Well, at least he's not a drunken invalid like Yeltsinfgalkin wrote:No, he's not.Robert Treder wrote:Out of those guys, I go with Blair, but I'm still a Putin fan. Putin is one suave motherfucker.
Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin

Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital
Well, at least he's not a drunken invalid like Yeltsinfgalkin wrote:No, he's not.Robert Treder wrote:Out of those guys, I go with Blair, but I'm still a Putin fan. Putin is one suave motherfucker.
Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
Not to metnion flip flopping over the possibility of sending the mounted police to Iraq but only if he is asked nicely.Darth Wong wrote:Chretien: my own prime minister. A bit player in this global drama, but somehow he found a way to sit on the fence while keeping both feet on the wrong side. He pissed off the anti-war and Muslim contingent by keeping 3 warships in the gulf in support of American forces, but he also pissed off the Americans by publicly speaking out against the war and "officially" keeping us out of it. Fucking moron ...[/list]
So Chircac is brave and admirable for sticking to a position that was in his own country's self-interest. Fine--I've heard repeated accusations from the left (and, to be fair, some on the right) that this whole war was fought for America's self-interest and didn't have anything to do with liberating Iraq. Why isn't Bush admirable for looking out for HIS country's self-interests and sticking to his guns?weemadando wrote:And like I said, he had a policy and he stuck to it. He was acting in the best interests of his nation and I have to respect that. What I respect more is that he was acting in the best interests of his nation AND keeping international law onside to boot.
He may be drunk, but he's not an invalid:Vympel wrote:Well, at least he's not a drunken invalid like Yeltsinfgalkin wrote:No, he's not.Robert Treder wrote:Out of those guys, I go with Blair, but I'm still a Putin fan. Putin is one suave motherfucker.
Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
If you mean Chirac continued being a populist toad, then yes Chirac maintained his position. If you mean he maintained a consistent set of ideals and principles, don't make me laugh.weemadando wrote: Bush and Blair didn't change their course either, but opinion of them within their own nation significantly changed, for better or for worse. Chirac continued on being Chirac, you could argue that his interest in the campaign was maintainign the status quo.
Oh, come on! Putin's a cool guy. He's a ruthless mother who doesn't take shit from no one. Selling stuff to both sides, saying 'no' to the US...he's an undeniable badass.fgalkin wrote:No, he's not.Robert Treder wrote:Out of those guys, I go with Blair, but I'm still a Putin fan. Putin is one suave motherfucker.
Add to the fact that Chirac played right into the hands of the US hawks, when he told the candidate countries that they missed a good chance to 'shut up'. As much as I despise Rumsfield I got to admire how he used the old 'devide and conquer' military truism to effectively nuetralise the French and the EU. There was no such thing as 'Old and New Europe' til Rumsfield coined the term (still isn't really, at least within the EU), while the so-called 'New Europe' was supporting the US through NATO, a legal co-operation as there really isn't any such presence in NATO for the EU.Edi wrote:Blair by far, for the reasons so many others stated.
Chirac is just a toad. He has his moments, but they are few and far between, and far outweighed by his usual obnoxiousness. Chirac may have been right on the legal grounds, but he's still just as bad as ever. He is no friend to the smaller EU countries, and has done enough shit-stirring in general that it is virtually impossible to like him at all.
Edi