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Hollande says US response to 9/11 increased terror threat to France

Islamic State ordered November 2015 attacks in Paris that killed 130 people, claimed truck massacre in Nice in July that claimed 86 lives
France's President Francois Hollande (AFP/file photo)

America's response to the 9/11 attacks augmented rather than defeated the threat, with the consequences of the Iraq war now being felt in terror-scarred France, President Francois Hollande said on Sunday.

In a Facebook post commemorating the victims of the attacks, Hollande echoed a famous front-page headline from Le Monde newspaper on the day after the suicide plane strikes.

"Yes, on that day, we were all Americans," he wrote.

But the Socialist leader, whose country has been rocked by a string of attacks in the past year-and-a-half, was also fiercely critical of the US riposte.

"The response that the American administration gave to these attacks... far from eradicating the threat, expanded it over a wider area. Namely to Iraq," he wrote.

"And even though France, through [ex-president] Jacques Chirac, rightly refused to join the intervention [in Iraq], which it condemned, it has nonetheless been a victim of the consequences of the chaos it caused."

Hollande's remarks were seen as a reference to the rise of the Islamic State (IS) group, which was formed out of al-Qaeda in Iraq.

IS, which later expanded to Syria, has ordered or claimed several attacks in the West in the past year, particularly in France, which it has declared a top target.

The group ordered the November 2015 attacks in Paris that killed 130 people. It also claimed the truck massacre in Nice in July that claimed 86 lives as the work of one of its "soldiers".

Hollande said every terror attack was like a re-enactment of 9/11, with its lot of "buried lives, broken destinies and grieving families".

Declaring that democracy would triumph in the end, he called on people to "never give in to fear".

The French government has responded to the threat by deploying thousands of troops to patrol the streets, enacting a raft of anti-terror laws and repeatedly extending a state of emergency, the Daily Mail said.

Hollande has not announced whether he will run for a second term next year, but is widely expected to be a candidate in spite of low poll numbers.

This article is available in French on Middle East Eye French edition.

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