フランスは中国を批判する資格がない!
投稿者: kowaiuyononakade2 投稿日時: 2011/12/26 19:41 投稿番号: [5067 / 5582]
キッシンジャーがイラク侵攻でアルジェリア戦争を研究したと言われているが
しかし、キッシンジャーはラテンアメリカやベトナム戦争でも拷問や
ジュネーブ条約を違反した爆撃を無視していますね。
フランスはアルジェリアでの残虐行為を隠蔽し
出版もできない
しかしチベット問題では、はっするし
ダライ・ラマを一番支援した国でしょう
サルコジの恐るべき陰湿な多重外交が垣間見えますね
>>Although the use of torture quickly became well-known and was opposed by the left-wing opposition, the French state repeatedly denied its employment, censoring more than 250 books, newspapers and films (in metropolitan France alone) which dealt with the subject (and 586 in Algeria).[2] Henri Alleg's 1958 book, La Question, Boris Vian's The Deserter, and Jean-Luc Godard's 1960 film Le Petit Soldat (released in 1963) are famous examples of such censorship[citation needed]. A confidential report of the ICRC leaked to Le Monde newspaper confirmed the allegations of torture made by the opposition to the war, represented in particular by the French Communist Party (PCF) and other anti-militarist circles. Although many left-wing activists, including famous existentialists writers Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus, and historian Pierre Vidal-Naquet, denounced without exception the use of torture, the French government was itself headed in 1957 by the general secretary of the French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO), Guy Mollet. In general, the SFIO supported the colonial wars during the Fourth Republic (1947–54), starting with the crushing of the Madagascar revolt in 1947 by the socialist government of Paul Ramadier.
The controversy over the use of torture continues to have echoes today. Already in 1977, British historian Alistair Horne wrote in A Savage War of Peace that torture was to become a growing canker for France, leaving behind a poison that would linger in the French system long after the war itself had ended. At the time, Horne could not confirm or deny that torture had been ordered by the highest ranks of the military and civilian hierarchy of the French state. Despite France's difficulties in looking at its past, which is made evident by the obstacles it continues to put before the historical research, and the way the Algerian War is taught (or not) in French high-schools,[2] the fact that torture had not only been massively employed, but also ordered by the French government, was confirmed by General Aussaresses
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torture_during_the_Algerian_War
しかし、キッシンジャーはラテンアメリカやベトナム戦争でも拷問や
ジュネーブ条約を違反した爆撃を無視していますね。
フランスはアルジェリアでの残虐行為を隠蔽し
出版もできない
しかしチベット問題では、はっするし
ダライ・ラマを一番支援した国でしょう
サルコジの恐るべき陰湿な多重外交が垣間見えますね
>>Although the use of torture quickly became well-known and was opposed by the left-wing opposition, the French state repeatedly denied its employment, censoring more than 250 books, newspapers and films (in metropolitan France alone) which dealt with the subject (and 586 in Algeria).[2] Henri Alleg's 1958 book, La Question, Boris Vian's The Deserter, and Jean-Luc Godard's 1960 film Le Petit Soldat (released in 1963) are famous examples of such censorship[citation needed]. A confidential report of the ICRC leaked to Le Monde newspaper confirmed the allegations of torture made by the opposition to the war, represented in particular by the French Communist Party (PCF) and other anti-militarist circles. Although many left-wing activists, including famous existentialists writers Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus, and historian Pierre Vidal-Naquet, denounced without exception the use of torture, the French government was itself headed in 1957 by the general secretary of the French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO), Guy Mollet. In general, the SFIO supported the colonial wars during the Fourth Republic (1947–54), starting with the crushing of the Madagascar revolt in 1947 by the socialist government of Paul Ramadier.
The controversy over the use of torture continues to have echoes today. Already in 1977, British historian Alistair Horne wrote in A Savage War of Peace that torture was to become a growing canker for France, leaving behind a poison that would linger in the French system long after the war itself had ended. At the time, Horne could not confirm or deny that torture had been ordered by the highest ranks of the military and civilian hierarchy of the French state. Despite France's difficulties in looking at its past, which is made evident by the obstacles it continues to put before the historical research, and the way the Algerian War is taught (or not) in French high-schools,[2] the fact that torture had not only been massively employed, but also ordered by the French government, was confirmed by General Aussaresses
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torture_during_the_Algerian_War