We've been talking about this lately on this board... This is yet another article from msn.com.
http://slate.msn.com/id/2077874/
"Much of the French opposition to American power arose after the fall of the Soviet Union made the United States the only power in a unipolar world: According to one poll, the percentage of the French who viewed the United States "with sympathy" dropped from 54 to 35 percent between 1988 and 1996. But French grumbling over U.S. power predates the end of the Cold War, too. As Philip H. Gordon outlined in the National Interest in 2000 (during the Clinton administration), "resentment and frustration" have marked French-American relations since the end of World War II. "
"But history is at the core of the tensions between France and America. Donald Rumsfeld's comment last week about "old Europe" was telling: Americans see France as akin to Portugal, a once-great power now in decline. But as part of its own "special relationship" with the United States, France refuses to cede the world stage to the Americans. French identity is similar to American identityFrance sees itself as a great nation worthy of power, the birthplace of democracy, and a culture and system of government that the world would be wise to emulate."
Like the article stated... I think it's resentment, envy and frustration that France is no longer the World Power they used to be. IMHO
Edited by - email on 31 January 2003 19:17:38