Franois Darlan

Admiral of the Fleet Franois Darlan (August 7, 1881December 24, 1942) was a French naval officer and senior figure of the Vichy France regime. Darlan was born in Nrac, Lot-et-Garonne, graduating from the cole Navale in 1902. During World War I, he commanded an artillery battery. He remained in the navy after the war, and was promoted to Rear Admiral in 1929. Darlan was made chief of staff in 1936 and admiral of the fleet in 1937. In 1939 he was given command of the entire French Navy. When Paris was occupied in June 1940, Darlan was one of those who supported the prime minister, Marshal Henri Philippe Ptain. He was rewarded by retaining his post as minister of the navy. He ordered the majority of the fleet to French North Africa, but fearing it would fall into German hands it was destroyed by the Royal Navy at Mers El Kbir on July 3 at the cost of around 1,300 French naval dead. This act did much to confirm Darlan's Anglophobia, but he still declined to commit the remaining vessels to German control. In February 1941 he replaced Pierre Laval as deputy to Ptain and was also made minister for the interior, defence and foreign affairs . He was de facto head of the government. In January 1942 he gained a number of other government posts. He was as much a "collaborationnist" as Pierre Laval, and promoted a politic of alliance beetween French vichyst Forces and German Forces, by Paris Protocols. However, the German government had become suspicious of his opportunism and "malleable loyalties" and in April he was made to surrender the majority of his responsibilities back to the more clearly pro-Nazi Laval. Darlan retained the post of Commander of the French armed forces. He arrived in Algiers on November 7, just to visit his son, just before the beginning of Operation Torch. The day after, the 8th of November 1942, at 1 o'Clock P.M., pursuant to secretly made agreements in Cherchell on October 23, 1942, between Algiers resistance and the combined allied command, 400 badly armed French civil resistants neutralized, alone, by their Putsch of November 8, 1942, the coastal artillery of Sidi Ferruch and the vichyist XIXme army corps of Algiers during about fifteen hours. To get that result, their groups, under the command of Jos Aboulker, Henri d'Astier de La Vigerie, and colonel Jousse, occupied, during the night, the majority of the Algiers strategic points (General Government, Prefecture, Staff headquarters, telephone central, barracks, etc.) and arrested most of the vichyist military and civil rulers. One of those groups, composed with some youngsters of the Ben-Aknoun College, under the command of the non commissioned officer (aspirant) Pauphilet, had succeeded in arresting General Juin, Chief commandant in North Africa, as well as the collaborationist admiral Darlan. Afterwards, Algiers having been occupated the first day by allied forces, thanks to the French resistance,General Clark compelled the collaborationist admiral Franois Darlan and General Juin, after 3 days of talks and threats, to order French forces would end the hostilities, on November 10 in Oran and november 11 in Marocco, providing he remained head of a French administration. For this he was dismissed from the Vichy government and Vichy Southern France was 'invaded' by the German army in Operation Attila. In return Gen. Eisenhower agreed with Darlan selfnomination as the High Commissioner of France for North and West Africa on November 14, a move that enraged Charles De Gaulle. On November 27 the remaining French naval vessels were scuttled at Toulon. Most French troops in Africa followed Darlan's lead but certain elements joined the German forces in Tunisia. On the afternoon of December 24, 1942 a 20-year-old French patriot, Ferdinand Bonnier de la Chapelle, entered Darlan's headquarters in Algiers and shot him twice. Although de la Chapelle had been a member of the resistance group led by Henri d'Astier, it is believed he was acting as an individual. Darlan died a few hours later and de la Chapelle was executed by firing squad on the 26th. Darlan was replaced as High Commissioner by another French flag officer, General Henri Giraud. Generally, Darlan was unpopular with the Allies — it was said that "no tears were shed" at his funeral. Unfortunately, his successor, General Giraud, was not very popular either; Giraud had continually browbeaten General Eisenhower about taking over command of all Allied forces, and was generally considered overly pompous by the Allied generals.

Sources

  • Rick Atkinson, An Army at Dawn
  • George F. Howe, North West Africa: Seizing the initiative in the West, Center of Military history, US Army, Library of Congress, 1991.
  • Arthur L. Funck, The politics of Torch, University Press of Kansas, 1974.
  • Professeur Yves Maxime Danan, La vie politique Alger de 1940 1944, Paris, L.G.D.J., 1963.
  • Henri Michel, Darlan, Hachette, Paris, 1993.
  • Christine Levisse-Touzet, L'Afrique du Nord dans la guerre, 1939-1945, Paris, Albin Michel, 1998.
  • Professeur Jos Aboulker et Christine Levisse-Touzet, 8 novembre 1942 : Les armes amricaine et anglaise prennent Alger en quinze heures, Paris, Espoir , n 133, Paris, 2002.
Darlan, Franois Darlan, Franois Darlan, Franois Darlan, Franois Darlan, Franois

 

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