Times 2

British press wades into 'playground' spat with France

LONDON, Dec 17 (AFP) - Britain's press waded into the bickering between London and Paris over the state of each other's economy, but warned today that the “playground” spat was getting both sides nowhere.

Some newspapers warned that neither side had much room for crowing, while others made merry in the bust-up and childish name-calling of the new “Entente Glaciale”. The eurosceptic Daily Mail had a field day.

“There are few more comic spectacles than Frenchmen throwing fits of Gallic pique against the victors of Waterloo,” the mid-market tabloid said. “And when even the eurofanatical Nick Clegg tells them to back off, it's a sure sign they've gone way over the top.”It put the boot into “sulky” French President Nicolas Sarkozy, scoffed at what it called hysterics from “the powerless head of France's toytown central bank” and then turned on the finance minister and his “playground abuse”.

“France is fast becoming a basket-case economy,” it added. The leftist Guardian said that “so long as we are all in the same sinking boat, we would be wise to focus on rowing in the same direction”. “Britain and France always were the best of enemies. They share similar delusions”, it said.

French cabinet ministers had this week “reduced the cross-Channel dialogue to the level of a year-six spat in a playground”. “Comrades, we are in the same boat. A sinking one. “So there's no room for crowing. And that applies as much to British eurosceptics as it does to French ministers blowing raspberries.”

The Times said Britain and France must not let what it called the present “Entente Glaciale” undermine their common interests, calling it a “sour end” to a year when cross-Channel relations have rarely been better.

It had a cartoon of Sarkozy as a cockerel, having its neck wrung and being stuffed by Cameron like a festive turkey. “The childish cross-Channel spat now going on as the embattled Sarkozy government badmouths Britain's economy to deflect attention from its own travails... is not a turning point in Anglo-French relations or a sign of breakdown in the overall relations,” it said.

The “smug” French Finance Minister Francois Baroin is, nevertheless, “intensely irritating” with his “calculating, deliberate and malicious” comments.

© Daily Mail, London

Top to the page  |  E-mail  |  views[1]
SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend
 
Other Times 2 Articles
180 dead, nearly 400 missing in Philippine storm
Manning defence takes offensive in WikiLeaks case
Obama, pushing back at Republicans, vows support for Israel
Russia's Syria shift a bid to guard image, interests
British court upholds English-speaking rule for immigrants
Pak generals back probe into memogate
Russia signs preliminary deal to sell 42 jets to India
Obama bans daughters from FB
UN ends sanctions on Libya central bank
British press wades into 'playground' spat with France
Sexual violence affects one in five US women
Do-it-yourself glamour for 'Jhollywood' stars
'We hacked US drone': Iran
Early man 'lived on' elephant meat

 

 
Reproduction of articles permitted when used without any alterations to contents and a link to the source page.
© Copyright 1996 - 2011 | Wijeya Newspapers Ltd.Colombo. Sri Lanka. All Rights Reserved | Site best viewed in IE ver 8.0 @ 1024 x 768 resolution