Jacques Émile Massu (5 May
1908 – 26 October 2002) was a French
general who
fought in World War II, First Indochina War, Algerian War and the Suez crisis.
Early life
Jacques Massu was born in Chalons-sur-Marne to a family of military
officers; his father was an artillery officer.
He studied
successively at Saint-Louis de Gonzague in Paris
, the Free
College of Gien
(1919-1925)
and Prytanée National Militaire
(1926-1928). He then entered
Saint-Cyr
and graduated in 1930 as a second lieutenant in the promotion class
“
Marshal Foch” and chose the Colonial
Infantry.
Between
October, 1930 and August, 1931, he served in the 16th Senegalese
Tirailleur Regiment (16th RTS) in Cahors
.
He was
sent to Morocco
with the 5th
RTS and took part in the fighting around Tafilalt
where he
earned his first citation. He was promoted to lieutenant in October
1932 and took part in the operations in High Atlas
, earning a new citation.
In 1934
Massu was transferred to 12th RTS at Saintes
, Charente-Maritime. He served in
Togo from January 1935 to February 1937 performing military and
civilian duties in Komkombas.
Then he was stationed in Lorraine with the
41st RMIC until June 1938, when he was sent to Chad to command the subdivision of Tibesti
with
headquarters in Zouar
.
World War II
He was serving in Africa when
World War
II broke out, and joined the
Free
French Forces.
He took part in the battle of Fezzan
with the
armoured troops of General Leclerc. In
1941, he was in charge of the
bataillon de marche du
Tchad. He served as a
lieutenant-colonel in the
2nd Armored Division (2e DB)
until the end of the war.
Indochina
In
September 1945, he landed in Saigon
and took
part in the retaking of the city and of the South of Indochina.
Egypt
In 1956,
the 10th Parachute Division was sent in Egypt to take back the
Suez
canal
during the Suez
crisis.
Algeria
A
Brigadier General in June 1955,
Massu commanded the
groupe parachutiste d'intervention and
from 1956 the
10e Division
parachutiste. (Grando and Valynseele).
France sent Massu and
his division to Algeria
in response to a wave of armed attacks and
terrorist bombings coordinated by Algerian FLN. (Codevilla and Seabury). Massu ultimately
won the
Battle of Algiers
in 1957, during which French forces were able to identify and
arrest the leadership of the FLN in Algiers through the successful
application of coercive methods of interrogation and outright
torture on members of subordinate cells.
In July
1958, he was promoted to Général de division and took
the head of the army corps of Algiers
, as well as functions of prefect for the region of Algiers.
It was said of Massu that he willingly admitted to the use of
torture on suspected members of the FLN. However, he insisted that
he would never subject anyone to any treatment that he had not
first tried out on himself.
The
Algier crisis of 1958,
began when the current government suggested that it would negotiate
with the Algerian nationalists, bringing the instability and
ineffectiveness of the
Fourth
Republic to a head.
Right-wing elements in the French Army, led by General Massu seized power
in Algiers
and threatened to conduct an assault on Paris
, involving
paratroopers and armoured forces based
at Rambouillet
, unless Charles de
Gaulle was placed in charge of the Republic. De Gaulle
did so under the precondition that a new constitution would be
introduced creating a powerful presidency in which a sole
executive, the first of which was to be De Gaulle, ruled for
seven-year periods. These changes were introduced and the
Fifth Republic was born.In July 1958
he became
général de
division (3 stars).
On 14 January 1960, Massu gave an interview in which he
declared:
Massu was immediately relieved of command and sent back to the
mainland.
Later life
After his criticism of the policy of
de Gaulle in 1960, Massu was fired from
his positions of military governor of Algiers.
In 1962 he became
military governor of Metz
and of the
Sixth military region in France. Promoted to
général de corps
d'armée (4 stars) in 1963. In March 1966, he became
général d'armée (5 stars) and
was made chief of the French forces in Germany.
On the 29 May 1968,
Charles de Gaulle came to visit
him at his headquarters in Baden-Baden
during the events of May
68. Massu assured de Gaulle of his support, but
according to some sources conditioned it upon an amnesty for French
military officers implicated in coup attempts during the Algerian
War.
Massu
retired from military duty in July 1969 and spent the rest of his
life in his home at Conflans-sur-Loing
writing his memoires. He died there on 26
October 2002.
Decorations
He received 13 citations during his career
Quotes
- "Give me two divisions and tomorrow, you can take your
breakfast on the boulevard Saint Germain" (to De Gaulle, about May
'68)
- "I am a soldier, I obey"
- Charles de Gaulle : "So, Massu, still that stupid?"
- Jacques Massu's answer : "Still that gaullist, General!"
Footnotes
Bibliography
1) Codevilla, Angelo and Seabury,
Paul.
War: Ends and Means, Second Edition.
Virginia: Potomac Books, 2006.
2) Grando, Denis and Valynseele,
Joseph.
À la découverte de leurs racines.
Paris: L'Intermédiaire des Chercheurs et Curieux, 1988.
External links