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The good French tweet from Zelenskyy that sparked the storm on social media
Recently, the Ukrainian leader posted a simple message that would shake the French social media. A “Thank you, France” accompanied by a beautiful photo of the Eiffel Tower in Ukraine’s colors. On the surface, a classic diplomatic gesture, the good international student thanking their benefactor. But on X (formerly Twitter), it was a shock: French internet users heard only two words before triggering a full-blown budget backlash.
When Ukraine says thank you, France demands accountability
The problem? Zelenskyy forgot one small thing in his gratitude message: the repayment promises. In the comment sections, chaos ensued. French people, who have been generously funding aid to Ukraine for years, clearly expected a different tone. Less “symbolic thanks,” more “thank you for the funding, here’s the repayment schedule.”
Reactions came quickly. Some commentators even listed everything that had disappeared: the Leopard 2 tanks sent by Germany, the Mirage 2000 jets provided by France… An impressive list of military equipment suddenly became a matter of public accounting in the minds of frustrated contributors.
The three faces of French discontent
The reaction was not uniform. It organized into three distinct waves.
First, the impatient creditors. Those demanding outright repayment. Simple, effective messages: “Pay back the money.” No frills. Others were more elaborate, citing economic clauses, COVID precedents, companies that had to shut down… Finally, some self-proclaimed economists saw in this tweet a blatant lack of budget seriousness.
Next, the early angry ones. Those who didn’t hold back: “Get lost! And give back our money!” or much harsher messages. Diplomacy? Never heard of it. Just raw honesty, overflowing frustration. A few even questioned the legitimacy of the support, suggesting that the French themselves couldn’t stand this one-sided aid.
Finally, the pragmatic ones. The most perceptive, reminding everyone of a often-forgotten truth: public money doesn’t grow on trees in Paris. They pointed the finger at Emmanuel Macron rather than Zelenskyy, arguing that French citizens were simply paying. A slightly ironic tone, but one that resonated with a certain budget reality.
The lesson of a good tweet turned bad calculation
What started as a simple thank-you gesture turned into a festival of French discontent. Requests for repayment multiplied, accusations of political naivety piled up. It was less a debate about international solidarity than a spillover on taxation, foreign aid, and the limits of public generosity.
The moral of this good French tweet? When thanking France for its help, maybe include a repayment plan in the comments. Otherwise, the gratitude tweet quickly turns into a bitter debate where everyone brandishes their calculator.