Naulleau, polemist of the living room and go to the warstock, begs America to intervene

On the set of the extreme right channel CNews, Éric Naulleau once again crossed a milestone in the war bidder. Invited to comment on the French position in the conflict between Israel and Iran, the essayist has laughed at what he calls “French gesticulation”, calling for an American intervention which “would quickly regulate” the situation.

“We cling to old moons,” he said, visibly nostalgic for military crusades under US umbrella. Far from all diplomatic prudence, Eric Naulleau castigates the Elysian line which he deems too concerned about public opinion, and calls for “being up to history”, that is to say to embrace an unconditional alignment on Washington. This rhetoric Va-à-warre, chanting by a second-class writer recycled as a plateau polemist, borders on indecency. Naulleau offers nothing more than a total erasure of French sovereignty, an assumed submission to the logic of bombs and power relations.

By dint of playing the hawks in a white shirt, these tray talkatives, without courage are taken for strategists when they are only extras in a warlike staging. Ready to send the others to the front while they monologize warm under the spotlight, they brew the wind with the morgue of those who will never pay the price of blood. Their virile postures and their bellicose residents mask only one thing: moral nothingness, political cowardice, and the need for a discourse that confuses Atlanticist and greatness of soul.