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Fresh from "relaunching" Europe, President Sarkozy took his deal-making skills to Algeria today to promote an ambitious plan for a Mediterranean Union. Mr Sarkozy's scheme for a cross-Mediterranean tie-up similar to the European Union's common market has hit a wall of scepticism on both sides of the sea and put up backs in Ankara, Beirut and Brussels in particular. Morocco cancelled Mr Sarkozy's planned stop in Rabat on Thursday. The official reason was a "scheduling problem" but officials said King Mohammed VI was offended that the French leader planned to stay only a couple of hours and only after first visiting Algiers and Tunis. The President's first trip beyond Europe is being staged in the whirlwind style that he has applied to fixing French problems and to brokering a treaty to salvage the defunct EU constitution. With his trademark salesmanship, Mr Sarkozy claims personal credit for putting the EU back on the rails at last month's Brussels summit.
Fresh from "relaunching" Europe, President Sarkozy took his deal-making skills to Algeria today to promote an ambitious plan for a Mediterranean Union.
Mr Sarkozy's scheme for a cross-Mediterranean tie-up similar to the European Union's common market has hit a wall of scepticism on both sides of the sea and put up backs in Ankara, Beirut and Brussels in particular.
Morocco cancelled Mr Sarkozy's planned stop in Rabat on Thursday. The official reason was a "scheduling problem" but officials said King Mohammed VI was offended that the French leader planned to stay only a couple of hours and only after first visiting Algiers and Tunis.
The President's first trip beyond Europe is being staged in the whirlwind style that he has applied to fixing French problems and to brokering a treaty to salvage the defunct EU constitution. With his trademark salesmanship, Mr Sarkozy claims personal credit for putting the EU back on the rails at last month's Brussels summit.
trademark salesmanship
Here go the media inventing a tag to hang round a neck. In this case it's an ambiguous one. "Salesmanship" can be positive, Sarko can be persuasive etc - as we see in several news items this morning. But a "salesman" is not a "statesman", oh no.
Sarko is putting his foot in a lot of doors at once and eating up his courtesy credit very, very quickly. There are doors that will, inevitably, bang in his face.
The implication is that Sarko is a parvenu, a noisy outsider trying to get in, and a bit of a spiv.
All of which is true. Although if he'd followed the neo-con line more faithfully I'm sure he'd have been hailed as magisterial, effortlessly dominant, a born leader, and all the rest of the usual rubbish.
So the undertone of contemptuous disapproval is there for spiteful reasons. He's not quite a neo-con creature, and this is telling him that because of that resistance he's never going to be the insider he wants to be.
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