French and Belgian born Muslims, have flocked to fight in the jihad in Syria.  The principal danger comes from those returning to Europe with both the military skills and the elixir of hate with forms the key security threat in France and elsewhere in Europe.
Indeed, the brutal Syrian civil war churns on with its physical and psychological carnage which extends beyond the besieged city of Aleppo and the environs of ancient Damascus. Until Syria’s bleeding can be stopped and healed there is a key motivator for violence which has a way of then returning to the cities of Europe and later the USA.
  Can we be certain the waves of migrants fleeing war, over a million of whom have gone to Germany alone, will not bring the hatreds and mores of the Middle East to their new places of refuge?
Predictably foreign tourism has suffered though we felt safe.  As France readies to return from the Summer vacation, the government has heightened alerts for schools which could tragically become targets.  The security awareness campaign Vigipirate; Alert to Attacks evokes messages in American cities; “If you see something, say something.”
France’s Socialist President Francois Hollande, much like Barack Obama, while treating the symptoms of violence, still really refuse to admit the dangerous depth and source of the radical Islamist problem inside their countries.
So in this Summer of 2016, strange memories return.  A sense of déjà vu if you wish.  As a young boy on my first visit here in June 1962 on the eve of Algerian independence, I vividly recall the odd thrill of seeing soldiers in the streets of Paris and viewing the massive base legs of the Eiffel Tower surrounded in webs of barbed wire.  That was so long ago I thought, but as if in a nightmare, the images have returned.

Monday, July 25, 2016

Comment du Jour


 United Nations Secretary General Election Heats Up



 What’s beginning to look like this year’s Republican presidential primaries in the USA has morphed into a political scramble for the UN Secretary General’s seat.

With a dozen prospective candidates, the race for the new Secretary General has now overshadowed much of the work at the multinational organization.  As incumbent South Korean Ban Ki-moon enters the final six months of his second five year term, the political crescendo has heightened with unending lobbying and jockeying for the coveted post.

Geographical representation and consensus has deemed that this time around it’s the “turn” of an Eastern European woman to fill the post.  Ban Ki-moon represented East Asia’s turn while Kofi Annan before him represented Africa’s.   

While national pride and diplomatic status are enshrined in the position of being the global Chief Executive of the 193 member multinational organization, the selection rather than election, usually goes to a consensus candidate from a smaller and often neutral country.  South Korea’s Ban, backed by the U.S., was a notable exception coming from an East Asian powerhouse state.  His recent predecessors were from Ghana, Egypt and Peru.      

The Secretary General’s race is usually determined behind closed doors, (smoke filled rooms are long gone with the UN smoking ban), with glimmers of information and light being tightly  controlled.  But the traditionally Byzantine selection process has changed.   

This time around, transparency has become the mantra whereby all kinds of roundtables, speeches and even a debate in the cavernous UN General Assembly Hall are trying to bring a public focus to an arcane process.  Yet no matter what talents and virtues may be available among the candidates, the stark political reality remains the Delphic diplomatic judgement of the Permanent Five members of the Security Council, Britain, China, France, Russia and the USA who will quietly but forcibly determine the outcome.  Only then, later in the process, does the full General Assembly get the chance vote on the selection.

U.S./UN Ambassador Samantha Power said the candidate must have “leadership and management skills.”

Among the dozen declared candidates, only a few are actually from Eastern Europe and are women.  A strong contender, Irina Bokova of Bulgaria, currently runs UNESCO, the UN cultural and scientific organization based in Paris.  Though hardly a dynamic speaker,  Bokova to her credit has been openly supportive of protecting historic sites in the Middle East from jihadi terrorist looting and destruction.  Her negatives include close links to Bulgaria’s former communist regime back in the bad old days.  She is said to be a Russian favorite.  

Moldova and Croatia have nominated former Foreign Ministers, both women for the post.  
Macedonia and Montenegro fielded former Ministers too.  Serbia, not to be outdone, nominated  Vuk Jeremic, a former ultra-nationalist foreign minister who is said to be a Moscow minion.

Yet as a ranking East European diplomat told this writer, the selection of Secretary General reflects a profoundly different setting than even a decade ago given a more unstable world.  Though the U.S. and China pressed for Ban Ki-moon and Russia acquiesced, now the international situation remains dangerously more polarized.   

Danilo Turk,  Slovenia’s President and a former UN official offers a tried and true candidate with serious potential.  Turk hails from a small successful democracy.  Slovakia’s Miroslav Lajcak, the Foreign Minister, is also in the running.  Both are from European Union and NATO countries.

As if this process does not begin to evoke the American primaries, recall that the objective was a female candidate from Eastern Europe.  But geography has blurred;  Among the frontrunners are Former Prime Minister Helen Clark from New Zealand,  Susan Malcorra  Argentina’s Foreign Minister, Antonio Guterres former Portuguese Prime Minister, and Costa Rica’s Christina Figueres.  Some insiders assert that in an impasse German Chancellor Angela Merkel, 
herself from eastern Germany, could be chosen. 

When asked whether the new Secretary General should be from Eastern Europe or a woman, British Ambassador Matthew Rycroft opined, “No, the UK believes that we need to select the strongest person for the job.  The qualities of leadership are the most important.”  

In presentations evoking Congressional hearings,  Antonio Guterres, the affable Portuguese who recently ran the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), a herculean task in this chaotic world, offered an brilliant analytical presentation on the monumental task facing the Secretary General. 

Slovakia’s Lajcak, significantly stressed the dire need for “preventive diplomacy.”  The Slovak Foreign Minister implored that, a “priority would be to prevent conflict and war.”   Preventive diplomacy, often overlooked in a UN beset by the crisis du jour,  remains vital.

The fifteen member Security Council will hold informal and non-binding straw polls to vet the names till the final voting in the Fall. In the first poll, both Guterres and Turk surged in support. 


A dozen contenders, six of them women,  are competing for the world’s top global job; but have they considered what the winner will be inheriting? 

Sunday, July 10, 2016

Comment du Jour

Portugal Defeats France in EURO 2016 Final

Game of Destiny

In a tough defensive match, in which its star player Ronaldo was injured,  
Portugal defeated the favorite France 1-0.   While hardly a showcase final match, the
showdown in St. Denis outside Paris saw a determined Portuguese team hold 
on to what seemed to be a French advantage on home turf.

Portugal has not defeated France in a match since 1975.  

Portugal's one goal was scored by Eder but the amazing defense
was the magic of goalkeeper Rui Patricio.  

Congrats to both the French Team and to France for hosting the month long 
tournament beautifully and safely.   

Parabens Portugal! 

Sunday, July 3, 2016

Comment du Jour






Les Bleus Melt Iceland in EURO 16 

In an widely anticipated and tense showdown between France and tough newcomer Iceland, 
les Bleus decisively beat Iceland 5-2.  The quarterfinal match in St. Denis outside Paris now
sets the stage for the final week of the EURO 2016 tournament. 

The semi-final schedule is set: Portugal vs Wales
                                                    France  vs Germany

The host nation France marches on to the final four!

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Comment du Jour



                             Bad week for Britain!!

BREXIT!!

Markets Dive Downwards!

England Football loss to Iceland! 

Monday, June 27, 2016

Comment du Jour

EURO 2016 Football--Surprises!


The 2016 Euro football/soccer championships seem to be all about surprises,
shock, and awe.  France is hosting the tournament which so far has proved anything
but conventional.  

Iceland shocked the world and toppled England.   

Powerhouse Spain was unseated by Italy.

France, Germany and Belgium are in the quarterfinals but not without a fight.  

Poland survived and will now play powerhouse Portugal.  Wales faces Belgium. 

Teams like Hungary, Ireland and Slovakia edged forward throughout the early matches. 

Again we are reminded that teams like Austria, Hungary Northern Ireland, and Wales  are among the oldest football teams in the world predating both FIFA and UEFA associations.  

As the championships approach the Quarter Finals in France, it looks like Footie fans are in for some amazing face-offs.