ASHINGTON, May 15 — French officials today took the highly
unusual step of complaining formally that their country was the
victim of a campaign of "repeated disinformation" they say is being
fed by Bush administration officials, accusing France of having
provided military and diplomatic aid to Saddam Hussein's
government.
Though it has made no secret of its displeasure at the French for
opposing the war against Iraq, the White House denied the
assertion.
"There is, I don't think, any basis in fact to it." said Scott
McClellan, a White House spokesman. "France is an ally; they're
still friends."
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, whose department and
supporters are most often mentioned as a possible source of the news
reports cited by the French, told reporters today that he knew of no
such campaign.
"Certainly, there's no such campaign out of this building," he
said.
Nonetheless, the forceful and public French complaint — in the
form of a letter sent by Ambassador Jean-David Levitte to the White
House, State Department and Congress — underlined the depth of ill
feelings that still divide the longtime allies weeks after the end
of the Iraq war.
In addition to the letter, which was first reported by The Washington Post today, the French
Foreign Ministry said it was instructing its diplomats in the United
States to monitor the American news media for signs of any
orchestrated anti-French campaign. "We have decided to count the
untrue accusations which have appeared in the U.S. press and which
have deeply shocked the French," Marie Masdupuy, a Foreign Ministry
spokeswoman, told reporters in Paris.
Among other things, the challenged reports assert that France and
Germany supplied Iraq with precision switches that could be used in
nuclear weapons; that French companies sold Iraq spare parts for
warplanes and military helicopters; that France possessed prohibited
strains of human smallpox; and that France, most recently, helped
Iraqi leaders escape to Europe by providing them with travel
papers.
The charges have rankled French diplomats for months. They say
such reports are hurtful to American-French relations, noting that
several of them have been seized on by members of Congress to call
for investigations or punishment of the French. The diplomats also
say such accounts may spawn anti-French actions, some potentially
violent. While suggesting no direct link, they said, for example,
that a man was attacked and severely beaten in a Los Angeles
restaurant because he was speaking French.
The disputed reports are "all untrue, and all serious," and "not
acceptable," said Nathalie Loiseau, a spokeswoman at the French
Embassy in Washington.
Ms. Loiseau did not specifically point to anyone within the
administration as the source of the articles, but she said that
France could only assume that journalists were being truthful when
they cited unnamed officials in the administration.
"We don't know who talked to journalists," she said, "but we
would like it to stop, because it's inaccurate and it discredits our
country."
The administration, while denying the French allegation, has been
frank in expressing its deep unhappiness with the French opposition
during the Iraq debates at the United Nations, and later when it
sought to block NATO assistance to Turkey during the Iraq war.
Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, asked on "The Charlie Rose
Show" on PBS last month whether France would be punished, replied
simply, "Yes." A midlevel meeting in the White House was called to
discuss ways to do so.
Still, some experts have been surprised by the anti-French
virulence that has come, if not directly from the administration,
then from some of its supporters or sympathizers in the news
media.
Jeremy Shapiro, associate director of the Center on the United
States and France at the Brookings Institution, said the French
sincerely believed that "there is a campaign, if not by the U.S.
government, then at least within the U.S. government, to discredit
them."
While "they don't believe this is actually presidential policy,"
he continued, "they do believe the president or the White House has
not been active enough in counteracting it."
Mr. Shapiro said, however, that the French complaint might not
serve Paris well. It might be seen, he said, as "a kind of
petulance."
The following news reports are among those France has
challenged:
¶In September The New York
Times reported that Iraq in 1998 had ordered or purchased from
France or Germany precision switches that could be used to detonate
nuclear bombs. A French response noted that the switches had been
presented as spare parts for medical equipment (as the Times noted),
and that French authorities had immediately barred the sale.
¶A March report in The Washington Times reporting that during the
previous several months two French companies had sold Iraq spare
parts for fighter jets and Gazelle attack helicopters. The account
cited American intelligence officials. The companies the French
Foreign Ministry denied the charge.
¶A Washington Post article in November that said a Bush
administration intelligence review had concluded that France was one
of four countries, along with Iraq, North Korea and Russia, with
covert stocks of the smallpox pathogen. The French government denied
that it had human smallpox strains in any
laboratories.