The
27-year-old has endured a fractious relationship with his national team and was
left out of the squad for this year’s World Cup in Brazil by France coach
Didier Deschamps.
“I’ve
made the decision. I made it a while ago, but I will announce it when the time
is right,” he said in an interview with the Sky Sports website, without
specifying what that decision was.
“With
the national team I didn’t win anything. So it’s more easy to take this
decision than if we’d just won something. When you play for a big club and you
play lots of games, it’s easy to come to this decision.”
Nasri
made his France debut at the age of 19 in 2007 and has won 41 caps, scoring
five goals, but his international career has been dogged by controversy.
He
clashed with senior players during the 2008 European Championship and unleashed
an expletive-strewn tirade at a journalist following France’s elimination at
Euro 2012, for which he received a three-game ban.
Nasri’s
girlfriend Anara Atanes, meanwhile, sparked controversy in May when she
responded to his exclusion from the World Cup squad with a foul-mouthed Twitter
attack on Deschamps and the France squad.
“Even
before the summer, during Euro 2012 I had a lot going on,” Nasri added.
“Personally it doesn’t affect me, but it affects my family. They live in
France, they read the press stuff.
“I
live in England so I’m fine with everything they say (in France) and I’m used
to it. But for my parents it’s really hard. I want to make them happy and the
national team doesn’t make me happy.”
Nasri
has won two Premier League titles and one League Cup since leaving Arsenal for
City in 2011 and he appears to have decided to concentrate solely on his club
career.
He
stopped short of confirming his international retirement, however.
“It’s
not something you can just announce on Twitter,” he said. “I have to sit down
and do a full interview and just say it. I will do it when the time is right.”
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