Asselineau : Ou etais-tu en 1992 ?
Soral effectivement reviens sur Asselineau en reconaissant ses immences qualite et en s’interrogant sur ses buts. Mais que fesait le pourfendeur de Maastricht en 1992. Voici le CV qu’on trouve sur lui sur wikipedia
La grille de lecture de Soral est interessante et j’aimerais bien la reponse de Monsieur Asselineau sur les Questions que Soral souleve. Quel est votre but et pourquoi tiree sur le FN ? Qu’es qui dans le FN vous derange tant ? Je vais m’interesser a la question et y repondre certainement.
Pre-Political Career
After graduating from HEC Paris and before enrolling École nationale d’administration (ENA), François Asselineau started his career in Japan as a cooperant for National Service Overseas (CSNE). He belonged to the service for economic expansion.[2]
As many of École nationale d’administration alumni, François Asselineau started his career in 1985 as inspector General in the prestigious inspection générale des Finances.
In 1989, he was chief of mission for the National Credit for 2 years. He was also president of the direction of the Society for Economical and Financial Analysis and Diagnostic (SADEF).
From 1991, he became chief of mission of the Asia-Oceania office at the Direction of Foreign Economical Relation (DREE) in the Ministry of Economy and Finance under the minister Michel Sapin in the Pierre Bérégovoy government.
From January 21 to October 1994, he worked as minister-counsellor for international affairs of Gérard Longuet[3] in the Ministry of Industry, post, telecommunication and overseas commerce in the Edouard Balladur government. He kept the same position until 1995 while the minister changed to José Rossi.
On June 13, 1995, he is nominated director of the office of the Ministry of Tourism, Françoise de Panafieu, in the first government of Alain Juppé.[4] The office was under a constant budget constrain pressure by the government[5]
In 1996, he moved to the ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hervé de Charette in the second government of Alain Juppé where he was in charge of Economic matters for Asia, Oceania and Latin America until the dissolution of parliament by Jacques Chirac in 1997.
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