Girard, Rene N - American Opinion of France, 1940-1943
Girard, Rene N - American Opinion of France, 1940-1943
Girard, Rene N - American Opinion of France, 1940-1943
by
Bene Girard
June, 1950
ProQuest Number: 10295238
uest.
ProQ uest 10295238
French affairs fro® June, 194Q, to June, 1945, on American opinion* The
French defeat of June, 1940, was a major event and its effect on American
thinking was tremendous* The defeat was envisaged, in this study, from
place formerly occupied by France appeared suddenly empty and the reali
sation of this fact had Its effect also on French cultural influence in
The problem of how much this new situation should affect traditionally
diction with the avowed American policy of supporting the cause of the
nations at war with Germany and Italy# This problem was not solved when
America entered the war or even when diplomatic relations with Vichy were
ii
It only took a new fora with the setting-up of a pro-Allied administra
For the purpose of this study, the French defeat of June, 1940,
September 2, 1939, for this second ©vent had little effect on American
era, and a study of American attitudes toward France during that period
previous crises# The logical place to close this study seemed to be the
event which marked the end of the disunity between the two French groups
Vichy was deprived of its last vestige of power with the loss of its
only have shown the influence of syndicated columnists and the importance
ill
polls were used upon occasion, it seemed to the writer unwise to give
too much space to the opinions of those whom the poll-takers called
political opinion*
tion Division of the French Embassy in the United State® and the staff
of the library of Indiana University for the aid rendered him in the
iv
TABLE OF contents
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Chapter
Conclusion . . ........ . . 44
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Chapter ^S®
vi
Chapter Page
vii
Chapter Page
vlii
Chapter
Ix
Chapter ?&g*
x
Chapter
xi
Chapter
adl
ch a p te r x
the treaty of Versailles and the Locarno Pact. France did not interfere
on that occasion and she did not interfere either during the Ethiopian or
front with Britain and France, a decision which evidently led the Soviet
Following the lead of Britain, France decided to make good her pledge to
of Italy, the French high command, probably mindful of the terrible and
1
£
France became obvious* General Ganelin rushed the best French armies to
alder common military measures in the ease of a German attack* The quick
most portion of the battleline, the mountainous Ardennes region where the
the Germans forced a break through the French lines near Sedan* General
German armored divisions which, instead of driving toward Paris, were de
scribing a wide are pointing toward the Channel and threatening to close
was then the French Ambassador to Spain, was made vice-premier* General
nised warfare, was appointed under-secretary for war* But these changes
could not stop the German columns which reached Boulogne on the Channel
on May £3* Among those trapped in the Flanders pocket was the whole Bel
gian army which capitulated on May 28, British and French units were
Dunkirk but they lost all their materiel* The British contribution to
the campaign on the land was practically ended, Weygand*s attempt to es
frantic appeals Paul Raynaud pleaded with President Roosevelt for American
3
help* On June 6 the government left Paris, which was occupied by the
that time the French army could no longer oppose a continued line of de
fense to the German tanks* General Weygand was applying pressure on the
government to end the fighting. Led by Marshal Petain, the pacifist group
in the French government forced Reynaud to resign on June 16, 1940* Petain
II
ion. Even though many people believed no longer that the French army was
the best in the world, the swiftness of its collapse provoked a universal
amazement.
United States than in any other country because, as many American jour
Many people were conscious not only of the fact that their security was
endangered by the rise of Germany to world supremacy but also that the
its fate in Europe* Moreover, Franc© had symbolised for a century and a
half certain values and a certain way of life. Because of the French
these values or at least to ask or search for the causes of the French
strongly Influenced by the clash between French factions, which was not
suppressed by the French defeat but continued in all places where freedom
causes of the French collapse* These works constituted the main source-
French and other eye-witnesses carried naturally a great weight since they
American public*
These bodes were of unequal value* Their very number and the
The works of the French writer AndreMaurois, for instance, were not taken
that he "related the fall of France, then the history of America, the
love affairs of great literary heroines, and then his own loves and mar
Porter Sargent with sarcasm showed his readers what a shrewd observer of
the European scene Maurois had been? "It was on a 1beautiful summer
Some critics saw the work of novelist Jules Remains, The Seven
made the book popular for a while and It was much quoted during the sum
mer of 1940j but, according to Henri Peyre, the book was only m attempt
ing to the reader*s political bias* The nationality of the author mat
tered less than his political opinions* It is rare to find remarks like
A study of Mr* Gooch's article reveals that the books which he considered
as typical French accounts were those which failed to consider the po
litical attitude of the French upper class as responsible for the catas-
nounced "men who had no scruples about aiding the forces of evil against
their own country, and who have accepted and are employing the support of
the criterion of Mr* Gooch is political, but this fact was not apparent
l®Gnly the books published before 1942 are taken into account in
this chapter*
7
They were the work of political exiles who had taken refuge in France
retain or acquire the favor of African opinion# The British, for obvious
lic opinion. British activity helps explain why most American comments
on the campaign of May-Jun© 1940 adopted the British view of the Dunkirk
operation*^
Minister Pierre Got defended hia position in The Sew Republic,*® Foreign
commented upon by the liberal press, which they provided with many argu
ments# Although de Kerillis was far from being a liberal, he united with
powerful Frenchmen* They were not all able to remain objective, however,
and followed the natural human tendency to over-emphasiz© the points with
which they had had personal contacts# Nevertheless, some Americans gave
them too much Importance or mistook their point of view for that of all
find out the causes of defeat, expressed the opinion that “eminent French
*®January, 1941.
19July, 1941.
K W o h 14, 1942.
9
utilised, but Instead they were humiliated and treated with suspicion,
democracy was more similar to the American than any other. This was
enough to make the fall of France very disturbing. A study of the causes
informed America could be sure to avoid the mistakes which had brought
cedence over a critical study of the French situation. Since the voices
of those who had an “ax© to grind” wore the loudest and since their in
political bias.
XII
defeat contains all the arguments tending to prove that a radical policy
of social progress endangers the country ’which pursues it* Most of the
reasons which were brought forward by American observers were taken from
The Vichy propagandists intended to prove that the French democratic tra
dition was a source of corruption, but they maintained that the "real
In other words their argument was more a political weapon for French use
this time for American use, they neglected to make a distinction between
the Frenchmen who had kept aloof from the evils of social democracy and
those whose corruption had brought about the disaster* Their writings
constituted an all-out attack against French society as such and did not
spare even the rightist "prophets." There was also a difference in vo
newspapers; the attacks were against "socialism" and "Hew Deal policies."
which were in accord with its own political, social, or religious bias.
was an example.
Barclay in Mill and Factory for duly 1, 1940, which Senator Vandenberg
to it, the “theories of Henri Barbusse, Leon Jouhaux, Leon Blum and other
assorted Leftists of varied hues had brought the nation finally to its
knees* * * *rt^& Why? Because they had not dedicated themselves to “eco
William Philip Simms wrote that “everyone admits that France is paying
the price for having attempted too rapid social progress* * * *H^® His
conclusion also was that this should be a lesson for the United States*
with which he already was very familiar. According to hi® Franc© had
fallen because she had allowed too much freedom of action to her trade-
unions and had allowed too many ant1-Fascist refugees to enter.^? The
46?58
n
fall Street Journal expressed the opinion that France had collapsed be*
vised the United States to return to "sound business methods" In the fora
America would suffer the same fate as France*^® But it was in the Chicago
tribune that the "Popular Front theory" found Its most perfect expressions
"France is prostrate because Leon Blum sent her best arms to the Gommu*
nists in Spain and because the Communists sat down in her aras-making
ism. The Chicago Tribune was even more outspoken when it proclaimed on
The most curious thing about these attacks is that they did not
prevent the same newspaper from commenting unfavorably upon the "Maginot
Line mentality," which kept France from helping her allies offensively
and brought about her final isolation. The Tribune decided that it was
the contradiction, which led it to conceal the way the French system of
with a completely original explanation of the French defeat which was di
rected against him* the origin of this theory was undoubtedly the dis
patch sent from Paris by Alex Small, which was published on dune 18, 1940*
The same day the Tribune published a cartoon entitled ”the will-ot-the-
wiap, how it led two great nations to their destruction.” The cartoon
showed two soldiers, one French, one English, tramping in the mud and
looking hopefully toward a pale sun which was labeled ^Roosevelt war
promises.” This allegory purported to show that France and Great Britain
United States of doing "to England and France what they did to Abyssinia,
or American diplomacy, even if the logical link between them was weak,
were launched at the same time by the conservative and Isolationist oppo
lic opinion polls showed that "war-feeling," which was on the increase
immediately after the invasion of the Low Countries and France, somewhat
subsided when it became apparent that France was rapidly being defeated.^
to prove that the battle of the Meuse had been a test which "New-Deal
democracy" had failed to pass. The relative success of their efforts was
**%ee p. 5"9'
IS
reflected in the public opinion polls. Many Americana saw in the French
papers* They were thus all the more disposed to follow them on the
ground of isolationism*
IV
Another proof that the French defeat gave the offensive to the
newspapers had to adopt, at least during the first days which followed
the collapse* They had to fight their opponents on their own ground be*
Nation was the first one to attack the "Popular Front theory**:
Raymond Gram Swing made the same observation in the Mew York
Herald Tribunes
stunned by the blow or silenced by Vichy and by the Germans, did not
facilitate the task of the liberal newspapers* Helther did the presence
est by the blow# Their first reaction had often been the negative "France
was betrayed*" It was the same thing as the w0n a &te tr&hi" of the
French soldiers who suddenly found themselves behind the German lines*
fed upon the fifth-column stories which were so numerous at the time* It
was the protective and normal reaction of dazzled minds looking for a
magic word capable of breaking a chain of causes and effects, the evidence
of which was not tolerable. The word was "treason." From this first and
was helped by the free expression of the liberal refugees and American
against pre-war French democracy, but its normal evolution did not lead
where the initial shock which made It possible could not be caused by
cern for the fate of democratic principles in Europe and in the whole
world.
reacted as Vichy wanted them to react and passed from the "we were be
duce such a reaction among old friends of France, like General Hugh
June 29, 1940, The Nation was still writing "the brave and steadfast men
of France have been sold out • • « but as early as June 22, the same
mainly of those in high places who intrigued with the Nazis before the
This shift was also apparent in The Hew Republic* which combined
"treachery" with "appeasement" as the main reasons for the debacle: "When
the whole story of the French surrender is known, we may find that the
defeat was caused far more by treachery and appeasement40 than by German
military might.
^Italics mine.
powerful men who wanted to undo all that had been done since the French
Revolution,,,4S Those who adopted this theory saw in the French situation
a political lesson for the United States. The Hew Republic wrote?
The lesson for the United States is all too plain* We have our
traitors to the democratic ideal— including some of the men who talk
In its praise most loudly and persistently* They may prove as dan
gerous to us as their French counterpart have been to the cradle of
liberty, equality and fraternity.44
France had been the victim of a plan carefully laid and carried out in
that the liberal theory found its perfect expression# Retainfs first
central point of the argument and the defeat of the French armies on the
who had "no scruples about aiding the forces of evil against their own
country, and who have accepted and are employing the support of a victo
these two points; aiding the forces of evil before and during the war
and collaborating with the enemy* The weak point in this reasoning was
the fact that the French governments of the Third Republic had been
elected by the French people and that the free play of democratic insti
tutions had never been seriously disturbed until after the French defeat#
There were two solutions to this problem* The first one was to
refuse to admit that the French leaders were real democrats and to show
mocracy. This view was held by Communists and by most extremists among
American liberals# They looked with the earn© contempt at the reaction
aries of the right and at those of the left. It mattered little to them
a collection of his articles and public addresses during the *phonytt war
behind the scene by the rightist opposition and the weakness of the
French governments* This solution was the most widely utilised* The
conservative theory had tried to show that the Popular Front had been
successful not only in destroying this leftist coalition but also in de
stroying the whole nation* The French governments which succeeded each
other during that period were not considered as full of traitors as they
outspoken when dealing with French affairs than they would have been when
talking about America. They felt much more free to carry their thinking
and their corrupt leaders* There was no such distinction in the argument
terests did not have to respect fair-play rules, since there was no na
tional unity to safeguard and no hope to win over at least some of the
The quest for scapegoats after the debacle became interminable* The
details of the witch-hunt are tedious* Each group exculpated itself
and blamed its enemies* * # * In each case the targets of accusation
accused their accusers* Each saw truly some elements of the total
and terrifying truth* France succumbed less to brutal assault from
without than to a cancer within which had spread unseen through ©very
organ and limb.4®
more precise accusations which place his book in the class of explanations
Many of the pygmies and parasites who were the lost leaders of the
Republic placed Property above Patriotism. In their delusion regard
ing the means by which Property could beet be protected, they made
Communism at home and the U* S* S* R. abroad their favorite enemies,
thou# neither had power to threaten their privileges. . . * While
the enemy of the Left was smitten hip and thigh, the enemy of the
Right was studiously ignored* » • • The Cagoulerds • . . had friends
The Army and th© French military traditions got their full share
of criticism* The liberals did not emphasize the Army’s military role
during the operations but its political role at th© time of the surrender.
more worried by the attitude of th© Communists in Paris tlian by the ad
vance of the German troops. Th® Havy was spared only until the battle of
Oran*52 it had not played a prominent part in the wsurj its leaders had
not reached important political positions 5 and before July 5 there was
still so m hope that certain units would rally to the British* The "in
Even the most liberal newspapers had little to say about th©
failure of French industry to provide weapons for th© French army. They
^See p. 105.
25
repeated what they read in ^accuse or other foreign sources on the trea
in their search for the causes of the French defeat, liberals turned
toward French foreign policy* They refused to admit that the enforcement
They believed with The Jfew Republic that? “In 1919 th® problem of French
security could have been solved once and for all, if the German revolu
tion had been allowed to run its course* Clemenceau preferred to grant
was considered as th® main engineer of this policy which had been planned
by th© treasonable elements. Th© most useful of these alliances was the
1955 pact with Russia which French reactionaries and, among them, the
man who had affixed his signature on this document, Herr© Laval, had
Had it been firmly based, it might have prevented the war. Too many
politicians in France were fundamentally opposed to the new alliance,
however* they disliked the Nazis, but they liked the Communists even
less* The pact was seldom worth more than a scrap of paper. . • •
Here was sheer tragedy*54
Bom people would not have admitted that these French politicians
ate plot against the Republic* A* J* Liebling, of The Hew Yorker, wrote*
and industrialists was not in the failure to organise the war effort suc
cessfully but in the field of foreign policy* The Ration* also, saw in
Fascist and reactionary forces working within France* The result on the
The Hew York Times also denounced the "Maginot jaind** In an evi
this newspaper differed from the liberals in its comment upon French
The Maginot Line was to France what the Atlantic ocean la to the
United States* * * * It was a symbol of th® outlook and temper of
the French people* The French wanted only to be left alone behind
their bulwark# The couaaitments mad© by successive governments in
the East— th© Little Entente and the Franco-Soviet pact— never re
ceived the whole-hearted support of the little people, the petit
bourgeois, who are the backbone of the republic*57
attacks upon the men in power at Vichy# There were attempts to link
was Ambassador in Spain and of his record during the First World War#5®
attacked the liberal theory on th© ground that the composition of the
"peace- and war-parties” was not ideologically clear-cut since the first
included leftist leaders like Paul Faure and, the second, reactionaries
acknowledged that the main difference between the two factions was politi
cal Then he declared that the division was Bb©tween two concepts of the
®%e© p. 16>o.
shout the "Hew Deal politicians11 who wanted to hide their own failure by
defending the record of their French counterparts, but the heat of the
this instance and in many others, America*s entrance into the war, the
rise of the French Underground, and especially British and Free French
elements of French society* This belief, however, was still far from
is hidden behind the reasons brought forward to explain the French defeat;
but many observers were not aware of all the political implications of
the problem* They were inclined to put more or less emphasis on this or
aments and interests* Between the ultra-conservative views and the lib
eral theory lay the largest part of American opinion* A study of their
confusion*
Grand Orient Masonry, which had played such a big part In the cre
ation of the Third Republic, played an important role in its down
fall by constantly preaching capitulation in the name of some mystic
principle of harmony (notably during the sixth of February riots and
at th© time of Munich).
elements, who denounced them, not for being pacifist, but for having
Th© most striking fact about all the comments on the French de
feat is that those which were influenced by conservative views are more
numerous than those which reflect a liberal outlook* This is easily ex
plainable if one does not forget that the only expressions of French
opinion which were allowed to cross the Atlantic came from Vichy or from
occupied Paris. Besides, the books written by the most popular French
affected liberal circles throughout the world like some sort of anaes
thesia, while at th© same time the Rawls were clamoring that their tri
umphs were due both to the moral regeneration of Germany through Hasism
credible factional hatreds which rotted away the spine of France while
blame on the pre-war goverranents, since French political life had been
It was very close to the Popular Front theory, "We shall be told that
the weakness of France was the result of the hopeless divisions created
the plain facts. ’Hopeless division1 resulted fro® th© refusal of the
there was something wrong with French democratic methods and the attitude
blame. The state of American public opinion in that respect may be summed
but they were not as bitter as those against "Blum’s Hew Beal.® They
servers, th© French government had mad© victims out of the Communist
very often turned out to be another occasion to attack the Popular Front
were also accused of having Inspired the sit-down strikes which had
Monthly?
The role of the French Communists, following the shifting orders from
Moscow, was first to aggravate greatly the class differences within
the country, then to push France into a war for which the Communist-
inspired strikes had made it unprepared and finally to execute an
abrupt turn toward defeatism after the war against Hitler’s Germany
had actually begun.69
You will recall that late in August France had a military alliance
with the Soviet Union. . . • This alliance was strongest when the
®%averley Root, The Secret History of the War (New York, 1945),
I, 159-160.
Many people, on the faith of information like the broadcast quoted above,
believed that the Communists had played a prominent part in the Popular
Front coalition and had even been members of the governments. Th® Spanish
Front# Papular had been the victim of exactly the same misconception.
to mobilise all th# resources of the nation In time of war. They ex
pressed the opinion that m "iron directing will" could have saved the
failed to interfere with an economic system, the larger part of which had
were due to a failure more devastating than the success of th® weap
ons* the failure of th# democracies to perceive the total implica
tions of the gathering threat and to mobilize the vast power of
^Italics mine.
the war effort* This was generally not done, not even by the liberal
newspapers* Bertrand Thompson, who had lived in France for twenty years
and m s industrial expert during the Second World War, was one of the
rare American observers who did not deal with this problem from a purely
failure, not only on the "collapse of discipline* but also on the "low
could have constituted quite a weapon in the hands of those who suspected
perts from Spain described French factories as "some of the world *s best
equipped,* which under the Germans might turn out as many as 1350 planes
a month**74
Insistence on th© political aspect of th© problems involved in
th© French defeat, even if it is not a proof that th© writer ha© an "axe
those who tried to utilise this event for political ends* The same thing
a national emergency* these papers took for granted that American affairs
had taken the same course as French affairs, Hew Deal being the equivalent
that moral relaxation had been the primary reason for the French debacle,
but they were not ready to accept th© idea that America was in the same
situation a® France* The very fact that France was a democracy was nev
that “French democracy had contracted diseases which were hers ©nly.w?$
cism which Included practically all phases of French history, all /rench
institutions, all the features of French life, and all classes of French
and the cheap newspapers are ashamed from th© bottom of their hearts,11
time all over America is th© editorial published by the Carroll County
7SSee pp 10- U.
complete surrender the logical way out* Among the great French
middle-class, corrupt newspapers, corrupt politics, and soft living
had sapped the vitality of th© nation* Socialist government and
Socialist propaganda had crippled the airplane industry so that
French production of military machines was more or less of a joke*
Gone was th© spirit of Verdun of the First World War. The grim
cry "on m passe gas1**— <*Th©y shall not pass**— was neither heard nor
much of any attempt made to live up to it. The Germans went through
Verdun like a hot knife through butter*
It is unfair and impossible to indict a whole nation on the faith
of a few newspaper articles, no matter how accurate those articles
may be, but at the same time it is possible to say with considerable
assurance that corrupt politics, corrupt newspapers, too much soft
living, and too much love of self and too little love of country
brought th© downfall of France* If the United States ever goes tit©
way France has just gone. . . *79
French debacle Sonia Tamara, of the Hew fork Herald Tribune, showed how
the former was exercised. She related her conversation with a few
Qringoire»
79Italics mine*
Flanner seemed in favor of the second factor# For her it was a permanent
“The French people with their passion for money « # « perhaps honestly
felt they could not afford to go on trying for a victory in this war
tions of the French Debacle,*1 Mary Steel© Owen found an even more basic
reason for the break-through on th© Meuse River? “The French had long
that “the French race® had lost only temporarily their old virtues and
refrained from condemning most of the past as well as the present# For
Ralph Delahay© Paine, Jr#, head of the European staff of Life and Time,
th© only serious trouble with the French was too much civilization!
tially good, though perhaps too civiliaed, given too much food, drink
The fact from which everyone starts Is thiss France, which before
the war was in a state of democratic confusion of purpose, permitted
that confusion to persist after the war had started, and for this
reason, although there may have been others, France lost the war*
That confusion of purpose is attributed by the Germans and the Fas
cists to democracyj by others not to democracy but to an assumed
French stupidity, or venality, or decadence* * * • We say that
French democracy has failed and we use the adjective French because
we feel that it is essential to attribute it to a special corruption
which w© thus localise and isolate* We do this because we still be
lieve in the democratic system in general and are proud of it in
particular as happily applied to us* We still think in terms of na
tions and we still believe in the possibility of local success and
failure* So that if we can with difficulty deny that pre-war French
policy and French political life existed in a climate of democracy,
at least now we can attribute the French failure to some peculiar
misuse of perversion of the democratic principle*84
A letter to the New York Times expressed the belief that ’’the sins as
all the governments of the world, present, past and future*1*88 gut such
interventions in th© argument about the fall of France remained rare and
their Influence was limited. The French defeat had a deep and lasting
YI
the French defeat usually showed at least a leaning toward the ultra
situation, although it may stem from sheer sympathy for France, was or
to give the lie to what Time had writtent "Truth was that France was not
knew They attempted to show that the French had been the victims
of overpowering circumstances*
Almost every explanation has been given for the fall of France, ex
cept the right one. France has been dead for some years. The kill
ing and killing andkilling of th© last war was too much for her,
and she simply died a hideous second death . . , leaving what was
left of Franc© to endure th© insultsof our vilo and lying press. .
• • It seems to methat those of us who saved France, futilely, in
1915, 1916 and later, must speak up to save America from the fate
which has overwhelmed France.8?
to attack Great Britain for not giving enough help to Franc© or for ex
from saying anything which might harm her cause. A Gallup poll of
“British had let the French down.” The poll indicated that nearly 28 per
was criticised.
sent from Spain or Portugal were not all full of reports on "French de
Petain*
The Allied lack of man power was due in part to th© difference be
tween 10 British divisions fighting in France in 1940 as against 8S
in critical phases of the last war, and also to Italy’s entry into
the war on Germany’s side*91
which was, he thought, "the basic reason for this lack of man power.'*
tween the number of soldiers at the disposal of France and Germany had
not played a direct part in the outcome of the battle* Most writers put
the emphasis on the tactics used by the Germans and their technical
superiority*
Allowing for some treachery and much incompetence on the Allied side,
the truth la that the Germans crashed through their opponents not
merely because they had piled up enormous quantities of the new weap
ons of war, but because they had drilled a huge army in original
methods of warfare which swept the enemy off their feet.92
Others mentioned the fact that French colonial troops, which had been so
tanks played a leading role. Many ©aphasia© the “fifth column system”
The attitude of Belgium before the war cam© in for strong criti
and had thus helped to bring about that of France. "In justice to
have worked if King Leopold had allowed the French and British to move
their troops into position last winter instead of calling for help at the
soldiers,” there were few attempts to defend the record of the French army.
In some dispatches sent from Lisbon French infantry officers were accused
of having deserted their men and having fled with their families in their
private ears, taking along their silverware and most precious possessions.
with the French army. Like most observers of liberal tendencies, he was
inclined to put the blame on the highest level of the hierarchy. Accord
ing to him, the French generals were responsible for the French technical
with 100 more planes, 1000 more tanks and 5000 more guns, they could have
won. . . . If they were not purchased it was the generals and not the
melted away* What happened to the French officers? For the most part
patch sent from Lisbon on July 2, he questioned the sill to fight of the
Individually, the men and units undoubtedly fought well* But com
pared with the French army at Verdun, or with the Poles at Warsaw,
these French armies fought without that savage desperation that alone
can save a desperate situation*
When the French decided to yield their capital city rather than
have it share the glory of ruined Warsaw, the prevailing frame of
mind m s apparent to the world* This frame of mind m s not
sufficiently heroic*®®
sport*
It must have been a little like one of those football games in which
one team seems certain in advance to beat the other by two or three
touchdowns, but in which the inferior team plays far below its form.
• * * After such a game the spectators always think the winning team
much stronger than it really is and the losers weaker than they
possible could have been.®7
defenders of French military valor could uphold their argument with one
facti the daily ratio of French killed and wounded during the blitzkrieg
the German advance and with its apparent ease. There was even a tendency
titled his article on the fall of Paris "With their Hands in their Pock
The French had at least three million men under anas and most of them
were put in action against the Germans at some time during the battle.
Tot the German Panzer divisions which smashed through them with
apparent ease numbered hardly two hundred thousand men."
The latter figure probably was too low, for when Germany had published
her total casualties on the Western Front, the men killed, wounded, or
If the French did not fight well, there is at least one explana
tion on which all American observers agreed, namely, there was no war
arose, in my own observation, from the fact that the french did not know
Chicago Tribune, on the other hand, used the French example to imply a
enthusiasm for war. The first one was the corruption of the French press.
Most American studies of the international press bear witness to the fact
that the French press had a bad reputation in the United States, even be
fore the war. On the occasion of the defeat, many journalists recalled
how some French newspapers had been bought by the Russian government in
order to facilitate the launching of the French loan to Russia before the
First World War. Starting with this example, they gave many other
cult to connect the moral standards of the French newspaper editors di
rectly with the failure of French arms, since no real opposition to the
war was expressed in French organs of public opinion. The liberals could
newspapers for not voicing the opinion of pacifists who wanted a second
Munich.
A strange fatalistic apathy hung over the country during the few
weeks before the beginning of hostilities. Bo doubt strong hints,
financial and otherwise, had been given to the press, and meetings
on the subject of war and peace were discouraged. . . • Every other
Frenchman with whom one talked was convinced that war would mean
bility of the press during the years which preceded the war. Talking in
and compared it with the French press under the Third Republic# Raymond
Clapper, for instance, protested his statement 31that the people of France
lost respect for their democracy because the French press was doing what
Raymond Clapper, 31that the French press was notoriously for sale. The
The second reason for the low French morale was said to be mili
tary censorship. Whether or not French newspapers would have done their
job of informing the public during the war, no one could know, since a
lOSjbid.
suggestion that everything was not going smoothly* Hone among the Ameri
can journalists who had suffered personally frost this limitation to their
have reason to believe contained Its good share of Has! agents and which
same opinion*
This was not the first encounter between French bureaucracy and
The French civil administration have learned nothing. They are still
under the impression that wars can be won and nations made great by
never telling anybody anything but writing everything down in purple
ink in very large books* They have simply doubled the red tape or
chinolserle as they call it, although I don’t know why the French
should make the Chinese the goats for their own worst
characteristic •H O
French people being kept ignorant, they were all the more in
clined to listen to the skillful German propaganda. This was the third
she could cite the testimony of French refugees who confessed the inferi
of the war, was praised for it® literary merits, but was considered inef
was merely a symptom rather than the cause of Francefs poor morale,
FIX
search for a true picture of French democracy. They assumed that its
considered that French democracy had taken a bad course or had only fallen
into the hand® of anti-democratic elements, they all took it for granted
would have been the best bulwark in the battle against Nasi Germany,
Even those who believed that only some kind of international or
ganisation could save the world from complete chaos failed to carry their
the reader has trouble grasping in their abstract form, Nations are mod
respects they are nonentities, whose shadows weigh on the thinking of the
Individual and blind hi® to certain truths. For example, public opinion,
This study shows that American opinion had not outgrown the na
American opinion, in the case of the French defeat, proved its maturity
by being able to distinguish between the few responsible men and the mass
satisfied with this kind of maturity* The problem of the "guilt” or ’'in
nocence" of the French people was trivial. What mattered was to take
cognisance that the French collapse was the forerunner of events which
would change the world to such an extent that the mature political
gency* Many Americana realised then that the democracies of Europe ware
really ♦'Americans first line of defense.® They looked toward the future
with anxiety. Uncertainty was at its height at the time of the armistice.
No prophet can now predict with assurance what other catastrophes lie
ahead} how desperate the situation will be, either in Europe or in
Asia, by the time our presidential campaign beginsj what great emer
gencies or what Immense decisions may face the government of the
United States during the four months that lie immediately ahead, let
alone the four years that will comprise the ter® in office of the
new administration,1
This feeling of emergency was due to the fact that the swiftness
and completeness of the French defeat had shaken the American belief in
an Allied victory. A Gallup poll taken at the beginning of the war had
shown that more than 00 per cent of the American people believed in an
Allied victory* This figure is not much below that of the people who—
the two figures would probably have been more important in France than in
40
47
destruction of Poland and the inaction of the French army during the
The Scandinavian war and the poor showing of the Allied Expedi
tionary Force slightly modified the situation but, at the outset of the
paign in the West. The change took place even before the bad news began
to pour In. By May SO, a majority of the American people had stopped be
from that of an Allied defeat. After all, even Hitler could not separate
During the summer of 1940 the belief that Germany would win the
war was very general. The number of those who wanted a British victory
had not changed, but, according to a Gallup poll taken in June, only
SB per cent thought that this wish would be fulfilled, 55 per cent picked
Germany as the winner, and 55 per cent could not make up their minds.s
high of 40 per cent favoring Germany ttregardless of hope,” and 27.9 per
cent who "didn’t know" or did not want to choose.^ The intimate
to apeak was probably that Hitler had already won the war.
been the only country among the Allied powers who had an army— not the
best in the world to be sure, but at least worth mentioning. France had
been defeated in no time* The protection granted the British Isles by the
Channel was discounted because the operations had shorn that air-power
was now the weapon number one and could achieve almost anything. Germany
was supreme in the air. Even if Hitler did not succeed in destroying
winning the continent back from Germany seemed utterly ridiculous. The
German army which could defeat any force on the continent would find It
even easier to prevent a landing on occupied soil. Stalin was still "al
lied" with Hitler and the possibility of a war between the two accomplices
seemed all the more improbable to many American people because the unholy
Intellectual reassurance.
This conviction that everything was over with the end of the
Roosevelt and Secretary of State Cordell Hull did not share this belief
% « e . July 8, 1940.
who, like President Roosevelt himself, had not entertained Illusions con
of the previous months. For the Minterventionist press," the problem was
Americans did not need to be reminded twice that they should "re
was "as rapid as the rush of ©vents#"® Cordell Hull pointed out that the
American public "was more keenly conscious of the grave dangers threaten-
ing us than at any tiara since [he] Had entered the State Departaent.-lO
war uses began during the summer of 1940 and was primarily due to the
for war supplies. On December 29, 1940, Roosevelt announced that America
would be the "arsenal of democracy."^1 This promise would have had little
Popular support for preparedness was not slowed down by the French
September, 1959, only 51 per cent of the American people thought that one
the Gallup polls, by dune 2, 1940, the number of these people had in
duly 10, the day Retain suppressed the French Republic, those who approved
politics, which they had refused to accept before and which they now felt
confusedly more than they understood, had plunged them into the war from
the first day, whatever they might have thought, said or done. This was
the first result of the French defeat on American opinion. Roosevelt re
called "the uproar that had ensued when he had implied that the United
Man in the Street, public support for defending any South American coun
try was lukewarm before the French defeat but "overwhelming” after the
fall of France.^ This change in opinion was due not only to security
reasons but also, especially after the French armistice and the end of
the Republic, to a general "Back to the Americas" movement which was re
flected in the tremendous favor met by Spanish and Portuguese studies and
the correlative disfavor met by French, German and Italian studies *3*5
The same change occurred in certain South American countries where Ameri
II
with all other countries of the Western Hemisphere was voiced by all the
necessity of helping Great Britain in her fight against Masi Germany also
were more opponents of that policy* Before the French defeat, only 20
the Allies, They were 70 per cent at the end of dune, 1940,^ The pre
3*%©a pp.<3&-3^'
^Public Opinion Quarterly* June 29, 1940,
hoodlum playing with the lives of millions, but one who could certainly
not succeed and would be checked sooner or later* After Munich, there
had been anger because the European democracies were too slack in carry
ing out their functions of policemen but it was only after the fall of
France that Americana forgot Hitler and Mussolini and took conscience of
help Great Britain to resist the forthcoming assault* The only chance
for America to stay out of the war was to keep Britain in it and to give
her all possible aid "short of war*” A majority of Americans were now
ready to accept measures, the necessity of which they had failed to grasp
until France fell* Those who were already ahead of the average opinion
17Burt in Bevins and Hacker, eds*, The United States and Its
Place in World Affairs* p. 462.
into the war was never very large. According to QsUiiitpi iiJ i*os8 to X9
per cent— the equivalent o£ about ten million voters— after the French
per cent in this group.20 Among these people were quite a few Americans
President Roosevelt was the leader of all those who thought that
the survival of Great Britain was vital to American security, but his at
His most important task was to convince isolationists that h© was right
him to secure the aid of some of the most important independent or Repub
lican newspapers which had severely criticised the New Deal policy# Among
these newspapers, Robert Sherwood noted the New fork Herald Tribune, the
Boston Herald, the Chicago Daily News, the Des Moines Register and the
also behind this policy,25 They wanted to show that it was not enough to
watch the French drama with a horrified curiosity. "Their disaster in
volves us,B wrote Dorothy Thompson, "we should face that fact with
complete clarity in order that, out of today's defeat we may draw tomor
row's strength and wisdom.11*^ the result of the French defeat and of
Americans were not ready to enter the war voluntarily but they did not
think that war could be avoided. Arthur Krock of the Sew fork Times, who
Senator Vanderberg was one who ©hanged his mind at the time of
the French defeat* His record in Congress was one of complete Isolation,
at least from all European affairs. He had been one of the sponsors of
the Neutrality Act of 1956. He had voted to retain the embargo on war
which of the two sides wlnsn^ $ but on June 3, just before the fall of
Paris, he declared that the United States could no longer afford isola
tionism. He asked that "this country give all possible help to the
in
All this excitement was watched with anxiety by the politically
active isolationist groups in Congress and in the Brass* They did their
comments could have created the impression that nothing had changed since
newspapers which granted too much space to international news and all
those who showed signs of anxiety. Touring the Middle West in a series
at seeing the people give so much attention to foreign affairs and neg
since most observers agreed that the French defeat did not disturb the
Middle West as much as it did the East, the West and the South*
homogeneous groups of German origin which had not entirely forgotten the
Bernard de Voto, in his Harper13 Magasine column, “The Easy Chair,** did
West, understand, was quiet in that the death of Europe did not dis
turb it. It saw no portentsj it wasn’t scared. Maybe the Nasals were
making a new earth under a new heaven, but let’s take that in our
stride— it was only Europe after all, and the Western pulse was calm*
You’re wrong, brother, it wasn’t the West that was quiet when
Europe died* X found the West, where the conditions of life, so much
harder than those you’re used to in Michigan, make people realistic—
X found the West just as disturbed as I was by those trivial events
overseas, just as certain that American was in ghastly danger.28
terest in the French drama. It showed that the most unconcerned state
West was, as a whole, less disturbed than the East coast. Having left
the excited urban centers of the East at the time of the French collapse,
he noted that?
American war correspondents coming back from France found their fel-
expressed his own amassment in The Road Back to Paris. Talking some time
after his return to a friend who had just come back and was still under
the impression of the violent change between Europe at war and America at
Lindbergh*s speeches and editorials of the Mew Masses, I see how things
aristocracy*1 and a few college professors wanted to drag America into the
war*2® Although the effect of the news from France was not limited to
the intellectual elite, it was undoubtedly less marked on the mass of the
American people* The French defeat was the most important external fac
opinion for the Second World War. However, a study of public opinion
polls during the period which followed the collapse shows that the action
of the American press and radio was even more important than the event
itself. If it had not been for this action, American masses would never
momentous event*
nothing.*35 The Chicago Tribune also felt sure that "in this dark hour
Americans can find some comfort in the knowledge that there is little
of such remains m s obviously to convince people that the end of the war
in France was the end of the war in Europe and that It was no use to help
cessitate that the lives and thoughts of every man, woman and child in
this country be directed toward war for the next generation, probably
as if they had taken place on the moon, were not the last to complain
America should always be armed because it was a great nation* the value
Martinique and the other islands should be taken over by the United States
colonies*
1940, concluded, and this conclusion was also true of the isolationists,
of convincing America that the war was over by the French armistice it
feeling. American opinion never went back to its indifference during the
The accuracy of these polls may be contested but th© trend they
noted was obvious enough# In America and the Axis War* British journal
ist Denys Smith recorded: “The shock of the French surrender checked for
tionist Francis Neilson noted in th© June 27, 1940, entry of his diary
“the change which has taken place in a fortnight* For a week or ten days
inevitable and wonder whan it will be all over.tt$9 A few days later he
Most observers thought that th© main reason for this trend was
th© American conviction that Hitler could not be defeated. This was the
that the French had given up the fight because they had understood that
nothing could be done. This seemed obvious also to many Americans who
gave up the idea of any attempt to check Hitler on th© Continent* This
was undoubtedly not th© only reason for the regression of interventionist
feeling. The surrender of France was a new blow to Great Britain which
was now fighting alone. American security was more compromised than ever,
and American desire to help the champions of democracy who were still in
the fight should have been greater than before. On the other hand, the
French defeat had created a state of tension and nervousness but no such
French defeat not only proved Hitler*s strength, but, in th© opinion of
many, it also proved the terrible weakness of th© French democracy. The
published in the second half of May, 1940. The conservative theory which
put the blame on the Popular Front and the French politicians of the Left
was fully developed in the first half of June. The reaction of the lib
eral opinion was much slower to come* Many Americans accepted these first
always opposed, on the American domestic scene, the very policies which
61
had proved deadly to France, had shown more political insight and were
Democratic parties during the crisis confirmed that fact* the April sur
vey showed that 54 per cent of the people favored the Democrats; 46 per
much* They knew that, in the minds of many people, isolationism was tied
any success won in one of these fields would reflect on the other css®.
The results of this strategy were too limited to change the course of
international affairs, This very concern was a first defeat for the
that socialism meant military weakness* Most delegates did not adopt this
view of the situation* Th© Republican party tried to convince the public
that only a Republican administration could prepare the country for any
emergency and keep it out of the war at th© ©am© time. Th© long debate
over the foreign policy plank clearly indicated that Republican leaders
did not agree on the best way to combine these two objectives. This de
bate also showed that the isolationists had regained some of their
was certainly influenced by his stand on foreign affairs, and with his
48Xbld.
65
a very important part but the candidates outdid each other in their prom
ises to American mothers to keep their sons out of "foreign wars.11 The
British statesman, Harold Laskl, like maty other people believed that the
French defeat, which had revealed to America that its choice was between
"victory and death" was the main cause for Roosevelt*s reflection.44 xt
may have been true that in spite of a political campaign during which both
although they knew that both were equally interventionist, also realised
Norman Thomas was probably right when he wrotes "It was not
Mr* Roosevelt!s foreign but his domestic policy, more precisely It was
him. "45
between the two candidates. "When did Mr* Willkie say that the frontier
the same newspaper felt the need to warn Willkie and his advisers that
"the good opinion of the people of the county seats will be fax more im
portant to the candidate than the support of the Long Island aristocracy*
The fact must be recognized that the county seats want to stay out of the
European war and Long Island wants to get Into it.n46 willkie apparently
only for the fall of France, and this was an isolationist argument, but
also for the Munich surrender, and this was harder to conciliate with
fitted all purposes since, fortunately for Willkie, Blum was accused at
the same time of having wasted away the best part of the French array in
Spain and of having betrayed the democratic cause through sheer weakness
Willkie1s attack© against Roosevelt and “his fine disregard for consist
ency. “48 This is true of many candidates for political offices at any
time but the confusion of minds was certainly increased during the 1940
presidential campaign by the fact that the French defeat had destroyed
held basically the same position on foreign issues, neither of the two
candidates ever dared ©peak his mind on the subject for fear of losing
the votes of many peace-loving but uninforaed citizens. The last Repub
opinion that the working class had nothing to do in a war between the
Fascist dictators and the "western plutocrats*" This purely pacifist at
orthodox line of action was maintained until June, 1941, when the Germans
attacked Soviet Russia# The Socialist party was also isolationist but
there was not among its members the same unity as in the Communist party*
The fall of France upset many pacifists who were not following the Com
munist line and was the occasion of many a crisis of conscience* Oswald
In the same issue of The Nation* Reinhold Niebuhr explained how he had
threat and mere eager to show that Hitler was only an outgrowth of false
ion was especially contemptuous of the French foreign policy between the
two wars* The attitude of Clemenceau at Versailles was the target of at
European war and it was sometimes hard to distinguish between the argu
ence in the two attitudes* Both groups, for instance, were influenced
The best criterion for detecting leftist isolationism was its at
titude on social problems* Far from condemning the Popular Front, leftist
French failure to carry out needed social reforms* Their conclusion mat
ttlet us perfect America instead of looking abroad for fighting evils which
we have not been able to correct at home*” A young New Yorker sent a
The fate of France, says Mr* Helton, was that of a country which
behind a barrier of arms enjoyed a delicious respite* Hot so,
Mr* Helton* Franc© urns rotten to th® cor® by disaffection nurtured
on years of unemployment and hopelessness for its people, its youth,
Its soldiers and its statesmen* Just there, Mr. Helton, we too are
side, and growing more so at a frightful pace*
If we are to survive to th© year £000 w© must be tough, writes
Mr* Helton* Behind these words is a world of thought* Boes he mean
a people who can go hungry, jobless, and hopeless that they may have
th© guns to protect their rights to go on being hungry, jobless and
hopeless?
Franc© thought that, and In the foreboding lull of th© long
winter months her soldiers, h©r youth, weighed that concept and in
the spring found it not worth a candle.52
the first opportunity to abandon the "dream world" of "Escape and Appease*
stent*”5$ In The Kation, Freda Kirchwey led a vigorous fight against this
kind of isolationism*
VI
during the hectic days of May, 1940* Henry Steel© Commager, professor of
s4Ibid.
reaction was not directly linked to the spread of Nazi and Fascist to
action contributed to widen the eift between those who wanted to precipi
tate tMs evolution and those who wanted to defend the past# The American
nationalist reaction was not due to Nazi propaganda but it was the result
faith in democracy was diminished and there was anxiety concerning it®
future. The Boston Transcript, for Instance, compared the French and
There are times in the affairs of man when we must take th© long
look of things# # • • In 20 years, a people stripped of their wealth
and manpower by war and Inflation, have built for themselves one of
the most powerful positions in the long history of Europe* They made
every sacrifice to do it, including that of freedom# # • # After the
same interval, her neighbor victorious only twenty years ago, lies
prostrate# . • • Democracy has not been functioning efficiently in
Franc© # * • national unity had reached a low ebb* Democracy in
America, also has fallen into bad days# Our economic structure has
been creaking* We • • « have been living beyond our means.56
On© man told m® that h© thought the Nazi ideal was sounder than
our constitutional system 1because have you ever noticed what fine
alert young faces the young German soldiers have in the newsreel?1
He added four American youngsters spend all their time at th© movies
--they are a mess I1
After this conversation, Whit© met another m m who told him that
anyone who took any kind of government seriously was a gullible fool*
You could be sure, he said, that there is nothing but corruption,
*because of th© way Clemenceau acted at Versailles.1 He said it
didn*t make any difference really about the war. It was just another
war. Having relieved himself of this majestic bit of reasoning, he
subsided.67
A few of you, but I think only a very few, are actually hoping
for a German victory. More than a few admire Hitler tremendously.
You canft help it. You have been taught to admire success whether
it be in the realm of athletics, business, social life or politics,
and Hitler is the greatest exponent of success the modern world has
ever seen.SS
paid to French culture at the time of the fall of Paris, th© reaction of
many was on© of cynicism toward th© values with which the French order,
more, was the question of the causes of th© French defeats Did France
fall because French thinking was outmoded and because there was no place
for a France in the modem world or did France fall because she had proven
unfaithful to her own genius? Many pragmatist minds answered th© first
against the tyranny of ignorance# The French defeat was especially ef
fective in France itself in that respect but its consequences were also
felt in other countries• The failure of France to carry on the war suc
cessfully and even more her surrender to th© enemy were interpreted by
not capable, and therefor® not worthy of survival. People now discovered
hearts of the present French generation even the desire to defend an or
der which had probably become meaningless in the twentieth century. The
Magazine that the only real threat was America*s 11own softness.11 H©
felt sure that Great Britain and France had acted f,on a female pattern,11
thus implying that Germany and Italy Restem nations wore the only ones
them to France, Great Britain and the United States, leaving out the
In Great Britain, Franco and the United States, power in the form
of money took precedence over power in the form of military weapons.
And the cult of the primitive in these countries came back less in
the forms of violence than in those of sensuous indulgence, drunken
ness and promiscuous sexuality and the paraphernalia of material
wealth. These people are passive barbarians no less than the more
active one® that have produced fascism, they deny the value of mind
and spirit and renounce discipline and the sacrifice that make men
truly human.®®
Western democracy was founded* This situation led some Americans to stand
oral reaction to th© successful Nazi onslaught, and for some, the only
country.
peared secure in her “ivory tower.” She fell in one month and the catas
trophe was too sudden for many to realize its consequences. Some did not
even attempt to do it. “Americans read in the headlines during the last
week of June that France had surrendered to Germany* but old habits of
It may be a long time before our people begin to realize what that sur
render means.”1 On this matter The Mew Republic agreed with th© Chicago
Tribune, which felt that “the plight of France is not easily comprehended.
The prostration has boon too rapid, its consequences too staggering and
A. J. Liebling stated why he had been so sure that France could not be
destroyed.
72
75
According to the New fork Times, th© French were the "most civilised peo
and gaiety and beauty, ”4 This newspaper was careful not to judge France
its appreciation of "French civilization,” the New York Times went so far
as to say that "the French order was much more coherent than ours."6 All
newspapers Insisted that th© fall of France was a catastrophe for all
mankind,
For the Mew York Herald Tribune, the French contribution to civi
tiful sense of logic and proportion, in delicate irony, humor and toler
found a way to pay tribute to "France, her thinkers and her artists."
The expression of this admiration was sometimes awkward, even in the most
6Ibld.
widely circulated magazines, life wrote* "Here lies France, the France
of the Third Republic, of Zoln and Anatole France and Clemenceau and
Marcel Proust and Dreyfus and Cezanne and Foch and Briand and Boni d©
Castellan© and Cocteau and Josephine Baker and Pasteur and Paul Morand
for France found its best expression* Many magazines published the nos
accessible Paris became so popular that song writers felt the need to
exploit its sentimental appeal. The hast Time I Saw Paris was the title
well that they became best-sellers. The book also reflected the most
thought that th© destiny of th© Western world was linked to that of France
could not hid® from themselves the fact that the end of French influence
10Elliot Paul, The Last Time I Saw Paris (New fork, 1942).
chances were left for the French civilization— many did not say Western
power# Th© only unanswered question was whether Franc© was to remain a
Reich.
This question was somewhat academic and many felt that It was
nevertheless conditioned by the grim present and the bare fact remained
that;
A country with which we have been in constant touch in all the widely
diversified field® of human relationship ever since the United State®
existed as a nation, now is silent, tlo Frenchman in France can speak
to an American in America* Th© lines of communication are cut. We
outside Franc© and outside the tyranny of silence can only remember
that France exists.
No one believed that French literature and French art could remain pro
tear for France1® films," John McDonald thought it unlikely that "French
films as we have known them will be again produced until the liberal
in the past no great culture had ever developed or maintained itself under
modem conditions— was not apparent to many of them. The fate of French
culture was thus tied to th© fat© of the French state and "everything
was in doubt.*3-4 Nazi power "may destroy forever th® most gracious civi
lization the western world has known If it can shatter the soul of
which did not venture any guess on the future of this culture*^® Most
Americans were with Paul Valery very aware that "nous autres civilisations
nous savons que nous somms mortelles1* and all their writings on France
sounded like funeral orations. Some people who did not want to look
frightened by the spread of Nazism held the opposite view. Ann© Lindbergh
expressed her confidence in The Wave of the Future: WI have such faith
the future will be even more beautiful than their contribution to the
past.112.7
were generally those who refused to define th© war as being only the last
Europe* Being more conscious of the ties which united Europe and the
^Anne Lindbergh, Th® Wave of the Future (New Xork, 1940), p. 25.
Western Hemisphere, they were at the same time more afraid of the spread
It was impossible for these people to believe that the mad men
from Nurmberg could model Europe according to their caprice* When France,
his conquest to Hitler, not even hoping that like defeated Greece, France
might one day conquer her victors* Such a thought would have been a
fused to admit that Fascist brutality could ever stamp it out or be won
over to it.
II
of human activity cam© into the limelight during th© summer of 1940. Con
currently with th© regrets and anxieties aroused by the defeat there was
Paris there was a tendency, in 1940, to limit th© importance of th© French
only as "the ideal atmosphere for the creation of expatriate art," Writ
ing about Paris France, by Gertrude Stein, the critic of The Nation noted
that °to those Frenchmen, Hiss Stein does not grant m y role except that
the American and other refugees who had belonged to the intellectual
"which divides and will always divide Latin civilization and German kul-
tur,f|22 once again reducing the conflict to its nineteenth century propor
tions and refusing to France the place which she has always claimed as
The French liked to think that their cultural heritage is a perfect syn
thesis of the classical tradition of Greece and Home with the romantic
mysticism of the Gelts, the Germans and the Anglo-Saxons, that it is the
that there was something definitely wrong with this French civilization
which had been so much admired. Most of them decided that the trouble
the Fascist thinkers* Franc© had had too little democracy— too much,
said the Fascists; France had perished because of her failure to under
stand democrary— to get rid of it, said the Fascists, The destruction of
France had thus been mad© necessary by the faults of French thinking and
could not have been avoided# Seen in this light, it was not a catastrophe,
but was only the final consequence of a state of things which made France
not only useless but even harmful to the development of Western civilisa
tion. Commenting on The Ground We Stand Qn,^ by writer John Bos Passos,
ing to him, the French revolutionists, whose minds were still under the
the right for a political group to suppress its opponents* He saw in th©
fall of France the proof that her people had never understood democracy.
He saw th© real democratic spirit in the Cromwellian revolution and as
sumed that the United States and the British Dominions, th© only true
heirs of this revolution, were th© sol© hop© for th© world of the future.
cared more for replacing the "ins" with the ”outs” than for protecting
who had the opportunity to observe French affairs after the armistice,
distinguished carefully between two Frances, the democratic and the au
thoritarian, the latter turned toward the past, her eyes closed to th©
rest of the world. This view was very different from believing that all
French achievement® were vitiated because French people had never under
tinguish the two Frances at the time of the armistice and very tempting
died, at the end of 1940, the critic Erwin Edman suspected him of having,
trol of France are also exhibition of the elan vital,’* For Edman, Henri
Bergson was obviously only on© of those Frenchmen whoa Dos Passes accused
bearing heavily upon him.28 Whatever may have been th© influence of
mind* Some of them were naturally led to shift to the opposite bias, and
after the armistice was waiting "for some national ethos to develop*"29
Apparently the reporters of Life had listened, but not attentively enough,
to th© French rulers in Vichy* According to th© latter, France must re
ject her democratic tradition but even they did not think that she needed
and to the "real" national ethos which had been fully developed two hun
dred years before* Mary Steel© Owen referred several times to th© "French
to think that this attitude toward the French cultural heritage was nec
the French way of life and of French cultural achievements* One was what
which the friendship between America and France "has always contained and
the main features offered by the relations between the two countries* This
groups, by the French defeat and by the nationalist revival® in the United
"mutual tendency to idealize* Neither side can forgive the other for not
being quite the land of heart1s desire*” This exasperation was also due
to the belief among many people of both countries that there were field®
France looked toward America for economic support and even political pro
scious that, in some way®, they were still dependent on Europe and spe
these obvious facts* As usual, they were those who had not realized how
view and bo direct his observations towards the fields in which the com
tions in France and In the United States, Americans very often neglected
It was more agreeable to believe that th® American ascendency was th© re
cratic government* Some were probably even inclined to think that it was
often failed to grasp. And they were often bitterly resentful when they
were faced with th© political and moral consequences of their country1s
intellectual ©volution*
harmful so long as they are not exploited for dubious purposes. The lit
tle game of comparing nations is usually not very honest and is usually
investigatlon•
Without mentioning errors of interpretation, one can say that it does not
standards of th© second, Visson was right, at least, when he noted: "The
Americans and th© French want to be appreciated. They believe that they
in 1880 was still true in 1940* *It is, I think, an indisputable fact
world and the most addicted to the belief that th© other nation© of th©
III
belief that Franc© grew the best wines, manufactured the best perfumes,
tailored the most elegant dresses, in short that th© French way of living
was the most refined in th© world. They had learned that the French lan
guage was that of the intellectual elite in the whole world and that
Paris was still in some respsots the capital of the Western world. They
felt that America had toward France a cultural debt similar to that which
every other Western country had toward classical Greece and Rome or toward
the Italy of the Renaissance* The chief difference was that the Greeks
and the Italians of today were not thought of particularly as the direct
ratory in which th© future of Western civilisation was still being shaped.
clined in the last decades, many pointed out that Paris was still without
vigorously denied. The French defeat was for many Americans a good occa
sion to affirm th© independence of America from Europe* Europe under the
Nazis was going back to the Middle Ages, they argued; it was thus time
for Americans to realise that the destiny of their country was decided In
their country and in their country only. Europe’s chaos compared with
America’s orderly development was offered as a proof that America was not
only larger and richer than any other country but that th© 11American sys
tem" and th© "American way of life*1 were superior to those of Europe.
American© of this type claimed that the United States had created an
original culture which was distinct from the cultural heritage of the
they urged that the country be closed to "foreign ideologies" and "foreign
harmful* Paris was judged responsible for th© trend followed by modem
art, a trend which these critics did not approve? and this art, in turn,
and social problems of Franc© on one hand and her intellectual evolution
Atlantic Monthly*
This letter shows how political isolationism was linked with intellectual
must have been overrated since it ended in a "failure," One may wonder
cal contact with th© world of thought, art, and literature. They also
did not realize that our cultural heritage is the sum of such personal
were thus reduced by many to their most accessible aspects, notably tech
nical achievements, folklore, national habits, and popular art* The high
est forms of human activity were Ignored and those who dedicated their
lives to them were not only not understood but were even ridiculed*41
The result was that, in all Western countries, many people were not con
scious of the profound unity of our culture* They did not see that the
It was thus not surprising that in America many people had the
feeling of having been the victims of a conspiracy of snobs, who had fol
group of intellectuals, widened the gulf between the artists and writers
was something like a feeling of relief among many Americans at the time
of the French defeat.43 Some utilitarian minds not only saw a direct re
lapse of France, and her final submission to Nasi Germany but they con
cluded that this surrender and this submission were final and would
destroy forever the unique qualities which made France and Paris attrac
tive to American artists. The French defeat and the capitulation were
thus used as a weapon against French influence in the United States* But
those who loci th© attack were somewhat hampered by their own understand
— and it was impossible to find among Its exponents any coherent defense
of the Mback to America theory.* Th® word "decadence" was repeated many
more elaborate indictment. The similarity between this attitude and the
these critics from following the Nazi pattern to its logical extreme of
IF
Many American educators felt that there was something wrong with
th© French system of education. They had always been extremely conscious
of the contrast between the French and the American outlook in this field.
th© former. Waldo Frank, for instance, reviewing in The Motion a work
of Jacques Maritain, declared that "if the book has a fault, it is per
memory* Here again, this accusation seemed very similar to th© standard
The Nazi reaction was anti-intellectual, The Nazis claimed Justly that
superman— whom they thought similar to ?$letzche,s3 hero— and prevented the
individual from blindly devoting his energies and life to the State. The
American conception was very different. In the United States the concept
more closely tied to the concept of patriotism than in any other country*
In Franc© the two Ideas had become practically antagonistic with the
school teachers,45 far from suspecting that their attitude was very often
ing to many American observers, the sin of these French teacher© was the
France and America* Most Americans did not realize that, under the pres
those who thought it was outdated. For most Americans, any departure
of th© First World War, who for the second time in twenty-five years had
not taught their pupils how to die nobly* "Their first duty to French
democracy was to prepare their youth for the terrible hour of decision*
Franc© was not ready for th© supreme test and there is an awful lesson
it was that French education followed "the pattern of the class system
of society, "47 The belief was widespread that only the members of th©
cans were aware that secondary education was free and that tuition fees
cal education which endows man with a cultural memory and technical spe
cialisation which teaches how to use the various tools necessary to the
The ton® of the discussions about French culture and French edu
cation indicated that many Americans thought that France had lost the
privileged spiritual position she had claimed as hers for the preceding
tiro centuries. Some even thought that this claim had never been justi
and all other people are merely bad Frenchmen," noted Time sarcastically.4®
prestige for th© French language. Although French had never played in
the Near East or in South America, most American high schools and all
business fields.
French enrollment had increased after the First World War to the
point that, after 1922, it was by far the most popular foreign language
which played against French in America was the same one which played
against English in France. As Bernard Shaw pointed out, the two most
most inaccessible ones to the people who did not start learning them when
they were two years old* Although they are closely related to each other,
ficult to acquire mastery of the other one. This difficulty was overcome
by many Americans ©very year, however, and not only universities but as
The main reason for the decrease in French enrollment was un
doubtedly a practical one. Most American students felt that th© useful
ness of the French language would decrease rapidly In a world where, what
ever happened, France would not play th© same part as in pre-war years.
very short-sighted view. Until 1943 they did not succeed. In a letter
admitted that wat Vassar, which is probably typical, the loss of French
in the three upper classes ia over a third*11 In his message to the mem
It is Interesting to not© the fact that the deolin© was not serious in
the East. This confirms th© previous observation that there was a defi
In 1940 and the amount of curiosity and interest shown toward Europe
and France.
of the French literary works written after 1940 were published abroad*
Th© only European center of French editions which remained free was
business In th© Western Hemisphere. In that field New lork entered into
fork not only published th© French version of the works on current events
literature.55
There were soon more reasons to hope. When America entered the
all, the Second World War was something even more important than God’s
one of their neighbors would be hit hardest by the tempest which was
shaking the whole world. They felt that in the smaller post-war world,
was in Spanish* In 1944 French and Spanish were on the increase again,
and this time, although the total number of new students was still larger
in Spanish, the rat© of increase was highest in French#^ The moat Irv-
teresting fact was that there was an increase of 112 per cent among be
ginners. This trend was nation-wide* In Hew York city high schools there
were more new students of French in 1944 than of any other foreign lan
guage.58 The figures were far from th© all-time high of 72,779 high-
VI
Among the people who did not lose much time crying over the
French defeat were those who dealt in ”haute couture” and all those
The influence of Franc© and of French ideas was nowhere more pow
erful than in the field of women's fashions. Since the eighteenth cen
tury, women all over the world had looked toward Paris when they wanted
to know th© last word in these matters* American women were no exception.
Just as in art and literature, this influence was never greater than dur
ing the decade which followed the First World War. The depression of the
superiority wag still manifest in the fact that both industries were
had lost her virile qualities. According to Roy Helton, France was de
feated because she had acted in a "female pattern."59 This was a rather
unexpected argument since it ran counter to th© popular belief that the
in French society* He pointed out that th© French people had forgotten
of the French Republic, was a little bit out of place in company with
Many newsreels offered, and still offer, to their audiences a few glances
and tasteless display for idle women. It is difficult to tell how suc
cessful they all were in defending the national industry but they de
during the decade which ended in 1940, "the prestige and th© glamour have
continued to carry a Paris date-line, They were also sure that the
French defeat was th© end of the "Paris dictatorship,11 The Chicago
German defeats
For four hundred years, Paris has ruled the world of women’s
fashions with an iron hand sheathed in silk. In Mid-June of 1940
that dynasty virtually collapsed without a flutter of lace as the
German army marched Into the French capital, Whereupon millions of
American women shrilly voiced th© questions what will replace Paris
as the style center of the universe?^
This question was already answered by many American women* "It seems
probable," wrote the Chicago Tribune, "that Mew York will become the
feminine capital of the world."65 Newsweek itself answered its own ques
tions a few months later*66 "The fall of Paris gave the American eagle
an opportunity to ruffle its feathers and try to establish Mew York city
as style headquarters*"
long before the Nazi tanks rolled down th© Champs Elysees." According to
her, "the Sedan of the fashion world11 occurred not in 1940 but in 1939*
At that time, she explained, "Paris introduced the wasp waist corset* •
whole matter was settled. Women had said no."67 Miss Raushenbuh over
looked the fact that, in France too, common sense was— for the first time,
probably— more powerful than the fancy of the couturiers* Th© new fashion
had been conceived before the declaration of war. Although it was backed
new-born European war killed it. Writing about the new style which Mew
York had to Improvise after the fashion upset, Miss Raushenbuh paid an
skirt was preserved, short skirt which of course will always appeal in
war time*1*®® Apparently Miss Raushenbuh forgot that American women were
still at peace In 1939* She also made a rash promise to her American
readers when she said that never again would American women lengthen their
Madam© Schiaparelli had said? ’'The woman with th© worst possible taste
is the woman who dress©© to look pretty* Women should dress to look
smart, not to look pretty."71 The Hollywood principle had been noted by
a "well-known fashion columnist" who had been watching two leading raotion-
picture stars trying on hata and what they wanted was "hats which would
flatter their faces, rather than startle and excite their friends.0 The
All American women did not agree with Mias Raushenbuh but many
were inclined to think with her that th© French laws against style-piraoy
ers, the French laws had maintained the prestige of Paris but they had
also protected the snobbiam of "rich women who bought haute couture models
69XtaUos mine*
72Ibid.
101
fix
Dressmakers were not the only ones who thought that the United
States had something to gain from the French defeat* Hot only would
French treasures*
Many art collections had left France for th© United States during
the "phony war.M?$ Even after the defeat , war refugees usually managed
of France and America to that of Greece and Rom© at the time of Paulus-
Railius* They thought that the French defeat had only accelerated a
movement which had started long before* They foresaw that many of these
collections* Private collectors who had justly thought that the United
States was th© best hiding place for their treasures, they believed,
State® was acquiring* Many observers had to emphasize that fact for ob
that they would only increase the number of urban radicals and the power
7*Ibld.
102
and American life. Most American intellectuals did not need to be con
vinced that Dean Matthews was right. 11Jules Remains, Andre Maurols,
French literature and journalism who have found asylum in America," wrote
French defeat only speeded up a movement which had started years before:
This time, in Mr. Chamberlin1a words, the bell tolled not only for th©
center of the world.♦ That Is what people were saying to one another*
With every artist who took refuge there, their pride, greed and envy
swelled* *We shall have them all here soon* * They were so certain
that one© here, one© inoculated with the American virus, these artists
would never return to their homelands* fle will give the® dollars,
millions of dollars** As if that were certain to hold them* ♦Paris
is finished* Europe is dead,1 How they chuckled, how they gloated
over their good fortune* Never have I witnessed anything more
disgraceful*77
But Miller had generalised too hastily on the basis of a few ob
thought that any attempt to make political capital out of cultural values
aware that the works of art and literature of the present and the past
were th© common good of all mankind, whatever th© place where they have
been conceived, whatever the language in which they were written, but
^Bernard Fay, known for his works against French Free Masonry*
Most of them were not ready to believe that everything France represented
had perished in on© month because the French array had not been able to
resist th© onslaught of th© German tanks* However, French prestige among
the mass of th© American people was at its lowest ebb during the period
which followed th© French debacle* Men like Archibald MacLeish and many
their duty to the Paris they had known to raise their voice in defense
Francei "I have heard it said that France is decadent, that she is cor
rupt, that to th© world of th© future no good can come from her, that the
British Empire and America can do without her»” This he denied vigorously
and he warned his American readers that "there is in her a unique element
without which th© energies and virtues of the Anglo-Saxon people cannot
1940, th© French government was left in control of only about on© third
of France, its only maritime outlet being the Mediterranean, France was
war materiel. She had to pay exorbitant sums for the costs of occupation
and her two million prisoners were to stay in Germany until the end of
th© war* Hitler, however, did not ask for th© French fleet, which was to
opinion that the fleet and the empire were doomed to pass into
totalitarian hands*
fleet, Th© American government asked Franc© to renew her pledge that ah©
would not allow th© Axis powers to seize her naval forces,! Britain took
more drastic measures* The French commanders in Alexandria and Oran re
Admiral Godefroy accepted to immobilize his ships for the duration of the
105
106
war, but at Oran, th© ultimatum was rejected and the British navy sank
part of the French fleet on July 5, 1940* Pbtain broke off diplomatic
The united States was also concerned with th® French colonies in
the Caribbean Sea, The American government warned Germany that any shift
the pressure of the economic and political situation placed the fate of
before the armistice, Japan had given evidence of her Interest in French
Indo-China. Traffic between the colony and Nationalist China was con
needs" in China. In August, Japan obtained th© right to move her troops
establish air bases In northern Indo-Chlna and to keep troops in th® area*
Africa, French India and the French Islands in th© Pacific sided with
ening its grip over the rest of the empire* In September, a British-
the pro-Vichy forces end failed to land at Dakar, the main harbor of
II
the Imperial assets of France, to her fleet end her overseas territories?
Although many people thought Great Britain had very little chance of re
sisting a frontal attack, everybody realised that the Allied cause would
seem a little brighter if the French Baplre remained in the war. The
the part of the French Empire seemed so natural that, during the two weeks
which preceded th® armistice, there were various reports that France was
just as Great Britain was going to fight behind th® English Channel. The
thought that this would not hamper the war effort of the French colonies.
toward Africa and that the French fleet was leaving Its home ports to
speculated upon th® question of what would happen to the French fleet:
wIf it ia 1captured1 by th® British fleet with which it has been oper
th© Axis powers In most naval categories.4 The word ’’captured® within
tween French and British units would be voluntary but that the French
navy would pretend to have been forced to fight with the British, in
This suggested course was not followed by the ’’men of the armi
time when Russia and the United States were not yet in the war, an under
ing the Second World War. It was, furthermore, a complete departure from
the traditional German conception since the days of Bismarck that Germany
had nothing to fear in Europe one© France had been put out of the fight.
other factor® involved, mad© a mistake just as Hitler did when h© failed
pected such early attack against England^ and when the armistice was
signed they were soon won back to the traditional conception boro in four
during the First World War. They gave too much importance to the defeat
swing to their side what was left of French power met with success and
American public opinion which wanted to see Great Britain resist Germany
victoriously. Fear of Hitler and belief in his military ability was such
that many observers thought the French Empire might become a springboard
During this time the official American policy toward French af
fairs was slowly maturing. This policy took no account of the attitude
government and a great desire to help dissolve the ties between the Vichy
government and the French Empire. This part of American opinion had, at
that time, great confidence in the men who were In charge of American
foreign policy and expected that some day events would prove that theirs
of 1940 should take into account important facts. In the first place, much
of the news coming from occupied France, unoccupied France, and the French
place, American sympathies and interests were on the British side. The
British reaction to the French armistice was very violent and influenced
were much more favorable to the Vichy government. In the third place,
the United States had always been traditionally opposed to the colonial
tact. America looked at all colonies in the light of her own colonial
the colonial policy of any European country.^ British and French colo
nial policies were the chief argument used by those who claimed that the
United States had nothing to do in a war which was not really being
leftist thought the opinion prevailed that insistence on the Nazi racial
An article by a German refugee, Hans Habe, entitled "Th© Nazi Plan for
The Nazi Negro policy seems to be the eme as that of France, the
British Empire, Belgium, Holland, Portugal and the United States ex
cept that Hitler wants or plans to use Negroes only in labor battal
ions (as moat United States blacks were used in 1917-18) whereas the
other white powers permit them to risk their lives in defense of
those who despise them.IS
being one who "frankly implicates the French for their insistence that
III
The first American reaction at the time of the armistice was that
the French Empire was going to crumble. The Baltimore Sun wrote edito
specks in distant seas. But in the event of the breakdown of the empire
with the defeat of the mother country, it i© difficult to say which might
moat observers were more preoccupied with the British resistance than
^Ibid.
attention* He did not order his troops to cease fighting at th© time of
the greater part of it," had steamed to North Africa for a "fight to the
finish."^ General Hogues was credited with th© most belligerent atti
tude *2-7 But nothing happened in th® following days, American hopes were
reported to be more and more centered on General de Gaulle and his London
committee* Few wanted to abandon th© belief that some daring move could
If the Retain Government’s authority over the French Empire and the
fleet and over French financial resources abroad is allowed to go
unchallenged, those resources will fall into the hands of Germany*
Hence, though General Petain seems to have come into power through
the usual process, his authority may be subject to challenge by the
Free French National Committee.*8
convince th© French pro-consuls in Africa and Asia that they should fol
low Petain* They finally agreed. Reports from London at the end of
French leader having the ability to rally French support came only when
Hostility between the British and the French people was considered
ation* It was then murmured in some quarters that there had been irri
tation between French and British military circles even before the German
offensive#2*5 There was a general agreement that British help had been
were so aware of this fact that a public opinion poll registered a large
percentage of people who thought that the British “had let the French
down.11 Those who thought that the French “had let the British down”
were fewer*25*
The armistice was a terrible blow for Great Britain and British
Murrow knew very well what sort of story his American audience was ready
contemplate.
the British was probably also influenced by the resentment against Franc©
citizens how worthless any commitment with a European nation was since
finally a desire to show that Great Britain was in a mortal danger# French
to help#2® Hostility between the French and th© British was encouraged
24Ibld,
Only the .future can tell what the result will be in misery, In
bitterness, in tragedy for the French and British people alike
These fears were soon confirmed by the events which took place
cern over the fate of the French fleet, the British blow at the French
Hitler*8 naval forces with and without the addition of th© French fleet.
Nobody knew what Hitler would do, but tils promises concerning the French
was vital for their country* The possession of the French fleet would
allow Hitler to extend his sphere of action beyond the European continent,
dune 20 the Hew York Times wondered why Hitler had not acted more quickly
and why "the French were allowed to put at least part of their fleet and
air force out of jhlsj reach*"32 Most newspapers did not think that Great
Britain could resist th© combined German, Italian and French fleets* The
pend on what happens to the French navy*"33 Ko one denied that this
British Empire*
In Great Britain and the Americas last week, the first reaction
to news of the fall of France was grim silence* Next wase What
about th© French navy? * , * Whether its officers would obey a call
to come in and surrender or would scuttle or intern themselves, or
would stay with the British became a question upon which the fat© of
Great Britain— -and perhaps the fat© of the Weetern world— hung.
Then came the British action against the French ships at Oran.
There were few dissenting voices in the general approval of th® British
policy# Criticism was based mainly upon th® psychological effect that
his diary:
such that even newspapers like th© anti-British Chicago Tribune wrote
enthusiastic comments.
If th© French naval command was determined to comply with th© terms
of th© Armistice and put th© ships in German and Italian hands, the
British government had no alternative to the measures taken. The
terms Mr. Churchill offered th© French admirals were the only terms
he could offer. That th© prim® minister was truly affected * . *
there should be no doubt •
French ships,3® Frederick Schuman called th© sinking of th© French ships
gree of confidence in British arms* Robert Sherwood noted that “Oran had
But it was not th© effect dreaded by Mr* Hellson| it "served forcibly to
underscore Churchill's defiant assurance that 'we will fight them in the
streets' and 'never surrender. *11 Life recalled th© period which preceded
that daring action* "As weeks passed and nothing happened, American ob
servers concluded that the British were hopelessly strangled in red tape,
to Americans that the British were still capable of taking the initiative
but the effect of this initiative was all the greater because it was un
expected* Before July 5 no suggestion that the British navy should at
but it was felt that th© British were right* The positive results of th©
military operation were more Important than French opinion. “It may be
chagrin must be even deeper," declared the Baltimore Sun, "and it is this
cept th© British proposals had been dictated by Germany or that the
French leaders could not communicate freely with the ships in North
Africa. Edward Angly cabled from London to th© Hew York Herald Tribune i
The French reaction after Oran, and especially the bombing of Gibraltar
by French planes, did not give much credit to this theory* It was soon
Interests*
The battle of Oran was also th© first French matter on which
Allied countries, was not reflected by at least some of th© American gov
ernment circles and especially the State Department. Since this action
Department did not officially comment upon it, but Secretary of State
I did not think th© attack had been necessary. I could not help be
ing inexpressibly saddened by this latest manifestation of the tragic
break between Britain and France* . , . How for th© warships of
Britain and Franc© to fire on one another, at the very moment when
the hordes of Hitler were preparing to overwhelm the last remaining
bulwark of Western civilization in Europe, was to me a tragic
blunder.43
In the light of what finally became of the remnants of th© French fleet
Hull's opinion turned out to be defensible but most Americans would not
have believed him in 1940* American newspapers took it for granted that
States that th© hat© between Franc© and Great Britain was a fact to b©
reckoned with for the next thousand years* More than ever before,
4SXbld«
Paris Alex Small reported to the Chicago Tribune that the event had
aroused "a wave of indignation that has swept away practically all op
Like many other newspapers, th© Hew York Times admitted the possibility
Christian Science Monitor believed that it would take a very long time
"for the French to forget that Great Britain did not come to their assist
about British opinion and was afraid that she would not forget that the
leaders in Vichy had long and secretly hated their erstwhile ally*5^
trophe. These newspapers could hardly put the blame on Great Britainj
that country was still in th® fight and had to be helped by ©very possible
means. On the other hand the defeat and especially th© armistice had
tention not to confuse "the men of Vichy” and th© "real France," The
Nation assarted; "The alliance between th© two greatest European democ
racies * i , has been smashed not by the victorious arms of Germany but
IV
The portion of the French Empire which was situated in the West
ern Hemisphere interested Americans more than any other part* Th© French
West ladies had attracted public attention even before the French defeat*
In The Man in the Street* Bailey saw the origin of this attitude in the
focused on the orphaned West Indian islands of Franc© and the Netherlands *
Strong public support developed for seising them or buying them or advanc
ing loans on them*"S3 The last two solutions had already been advocated
by many observers during th© "phony war." It had been suggested that a
cession of th© islands would be a good way to get paid for war materiel
in case th© Allies were short of cash* Public opinion polls on this mat
ter showed that a large majority of th© American people were in favor of
ment gained momentum with th© German offensive in the West* On May 11
I made th® suggestion that both Great Britain and France might cede
to the United States their islands in the West Indies and along the
Worth American ©©aboard* This would not only be a wise thing to do,
in view of th© great debt these countries owe us, it would also be a
practical one* It might put an end to the alarm that has been cre
ated in this country regarding the possibility that Hitler would
A Gallup poll previous to the German offensive showed that 31 per cent
of the American people were in favor of the United States and other Ameri
can republics buying the British, French, and Dutch possessions In th©
area of the Panama Canal if th© Allies needed more money*5® According to
the Chicago Tribune, however, “most of them [the coloni.es] already have
been paid forw57 since all the countries which ruled these territories
government stating that the United States would not tolerate any transfer
of sovereignty from one European power to another one*58 This was don®
In th© name of the Monroe Doctrine* The New York Tiros compared the
situation in 1940 with that which had occurred in 1825 when a French
fleet appeared off Cuba and Henry Clay, the American Secretary of State,
had Informed France that only Spain was entitled to keep armed forces in
the American demand*S9 The German answer, which denied that Germany had
any intention of occupying the islands, naturally pointed out that th®
pointed out that Hitler did not need any transfer of sovereignty to be
These demands were not only the result of American fear that
Germany could us© the islands militarily but also a consequence of the
the common belief that in case of a complete German victory “the Americas,
including Canada, Central and South America, will have to organize under
matter of European colonies, the quickness with which those who used to
Western Hemisphere itself, and the tone of certain utterances on the sub
ject led some observers— and the German propagandists— to believe or say
that the main reason for that unity of purpose was imperialism* This was
motive was not imperialism but security* Our existing Caribbean poor-
houses, under the proud fold of the Stars and Stripes, were worries
enough*“8®
of State Cordell Hull and President Roosevelt, who had already decided
what course of action America would follow with th© Vichy government, had
that the American government would not be pleased by a second Oran battle
Time saw “two solid reasons” for the “stalemate** in Martinique, The first
one was that the Brazilians had proposed that Brasil be given a mandat©
over British, French, and Butch Guinea* This proposal embarrassed the
American government, which did not wish to harm British interests* The
second reason was that Guba was agitating for the freedom of ail
dangerous precedents. “89 The influence of the State Department was even
American policy-makers, th© question of th© French Antilles was too easy
might cut th© ties between Vichy Franc© and the United States*
Many newspapers pointed out that the French warships in this area
were potentially very dangerous Such papers were also worried by the
hundred odd American planes which war© being shipped from United States'
the armistice. Th© French Admiral Robert was apparently not willing to
give up these planes which could have been so useful in th© battle of
Britain.7^ Referring to the American planes on the Island, the Hew York
American fears.
their government was so lenient with the French colonies whose governor,
with the American attitude but soon realised that it was only a minor
Empire outside th© Western Hemisphere. Even before the end of the hos
tilities with Germany, Japan exerted pressure to stop any trade in muni
tions between the French colony of Indo-Ghina and the Chungking government
of China. Japan acted to cut the supply route fro® Indo-Ghlna to the
June 22. ”The French collapse leaves the American fleet the only effec
tive military bar— apart from the Chinese army— to Japanese expansion.**
It was certainly obvious that French Indo-Ghlna was just as powerless be
which might slip out with contraband for Chungking. Ho one expected that
“inspectorate.M This was what the Japanese had promised, but their in
with so little. In August she asked for an economic agreement with Indo-
Ghlna, the right to move troops across the country, and air and naval
public opinion, the Japanese government continued its pressure and Vichy
• , • were ready to help the French at a moment’s notice. But the courage
of the French was broken and they could think of nothing but yielding.”
“with more than one million soldiers tied up In China and having lost an
other million killed or crippled, the Japanese war lords could spare no
ventionist and liberal newspapers was the attitude of the Vichy government
which represented th© whole matter as a proof of th® good relations be
78F. Lee Benns, Europe since 1914 (Mew York, 1947), p. 560.
Great Britain, which was also subjected to pressure, had closed the Burma
road* The interventionists understood that America was the only power
which could atop Japan but no voice was raised to ask for military inter
vention. All they could hope was that Japan's attitude would speed up
negotiations with the British to give the American fleet access to Singa
pore and would bring about the embargo on oil and scrap iron exports to
Japan.7®
Japan had moved in with “what appears to b® full agreement with the local
conquest of the country had been carried out by the French marines at the
turn of the century, many observers still believed with Newsweek that
Smith, however, voiced the opinion of the liberals in the Living Age.
BQIbid.
He warned that °this viewpoint ignored the intons© and bitter feeling
maintain would, according to observers like Hallett Abend, make the French
gic reasons made Japan*s move a serious threat to th® Allied cause in
in the Far East could be expected shortly and that the Indo-Chinese
VI
had not passed unnoticed in America. At least on© French military leader
did not want to give up th© struggle. A few days later, when he was
in the midst of the catastrophe of 1940 whan Paul Reynaud had appointed
primarily that relations between the Vichy government and Great Britain
would be cloudy.®? For those who were anxiously watching Great Britain
and wondering whether she could hold against th© mighty German air force,
at a time when everybody was deserting what was considered to be the next
victim of Nazi military genius, no help, no matter hew small it might be,
those who tried to stem the wave of resentment against France for her
one French general refused to bow to Hitler, even at the cost of French
logic and common sense* America soon learned that de Gaulle was the au
other French officers, de Gaulle had nothing but contempt for French
democracy.
In spite of its proverbial prudence the New York Times had been too hasty,
ness toward de Gaulle and Ids movement. At that time, in fact, ”de Gaulle
Our own attitude toward.d© Gaulle was that of waiting to see what he
would do and to what extent he could rally Frenchmen to his cause,
There was no question of our ’recognizing1 him. We could not accord
him diplomatic recognition as a government and at th© same time
maintain diplomatic relations with the Vichy government,92
The man on horseback who will try to make France strong again had
not appeared last week. He was not likely to materialize out of any
of the figures now running the country* Some people thought that, if
the British should win, General Charles de Gaulle might be such a man.
More likely it would be someone a® obscure as Adolf Hitler in 1918*
Perhaps It would take a revolution to produce him.98
tion to de Gaulle, but The New Republic was not very optimistic about
1940* This event was greeted by the American press with the same satis
faction as the Oran battle. Its military significance was limited but
it eliminated one danger and constituted a hopeful sign as far as the at
titude of the other French colonies was concerned* Some people expressed
the belief that the decision of French Equatorial Africa was due to
thought, too, that the attitude of this colony was due to economic
groups*97
Empire was dissolving* "Last week th© world’s second greatest colonial
The Commonweals
The French colonies are seeking their own salvation * . * th© contri
bution of th© colonies may not prove insignificant* But their action
has a far more far-reaching meaningt in claiming their political
liberty of action and in breaking with th® French government, the
colonies are submitting to a profound necessity of organising their
life on the national basis of regional groups, rather than on a con
tinued dependence on a political relationship with the mother coun
try * * * what w© see in these ©vents is a first sign of a regrouping
of elements, detached from their former political connection In
continental structures*99
The fact that The Commonweal took, at the same time, a position against
General de Gaulle and the men who have answered his call are
simply volunteers In foreign service acting on their individual re
sponsibility against a system which has oppressed their country, act
ing to liberate their country but from a position outside It and
themselves detached from it* Literally they have left their country
to fight for it* Any talk of their being th® ’real’ French
government is absurd*190
"ibid*
XQQIbid*
155
The Nation did not view the situation very differently*
pet. The attitude of the American press toward de Gaulle was probably
the most important success achieved by the Vichy propaganda in th© United
States. In the index of his diary, Meilson mentioned de Gaulle under the
D© Gaulle *s name became better known but his prestige was further
capital and th® main harbor of French West Africa. B© Gaulle had thought
fight against Germany. His attempt failed* After some fighting, the
British units withdrew from the scene. Th® impression created in America
feat, as one more British '♦r&barkment” in the series which began in Nor
th® British claim that the ^Allied forces refused to attempt a landing”
General Boisson.
information*
More often than not during a crisis, German news reaches America
a long time before ours does. Terrible tales of calamity appear be
fore the anxious eyes of the American public, and only later do re
ports from London begin to straggle in. There have been innumerable
instances of this. The latest case of muddling news was over the
Dakar affair. This was badly handled from first to last. The German,
Italian and French stories reached the public long before ours, and
for the first twenty-four hours, at least, the various communiques
from th® Allied side were hopelessly confusing, whereas th® eneay*s
story was certainly cut and dried and simple to r e a d * ^
Most Americans undoubtedly thought that there was something wrong not only
with the British propaganda but with th® British conduct of the war, also.
ing that French officer® at * . . Dakar would welcome a joint British and
William L. Danger,107 he thought that the main cause for the failure was
the fact that three French cruisers and three destroyers had been allowed
to slip through the Straits of Gibraltar in time to reach Dakar and take
report a success for the Allied cause, bore witness of the lack of suf
tion to Dakar is wrapped in mystery,” declared The Nation after the first
Hew Republic showed how confused and worried American opinion was*
Great Britain. Tim© used a historical comparison which hardly fitted th©
1940# But the worst of them all, because the iob looked so easy and
the repercussions of failure were so drastic, was last week’s fiasco
at Dakar.13-1
Time concluded with many other observers that de Gaulle was finished#
his share of the North African operation*31& The mass of the American
the events which followed it# Nevertheless, the name of de Gaulle re
mained associated with ideas of inefficiency and failure# Dakar was not
only a serious defeat but it made de Gaulle look politically unfit for
fellow-countrymen.
^ S e e pp. 287-289.
CHAPTER ¥
June 16, 1940, included many politicians who had formerly advocated an
entente between France and Germany. Mainly through the efforts of Pierre
Laval, this government checked the efforts of those who wanted to con
tinue the fight in Africa* On July 9, 1940, the two houses of the French
which adjourned the parliament sine die and gave him plenary executive
by Retain, came to reflect more and more the authoritarian and socially
139
140
sitions and economic infiltration, and the tight demarcation line which
divided France into tm cones • The people suffered fro® political op
were suppressed and even the Labor Charter, based on the Has! and Fascist
system remained a dead letter* Germany and Vichy made abortive attempts
II
rials warning their readers not to believe news reports coming from
France*^ It soon appeared that there would not be, as some believed,2 a
wall of silence between America and France but a wall of lies# As early
The first result of the French defeat had been a breakdown of the
news stories were sent out by American correspondents and subject to con
and, like the French newspapers, their only source of information was the
German official news agency* They also had other troubles. Sherry Mangan
dispatches sent from occupied France to reach America# Every mail went
first to
Berlin, where all our dispatches and letters were censored before
being passed on, either to the Berlin office or to our families and
friends back in the United States. This channel was not open to the
general public but was a special arrangement made by the German mili
tary propaganda division for foreign correspondents • * * . The ac
tual time for a dispatch or a letter to get from Paris to Berlin was
about 24 hour®. But the complicated censorship organisation in
Berlin held them up for another five days, on the average. That *s
why most of our dispatches were marked 'delayed* whan they appeared
in the American papers.®
was linked with the outside world only by wireless. Joseph Barnes,
foreign news editor of the Hew York Herald Tribune, explained how the
Hews broadcasts from Vichy were also retransmitted from Berlin under a
the United States. The Germans insist upon censorship of stories which
might reflect on the German occupation. The Italians are touchy on sto
furlough reading back issues of his own paper to get his first coherent
picture * This situation was not improved by the demarcation line which
8Ibid,
9Ibid.
10Ibld.. p. 114.
impossible, to get such a permit. Jay Allen of the North American News
paper Alliance learned this at his own expense. He was caught by the
German military police on the demarcation line and remained in jail for
Meanwhile, the Germans were flooding America with their own news
stories mid other means of propaganda* The Nasi version of the Western
campaign, wSieg Ira featen,11 was shown In New York theaters.1® Another
NassI film, “Blitzkrieg im Westen,” was shown to two thousand Harvard stu
on the average more successful than Allied newsreels which had bored the
American audience with “six months of ruins and wrecks.“IB The American
The best German propaganda was that which came directly from
Even in that case, however, this propaganda was very easy to detect. The
Baltimore Sun again remarked, “When it has not been lying it has been
ludicrous. Even the pigeons of the Tuileries were being tamed by Teutonic
14Ibld.
the Chicago Tribune many articles on life in Paris during the first
months of the occupation* One of them, for instance, was published under
the title “Basis let Paris girls know that rouge is taboo* Results
The innocuousness of such “news items*1 was only apparent* They were in
tended to show the Germans In the best possible light* They were also
useful as a proof that the integration of the French into the Nazi order
that America should stop worrying about Europe* Alex Small took the
writings of the Paris press at face value* According to him, “One of the
III
Th© Nazi victory in th© West had been the signal for an all-
out offensive of the forces which, consciously or not, fought on the Nazi
side* Ann© Lindbergh in her book, The Wave of th® Future* included
England, France and th© United States among the “forces of the past.“20
The forces of the future were Nazism, Fascism and Communism. In spite
portant asset in the German game* Being devoid of th© dynamic and appar
ently revolutionary side of Nazism Vichy appealed to all those whose per
the existing order*21 To many people it was apparent that property, re
ligion, nationalism and social hierarchy were not endangered but protected
by the German army, which looked with favor on the new regimes of Spain
and France and on older Fascist strongholds like Italy and Portugal, It
was obvious that a war against Germany might provoke social revolution
all over Europe and reinforce American radicals* These circles hoped
that America could reach an agreement with Baal Germany* Vichy might be-
seemed to show that the Petain government had the support of the highest
because the Osservator© Romano had praised “the good Marshal *“23 Even
after the Nazi invasion of Russia and th© passage of th© lend-leas© bill,
Ambassador Weddell, on his return from Spain, voiced the Franco point of
view and declared that “the Spaniards*^ regarded the war as a large scale
Vichy and criticized those who denounced the “new o r d e r , “26 a h those
cial reforms were inclined to view the efforts of th© Vichy government
American Catholics to attack people who had annulled the “lois scelerates"
and appropriated money for Catholic schools. Newsweek admitted that there
weak and blind,27 or on the other hand compared with the regime of the
great Adolph© Thiers who resurrected France after 1871.” Newsweek found
some good reasons to hold the second opinion* “It, at least, chose not
to join th© sad array of Polish, Czech, Dutch and other governments in
24IUlios mine*
Time also defended the Vichy government* '’Th© much abused Fetaln govern
ment, not popular in lower Hew York, has been trying to remedy abuses
Frank Norris, who went to Vichy to take pictures of th© Marshal for life,
sent dispatches which helped to spread the belief that the Fascist decrees
show that they were forced upon Vichy by Germany and that the moderate
elements in the Vichy government had opposed them. wTh©re is a story be
hind the French anti-Jewish decrees issued last week,” wrote Newsweek on
October 28. "The laws and the statements Justifying them were drawn up
six weeks ago but hold up because of sharp disagreement in the Vichy
cabinet* Petain himself is said to have thought the decrees too hard."
Tima admitted that "Vichy commits th© pardonable sin of wishing to please
the conquerors so that the peace will be gentle* Therefore, some of the
'’The Frenchman,” asserted Newsweek* "was said to have become th© world1©
in
A study of American opinion of Marshal Retain during th© four
the First lorld War were among th© Frenchmen whom Americans were most in
clined to respect. Retain was th© last of these great French generals.
French one. American liberals who attempted to destroy th© "Petain myth"
in America encountered th© same difficulties, ran into the same psycho
logical barriers and had to move with th© same prudence as their french
down* Marshal Retain, hero of Verdun, has profited from that gallantry*
the best*"84
The did age of Retain also played in his favor* It was practi
to find any reference to him without seeing his name preceded by the
years of age were almost a proof of his unselfish devotion to his country.
was too old to be aware of th© situation and he was only the nominal mas
ter of France. Even the liberal press was at first reluctant to attack
him personally. The New Republic suggested that "Marshal Retain, aged
Nation envisaged the possibility that the “aged Retain perhaps was only
cover for such Fascist tools as Pierre Laval, the real head of the
Cabinet. "36
Petain was one of the main assets of the Vichy government. Bis
name was used in France and abroad with a judicious sense of propaganda.
One of th© first Retainist notes was sounded by the Hew York Times* cor
Marshal Petain, still lucid, still above intrigue, still the personifi
cation of that France which must continue to live. He has always kept
aloof from politics and still does."87 The belief in a Petain "aloof from
politics" was quickly dispelled, however, and there was no further mention
Tribune details on the Marshal1s public and private life which were very
"They didn’t live to see their country die," and Petain added, "How
with the French people. Ambassador Bullitt, when he came back from Vichy
at the end of July, 1940, confirmed the fact that "Marshal Retain is uni
cerned, all Bullitt said to the press m s that he m s "doing his best to
bring out order out of desperate disorder." When he was further ques
tioned about th© Fascist tendencies of the new French state, he refused
to answer. Bullitt was probably convinced that whatever his answer might
have been it would have been harmful to the French government. A negative
of national honor and had jailed a minister who wanted to betray the
country* Although Scholastic resented the fact that "he was the willing
felt sure that “Marshal Retain*s patriotism cannot be questioned, nor his
since the surrender, don© all that was humanly possible to preserve th®
last shred of his humiliated country’s dignity#"41 Even Th© Nation be
circles close to Marshal Retain himself adopted the outlook and even the
style of their Petainist friends* Janet Planner, for instance, was very
ganda mottoes* "Of the Germans, up to date, the Germans say, Das 1st
ward supposed German— or American— admiration for the old Marshal* Miss
Flanner failed, however, in one of her efforts to show that Petain was
venerated by the French. According to her, many people in Vichy and else
corded that the expressions le vieux or le pauvre vieux were commonly used
to refer to Petain, but h© understood that all they could express was
pity or scorn. 45
after his return from Vichy, contained a defense of the Marshal dedicated
to the Americans who despised him* Porter was aware of the fact that some
because they were based "on careful conclusions drawn from personal
4%ven th© French addicts of the word mystique had trouble defin
ing it in their own language. It was significant, however, that Miss
Flanner*a proposed translations were closely related to the reassuring
but worn-out social and national myths which Petain intended to revive.
The reported "decline of French humanism" was also typical of the Vichy
mentality. It meant that French thought had taken a course which Miss
Planner’s friends resented or were incapable of understanding. Their
only recourse was to charge that French youth had lost faith in
everything and was "atrociously materialistic."
Petain which were ©bid or given away In every French shop during the first
France, devoting the last remaining energy of the closing period of his
Petain as the saviour on whose trembling hand® th© future of France now
was at its peak during the summer 1940 and never ceased to decline.48
For some others the peak was reached with Laval’s dismissal on Decem
Is serving France."80
reflected the opinions of its author. In this ease th© writer was th©
was well informed about the pillage of Franc© by the Germans and this
somewhat tempered his sympathy for Petain1s efforts* He was far from be
ing as devoted a® Porter to the person of the Marshal and was inclined
many liberals as on© of political morality. The only way to evade this
problem was to maintain that Retain had good intentions and should be pro
tected against his entourage* For many other people the problem was even
more simple. Th© very presence of Admiral Leahy In Vichy was a proof in
and th© men around him. Typical of those having this attitude was
A new term has been coined and will b© used in medicine. For
hereafter one who had a great past, one who had great courage, one
who loved his country and rendered great service to It, when he be
comes old and feeble and looses his courage, and doesn’t know what
he Is doing,— this will be known a® Petainitis. And we sympathise
with that. He I® under duress.^
Admiral Leahy who, after his return from France In June, 1942, gave a
tige, the competence of a man who had been close to Retain for more than
on© year and whose position as the ambassador to Franc© gave him all pos
contradict this statement. Th© belief was widespread that Germany was
eager to get bases in the French Empire and such statements seemed to
wrote in the New York Times that, perhaps, it was time for Americans to
what different tone from his public statements. After his arrival in
Vichy, He found Petain “remarkably capable for a man of his age," but he
admitted frankly that “the burden of work which he has assumed is beyond
that Petain would never resist German pressure if applied strongly enough
Admiral Leahy apparently must have regained some confidence in the use
what liberal observers had always proclaimed. The latter, although they
convinced that no hope should be staked on Petain. "Ho matter how impos
declared The Nation a week after the Vichy coup d ’etat in 1940.57
to apply them were th© main reason for American hostility to Retain. All
and among them there were naturally many of th© future supporters of the
During the last days of the French parliament, the New York Times clearly
constitutional plans.
the Revue des deux sondes in which he tried to show that the authoritarian
philosophy on which Fascist Italy and Maai Germany were founded was a
wonder that much of th® world regards him as more than mildly de
luded. . . . Th© Fascist dominated areas of the world, however,
have reached a point of such addled thinking that virtually anything
is possible? nothing nowadays in the thought of millions can be too
ridiculous or too preposterous. Doubtless the astronomical fact is
that th© moon is made of limburger.®9
“reforms" of th© Vichy government. These ideas were exposed for the
to Jay Allen of the North American Newspaper Alliance his first interview
claimed that his "new order" was different from th® German and Italian
labor, fecundity is fatally life and the more compelling pervasive sense
of La Patrie."
’There,* the Marshal cried, ’you have a true revolution. Believe me,
this revolution has need of liberty, but to a ciegro© it excludes in
dividualism* This revolution calls for equality, but for ©quality
of sacrifice* It rejects demagogy* This revolution calls on the
spirit of fraternity, but this spirit of fraternity it will organize
to save the said revolution from temptations to deviate and from
falling into a caricature of itself.
But such attempts as this had very little influence on American opinion*
Some American observers who went to France during the Petain regime did
not limit to the salons of Vichy and the military and professional cir
rule. Howard Brooks, who worked in France for the Quakers and who visited
conclusions which were very different from those reached by Porter In On-
censored France. Brooks thought that "on© of the illusions about Petain
which would not bear close examination was that he was an old man, with
out personal ambition, who had sacrificed his personal comfort to give
France th© leadership she needed.”®^ According to him, Retain always be
haved like a "ftthror" for whom obedience was th© first virtue* Petain
was the man who had killed democracy in France and M s popularity— which
was decreasing very fast— was duo to th® desperate situation of Franc©
after the armistice* Petain was already hated by the working class and
it cannot belong before all Franc© will understand that never for a
moment did Petain try to oppose Hitler, that otherwise h© would not
In order to fight th® American respect for Petain and the reluc
tance of most people to admit that he was just m much and maybe more
responsible for th© Vichy policies than any other member of his govern
ment, the liberal press started a campaign which resembled th© tactics
of Retain wearing the German Iron Cross. The portrait was torn to pieces •
The caption read# “The British radio reported yesterday; Marshal Petain
his picture which had been torn in two.M®d This campaign reached a climax
with th© return of Laval to power* P. I* warned its readers not to "be
world into believing that he, not Laval, was still Vichy's head man, and
that Laval would operate under his authority. Th© truth Is that both
was the most dangerous obstacle in th© way of those who thought that all
Johannes Steal, for instance, maintained: "One can almost respect Laval
toon showing Petain leaning on a can© and on Pierre Laval* Petain said:
“When he speaks, he speaks for ®e.H Hitler was laughing In the background
and saying: “When either of these rats speak, they speak for me."®7
“He has repudiated his own work," wrote Dorothy Thompson, “if Verdun
really was his own work. Some historians have doubted it. They say he
wanted to give up there, and he was forced to stand against his will,“70
The New Republic decided that he was “still th© same Petain who wanted
send to Jail could have refused the Nazis the use of Dakar for two long
years. The liberals, like many other Americans, honestly believed that
acknowledge the fact that “Marshal Petain did not give Hitler all the
help he wanted from France, but he gave a good deal of help, and above
all he saved Hitler th© trouble, the expense and th© moral consequences
Men behind the War, a book published in 1942, Johannes Steel ironically
attacks against the French Marshal created sentiment in his favor among
a few people. To them Retain was a martyr, reviled not only by the Ger
mans and by his own fellow countrymen but also by uninformed public opin
ion in the rest of the world. This feeling was exploited for political
7%alt©r Lippman in the New York Herald Tribune, April 16, 1942.
74Johannes Steel, Men behind the War (New York, 1942), p. 193.
purposes.?^ Th© silence which spread over his name after th© occupation
VI
people viewed their own situation during these terrible times. Immedi
ately after the armistice the feeling was widespread that France readily
Th© swiftness of the French collapse was often interpreted a® the result
had accepted th© possibility of German occupation even before th© German
offensive. Then, French resentment against the British was often inter
urns designed to show that French people and German troops were on the
best of terms. Finally, th© absence of resistance against th© new regime
or the German army during th© first months after the armistice was par
Retain that the armistice and Vichy were the results of a deep
jectionable even by those who had previously felt that French nationalism
at the same time, and in spit© of the careful distinction between wNa»iw
the minds of many people. This was especially noticeable after America
entered the war* Anti-German feeling was a French national duty just as
defeat was also part of the American nationalist reaction. Even for the
According to the Chicago Tribune, the French were disgusted with British
The Tribune hinted that such circumstances were liable, in case of war,
French were the smart people who refused to follow British orders.60 For
French frivolity.9*-
to give a more serious tone to most American comments on the French. Lib
eral newspapers did not know whether to accept the unfavorable reports
from France and therefore to condemn the French, or to classify every re
port coming from Franc® as German propaganda. On July 13 The Nation chose
the second solution and affirmed that "Fascist France is not France."
Two months later, however, the same journal reported} "The demoralization
French reaction* "It appeared that the French now hold very lightly the
This reported indifference of the French to the war and its consequences
people according to the manner in which they themselves had solved the
Petain1s popularity with the middle-class was a proof that Franc® had
Kothlog could be harder for one who loves France and has been
twice honored by its government than to speak critically of France,
long and rightfully said to have been the fatherland of every
civilised inan. * * *
The tragedy of France betrayed has moved continuously forward
until it is about to be revealed as France betraying, • » * the
height or depth of the tragedy being the full and explicit assent
of France to the faith and spirit of Naeisia.®®
It seems clear that for the French bourgeois his class interests
outweigh the interests of the nation# Hence it would be unrealistic
for us to expect the present French government, and the bourgeoisie
which backs it, to give us any help In freeing them from Has! Ger
many for the purpose of re-establishing the democratic system which
they are only too glad to have replaced by the fnew order. *86
papers to show that the working class was at least as favorable as any
other to the new regime. The Chicago Tribune reported that the workers
widely publicised and gave the impression that the working class wanted
that the first flush of pro-Germanism after the armistice had faded#**®®
In Collier's Therese Bonney recorded that "those who wore quit© 'pro'
during the first months swear today that they will never live under a
Nazi regime. This is why it seems very doubtful that the collaboration
pill can ever be sugared enough to make the average Frenchman swallow
it,n®0 Many American observers began to recall the sad days of 1940 with
Rex Benware admitted: "If, after they had conquered France, the Germans
had proved magnanimous about food, they might have succeeded in winning
the French people's more or less willing collaboration with Germany. But
the Kazia were the reverse #"92* Albert Guerard expressed the same
opinion in Common Sense. "We have good evidence," he wrote, "that for a
few weeks after the stunning blow, Hitler could have won many Frenchmen
VII
not the voice of Franc©."®® In The Hew Europe Bernard Newman charged:
Atlantic Monthly, "It is almost certain that the Vichy regime will go
down with the Nasis*"®® Bernard Newman was more categorical. "Nothing
is more certain than that it will disappear with the collapse of Ger
Of all the regimes under which France has lived during the past two
centuries, Vichy proved to be the most ephemeral, the least capable
of putting down roots in the country. . • . Other French regimes of
equally brief duration had left behind them a permanent heritage, a
lasting mark on French political thinking. Vichy might conceivably
have done the same, If Retain and his closest advisers had been men
of a different sort*®?
that the Vichy government blindly followed German orders, at least as far
a ship of which Hitler was the captain with a crew of Nasi pirates* Many
observers, however, maintained that there was a conflict between the be
lief of the Vichy leaders in a German victory and their French national
ism. Except for Laval, who was universally despised in America, the men
stated that the laws of occupation "were promulgated not only by Axis
partners themselves but also by puppet regimes and puppet states which
Scholastic explained one day why it was only fair to make a distinction
other puppet governments and Vichy France. "The most important of these
Hitler tells it to. But at the same time it's not aiding the Germans in
leaders to maintain until the end of the war that they were "patriots,"
ing to concede that there was a struggle in these men between their sub
mission to Germany and their nationalist feeling* But they did not see
why this nationalism should absolve them* The outcome of this struggle
was foregone* The scales were weighted by their authoritarian ideas and
idea® on the other side* They did not accept a nationalist conception of
World War II. Retain had decreed that one did not leave his country even
in order to save it. To the liberals such a statement appeared not only
"italics mine,
criminal but ridiculous* The Vichy men were helping the Nazis; they were
spiders feeding over the body of a France that was dead J"101 probably
some Americans felt with him that “the miserable efforts of the French
recounting,"102
Even the people who felt some sympathy for the principles of the Vichy
government did not try to defend its doings very long* Many observers
played with the Idea that the French were satisfied with their government
show that there was nothing to "liberate#" The real interest of these
isolationists was not in the French situation but in the American domestic
scene. Even the Petain sympathizers had to admit that nothing in the
French situation could Justify any confidence in the French government #3X)S
Some observers maintained that some of his Ideas were good but could not
Americans, however, Petain* s efforts to "turn back the clock to the Ancien
had not been tragic. Even the easily influenced Janet Planner tried to
_ i-- t 1 t — 1----------------------------------------- — r- r~n—“ i------------------------ 111 ■ ■■■ ■■.■...... ..... ..
IQ2lbid., p. 521*
visualize the effect which certain of Plain's reforms would have had in
of Hope.
by the Germans and partly subjected to the “Vichy cure" appeared pathetic.
concluded that
^^Bee pjp. i
171
Americans did not need to be told what kind of a life the French
votion, the last die-hard American expatriates to leave Paris have de
clared on their arrival in the United States that in Paris a normal life
is still the norm* **332 Most observers, however, reported like journalist
Lars Moors that in Paris "the atmosphere was depressing#"!!5 The first
reports about gay life in defeated France were forgotten* The Parisians
had too much trouble with the German occupation, the food and heating
know what the city looked like when it was covered with German posters
!!®Lars Moers, Under the Iron Hoel (how fork, 1941), p» 510*
self actually very well Informed about these thing®. A H the rumors cir
culated in a Paris, which knew more about the Allied or the German war
effort than about what happened twenty miles from the capital, were re
several times during the war. This was on© of those Paris rumors which
Life in other French cities was not happier than in Paris* Janet
Planner reported that Marseilles was the only French city which m s really
If on© came into a home where death had ©truck and members of the
family ware trying desperately to live a normal life but not
succeeding#!!^
servers reported that Belgium, Holland and Denmark also shared athis
honor"— it was obvious that it was being emptied of its wealth by the
The first German master trick had been the separation of th© two
Frances, the occupied Franc© and th© "free" Franc®, by th© rigid demarca
tion line "that runs like a jagged wound across th© face of France* It
w o ibid.
174
two aones, and setting one against the other* Thus the disunity of Franc©
had acted cleverly when they "disdained to take over the unoccupied son©,
distinction between the two m n m mattered a great deal to the French but
very little to th© German© who could exercise their profitable activities
in both* "The French are rated as highly money-minded, but they seem to
observers noted that Germany charged France much more than she needed for
francs out of th© daily 400,000,000 she got from France for occupation
expenses «
That left her credits of 500,000,000 francs daily* She utilized them
to buy up French agricultural and industrial products, thus plunder
ing France of her own resources at her own expenses ? to pay for mate
rials and labor for the fortification of France, making Franc© pay
the bill for a rampart designed to prevent her future liber&tion|
u sIbld.
British under secretary for foreign affairs, figures which showed that
France was paying more than three times the maximum amount Milch was ever
required from Germany after the First World War, th© Philadelphia In
prayerful hop© of release from the Nazi bandits# Their fortunes, their
homes and their lives have been taken over by the Invading plunder-
mists were not misled about the nature of German activities in France,
so aware of the situation that they were not surprised when they found
out that the Basis were not only permitting but encouraging
In the master plan of the Mew Order, and an exporter of luxury Items,
she would not need this machinery* Second, the stuff that th© French
actually did need until the Meuordnung was accomplished could be used
as barter goods to trade back: to the rightful owners for concessions
profitable to the Hazie*!29
American observers reported, for Instance, how th© Germans tried to take
over and did take over many Paris newspapers* This they did not only for
political but for business reasons* The result was th© "lowest kind of
collaboration!sm" helped the Germans and mad© spoliation easier and more
.
!®%enry W* Ehrmann, French Labor from Popular Front to Libera-
. _uw M p iw n a « M M w H iiu u u u wwi1* mmmmmm -mm*** w m m m m m nm m *
tlon (New York, 1947), p* 251*
The French Labor Charter looked like a feeble attempt to copy the German
Labor Front and the Fascist corporations .1®® The attempt failed lamen
tably, mainly because of the opposition of the French working class* The
main result of the Vichy policy, however, was to suppress the trade-
the fact "that th© Labor Charter was tantamount to the end of free trade-
unionism was intentional*"^®'? Many suspected later that the main objec
tive had been to prevent workers from protecting themselves against the
1S8Ibld.
178
government*
Even a Germaxv-bom Hast could hardly match th© stupid or cynical dis
regard of simple arithmetic which Herre Laval showed yesterday when
he went to Compiegne to ’welcome home* a trainload of 1,000 released
French prisoners. • . • Laval boasts of a new bargain. • . • For
every sick man coming back France will send three workers. . ♦ *
One expects Hitler to make bargains like this* In the beautiful
old French phrase he is that kind of esp&oe d© cochon. But it does
seem queer to see a Frenchman getting' out' the bancf and making a
speech in honor of such base trickery.141
But there was still another tragedy in France, and Its victims
were even more pitiful than th© mass of the French people. At the time
of th© armistice there were in France many anti-Fasciet people from vari
ous nations who had taken refuge in that country. Their plight under the
Republic m s not very enviable but it became hopeless after the fall of
turned over to the enemy. The Hew Republic termed that clause the "most
th© only country which could do anything for these refugees on a vast
in Primes©.
During the first weeks after th© debacle escape was easy, and
many refugees went to Portugal through Spain and wore granted visitorsr
permits to th© United States. In th© fall of 1940 it became more diffi
cult to leave illegally but In January, 1941, the Vichy government began
ment revised its visa policy in June, 1941, and "the way to safety was
once more b a r r e d . **-45 Many refugees were still in France. Most of them
ber of them were Spanish Republicans .*46 Americans received many reports
about the "inhuman treatment” to which they were subjected* "The plight
the Vichy regime took over. But today these men— the vanguard of the
146Xbid.
off to French camps* And sine© women were interned without any
regard to their condition many children were b o m in the camp* • • *
But it is one thing to know and another to see for yourself*
How, seeing these child-tnternees, I felt for the first time the
whole Inhumanity, the appalling cruelty, of the situation* I real
ised in a new way how merciless the world had become. If there were
anything worse than this imprisonment of children, X thought while
there, it m s the indifference of th© world, th© fact that the world
was not revolted.ISO
1940-1941
The advent of the P&tain dictatorship did not interrupt the course
of normal diplomatic relatione between the United States and France* Ihen
Bullitt remained in the capital and Anthony J* Drexel Biddle replaced him
after which Retain announced that Germany and Prance would adopt a policy
edly and brutally dismissed by Petain* Pierre Etienne Flandin, -who re
amity but he himself had to yield his position, in turn, to Admiral Jean
IBS
185
Petain as delegate general of the French government, was looked upon by
negotiations which the Germane had broken off after the dismissal of
the Germans in Syria and in Worth and West Africa. Although the Paris
Protocols war® never ratified by th® Vichy cabinet, Darlan permitted th®
of British rule in Iraq, and the British and Free French invasion which
followed was met by bitter resistance on the part of th® Vichy commander
Vichy and Washington, a tension which was further increased when Vichy
was forced to resign his North Africa post on Vichy’s order® in November,
1941, and again when Petain conferred with Marshal Goering on December I,
1941.
II
government* Even before th® Vichy legal coup d'etat, American liberal
cern for the fat© of Great Britain, France had betrayed the cause of the
democracies* The Hatton declared that there was ^nothing honorable about
separate peace, and turns Franc® into the passive accomplice of th® dic
brutal.
ment increased when ’’the Third Republic . « , died in th© fashion earlier
prescribed by its own degenerate leaders for th# Republics of Spain and
Czechoslovakia, The events in Vichy clearly showed that Franc© not only
gIbid.
that "the Third Republic was converted into the Petain dictatorship*"®
were acquired."7 As the Baltimore Sun remarked, the vote of the Parlia
ment was "bom of defeat and desperation."® Some ©von wondered whether
th© proximity of the German army had not removed freedom of action from
University of Michigan also pointed out* "Men have ruled France since
June 16, 1940, who could hardly have held office under a system where
majority."® Were not free elections the only real democratic criterion
of legality?
the question. "The test for us had almost invariably been whether an
other government was willing to live at peace with th© United States
June 25, 1940, m Associated Press dispatch reported? "On the question
of whether the United States would continue to recognise the French Gov
up in England, the Presidential secretary said Mr* Roosevelt had told him
there was *no news* on that point*"32 Undoubtedly there were people in
th© immediate entourage of Roosevelt who favored a rupture with th© Nazi-
v
dominated French government* Regardless of th® constitutionality of her
nificance fro® a French point of view but would have been a challenge to
n Ibid*
important part in formulating the future American policy toward th® Vichy
had the reputation of being a friend of Laval and quickly acquired that
of "not being outstanding from th® point of Intelligence* '*!7 On his ar
taken part in th® French campaign with American ambulances, cam® back to
America on the same boat which transported th® French ambassador* "Bn
arrivsnt * * * a Mew lork, j*ai vu des jeunes gens ei d©s ©nfants qui
portaient des placards avec les motes fHeil Honry-Kaye, f pour accueillir
Ill
Vichy was more or less voluntarily helping the Axis in its fight against
word of protest* Th© French navy refused to accept the British proposals
16lbld.. p. 76.
17Ibid., p. 99.
the Western Hemisphere could constitute for the American republics* Laval
tried very hard, however, to convince public opinion abroad that France
still had an independent foreign policy* During the months which followed
the armistice, the American press gave much attention to Laval4s policy
balance of power in the new Europe* they had little success* Hswswsek
Many people thought that Hitler was going to sign a peace treaty
21Ibid.
was encouraged by the Germans and some predicted a complete
blow to the rumors of a Latin bloc as well as to the belief that Hitler
would make peace with Franc© before the end of the war, Nobody knew what
had taken place at Montoire, however, and American newspaper© were kept
with a definite plan and specific conditions which B^tain had no choice
but to accept. According to Time, "the German term© were hard but not
the concessions which Germany could wring from Franc© than in the advan
tages which Vichy could gain in the bargain* Some people predicted that
after Oran, many newspapers announced that France might declare war on
Great Britain* There were naturally reports that Germany had asked for
in the economic and in the colonial sphere, we have envisaged and will
2SZbid*
France in return.
can suspicion of the Vichy government. It soon became obvious that the
meeting had been fruitless, but the French government had taken publicly
a position in favor of the enemies of Great Britain and had thus asserted
its conviction that the future of France lay with Germany. There were
demands for a revision of the American policy toward th© French Antilles.2^
political chameleon."30
successfully resisted German demand® during that period and that he was
fighting a "rearguard battle" which gained more time for the democracies.
This theory was especially popular with those who approved the American
false assumption that th© Montoire interview, like all other phase® of
desire to acquire military bases in th© French empire and use of the
French fleet* William L* hanger concluded that "Hitler did not press
Petain for any specific engagement" because, "having just come from a
ant mood."33 if Hitler had wanted something specific from France, the
Franco interview would probably have mad© him more exacting than ever*
Th© turth doubtless was that Hitler*a main objective was to demon
strate to the British "how completely the Continent m s under Nazi con
was reached after th© armistice and was so advantageous to Germany could
55Ibld», p. 96.
prisoners of their own prejudices and that German interests would be pro
tected by the new and old quarrels which would develop between the French
and the British. The armistice allowed th® Massia to exploit French eco
territory Hitler occupied in France was all he needed to pursue the war.
Th© French fleet and the empire were immobilised. Obviously all Germany
was recorded the conversation between Hitler and Mussolini on June 18,
IV
S3
“Graziani Papers,” in Langer, Our Vichy Gamble* pp. 48-49.
195
Many American observers accepted the official hints that some hope
in the event of intolerable Axis demands the Vichy regime can always
flee across the Mediterranean and continue the war* • . , There have
been many indications that Weygand has been adopting an increasingly
independent attitude toward the Vichy authorities. Two events might
influence Weygand to place French Africa on the side of Britain
again s 1) humiliating demands by the Axis on the Vichy government
and 2) a general Mediterranean offensive by Britain that showed real
promise of defeating Italy.38
Such comments opened the door to the theory that Weygand could be coaxed
friendship.^ For a large part of the American press the whole problem
of Vichy consisted in showing the French how nice the Allies— and ©spe
cially still neutral America— were. Weygandfs choice was almost thought
to be between the "American way of life" and the bad manners of the Nazi
France*s General Maxime Weygand who does not much like the English but
may now be learning to hate the Germans and Italians even more.'‘4°
The liberals did not accept such a simplified view of the situ
ation. They did not yet oppose a policy which had not completely taken
shape, but they were worried by the American tendency to believe that
some of the Vichy men were secretly trying to join the fight against the
common foe or were driven into Germany1® arms by Allied attacks against
them. 41 Weygand repeated time and again that his only allegiance was to
Weygand1s remarks as to where his duty lies."42 The liberals did not
doubt that French Africa was "Vichy*s hole card."43 They reasoned that
the man entrusted with guarding this last trump would be a faithful Vichy
power in the Vichy set-up was the result of his privileged position. Ac
cording to the liberals, there was no hope that Weygand would move his
little finger to help th© Allies until he was sure that th© Allies had
won the war.44 Before that day, an Allied occupation of North Africa was
tinguished from his fear of a social revolution. Vichy was the only pos
sible way to save the French Empire and to save France from socialism at
out that this argument was totally unrealistic.45 its only hope resided
^4yhe New Republic, December 23, 1942 j The Nation, January 18,
1941, p. SlfT
can liberals had exactly the same reaction* They thought that any com
promise with the sordid calculations of the men of Vichy was a useless
parently accepted the Vichy rule# The whole diplomatic and ideological
Ilk© a bigger weygand playing for higher stakes* There was no doubt in
the minds of most Americans that Retain had dismissed Laval because the
latter wanted to help the Germans beyond the conditions required by the
th© traditional meaning of the term* Hull declared that American "diffi
culties with Vichy France seemed suddenly and somewhat alleviated by the
fireside chat on December 2j "I believe that the Axis powers are not go
ing to win this war* I base my belief on the latest and best informa
Laval*a dismissal was the only favorable news item in the last month, ex
cept for the Italian failure in Greece which had little bearing on the
The liberals were not so easily satisfied. They were glad to see
they warned that it could not mean that Vichy would change its policy.
They suspected that the dismissal was the result of a French Internal
feud and that a new faction had won over the easily Influenced old
marshal. "Whatever the reason," wrote The New Republic, "th® change
the food situation in western Europe after the French defeat* All ob
because France had been "able to raise export surpluses of wheat in re
colored by the Germans. "Even French farmers were reported living off
reported:
convince American opinion that th® Germans were doing their best to help
the French; secondly, to emphasize French need for more food supplies.
The Germans were interested In convincing Americans that they should send
food to Europe. Regardless of its military value, any leak in the Brit
ish blockade was a psychological success for the Germans. Any movement
Europe was not due to German propaganda but this propaganda undoubtedly
the European need for food. The Mew York Daily Hews, for instance,
revealed that
in France, and th© like* The more ninterventionist” the newspapers were,
his Memoirs what was at that time his own attitude and that of th©
Presidents
supplies and food for children through the International Red Cross*
^I’
Jew fork Daily Mews, October 21, 1940*
dor to Vichy France and sailed for France, via Spain, on the American
any United States diplomat ever undertook* ”56 Leahy was to uphold the
old marshal in his resistance to German orders and make France aware of
whether these goals would be best achieved by honoring with the visit of
reports that Petain had delivered ills own ultimatum to illtier threat
ening to resume the fight as Britain’s ally from Africa rather than
yield to repeated demands for the French fleet. Airplanes were even
said to be waiting at Vichy to fly th© French government to Africa*
Some French warships were reported to have been shifted to Africa so
the officers and men could have ’vacations* ’58
The liberals did not attach much importance to these rumors and pointed
out that Laval was in the background, ready to comeback on German orders.
’’The Nazi campaign to force Laval on Marshal Petain appears to have suc
ceeded,” asserted The Nation on February 8 , "and bythe end of the week
57jbid.
5%ewaweek, January 6, 1941.
200
before.” Laval did not come back but The Christian Century remarked a
week later that it Mdo®s not appear that Petain defied Hitler by
Laval was the main concern of the American press but the State
Department had other problems# Th© economic agreement, which had been
the representative of Weygand, and finally Weygand himself, had been de
layed by friction between the American and th© British governments con
cerning the lifting of th© blockade. The British were hostile to any
thing but tight” and the State Department finally decided to go ahead
without British agreement* This fact, when it became known to the lib
erals at a time when they had frankly taken a position against the Ameri
can policy, provoked their indignant comments. Four months later Th©
We want you to know that w© are as shocked as you are by the news
that our State Department has brought pressure on th© British govern
ment to permit shipment of American oil and other supplies to Vichy-
dominated North Africa; and that th© State Department’s action was
not the result of any decision arrived at after democratic, debate in
Congress or elsewhere.
The idea that Weygand can be weaned from Vichy by special favors
seems to us as dangerous as the idea some of your diplomats nourished
— that Mussolini might be weaned from th® Axis, Goring separated
from Hitler.51
They even saw a connection between Weygand1s visit to Vichy and the Brit
ish efforts in Libya* The Saginaw (Michigan) Hews wrote for instance
that;
One guess which appears to have a fair basis is that th© French
commander is looking ahead to th© time when th© British win— as they
evidently hope to— control of western Libya and Tripolitania from the
Italians. Then they will stand on the frontier of French Algeria
CsicJ • It is more than possible that they will attempt to strike
some kind of active partnership with the French to continue th©
war*64
tt®very effort was mad© to substantiate these reports, which in th© end
likely that the main reason for leygand*® trip was his desire to secure
6gIbid*
66Ibid.
202
ambassador that ”his trouble is his habit of telling anecdotes about the
were more convinced than ever that Hitler was planning an invasion of
Horth Africa. Actually th© Germans were preparing for their campaign
against Russia, but the British tried to communicate their anxiety to the
Americans and to involve them in a shooting war. All they obtained, how
economic warfare, remarked that wit was about 11955 in respect of economic
cooperation” with both Spain and France, but h© felt Hhat straw and
Darlan was really doing his best to get Wstraw and carrots.” In
American pres®. Again the American press was divided on the matter. The
70Ibid., p. 145.
71Ibid.. p. 157.
203
slowly giving way to a division between the radical and liberal elements
on the one aide and the rest of American opinion on the other one. A
newspaper like The Christian Century was still in favor of sending food
for humanitarian reasons and this was in keeping with its isolationist
line* "The people of the United States alone are able to bring about the
lifting of the blockade and to supply the needed food. If we fail to act
we, along with the nations at war, become responsible for every death
France did not collapse; France was beaten after a hopeless fight*
Under the terms of the armistice France may do nothing to help Britain
— but Franc© will do nothing to help Germany. Franc© must collaborate
with Germany until Germany lose© th© war, but France hopes Germany -
will lose. Meanwhile France must be fed, because starvation will
drive France into Germany*s arms.?®
garding France,'* Dorothy Thompson charged that this article in Tim© was
She concluded that "America can no longer afford to play the Good Samari
tan to th© enemies of her basic institutions and ideals. If we give food
maintained that an actual sea battle between the French and the British
should be avoided by sending food to France and upholding the Vichy gov
ernment was that the French would not accept to fight Great Britain.
The bigger obstacle to that development hitherto has not been the
Vichy government, which is wholeheartedly anti-democratic and com
posed of men who, in effect, have bet their shirt© on a German tri
umph, but the strongly anti-Nazi and pro-British attitude of the
French people. That was the real reason for Laval*s dismissal.?®
Those whom The Nation attacked in this editorial were not the isolation
ists, whose power was diminishing every day, but those who believed that
terprise. Demaree Bess, recalling these times less than a year later in
The only effective weapon w© possessed was a bribe— mid the on©
great bribe we could offer was food. Both occupied and unoccupied
France were desperately hungry# . . .
Our problem was not to regard food as a humane means for saving
lives but as a weapon for waging war.?®
Once more the State Department dicided to carry out its food
Th© good will of th© American State Department, in the opinion of many
even Hitler* The British ministry of economic warfare, however, did not
view th© matter from that angle; neither did American liberals* The
Hatlon charged that there were "still many people in this country includ
ing officials of th© State Department, who close their eyes to the true
relations went
VI
On April 50, 1941, Leahy was instructed to see Petain “at one©
and by all means alone” to explain to him that America was going to send
marshal had departed on May 5 for a week1© rest in southern France and
why Leahy could not see Petain between April 30 and May 5. Darlan was
obviously fearful that he might suffer the fate of Laval during his
78Ibid.
60Ibld.
206
absence from Vichy and apparently had decided to keep Petain away from
with th© Germane. The fact that these negotiations were on French initi
ative was very important, since many Americans believed that Vichy was
yielding inch by inch only under German pressure* hanger wrote that
Darlan . . . had been wooing th® Haaia ever since December, but
only to get the cold shoulder* Th© Germans were still pining for
Laval and refused to collaborate with any other French
government* • • •
Durian*8 procedure in general was to make concession© to the
Germans out of hand, in th© hope of attaining later some larger and
more definitive arrangement* Thus he agreed at the outset to make
available to Rommel a number of French trucks that had been stocked
in North Africa* * * *
After these preliminaries Darlan was invited to Paris to confer
with Abets (May 3). Evidently delighted to be received into the good
graces of th© victors, and on assurance that Laval would be left out
of account,, ho prowised everything,8*
seemed, Darlan wanted to prove that he was better than Laval and he agreed
who had rebelled against British rule#®^ It was also decided that German
General Denta to give the Germans all facilities in Syria and to oppose
82Ibid.
8 5lbid.
8 4 i b l d . , p. 149.
207
Berchtesgaden and saw Hitler on May 11-12, 1941* Again, the record of
this interview in hanger* s Our Vichy Gamble showed that Hitler had no in
however, reached its peak when, after Darlan*s return to Vichy, Petain
mad© a speech (May 15) in which he announced that the interview between
the admiral and Hitler “permits us to light up th© road into th© future
and to continue the conversations that had begun with the German
government.” He declared*
to th© Germans and the promise of the two shiploads of wheat which Leahy
had finally imparted to Petain had not been enough to deter the French
a public statement on May 15, appealing to th© French people over the
The people of the United States can hardly believe that the pres
ent government of France could be brought to lend itself to a plan of
voluntary®® alliance implied or otherwise which would apparently de
liver upFrance and its colonial Empire, including French African
colonies and their Atlantic coasts, with the menace which that
involves to the peace and safety of the Western H e m i s p h e r e . ® 7
The Hew York Times asserted Its confidence in the firmness of the French
Italics mine.
people* "No man on earth, and no power that is conceivable, can trans
form the French people into willing partners of the ignorant and obscene
barbarians who rule Nasi Germany.11 This newspaper, however, was very
plays for time* But all the available evidence indicates that we are
about to witness, in a dark hour for the French people, the tragic, long-
ernment a year ago."®® Th© Hew York Times was typical of the reaction of
unmoved."®®
Admiral Leahy himself, apparently, had lost confidence in the
that some of Weygand*s troops would side with the Allies.®® Sumner
The seizure of, control over, these areas, some of which are barely
sixteen hundred miles from the coast of South America, by powers
which are bent on world conquest, would constitute so immediate a
threat to the peace and safety of th© Western Hemisphere that the
situation arising therefrom could not be regarded passively by the
United States.
But Cordell Hull talked th© President out of making this statement, argu
^Ibld.. p. 158.
% u n , Memoira. p. 958.
209
pointing out that wit would provoke the fiercely vociferous resentment
endeavoring l,to ascertain Just what can be salvaged through the Vichy
The liberals urged immediate rupture with Vichy. Like The Hew
Republic, they condemned the whole American policy toward France sine©
the armistice.
On May 21, 1941, the Hew York Post published its first editorial
Hull recorded in his Memoirs that, at that time, the administration “mat
with heavy pressure from various quarters, both in Britain and in the
Memoirs, p. 958.
secrecy while American observers tried to guess their object and their
results* Since it was believed that the Germans had taken the initiative
th® Germans are offering better terms j and this circumstance should warn
Nation was too optimistic when it declared? "So far, th© concessions ob
tained by the Vichy representatives do little more than give France th®
It was Indeed difficult to guess that th© final Paris Protocols, signed
on May 28, contained no compensation for the Vichy government, and that,
to reassure French and world opinion. He affimed that Hitler had not
England. "Germany won the war alone and judges herself able to end it
alone against no matter what coalition." " This statement had a soothing
No one knew exactly what had happened in Paris but there was even
threat in France. Th© liberals wanted a rupture with Vichy and maintained
anywhere, were also inclined to agree that the policy of meddling in Vichy
"closer collaboration between France and Germany" showed "more than ever
wanted any harm to the United States. This reply was for the isolation
When the Paris press wrote that Roosevelt should intervene to stop the
observers were certain that th© efforts to keep France from helping Ger
many beyond th© terns of th© armistice had failed and agreed "that the
Americans did not know how extensive French concessions had been.
Vichy, were better informed. What they learned "fulfilled" their "worst
view, were those which gave permission to th© Gormans to use Blzerte in
connection with their Libyan campaign and Dakar in connection with their
which would have diminished their authority in th© free parts of the
th® war that Petain was maintained in th© right direction by th®
108Ibld.
10sIbld.
now we were to see the ripening of the fruits of our many months
spent In carefully developing closer and substantial relations with
French Africa* leygand and Boisson threw all their weight against
the Barlsn agreement. « . . Leahy added his influence to theirs,
and P^tain began to see that carrying out the agreement would possi
bly mean a break of diplomatic relations with the United States and
war with Great Britain.^08
German officials of the trench foreign ministry* Leahy did not have any
interview with Pstain during the period of crisis* All Langer could say
was that ^indirectly, at least, all the influence of Admiral Leahy and
[weygand] belongs the chief credit for frustrating the Harlan policy.
Weygand used his favorite argument that everything should be done to pre
French people at least partly substantiated the liberal claim that col
U 0Ibid.. p. 161.
m Xbld., p. 159.
214
emphasised the repercussions of the Paris Protocols on Franco-American
and Franco-British relations but it was difficult to claim that his stand
exports to this area which had been too insignificant to modify the
The most significant fact was that all French officials in Africa
position in the Vichy set-up. Bven Admiral Esteva, who collaborated with
the Germans in the defense of Tunisia in 1942, opposed the Paris Proto
cols. Finally, it should be noted that the French refusal to carry out
Harlan’s promises to the Germans did not provoke any reaction on the part
of Hast diplomacy, thanks to American moral and economic help. The whole
mental— although still Haai— way and his desire to please his fuehrer.
Langer wondered how Harlan made his peace with the Germans and
noted that since the latter were tTon the eve of the great attack upon
the grandiose plans that had been elaborated for the Mediterranean. "US
The German attack on Russia had been planned long before the beginning
of the negotiations which led to the Paris Protocols and was only delayed
which would have helped Eommel in Libya and the submarine campaign in the
Atlantic. They were obviously not ready and not willing to assume the
tailed. The text of the Paris Protocols showed very clearly that the
military concessions granted by the Germans to the French were not a re
ward for the French docility. The German general staff understood very
The Germans were obviously afraid that military cooperation with the
French might lead to a breakdown of th© French Kmpire and the destruction
of the situation created by th© French armistice. The Germans did not
attempt to carry out th© agreement and one may wonder whether the Paris
Protocols, while they were being scuttled in Vichy, were not suffering
th© same fat© in Berlin when they reached the desk of th© real German
policy-makers•
VII
Th© best proof that Germany and the United States were apparently
carrying out th® same policy in the French Empire— that of maintaining
th© unity of the French colonies behind Vichy— m s given during the
the French mandate *2.17 The British-Free French invasion of this terri
tory was the only practical result of the Darlan’s policy. The Germans
Free Frenoh-British force® which invaded Syria were militarily weak, they
from a military adventure in the French Empire were not worth compromis
ing th© authority of th© Vichy government* American opinion did not un
Indication that Germany was going to defend the territory. The Ration,
for instance, advised Britain ttto call Vichy’s bluff and march into Syria
before th© Raals establish themselves there in any strength* **21.8 It was
only after th© beginning of th© struggle that some observers were sur
prised at th© German attitude* The Christian Century noted? "There are
many mysterious elements about this campaign* Most important are th©
reasons as to why the Germans haven’t fought against th© invader and why
U 8Xbld.
Many observers also expected that th© Arab population would revolt
independent states was considered not only democratically right but po
reached heights unknown until that time# Among some commentators it de
reminded Americansj
for Franc©, and were all th© more resentful towards the French government*
the Hation, for instance, found the solemn marches and counter-marches of
ment in th© lew York Times before Bastille Day, 1942* "Just an idea,
fell swing bat no on© thought that Russia could withstand the Nazi on
Germany would probably soon be free to turn against th© French Empire
th© Japanese, anger against th© Vichy government spread to all sections
when it learned that Vichy had invited” the Japanese government to Me-
tacked the American economic agreement with North Africa* uIf Vichy sur
sell oil to the Victor forces in North Africa? Do we have reason to think
that they will 'defend the Empire* there by tactics different from those
applied in th© Far East? let us turn to Syria for our answer.**1®
pers considered that the dismissal of Weygand was the result of German
Barian and Fuohsu agreed on "the need of getting rid of Weygand.” Retain
lgaIbid.
the German ambassador in Paris, used his influence against leygand but
one© more his pressure may have been the result of French intrigues a®
was very natural, however, in view of th© hopes his presence in Worth
Africa had raised in the American press. A Washington report to the Hew
significance of Weyganddismissal.
For some time now the possibilities that th® United States or
Britain might land an expeditionary force in North Africa to cooper
ate with General Weygand in a campaign that would eventually lead to
an Allied attack of th© continent from across the Mediterranean has
been freely discussed in the American press.
Robert I). Murphy • . • has been in North Africa, as have been a
number of United States 1observers*1 Thus, as cm© official stated
tonight, ’the democracies have again talked too much and done too
little in implementing their policies of war.1
This interpretation of th® events of th® day does not mean that
the Germans have abandoned their schemes to take over Casablanca and
Dakar . . . but for the moment there is little reliable evidence to
g?PP<»t ttw viaw that Vichy has gona aTl the m y over to the German
side or that This Germans are ready for their Casablanca drived 57
did not agree with this interpretation of the situation in Vichy. The
The great battle now raging in the distant desert between British
and Axis armies, and the capitulation of Marshal Fetain to Hitler’s
demands for the removal of General Weygand, must be viewed as closely
related events in the struggle for a continent. In the outcome of
that struggle th© United States had a direct concern^ for German
troops based at Dakar, opposite the bulge of Brasil would constitute
that "at this moment of writing, Hitler's armies are farther from London
than they are from Hew York* "3.39 According to Ingersoll, there were no
military obstacles between Hitler and America via Dakar while there were
armies on watch on the British coasts* These fears increased the Mew
York Times* conviction that the American efforts in Vichy were necessary
and useful.
For the liberals th© dismissal of leygand was one more proof that Ameri
and thus not worth the ideological cost of maintaining relations with
policy toward France "was being reviewed" and that the shipments to North
Africa were s u s p e n d e d , 3-41 This news was greeted with enthusiasm by the
M.,
mm mm * November 18,w 1941.
141Ibld.
22b
liberal pres® and many newspapers expected that severance of the diplo
matic ties with Vichy would follow* "On further consideration," wrote
the hesitations of the State Department were only m aspect of th® feud
between Cordell Hull and Sumner Welles, The latter had issued this press
first surrender, th© removal of Weygand from his African poet* Most
to enter a new phase. It is now known that this meeting was just as
fruitless as Montoire had been but there was then much anxiety in America
about the fate of French Africa and Dakar* According to the Hew lork
to have agreed that Germany can have all the Vichy naval and air
bases in North Africa. * * * Capitulation was the expected outcome
of the Goering-Petain conversations, the logical event to succeed
the *resignation* of General Weygand and th© natural parallel to
Vichy’s capitulations in th© Far East.
We should break relations with Vichy, oust the Vichy-Naai spies
from the country and accord full recognition and aid to the Free
French government. We should occupy French Guiana, Martinique and
Guadeloupe, thereby sterilising direct Nasi infection in this hemi
sphere* We should, if it is within our military power, seize
Dakar.3.44
before and after Pearl Harbor few American observers had time to bother
with the details of the French situation* But this did not prevent the
by th© fact that America was then at war with th© Axis*
Th® American attitude toward Vichy just before Pearl Harbor was
investigated by public opinion experts. They found out that only about
one American out of two had any vague knowledge of th® existence of th©
it would resist a German attempt to use th© French fleet against Great
of whether America should break off diplomatic relations with Vichy, the
Of those who had some knowledge of the French situation 48 per cent ac
were convinced that a complete break with Retain would be more useful to
the cause of the United Nations than new attempts to prevent Vichy
entrance into the war did not bring about a rapprochement between the
United States and General Charles de Gaulle1s Free French movement. Al
though th© Free French territories were included in th© Lend-lease pro
Free French of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, small French islands off the
coast of Newfoundland which were still under Vichy rule, created much
Africa, but it was only in accord with the American policy of dealing
with all local authorities in th© French empire and in no way constituted
recognition.
paired by the Riom trials, in which the government failed to prove that
responsibility for th© defeat of June, 19LG, lay solely with th© liberal
politicians who had preceded Vichy in power. The proceedings were fi
Petain appointed Laval prim® minister. This event led to Admiral Leahy’s
225
226
Th© American government did not help th® Free French force® in
their attempt to bring more French territory into th® war. In Marti
led the American government for security reasons to seek tighter mili
as the spokesman abroad of the French underground. Th© Free French move
ment then changed its name to that of Fighting France. On duly 3, 19h2,
this new situation was sanctioned by th® British government, which gave
the Axis* On July 9 th® American government, however, went only so far
II
^Se© p p.
227
Pacific had accepted his leadership and broken away from Vichy, but these
colonies were remote and had little strategical importance, then d© Gaulle
Th© term ‘'Radio general,*' was commonly used at the time.In Radio Goes
nature for th© role of Radio General* Ha has a genius for martial oratory
th© Fro© French movement owes its existence as much to the power of radio
During th© months which followed d® Gaulle made very little pro
gress in American opinion. It was only in the spring of 19kl that lib
19kl, th© New York Poet asked for “recognition” of th® Free French. The
America, who lived in France yesterday and throughout th© years, shall
and under the banner of Free Francs A public opinion poll, however,
taken in July, 191*1, revealed that only about one third of th© American
2
Current History, December 10, 19kG»
note, however, that the better Informed an American was, the more in
French people as a whole* The better informed Americans were, the more
suspicious they also were of Vichy fs policy* A total of 73*h per cent
of those who had heard of do Gaulle saw in him the real representative of
France* Only XO*ii per cent thought that Fetain could talk for the French
peopled A poll taken one month later showed that about Ih per cent of
Free French forces, and that only about 16 per cent were opposed to that
6
measure*u
organised in London* Cordell Bull noted in hi® Memoirs that ffthe British
view he had given to George Weller of the Chicago Daily hews. This inter
view was in fact a demand for direct American support* teller had quoted
tories and Pacific islands under Free French control ^without demanding
realised 11how badly this interview was received,’1 both In th© baited
9
States and in Britain, ”h© attempted to repudiate it.” Old school dip
France to the United States” was presided over by Adrien TiadLer, who had
The conversations between Rene Pleven and th© State Department resulted
in various economic and financial advantages for th® Free french. Every
Ill
Th© relations between th© Free French movement and the United
two small French islands off th® coast of Newfoundland. These two tiny
islands, whose small population was entirely French, were under the jur
whom the American State Department had juat signed an agreement guaran
The origin of the incident was the fear of the Canadian govern
ment that th© radio station on Saint Pierre might be used as a guide to
Admiral Robert on Saint Pierre could not be trusted, and the British sug
his Memoirs that he 'locked with something like horror on any action that
would bring conflict between th© Vichy French and the Free French or the
and a half and it turned out that no Frenchman on the islands was ready
opinion# The Americans were opposed to any solution in which the Free
French navy, who had been sent by de Gaulle to "inspect the Free French
and the population cheered heartily the sailors of Free France. There
^Xbld.
lgIbid.
Montreal and Ira Wolfer who cabled his story to th© Har York Tima?. "A
little less than half an hoar after the first sailor had jumped ashore
the islands had been secured in the military sense#^ The next day
there were elections and only one and a half p m emit of the population
They had been absorbed by terrible news for th© past eighteen days and
they were delighted to cheer any evidence that anyone on the Allied side
had actually don© something that was bold, adventurous and successful#”2^
American newspapers applauded the Free French gesture and war© ready to
forget it. Then th© State Department published a statement condemning th©
Free French action In the most sever© terms, and, as Waverley Hoot noted,
the effect was "to convert a on©~day newspaper story into a major inter
national incident, thus producing fatally by its own action, the very re-
22
suits which it blamed Admiral l-uselier for producing#" It was actually
impossible for the American press to interpret the bitter American note
th© State Department appeared more concerned with m$pty diplomatic forms
*^Eoot, The Secret History of the War, II, &+ 205* ”19 per cent
of th© ballots were InvSIdT" be¥a\ise tS^r were Improperly filled out or
illegible, 1 1/2 per cent in favor of collaboration with the Axis through
Fie^fl 79 1/2 per cent in favor of the'Free French#"
21
Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins, p. 181#
232
than with th© broader Issues involved in the Saint Plerr© incident.2^
the United State® and Martinique, the Monroe Doctrine, and the Havana
in and without the Vichy orbit* The not© issued by the State Department
mentioned that the islands had been occupied by "three so-called 11?©©
French ships which had landed m th© island” of Saint Pierre.2^ Ibis
"amused indifference.” Hull had been, until that time* "virtually ex-
esgjt” from the criticism directed against all th© other members of Presi
la his lesaolrs Hull gave the impression that Admiral Muselier’s quarrel
of having offended the American Secretary of States#2^ from that time on,
American attitude totrarcte the free French movement * As Hull put it him
self, "few actions that seemed so minor have ever aroused opposition that
could not believe that it was wise of the State Department to have so
French forces on Saint Pierre and Miquelon proved futile* Sherwood noted
accept any solution which would not have the consent of de Gaulle*
08
H&ll, Memoirs, p# 1129*
59Ibid., p. 1130*
3lIbid*
«Why this sudden reversal?® asked P»M* ffXn the first place the press,
thing* Only after the State Department*$ protest did it swing into line*
Hew York Post led the attack* In front-page editorials this paper de
manded that the #nullifiersw be swept out.*^ Samuel Grafton was °so hap
January 6, 19t2*
^^Ibid#
The Slew York Times tried to defend the State Department# Ann©
that
The St* Pierre affair cannot be considered apart from our policy
toward France a® a whole, and to criticize it as State Dqparfeent
policy is absurd to anyone who knows the f&et***«The fact Is feat
Washington lias hmxi fighting a delaying action in France as truly
as General l&cArtkur has h e m playing for time in the Philippines *
***lt may b© argued that our entry into the war changes our rela
tion to the United nations fighting Hitler, but our belligerency
does not diminish the necessity of waging diplomatic battles as
successfully as we can until we are ready for military battles*^
This article showed to feat an extent the incident had shocked American
of the Vichy policy who were puzzled by more ^appeasement# aright after
Pearl Harbor.
The final, result of fee Saint FieiTe-Miquelon affair was not fav
American liberals and all those who thought he was persecuted by the
gotten fee old diplomatic adage that it is dangerous to play little tricks
IV
State Department *s policy certainly did not help the Free French in this
task# Th© Christian Science Monitor, for instance, rmarked that "fee
political activity of fee movement has not measured up to its fine mili
tary achievements,** and that "th© amorphous political state of the Free
"For fee French, General d© Gaulle remains a brilliant general and a gal
which shall rise from defeat **^3 Liberal newspapers continued to fight
deal with," he was the only french leader fighting Oermqy. Liberals
^appeasement" of Vichy and that tills inexperienced diplomat had been up
Gaulle in the Pacific* In order to get bases against the Japanese, the
United States agreed to eo-oper&i© with the Free French in the defense
of the French Pacific islands* This was done very unceremoniously but
least * * • and a real slap at Vichy* Early in April, 19k2, the State
Africa*^ This was naturally done without consultation with Vichy# The
American press applauded the move* The New Tork &un remarked that
"the move was more than an ordinary step" as "shown by the statement in
k%bid.
meagre consolation for those who wanted to see the free French accepted
a full-fledged ally# tim fork Herald Tribune felt tlrnt »The an*
x m m m m t might be applauded politely If it could be considered to rep
An American fighting with the Free Franch in Africa, Hassoldt Davis, de
scribed in his bode Half Fast When his reaction aid that of his French
The United States had promised m m planes half a year ago, but the
policy of deliberate discouragement of the Fighting French was as
effective then as now* 1 begged in cables, broadcasts and articles
for essential material, but there m s no sign of m ? recognition of
our needs, except, finally, the posting of a consul to Br&m&ville#
'Oils cheered us somewhat3 it should have meant that American rela
tions with Vichy were at an end* It meant nothing ox the sort* It
was merely a preparatory move towards America *s using the French
Hobody denied that the situation relative to the Free French was
lamentable* but many people did not think that it m s only the result of
the State Department fs policy. Even Waverley Boot admitted in The Secret
History of the War that the Fro© French wore handicapped by political dis
?
During the spring' of 1$|2 American attention was also focused on
Vichy France. The long awaited political trials of French leaders had
cused of being responsible for the declaration, the conduct, and the dis
astrous course taken by the war in 1939 and Cementing upon that
living Age had predicted that "the trials at f&om* * ♦idll prove abortive*
and that# ,Tlike the Leipzig trials of the Oeman *war criminals* they will
Two***-^ The sensibilities of even those who believed that the mistakes
of the pre-war governments were responsible for the French defeat were
up its stag© show# but the French political prisoners were not forgotten
lowing telegram was sent to Leon Blum* the leader of the French Socialist
Farfcy*
When the trial finally began in February, 191|£, there was a new
that the trial would turn to the confusion of the accusers. According
He called treHec and said, °3end a cable t© Bill Leahy asking him
to tell Fctain that I want to get tfeto full transcripts of those Idem
trials from day to dsy*rt
Roosevelt did not core to wait until the end of the war to read
this interesting material*^
The Haw Republic could write in the w m of practically all. American ®pinr
the trials that "Slum w u H -be the leading spirit in the defense* Hie
spirit of France shone once more when Leon Blum facts! the court at the
62 It Boon became ap~
opening of the long^delajod H I ® war guilt trials ♦”
parent that the trial would not be a trial* The old contro
versy about the causes of the French defeat m s revived in the RLoei court
room and in American newspapers as well| but in 19&2 the voice of the lib
erals and of the defenders of the leftist wing in French politics was much
louder than it had been in IS%0* Regardless of the fact that they denied
the competence of the tribunal, since the defendants had been freely
elected by the French people, liberals and radicals accepted the challenge
could oppose to the modern conceptions of the Geraan General Staff only
the methods of Hie last war, The man who* sine® the death of Foch, was
the highest French military was not Daladier but Petain,1^ The nation
*.««*«***
Hatton,
mm *r
February 23, I9h2*
61
The ifar Republic, March 23, 19l*2•
these were the Bears't papers, In an editorial the Hear York Journal Amer-
The most remarkable thing about tills editorial wm that It looked at the
M m . trials, not even so much frara the Fichy point of view which was al
view. More than two months after Pearl, Harbor the Journal American as
sumed that «*w»r guilt* was on the democratic side, Commenting on this
Hew York paper who suggested that it was Pierre Cot’s duty to go to
6T h « H&tion, itercb 7,
9hh
respomibilitr*68
well for those who expected they would be a farce as for those who thought
they would prove the wgulltw of the Republican leaders * They regained a
aid accusers, in the attitude of the government toward them, but the
"The Third Republic never looked so good as it has under fire from its
s u c c e s s o r # *70 Even more important, for America at war, was the fact, ob
vious from the outset of ih© trial®, that the Vichy government did not
dare accuse Paladier and Eeynaud of being responsible for the outbreak of
^William Philip Simms in the New lork world Telegram, April 16,
1$*2 .
69Ibid.
70
Quoted in Laager, Our Vichy Gamble, p, 2b$*
2k$
those whose blase for the lack of preparation la at least
for let xm mot plead the M. m case In this roa^— se-ek scapegoats,
yet some last vestige of national pride on the part of the men of
?lchy prevents them £ t m rendering a verdict against France m be
half of Germany.71
commonly supposed** Bat this newspaper found, out that there **w&s little
Has&ism at the seme time* Thg lation concluded with other liberal news
resisting Mass! dictation just m the German courts did in the first years
the correspondent of the Hew Tosds Times, when the court adj©urmed— never
to- meet again— a little after Hitler *s public outburst against the pro
ceedings at Horn*
The original intention was to discover and punish the men nre
sponsible for the war,* which manifestly was in accord with Oera&n
desires. But by the time the court had gathered some hOO depositions
and had read ream upon re&ts of pleadings and attendant memoranda,
its terms of reference were limited to an investigation of unpre-
paredness. « . •
Defending counsel are the first to recognise that the court has
proved judicial and impartial although striving to remain within the
terms of reference [from Blumfs accession to power to the Armistice].
Judge Caoue, indeed, has succeeded in creating an atmosphere that has
set at res t earlier assumptions that everything at the trial was pre
arranged. * « •
The conclusion is unavoidable— it is not n w — that France was not
prepared for war, In numbers, in material, in doctrine and possibly
71
Address delivered by Dorothy Thompson at the French American
Club, March 9$ 19h2 (Coraminicatec? by the French Embassy).
?!
The Hiom trials dealt a serious blow to what was left of the pres
tige of the Pet&in regime. HO one was more conscious- of it than Detain
himself* and his anxiety over the German reaction to the trials was ap
parently the main reason for Laval’s return to power in April, 19it2. In
Our ?lchy Gamble, hanger accepted the current theory that Laval *s rein
statement as prime minister was the result of Gcsmn pressure, but he gave
himself had advised Laval wnot to re-enter the french government, but to
wait until peace had been made and real collaboration became possible*
Vichy leaders. Laval had sent his aon-inrlasr, Eon«S de Chamhrun, to Vichy
negotiations with Laval. If proof were needed that the return of Laval
was mostly due to the fear of the men of Vichy, the Goebbels diaries would
vations.*^ This remark would not have been made if France bad only
^Louis loehncr, ed., The Goebbels Diari.es (Hew York, 191*3), p. 36.
Entnror vkaimiliy S&, 19&&. ltUIcs**iEn©r"
m
to pleas© the Iteis that it did not ooa^letely alleviate Gernaan suspi
rumor heard by Leahy that f!Darlan, in order to foil .Laval, had reported
and that thereupon Hitler had decided to make the matter a teat of strength
between Germany and the United S t a t e s . I f this were true it would seem
was applied, and there was no American intervention before the interview
between Detain and Laval on Harch 25, which was: decisive# It would also
indicate that the main trump of Laval was the anxiety his name aroused
in Allied circles.
The fact that the Germans were interested in Laval only in view
76
Laager, Oar Vichy Gamble, p. 2W.
Laval appointment and the tt4&sost childish outburst of abuse” which sa
luted Laval** return to Paris*7^ «of course the French fleet will be
handed to Adolf Hitler,** affirmed the Salem (Mass*) Kve?d.ng Howsj^ and
and Madagascar, and he will control the Atlantic, the Mediterranean and
81
the Indian Ocean.**1 America*® leading newspapers were not more opti
mistic . "The days of ’Yichy France* are over,” announced the lew York
would have the most terrible consequences. «By today’s event Great
we can overcome only by the utmost energy arid resolution. He, and
in France, and they had been frustrated not by the French government but
lost any hop© of winning Franc© to his "Hot Order*0 Walter iJLppmann re*
cordeds
There has never been a time since the French armistice when Hitler
was unable to do what he has now done with laval. In European
France he has always been able to appoint the government * The
reason tihyr he has hitherto preferred the sanl-iodepeadesifc govern
ment of retain to an out-and-out Quisling government under laval
has been that he had much more to gain from the P^talm regime*
Mary newspapers accepted this theory that Laval r$ return 'ires a defensive
reaction on the part of Hitler* To the Toii: Times it was a proof that
This gave observers added reasons to hope* To the Balm (Mass*) Evening
the people of France against their Axis conquerors than in the enforced
8?
return of Pierre Laval to power*0 Halter Lippmann was even more
eight and their relief rrn® n m shared by many American newspapers of more
Toxic Herald Tribune that "the return to power of Pierre Laval in France,
Mirks the bankruptcy of a political line of action which never made sense
09
from the strategical viewpoint*" * Almost unanimously the American press
asked for severance of diplomatic relations with Vichy* "Laval and the
men about him will only represent maggots# spawned first in corruption
and now poisoning the wounds of France* Can the United State©# officially
Even the tlcw Toxic Times began to advise the government in favor of a rap
ture of the diplomatic ties between Vichy and Washington* "It becomes
88
Hew fori: Herald Tribune, April 16, 19kZ»
2%
0*^
break off these relations**'*’ Ike Times became even core positive,
quence of Laval % return. The Hew York Post published a triua^iant edi
Ibis satisfaction became so noisy that Freda Klrchwey thought good to re
mind 5*thoss of us who havw insisted since the fall of France that retain
’test beware of talcing an easy satisfaction In his downfall and the immi
her past record, she insisted, that % e must leave it to Laval to make the
9*3
break that will put the final touch to M s stupendous unpopularity,11 ?
tent Americans, including the liberals, believed that Hitler wanted the
French float and Ai'rieaa bases* From Freda Kirehwey’s pen these words
'for a long time the ISaais have desired to get rid of the American
Esabassy to unoccupied France* They are disturbed by »As®riean inr*
finance,partlcitlaxly the moral suasion o f Admiral. Leahy, ?$iieh
they hold responsible for the non-cooperative attitude of Marshal
Detain* , * * ■ It is true that the American mission in Vichy— of
which this ra&y mrk the m drrm zk not only a valuable observation
post but mi ©ncouragoaent to -opposition, .tt is clear that the Gejv
jaans are deters&ned to force us to recall Admiral Leahy*^5
Leahy* The very harsh note handed. Ambassador Heroy-lfaya by Sumner Well.es
Halifaxs
called home, but we're still on speaking terms with vichy," Demands
nothing but M e d forces has worked in this war* It lodes like the time
of tha state Department with the quick decision of five French embassy
attaches in Washington.*
Hear Orleans States claimed that 11For this courageous stand the people
of free America applaud them,*1 and this newspaper mad© the optimistic
and hazardous guess that wlf Ambassador Henry-Haye himself made known
13, 1S4-2, a note had been sent to Vichy amomcing American recognition
clared in a press conference that the French rejection could not be ac
Germans for approval# This Welles- denounced m Hh© most amassing fact11
98See p. 27U.
"P.M., April 17, 1&2.
^ S e e p.'?'2>7''
2a
tions with ficby whan its relations with ue are filtered through Berlin
The impression that too much lac© hangs In the State Depart
ment*© parlors is heightened by our M u unwillingness to take
Martindqae, Guadeloupe, Mtotisgftacar, and other Vichy French bases,
• » *Wr* h m X has knocked the chip off our shoulders, he has
crossed the line drawn in the dirt, he has made faces, he has
pulled our sister’s hair* But the State Department*® reaction
(as piped out to reporters in «dopew stories) Is that Mr* Laval *8
speech w m about England, not about * * # This sissy reac
tion opens the whole question, whether our State Department is
equipped to lead us diplomatically through a period of offensive
warfare
Liberal newspaper® were not the only ones m m to join the anti-fichy
again we ©ay that Admiral 'Leahy, to come home, ought to slam the
door and not leave the place in charge of a ^career diplomat,**
faint of heart*
ire would like the site to be so loud that it would echo
through France and reinforce w M t the President told them and us
when he saidj
»Tha United Nation© will take measure©, if naoaasary, to pre
vent the us© of French territory in any part of the world for
military purposes by the lads powers*^/
that .Laval was intriguing to h m e the United States coj&imie it® nap~
^tho thieves fall out#”^ Maty people wore inclined to think that the
whole affair was on® more 00i » maneuver and no proof of an independent
with the -aid of any bought French loader, w e n Laval, and are therefor©
Americans expeeted him to take drastic steps to satisfy the colonial re
American outlook on the Gemaa policy towards the French aspire* When
^Ibld., I, p. It5l.
110
Freda Kirchwey, The Hatton, April 25, I$j2.
he algfct be deposed and hie Job be given to some store aealoue collabor
achievemmts, and the supporters of Petain had admired the general for
scapegoat for all the evils of fichy* th e liberals, who had staked their
hopes on the resistance of the French people, had less fear because they
which Hitler’s efforts to take Dakar had been checked, the liberal theory
was probably' the only one to have ease factual support* Hitler would
probably not have hesitated to take Dakar, Biserte, and other bases if he
had needed them but his legions were busy in Russia and Hitler w m too
sions sufficed for that ml* lb® defense of his policy which Laval wrote
Laval was undoubtedly vexy eager to prove that, like everybody else, he
had 'always secretly worked for the French and the Allied cause* He never
only explanation for tills silence is that the Gexmms never asked for It*
of Hitler*a frustration* and it® main cogency reside! in the obvious fact
that a war which was pictured m a war of the people against Fascism
should have enrolled the help of all enemies of Fascism and tried to open
as ®any eyes as possible to Its evils* liberals contended that the main
vinee the French that they should pray for a Gorman victory and accept a
Hie best I can make of our current policy is that we insist the
French people shall rise in revolution, but not against their gov
ernment* * * -
Hew can the French people revolt against the Ihsia without re
volting against Laval* their agent, and against the cloudless
Petain? How can they sake an omelet without breaking those eggs?
At this point we always get back to the famous French fleet*
Fe have to centime to behave strangely in Vichy, -the argument goes,
to keep the French from giving their fleet to Hitler. This means we
think the French fleet is more Important than the Freadh revolution*
But Hitler thinks the French revolution is more important than
the French fleet* * * * Hitler let® the fleet alone, to sustain
Vichy *s prestige, and we sustain Vichy*® prestige in order to save
the fleet. 2.16
One of us must be taking a hell of an Ideological beating.
has»
icy which, since Laval’s return to power, had boon attacked by a great
but they produced little effect because they did not constitute a real
answer to the liberal charges, the real nature of which they seemed to
ignore* The defense of the Vichy policy which "deserve® the most re™
spcctf^18 and produced the meet effect was that of Admiral Laslsj when ho
American policy by his "high personal regard* for Detain, hut the ■liber-*
als answered that Detain was powerless* He repeated that Vichy was the
only means thereby the United States could keep contact with the French
people, but the Itm York Herald Tribun© noted that it was "difficult to
France’s oppressors can reassure the French people that they will eventu
reason for xwcognifilhg Vichy," the Kerr York Herald Triune suggested that
na H the recent <mtpourlnga about France may have been attempts to dispel
sdttee, also came out in favor of the State Department’s policy and, ig
with Vichy" in order to enlist the support of the French people in mili
speech was made at the time when de Gaulle was successfully concluding his
policy toward France, argument which was restated by Longer in (£r Vichy
Gamble when ho said that Adrslral Leahy’s presence in Vichy "gave aid and
would-be spies, but once discovered these might have been useful as
well, Sometime® X would feel genuinely mrry for thm* especially
the .young ones* They had offered their services in apparent sin
cerity, only to he turned d m m coldly* I think we might have been
a little more kindly to these youths, even though a strict inter
national m d m m snore severe Immigration regulation® prevented us
from accepting their services* 1 could Imagine the weeks of self-
torment some of these young fellows must have gem through before
deciding to risk all and place themselves at our disposal* Aid
then, after so momentous a decision, it must have been a cruel dis
appointment ia the great America, HArsenal of Democracy,n to be
turned «my»^26
Hates for the future Ph.D. >et When the time comes to write the
books about this struggle, none of the subtler facts should be over-
looked, and so I invite the attention of scholars of 1S$Q to a cu
rious circus®'toco* fcfitMs the last fortnight, tm prominent
Americans, Admiral Leahy and Senator Tom Connally, have advocated
continued recognition of the Laval government in America* And last
week, the sane 'two gentlemen put up a hot fight before the Senate
to continue the battleship-feuiHing program* * * *
If© now have it on record that Leahy* who started out m aa old-
school admiral, winds up as an old-school politician, while GonnaHy,
who started out as an ©Ici-school politician, shews signs of devol
ving rapidly into m old-school admiral, , * « Warn we find the
$ m e two gentlemen in th© opposition on both plane, desperately
fighting, against change, political or mechanical, searching for the
key to victory among their souvenirs, clutching the tattered remnants
of the world that was, saying to both the aroused people of France
md to the aroused designers of modern weaponsi "Keep quiet, you 2n
we are entitled to state the fascinating parallel and let its o m
victims explain it away as they can#^7
to the closing of French factories, to the new wave of' unrest which swept
•k^Dashtell,* »«»!.—
Victory. » iim
tlnmgh Africa, pp. 223*»2£U.
l m i ' iK . n w * *
Tribune had charged that ?tea was a *Vichy 3py," but without result. This
time the paper charged that he was gathering military1information for the
Axis **3! These attacks did not achieve any result, however, on the diplo
matic relations between Vichy and Washington* During the whole summer and
fall of 19li2, the campaign against Vichy continued# In its November issue,
The Atlantic Monthly wondered once more? TWtll the Germans move into Feat
Africa and what will such a move do to relations between the tJ.ni.tef.! States
and Vichy.
vrt
At the time of Lava! *s return to power, relations between the Free
been held between the representatives of M Gaulle and the State Depart
influenced by the State Department, which showed very clearly that America
did not look with favor upon any extension of the Free French movement *s
fighting front® who feel the only worthwhile objective at the ttwaxt i©
to continue the battle' for F M freedom*"1^ The Mew fork Time© to*
nouneed that there had hem "signs of deterioration within the FTm French
delegation here in WasMngfcon • One report declared that the State De
partment had called upon General do Gaulle to "put hi& house in order*
Hie Free French are getting the rawest deal of any group asso
ciated with the United Nations in this war* • * *
The Free French would ha even more powerful today, both inside
France end out, if it were not for the policy tendon ant Washington
have felt obliged to follow since the Franco-German arsdstict * * •
The Free French h a w been the victims o f a systematic sniping
campaign ever since the State Departsant’s famous reference to the
"so-called" Free French at the time Admiral isusalier occupied St
Pierre and ISiquclon.136
The State Feparbneit had expressed, the desire to see fee basis of
the Free French movement broadened* On this point Secretary of State Hull
declared;
This desire to make the Free French movement more representative and the
return of' Laval to power* The first m m ® put forward as a possible French
of Pierre cot*^ did not get as much publicity because his name was really
In some circles it was pointed out that Got and Qhautemps were not
the only Frenchmen to have been sounded out. Alexis Leger, the anti-ap
revolutiom*
by the friction which took place in lew Caledonia* Hews stories r©~
ported that -do Gaulle had appointed two governor© in that Pacific is
averted**^ Finally, both governors had left the island and there w m
with the existing state of things*^ The liberals did their best to
l W XMd.
the fight between the State Itaparbsgent and the Board of Economic v/ar-
fare* or the ©seeMnge of cospllmenia between Mayor la Guar&la and Dean
XaaJia.OM lAberiOa did not afaayo agree, hewwer, in their intarpi-G-
t&tiorn of the events* Waverley Boot was fell of praise for Admiral
Thierxy d^rgenlieu* the Free French military colander and said that
the friction was "typical of that v&ieh often arises when a civil and
that the popular dm&ncl in the United States for a complete rap
ture and for -out-and-out recognition of de Gaulle and the Free
French movement should have grown apace. The two demands usually
went hand in hand and seemed to many American liberals and radicals
to be logical counterparts
Once again the lew York Post proposed a n m policy toward Free France*
these were the very promises which de Oaulle in London m s then making
which coincided with the Free French feat of arms at Bir Aeheim In
Eighth Army held up the attack of tanks for sixteen days* Mb-
era! newspapers were afraid that the Free Fronch movement would not be
included in the parade which was to march in Hew York on June 13* A
Harvard alumnus wrote to the Boston Herald to express his criticism for
the ©mission of the French flag in the display of United nations color®
m coMamcement days
It stru c k at. least one aluarns m shocking that itdle thus rep
resenting our solidarity with a good many nations which are only*
up to the present* rnm im lly in this war* Harvard University should
have* on a mere technicality* failed to honor- one of our most gal
lant allies* the Free French forces, who that very day were de
fending with their life blood the strategic lybian forts of Bir
Aeheiia.W
On that vexy day# Secretary of the Wavy Frank Knox mad© an address to
Herald Tribune# explained the basis of the faulty Mexican policy towards
France* **Do you k n m any people anywhere#* asked the Secretary of the
Navy# ^wh© are fro© because somebody made them, fre@; is not freedom in
its true sense# something which must he wtrn and maintained by those who
et^oy itfd&t
to meet the requirements of Secretary Knox and liberate their country with*
out outside help but they were doing their vexy b m % in the Libyan desert#
To some people the Bir H&cheim episode w m only part of the cCUnrer Free
of Bir Acheiau” He turned the battle #16 days of the most blistering and
mender# General X&chtie# who told him that "The resistance of the French
garrison there has appealed to our chaps * :!imagination# anti they have
taken. the Free Preach under their idngs*l! Blehtie ehwed Hill the French
Horth Africa how twice he tried to drive "dam tlaero and see this great
tiling if only from the outside# Bach time I was headed off in the per
Bir ACheim had a favorable influence on the cause of Free France* The Hew
was not injured when Free french troops fought bravely though vainly,
Incursion in the forbidden political field, the now Torts Herald Tribune
replied that de Geallefs statement was Apolitical in the sense that the
Times, which was becoming raore favorable to FTce France wary day, ven
tured a prophecys r,The day when &© faulted France will take full rank
Science Monitor felt that %©- more appealing statement of war -alms has
cm® f r m any of the United Hattons than that issued. * *by General de
french movement. Wendell t»» Wlllkie made a public address at the opening
heads, risked all to follow him.1* On the occasion of the French National
Holiday on Bastille Bay, General l&eArfchur was one of those too sent mesK
sages to de Gaulle. ttSome things can never die* One of those is- Free
tHSortaXIty-."1^
the Free French a full-fledged ally and of breaking with Fichy. But only
56 p m cent of ih® popu3& tion claimed they knew vfoe de Gaulle wm* Among
these, eight m3, three-tenths p m cent could not give any coherent explan
ation of his role and six: per cent thought that the Free Frisch were the
their government dealt with the Free French or with the flchy government
headed by Laval# 32*1 per cent answered that America dealt with the Free
French, 1*8*2 per cent answered that America dealt with Tidiy, only two and
two-tenths per- cent answered that it dealt with both# nevertheless, the
dealt with Fiehy— M *2 per cent-^and the number of those who thought that
this government should deal with ?ichy--X2*8 per eeafc-*was a clear indica
tion that the press campaign had created a rather widespread criticism of
America did not want to discuss long-range political issues. This move
Memoirs, p* 1 X62 #
17W
2ft
had been made imperative by the broader fom of recognition granted by
the British on Jb2y 3*^^ Ibe British action Itself was an acknowledge-
neni of the agrsostfmt between anti-H&si metropolitan Franc® m3, the Free
French movement* Secretary of State Hull did not realise the rbnportance
of tide agreement bat noted In his Memoirs that ttIt became apparent to m
[at the State pepartmont] that larger sepsents of the- French population
wrere rallying to de Gaulle than before #w3*7S yhe American gesture was
even granted to this action an importance which it did not have in the
eyes of the State Department officials* For Walter fdpptmm# this recog
nition was % o mere diplomatic gesture n&lch ha® little practical military
was a sign that United States strategy was getting bolder and shifting
from the defensive to the offensive, tte implying that de Gaulle would
seemed that the growth of the Free French movement wm mm xtod by the de-
cadence of the Laval regime and that smooth sailing was assured until the
liberation of France*
Fill
evident, during the summer of 19hOf that the State Department was opposed
17W
17tfew Too* Herald Tribune, July 17, 15*1*2.
2n
Negotiations were initiated between the French admiral and the envoy o£
fe&fce,"*?® and the planes which "could have been used in the defense of
Britain against Coring#s air arcada rusted assay Liberals were some—
case to consider the attitude of their government toward the Vichy colony
of the French colonies which -wuaXd have starved without supplies, from the
ically, Jlartiniquc was as much tlie prisoner of tho united States as Vichgr
was of Ccmsmy. Haay newspapers, however, had toned down their recrimi
nations . As far as? planes and gold were concerned, "The United States
©Emphatically wants neither plan® nor gold to reach either Vichy Franc©
or flaai Oeraany."1^0
Alford, chief of tho Washington bureau of tho Kansas- City Star, noted;
hands i® a Hasi base" and warned that It could "be used for wholesale
liberals, was to hand the French Antilles over to de Gaulle# When support
of de Gaulle became almost fanatical, the main issue, which was supposed
itely, hopes by this offer to torpedo French resistance and destroy Gen
been reached regarding Martinique* Ho details were given but this accord
the French naval and air force® there shall not fall into Q « M n
taida*lSb v
Texy disturbing, however, for ‘t o general American public was the re
ican opinion* The Hew Xoxk Daily Hews thought that the presence of Laval
at the head of the French govenraeat made it imperative for the Halted
advised the State Department "not to try to bind fate® Americans by any
Martinique problem the liberal and the uXtrarconserv&tive press were al
most in cosg&ete agreement* The only difference between the Daily Mem
and the lew Toxic Post was that the latter envisaged action on the part of
x86X b M », p* 255.
X8?Hew Toxk Daily Wms, April 10, I9h2.
x®%©w Toxk Poet, Uagr 2, 1$*2#
editorial einrioasly deviated from the M e Oaulle line*1which wag
The United States government was act ready to- go- that far* Admiral
John Em Hoover aid Samel Eeber, assistant chief of the State Departments
faree-iragedy is- reaching its end***^®' Moat newspaper took for granted
that the negotiations had been initiated by Admiral Robert* The Herald
Tribune believed that the occupation of Madagascar might Ml&rify the facts
have done so for Admiral Robert* fives the If&tlon believed that this
newspapers made it clear that terieans would not- be satisfied with as
surance© that Martinique would remain neutral. A cartoon of the Hew York
1 ? 1 Xbld.
that Martinique would not be used against th® Allies**^ The Mm York
would bet
American policy had remained unchanged. At the e»3 of June demands for an
immediate occupation of the islands again became rmierms* The Hew York
view of Fierro Lavalhs essprotsod hope of an Axis victory and his co
Henri Olraud to whom was intrusted the task of rallying the population to
their allegiance to the Vichy government and ordered the French North Af
rican troops to resist. Admiral Jean Barlan, the ccRB&aa&er of all Ylehy
through him that General Mark Clark, deputy supreme ccsaaaader of the Allied
the United State© and Q e m m troops had crosses! the armistice demarcation
line into unoccupied southern France* Parian vainly urged the French
fleet to leave Toulon for the North African harbors, but the ships were
he argued that Retain wag now In German hands and was therefore not free
277
278
Pierre Boisson of French West Africa soon joined farces with Parian* But
unchanged*
who load already brought part of the Freneh m p iro into the war, had not
fused, however, to negotiate with Parian* All necessity for such xmgp~
/
ti&tlon was m&&& on Deeasabor 22** X$*2, when Parian was assassinated by
11
The landings in Africa did not come m a surprise even to the jaost
impressed by the fact that the shortest passage across the Atlantic
from the eastern to the western hemisphere is fr m Dakar to the
bulge of Brasil, Meric$m in 1^2 becsas© DaksrKsonsclous * The
nsa© of this port of West branch Africa was never mentioned in the
press or on the air without the remnder that it was the jussping-off
point for an attack m the Americas
l
Hoot, The Secret History of th© Dar, I, p. £8G*
w
United States should enter the war* The American consulate in Dakar was
recessed after the French defeat and consul Thorns Wasson arrived tore
activities***^
from that time until after t o Allied landing In North Africa* nu~
boasting that North Africa would soon be connected to Dakar by this stra
tegical line which would facilitate tho "defease of the %>ire" increased
American fears * Many saw behind these plans the hand of Germany* Dakar
could also be used— was already used* some thought— as a submarine base
and could naturally became the springboard, for much more ambitious plans*
2
Danger, Our Vichy Gamble, p. 55.
And if Egypt £&lX©"-ssiake no id®take about it, tho shadow of the Dark
t*
Continent will reach the Andes #t?;> In January* 1$$, Paul M* Atkins wrote
in the -Saturday Svaning Post about ITThe sjysrfcexy of Bakar*fl In his opinion,
"recent events have made clear 'that the Gersians wouM like to secure thin
important base and soon# the pressure which Germany is, at this writing,
Qom an penetration in heat Africa# Even in forth Africa tho German aanofc*
7
stice commissions wore chiefly interested in jxilice and economic problems*
£
hanger tsr&od this Ctcrsnan Inactivity a "curious thing *n * It was curious
very serious view of the E&kar thimt, especially at the time of Darlas1#
negotiations with the Ctexss&ns. On April 2L, l$tl, Secretary of the Sfeyy
Thm Basis have the armed power' at any moment to occupy Spain and
Portugal! and that threat eactends not only to French Berth Africa
and the western end of the Mediterranean, but also to the Atlantic
fortress of Dakar, and to the Islands outposts of the Bear World--
the Asores and the Cape Verde Islands* Hie Cape Verde Islands are
only seven hours -distant from Brasil by bomber or troop-carrying
planes* They dominate shipping routes to and from the South At
lantic* Hie war is approaching the brink: of the Western Hemisphere
itself* It is earning very close to
lass than three months later. Secretary of War Stimson roe^hasised the
Germany has been pushing into North Africa and m have season
to believe that a major advance will be made by her into feat -con
tinent* At Dakar, which is held by Vichy forces, now friendly wife
Germany, th© great western bulge of the African coast arrows the
South Atlantic ocean until the distance .from Dakar to the easierar-
most point of Brasil c m be easily traversed by air or sea*^
think that fee West African port would be chosen as the first target for
over WABC on October Ip, 19t2, William L, Shirer discovered certain signs
suggesting that West Africa would become America *s second front instead
■^lioosevelt %
n fireside feat on May 27, 19^1, H«r fork Times,
lay 28, 19hl*
12
August 15, l$il, in laager, Our Vichy Gamble, p# IB?.
French possessions there wore protected” by the German airforce and the
Italian' mvy* The most likely place wm thus Dakar in spite of Its r&~
the Free French operations in Idkya to show that desert warfare offered
many possibilities* In the Henr lotic World Telegram William Philip $l»®
blow," he wrote* "would hardly begin at Dakar* hitherto virtually the only
seemed to prove that the United Nations strategy m s getting bolder and
that the long chain of defeats and failures would finally be broken.
HI
The diplomatic and intelligence work which had preceded the land
ings in Horih Africa got' wide publicity Immediately after the opening of
claimed that the landings had been made possible by the work of the State
17
Department# He claimed that the preparation of future operations In
Africa had b&m the first concern of the State Bepartansait in its dealing®
take this claim seriously# Vteyo-ne who wishes to believe that the State
precipitated xm into- tho war* foresaw the north African Invasion of two
ami a half year® later* and tailored it® policy with that objective in
17a
mind may do so* * * *?l nevertheless, Demarco Bess, almost one year be
fore the landing®* published in fee Saturday Evening Post an article which
their intervention may have been* military and diplomatic observers were
really ©cut to Tlorbh Africa with the idea that it could someday become a
the .French to change sides* After the "Darlim deal** h w m r * tho liberal
gnestlon the political abilities of the State Department envoys and of the
mission to Churchill near Algiers' on October 23» l$k2* The first account
20
was an Associated Press dispatch dated Sorafeer 13* These stories gave
the impression that American authorities were in close touch with a vast
which Involved many leaders of the I t e h any* Iffig o r noted in Our fichy
tine* They contributed, however, to the false Idea of tloith African opin
of these reports, to realise that the Irenchaen who were hostile to Ger-
aa3y French military leader who took part in this affair was Osnoral wmt*
As hanger pointed out, "The French officer corps fait strictly hound by
its oath to Fetain and ooqplfttely blotted all those, like Oeneral Mast,
22
who had had dealings with the Amaadcam**
underground were not open to debate. The easy occupation of Algiers was
If Birphy had tried to work only with elements opposed to the Yiehy regime
the struggle for control of iforth Africa by the Allies mi^ht have turned
into a political and a social revolution, Many liberals did not $m&
averse to 'taking that risk^ but the supporters of the official United
States policy answered that the military situation made ouch a course im
that Hh© rank and file of the population disarmed and disorganised as
however, lost srnch of their practical value because of the suspicious at
titude of the Americans toward, their French partners * This distrust was
noted by mr® than one obssrv&r*®^ L&nger worded that ^American lack of
Frl.ce attributed the change in the date of the landings to the fear that
The Allied General staff were growing uneasy about tee fact teat they
had h e m obliged to take the irsatfc patriots into their confidence.
They could not tear to what eictent tee German- Jntellige&ce Gerrie©
in Algiers had succeeded in getting access to their secrete# Dy thus
advancing tee date of tee arrival of tee Allied troops, they hoped to
dislocate any am&ngemerrte the Q eim m might have .made to cope with
a landing on hoveeber 2?te*33
27Ibid.
28
Pendor, Mventere in Bfpfeycy, pp* 96-971 Susie©! Eliot Morison,
Operations in l^orte'lkfrieTm iffieSS'1'(Boston, 19U7), P* 66*
on
''linger, Our Vichy Gamble, pp. 330-331*
*^Pric@, Giraud and the African Scene, p, 103#
28?
kepi ana both had been made m m m o f the strength of the force© that were
Xf
The American government had realised long before the Morth Airi-
can landing© that the central problem ■of i'raaco-Aisaerican relation© in the
period which would follow the liberation «tf north Africa and. precede the
natural* since de Ga&H© had hmm® fa u n a for rebelling against the armi
stice government and had succeeded in rallying around him vast areas of
the French inspire which were ©miimiag the fight on the Allied ©id©* Al
though some superficial, observers did not even realise that de Gaulle had
been ’built up* by the British radio and financed by the British Troas*
fitted1' for north African purposes * "He was a military man and the French
for at leant two generations had distrusted military men as national load*
and America since the Saint Pierre and Hiquelon incident?^ were not sur
prised to see that de Gaulle had been "forgotten*5 in the preparation of the
Forth African operation* Obviously Secretary of State Bull had never for
given the Free French leader for this incident* Kaay a&mpapers and col*
America's Bbrth Africa policy* recalled this incident as a reason for the
the subsequent protest over American policy on this there were tether
over sonK popular french figure who could enroll the support of the nfc»
such a leader*^ lie refused to leave JYaacoi**® but perhaps the liopos of
the government were not corjpletdy blasted, m m after the fa4d.au agree
of Oirand in Barth Africa, that ho had been chosen because there 'was so
learned that Gir&ud had accepted.*^ It & m m 9 however, that, except for
Harriot, the American search for a French leader was strictly limited to
military circles* Ibis was naturally due to the fact that French troops
in north Africa were the big problem before the landings. Amartcm Charge
d*Affsires S. Ftjtasy- ftsete m s the first on© to suggest to the State De-
partsieot that Glrsrnd might be the mm of the hour# Soon after the latter1®
was also welcome to the Americans involved in the planning of the llorfch
the Ilorth African operation with the help of a classical diplomatic pre
There had been no fctbb about the reality of the Iasi* breaches
of the french arts&aiic© treaty or Laval's toleration o f them; nor
Is there any doubt about the Imminence of Mas! m o of french Afri
can facilities for the greatly altered war in the Mediterranean and
m the high sea®.
of the war# Fortunately, the french learned about the invasion from
Booeevelt himself, but, as seme observers pointed out, the Allied cause
tion was the desire of the French people to get rid of their oppressors.
Cmricusly enough, the most nationalist element® in the United States did
not react violently against the attitude of the French emtfnders, BoguSs
sdlitaay %hmty that akrnmrn required resistance on the part of the French
This military outlook which placed discipline above everything else may
m the fact that the war began in Morth Africa with the Allies fighting
the French and not the Germans* He -called the French #the enosor* and gave
while inspecting the Morece&n cavalry, he showed some concern for the
tiles. Koberb Sherwood lamented* "For the ’honor1 of the Vichy govern
have landed with the shock troops because he "hadnever wanted to see a
%bM.
Cli
Sherwooda Roosevelt and Hopkins# p, %$>
m
fight between Moriomm arid Frenchmen**® Waiting ©IX the African coast
me* *SomepXae© where resistance has ceased,1 I told him* 'Thai estab
cupied with tli© progress of the landing operations* there was practically
Algiers was a hopeful sign, but fighting continued at Oran and m the
old lady.*®' Sver/oody knew wife the Baltimore Bua feat the great
question was
whether those who apeak for Fmnce in North Africa will join
General Girand and others® ±n talcing full advantage of the op
portunity which prSSEmliself. If they do, there will be more
reason than ever to hope that the rigors of the extended occupation
of metropolitan France will be of limited duration.®
observer© had ceased to think that the Vichy regime would crumble at the
first appearance of the United nations flag©* Many people suspected that
fftf
^J.ebling, The Road Back to Pari©, p. 213*
5^ b M .
Baltimore mmamnamb
Sun, Swasher 12, 1S&2.
?>8
Italics mine. These two word© showed that many people thought
d© Goullft would have aanabfcing to do in the North African operation.
<o .
Baltimore Bun, November 12, I9ii2*
29k
Walter U pgm m g it wm "evident that the real test of' our diplomatic and
political preparation lies not behind us, hut ahead of u«uH^ This too
an answer to Secretary of State Ball’s claim that the Vichy policy had
Walter lippman continued, f,is whether the decisions have been taken and
the preparations made for the situation ifeioli now edsts m a result of our
mam* The occupation of the Vichy territory by Gexmay and the lose of the
Sate dispatches m m announced that Fetain was on hie way to the Allied
headquarters in forth Africa*^ It was felt that the political vacuum thus
of December which was- obviously at press when the m m of the Darlan agree*
6llhM.
¥1
dean Dorian was the '"prisoner* of the Allied forces*^ She nsrt day it was
hostilities & On Ifovestber llj. the nevrs that Harlan had bean chosen as the
head of the French administration in North Africa was imparted to the Amer
in Journey into War, described the effect it had on these people* «te
were dmbfounded* ’Hie story was something out of Alice In Wonderland being
told, not by a Mad flatter, but by an apparently sane and collected American
We bad come to liberate forth Africa# We wondered what the French would
however, wrote a story which insisted upon rthe realistic view" taken by
^■fhe Atlantic
.
nijiw iwuw
llonthly, December, 191$, p, k*
..... mmw>iBwwi,ifnwn^Wai>i **
Parian bappmod to be in Algiers at the timo of the landing, %ad been en
tertained with all the ccusideratiojas due to his rank," and had given a
cease-fire order to the French troops* this was enough to convince the
How Yoxk Thscs that the State ’Dcpartiaent bad prepared everything before*
In the same newspaper, StMa L* James was already preoccupied with the po
was Mimch too early to d m any definite conclusions * The situation has
to develop *n^
the landings* ■It was soon explained that his presence was due o:ly to
chance and that the agye&aent entered into with liim had not been premedi
72TbM,
to justify t o arrangement with him* C* Ward Price wot© in Giraud and the
tive1* and Price was sure that the m m of the landing cmm m a ^shattering
ascribed t o rmaors that Parian. %ners and that Murphy % xm that the ad
flmed de Kerillis, who had %ad the opportunity to consult the best soursos
C* Butcher, who was specific on this point in M s diary, Jgr Three Years
series that the latter was ready to change sides and bring over t o amay
was, after all, commandoi^tochlef of all French forces— land, sea, and
air— and his authority over the fleet was unqueEtioned, Linger admitted
^Prlc©, *
Gftraeud and the African Scene, p* 123*
i in*mii]iMHttni*i|M 1 rnvmm .•*■ « •*« » ww»hw»i*>« IIiii-ii m m vmwma *
of the French ttn&ergro^ and General Mast that ,!Darlan mm dropped from
ment with Parian,^ and t a n d believed HSmt if such, charges were true
the fact would hare become erMent long since, no matter h m powerful or
go
cOBprahensiv® the atteapta to suppress ii*« Apparently there was m
formal charge in American newspaper© that the Harlan deal" was premedi
did not even know that there wouldbe an Invasion of North Africa* Sbe
attitude#
78"'" ” '
^ m n . , p. 3t5.
Qf\
““Sherwood, Koogwelt and Hopkins, p. 61(8.
that the presence of Dorian in forth Africa was on© acre proof of the wis-
So
dom of this institution* IMs claim was quickly draped# In v i m of the
They did not dare follow the principle of wmilitary ©jspedisricy” to its
logical wdrmtm and ultimately denied vigorously that Barlsm had been ap
proached before the landing* They even denied that Parian had approached
The vigor of their denials clearly demonstrated that the would have dis
at the head of liberate forth Africa# They justified the Darlan appoint
ment by stating that it wm an improvised solution which had been made nec
essary by the dangerous political and military situation which had devel
oped at the time of the landings*®* This confession was ©rfcsmely sur
ftooseyglt and Hopkins used the papers of Harry Hopkins * who had no sympathy
landing at a time when the success of the operation was still in doubt*
who were practically immune to criticism in war time* 0a the other hand*
Hi® people who defended Hie Harlan appointment were those who had approved
the Vichy policy* They had praised to tbs sides a policy* the result of
which should have been to suppress the obstacles which made the ”te©poraiy
ITasi puppet but they had criticised violently a policy which* according to
sity* and they had to accept the tosporaiy amngoaent which prevented a
collet® political vacuum in Barth Africa* This e^lalaed why there was
Samuel Grafton said over WOE that ”0nr comanclere in the field were justi
fied in using Harlan to shorten combat and save American and. French lives*
Most people believed that the arrangement was merely tc^orury* nfhe rea
sons for this- rather unexpected decision on the part of the United States
are obvious,n wrote Egon Kaskelilne in Hie Christian Science Monitory "French
armed forces in Uorth Africa and probably part of the fleet are stall fol
* * .the people who had mistrusted his Vichy policy were bewildered. by
decided Roosevelt to sake & public statement in which he pointed out that
the arrangement was purely temporary and. did not engage the future of
Franca in any manner* The president also assured Americans that the United
thing like this 5 child* you are permitted in time of great danger to
walk with the devil until you have crossed the bridge* Tills statement
isfactions
Idppssaan decided a little hastily that In "this unplamed, but wisely im
Africa#" He concluded with a plea that the Third Republic1© laws be re
The fears of The fcr header were also allayed 'by the President*s
statmmt*
after the Parian deal became public* came out with violent attacks against
The main argument advanced against Barlan was th e effect his name
which the do Gaulle movement had acquired support among Frenchmen inside
92
Hew Xork Times* Hwcmber 18, 19h2.
achieved in, spite of American policy and that the n m developmeiits aster*
gored this unity so p& ±pl\dly achieved* In his opinion, the Parian ap
of the official policy, In Bad-: Door to Berlin# Woe Gallagher remxtesd that
bright hand in the political, eworship,n Bmm liberals at home were even
more bitter*
As for the journalists who have hitherto been able to protect the
people from the unforeseen consequences of mistaken diplomacy, their
hands are now tied# They might know of the most dunging move® of the
State Department# but ihqy would be prevented from revealing them by
the clause in the ccnBorsMp code which prohibits «premati« dia~
closure of diplomatic negotiations or conversations.* The word »pr@~
mature^ would undoubteflly be interpreted by the State Department as
meaning disclosure in time to prevent any harm, being done by a mis
taken pollcy.l^
98
Eisenhower* Crusade in Europe# p. 131,
99
Gallagher# Back Boer to Berlin* p. 81,
acre1 forces 8 lu the Barlach deal and "therefore by it, we m & lose the
definition which the Allied people m well as their leaders should help
"number and quality of those who disagreed8 with i&serihoirer's policy, un
did not mention ¥1111:1© by im m but referred to reams.!;® isadc by him in Ills
Tb
hese attacks on the Barlan agrBSraettt carried a great weight# Two
Baymond Gram Swing, who rarely criticised the /uMntetxatian’s policy, esc-
pressed his' concern over the results of military esjpediency* wIt is note*
worthy that our axagr no sooner had landed, in Africa than a temporary deal
was made with B&rl&n of Ylcky. This was explained by President Pooeeveli
tod: a position against Parian and launched a direct attach against the
American policy:
Ticliy^— that corrupt source for more than two years of so nmch
weakness, confusion and division in the free nations* conduct o f
the war— is deadj but its rebirth in forth Africa in Urn person of
Admiral Barlan is rapidly threatening to produce even worse effects
of the same kind *^7
Opponents of the Barlau. policy insisted that "criticism o f the Parian deal
tnA
is far more widespread in Britain than in this country*t¥ The Tmr York
TO
Eeasaefch Crawford also believed that the ierth African operation was
end of a dream for those who wanted to fight all form of Fascism.
came violent, anti-war isolationists^ because they, too, accepted Hie revo
lutionary concept.**^ This fact was cited to eacplain why the North
own conclusions from the situation in North Africa* Els opponents, al~
though they did not trust the President, were more satisfied. They tried
to maintain the fiction that all the credit for this satisfactory foreign
but It was difficult to believe that the American generals were the real
policy makers of the United States govexment. One thing at least was
certain and that was that the v%<Mnistmtion accepted the Darien arrange*
mander-in-chief *s action.*
group and in the French resistance movement* The Chicago Tribune joined
nW
*1^
Sweeny, Moment of Truth, pp. 213 and 216.
309
in this concert of approval ted went far beyond the or&mmt of %dli-
*a& ccmmista, and 'like rabble haw imped upon Jftaedtwm^s amngeaents
Support of the "Parian deal" was certainly more powerful than op
position to it* lost local and chain newspapers and all the large circu
evident that all the trouble in Berth Africa came either from the vicious-
and they probably joined the two by saying that American diplomats were
119
Incapable of finding their way in the Intricacies of European politics.
^Chicago Tribune,
uititr
niL'„i,,jn,
Jamaay 21, 19h3*
Sweeny, Boaent o£ S E & , p. 33?.
^ s e e "Hie Sucker’s Tradition" in Bailw', The Man in the Street,
m #*m «k p* tmtmmim m *• m w » m+m v u m m M' » h«i .i i I m . n
pp. IThlaS*
310
Hrn© they expressed disapproval of their government and of the European
®©t«up* Europe was diabolical and any good American should bo ignorant
of it, but American officials were elected or paid to protect this bliss
reaction® had brought about much trouble. It was s&so obvious that the
that ignorance'* For the liberals these shortcomings were still a question
Hie mass of the American people did .not understand this accusation*
They believed that the Bay!Ian appointment had been made necessary by Amer
stances* nothing els© mattered and the people accepted the necessity of
national discipline in war time* Ibis need for discipline and obedience
was the only common bond in some of the arguments brought forward in de
fense of the American policy# For Samuel Bashlell, for instance, the ar
licly and privately,3-^ that he was carrying mit the orders of Petain,
his fellow countrymen would have seen any harm in “forcing* something
did not understand the ^distinction between milS-t&zy and political d©~
war were very much satisfied with a political status quo in north .Africa*
A reader of the Mew York Herald Tribune* for instance* & M not 90 m to be
to forget politic© but* at the same time* he wrote an. enthusiastic apology-
government were based on the belief that Tichy had protected Worth Africa
from a German invasion* The writer cited above also professed to admire
<1© Gaulle* although the first H u e of the above quotation exemplified one
of the moot frequent attacks upcm him* His conclusion m s somewhat un
expected in view of the political discussion which came before? "It is
tragic to see that politico cum be thought of in the face of the jaost
colossal and Imperative necessity."
Many observers reacted to the attacks against the Barlan arrange
ment by violent attacks against de Gaulle and the Fighting French* Kven
some liberals admitted that the controversy acquired more bitterness be
cause of the Fighting French propaganda**^ Soaso people* however* tried
to deny de Gaulle1s claim to .political leadership on very specious grounds*
They were apparently not aware that he had been kept out of Ilorth Africa
by the American government* In the Hew York Herald Tribune* for axample,
Bark Sullivan remarked that sjost critics of the arrangement believed that
**the only French leader we should ever recognise or have dealings with
was the head of the Fighting French, General Charles de Gaulle*11 Sullivan
continued: "This part of the outciry [against Darlanj neglected the fact
that de Gaulle was not in Sortii Africa and could not help uc there* while
Admiral Darlan t;&s and did*w^ of the attacks against de OsulX©
were obviously inspired by the State Department# There was,, for example,
an attempt to prove that de Gaulle*a attacks against the Darlan s y s t m
endangered French sovereignty in the north African possessions*
And Arthur Frock concluded that Usonlwer had not ©siablished a puppet
France*s sovereignty in Horih Africa and add to his own military strength
under pressure of public opinion and, removed any legal basis for his
regime#^30
Berlins
12%bid*
110
^ vSee pp. 378-379.
131
Gallagher, Back Poor to Berlin, p# 7i*
31Ii
The value of 'tils argument was actawrledged even toy the liberals*
cial policy conveyed the ftaprosoian, in their later writings, that most
Although some observers maintained that the French army would have joined
the Allied side even if its pro-fiohy leaders had been shot or jailed,^
ember 17, Parian consolidated Ms- hold on Hbrih Africa and. maintained the
also lost some of its cogency after it became certain that the Germans
could no1>— probably did not attest— to throw the invasion forces back to
the sea# Supporters of the American policy claimed, however, that "the
B&rlan collaboration*
would probably not have joined the fight voluntarily if it had not been
for the agreement with the Vichy commander# Barlan presented this
ffispected to solve this West African problem, when they did not wen know
rax
Another argument in favor of continued collaboration with Parian
disappeared when the Frenbh navy was scuttled in Toulon*s harbor by her
own officers and sailors* This action delivered America from a nightmare
which had lasted more than two years * but it disappointed those who
thought that Parian*c prestige with the French navy would lead the French
to decide where the path of honor lay,***^ but their attitude was judged
highly patriotic and reports m the fights which took place in the bailor
the fleet w m proof that the French navy did not like Germany and that
Dorian, who also was a sailor, probably did not like them either*
Ho one cun a»ay that Adroiral Dorian had Birthing to do with the
scuttling of the French fleet* But the fleet was formerly under
his coumnd, and mm that events at Toulon h«m demonstrated the
French lavy*© uMarlyirtg hostility to Germany perhaps there will
he a more pronounced inclination to withhold for a time at least
cendennatlis! of the Parian arrangement*1^1
To the liberals, the ©entiling of the fleet was proof that &p~
break between Hoosevelt and Flrfeain and although Admiral Leahy w m not in
Vichy to influence the French, the French sailors had refused to sttrren-
Sunk beneath the waters of Toulon, Harbor, along with the French
navy, is a jqyth that bedeviled m r foreign policy for more than two
years*— the myth that it was noeessaxy for the Unit©:! State© to play
ball with Vichy in order to keep the French fleet out of Hitler*©
hands* !e know now that orders to dectray the ©hips rather than let
t t m be employed to fight for the Axis were issued when France fell*
It was the only order that could have been given, for If the ma
jority of French naval officers were bitterly anti-British, the rank
and file were no less anti-Oaxmn# Urns the fleet could not be used
by either side; it could only fight if attacked and corsmXi suicide
if its position became helpless *3l|2
After the occupation of all France by the Kasis, liberal newspapers pro
claimed that Vichy was dead, killed by the complete German occupation
and by the loss of toe empire and the fleet* The nation wondered why
the "toothless symbol/1 had lost all his political significance, and The
XX
this murder had been the result of de OanXXist Intrigues* Thm® sus
trip to Algiers was cancelled .Xki- American nmmp^peW f however, did not
voice these suspicions, Frank Gorvasl openly admitted in his bods, But
inclined to think that popular feeling had been stronger than the mistaken
accept these views m d tried to restrain those who greeted the death of
the ads&ral with satisfaction. "Those who are incline to see in the as
sassination of Parian a proof that Washington policy toward him was mis
taken must reckon with this facts that tho most pressing problem raised
claimed that
and the thoughtXess #10 will as3um© that such a murder at such
moment Solves” a peculiarly difficult problem, lb# problem
remains .It®
policy were relieved by the death of the French admiral* The Christian
Science Monitor assumed that it offered "The United States* Britain an!
ences which were bound to exist until the nature of B&rlan*# role could
We may hope that out of the present situation there will com
both a continuation of the political stability which has existed
in Worth Africa under Parian and. a closer union of .all the French
groups fitting Hitler* But we are not untitled to expect these
things to happen automatically as the result of an. assassin1#
bullet*15^
The death of Parian took Washington and the United States by sur
prise* Hi© attention of the world .was still focused on that man* His
was less known to the American press and public than Detain, Laval, or
enigma of his motives and this inner power which slrm^s seeded to push
him to the foreground mad© rather for admiration than for hate* The of
ficial regrets expressed by the highest authorities after Iris death and
memory after bis death* Above all, the silent efficiency of the man who
bad been presented as the only Fronciaoan capable of reversing the Ilortb
of hanger In Our Vichy Gamble, ,flt seems reasonably clear that on this
occasion in North Africa , as m so many others, he acted as a simonrpure
opportunist.”153 After the landings in North Africa and the Harlan ap
pointment, Darlan was called an ^opportunist” much m m often than he was
* or a ^collaborationist,11 Those last two words
called a ttcollaborator1
bad acquired for Americans, especially after Americafs entrance into the
war, the special moaning Which they already had in occupied Biropen It
was certainly obvious that in the specific circumstances of occupied
Europe, !lopportunietsK became ^collaborationistsw but the actions of
laborated,” but it was difficult for those who did not go as far as
calling him ”Americ&*3 first Quislingi^^ to admit that they' had a *co3r-
laboratioMst11 m their side* Hie word was ambiguous. All good, diplomats
the Talleyrand or even of the Bichelieu brand. Behind his practical op
Darlan made his actions plain when he said, 11As long m the
Allied nations were not ready to help France resume the struggle,
I tried, sad and resigned, to prevent France from dying under the
German heel.” # • « Collaboration under duress certainly gains
less from the conquerors than total confiscation.155
If this were true, D&rlan, although not vexy reliable from an American
point of view, was "honorable” enough for an agreement with the American
ist” removal the ambiguity of tho latter word alone* In that case,
personal interests, and served M s country only when he.r interests coin
had been provided long before the North African campaign by the liberals
who wanted to show that the ,!m 'order” was not entitled to condemn the
tions with the Popular front and his good relations with Leon
Hope, that "Parian had one important characteristic in common with the
tho fact that he was concerned above all with his career &<m
not imply that he was ever anything but a reactionary. The French
navy has always been led by a amll eXique of reactionaxd.es
royalists* Its policies wore always chauvinistle— ^ilch meant that
as the Ocrmn fleet was too small to be dangerous, It was always
anti-British and anti-Semitic •W f
M i k e many others, Brooke was careful not to give the ispression that m
the contrary, ho was probably ready to say that any political opportunism,
met clearly analysed by those who, like Brocks, consented to envisage the
case of Parian as only one e^axqXe of a certain mentality resulting in
termined the attitude of Parian and the Tichy goverrmmt* Only those who
were 'not afraid or, like the liberals, were eager to shew that the factors
XS7IbW.
322
1<3
by national differences and indeed overlapped national boundaries,
human or super-busm*
1
After the death of Admiral Barlirn the American government urged
and on December 26, 1$*2, Giraud -was intrusted with all military and civil
affairs in Horfch and lest Africa* The political situation in B>rih Africa
was not changed, however, by the death of B&rlan, and the Vichy leaders
condition for a merger of the two French group® fixating the Axis. Dur
between the two groups was deepened by the appointment of ex-¥ichy tin-
his control#
Giraud not only competed for the allegiance of new territories like
323
Frenah Guiana, which rallied to the Allied cause* but m m for the aHe-
ficers of these ships followed Oiraud bat part of their cress rallied to
the hope of bringing about a fusion of the two French group® fighting
Gemngr* On lay 31* 191*3* an agreement between de Gaulle and Giraud was
and by de Gaulle.
IX
between the Fighting French, of General de Gaulle and the French adminis
It may became possible to bridge the rift that has existed ever
since the 19i*0 armistice between the .Fighting French. . .and ’
those
Frmchmm* especially in IJorih Africa and other colonies* who pre
ferred to follow, officially at least, the n m state of
Henri Philippe Detain* m m completely a prisoner of the Germans,1
she stated in her solum in' the 1m look p m a that »it will not be easy
ien who has been chosen by the ttsmtered .Admiral1© own »Imperial Conor
oil- *H She nevertheless saw sme hopeful signs in the situation, espe
cially the fact that both Giraud mod do Gaulle were ^publicly on record
as willing' to fight together**1 She realised that the problem was more
than a purely French affair,, howwer, since ©he concluded that if both
Americans and. British could, agree on Giraud, as they apparently had be
A H over America lummox-able editors did their best with the ma
daring escape frw the Konigsteln1© fortress m well m upon his bravery
self teck the lead in that direction and expressed officially American
satisfaction*
Host newspapers rajoleed over the fact that Giraud was not a
Allied cams©* Editorially, the K m fork Times declared that tthe is not
so closely identified with any political group as to have aroused the un
soldier, not a statesman^ Hi© Jte fork Herald ftrikms, ihich was very
favorable to Free France, also expected much good from Olraad*® appoint
ment#
Giraud* * *is identified with only one principle— the defeat of the
powers that have enslaved his native eountiy. He has no damaging
associations with the forces of collaboration, neither does he stand
— like General de Gaulle— as a living reproach to those who- once em
braced (or tolerated} collaboration**
the way for a general fromh reconciliation* Walter Lippmn was so opti
order to make that political unity possible,* he wrote, m event and not
He asked for recognition of the government which he thought 'would not fail
to be created very soon* *Th© change in the situation now calls for a re
5
War York Times, December 28, 191*2#
7M d ,
32?
voices were heard, although most observers thought that it would be easy
to work out a compromise between Giraud and de Gaulle, some voices close
Arthur Krock noted in the IT® York Times that there was % ! » difference
ion, who at the time of the landing® already feared that Giraud could be-
come a rival of de Gaulle, thought that his presence would not have a
anything bat & stop-g&p measure* This general cannot be anything but a
III
thies of American opinion* ifmSike de Gaulle, he did not enjoy the tre
mendous build-up given to the free French movement by the powerful British
liberal elements distrusted him* For some of the French he could have
itarian traditions which had little sentimental appeal m m for the most
of publicity in any fern, and his fear of being mistaken for a "politician”
of the American public* The only spectacular incident, in his career which
might have helped to make him a popular international figure, his escape
from Koenisstetn, took place at a time #ien his personal conduct could not
have any real Influence on the course of the war. later, the liberals
attacked this glamorous episode in Giraudfs life and questioned the offi
cial interpretation— or his own version— of his ©scape from the German
Van paassen wrote in the I ® Yozk Post that Giraud*r> fame rested "upon
having managed to have himself taken prisoner twice and to have escaped
also suffered la American opinion for his failure to carry the day during
the frantic search for a French leader who might stop the fighting lit
Most observers took it for granted that Giraud was a **good gener
tactics1’ before the French defeat* the only gauge by which th^jr could
ysis of Giraud *$ character in The Head Back to Paris assured his readers
that "he is* m I had knam since* the Battle of France, a good general.
G# V# Price, whose book, Oirand and the African Scene, was written with
the help of the general himself, naturally never questioned the military
capacities of big1hero# Cordell Hull called him "one of the great com-
The m n who was probably most competent and had the best oppor
obvious reasons h© did not make his findings available to the public un
til after the war. When Giraud left France in November, 191$, he was
that IiAsehhower was the supreme commander and that the Allied forces would
not be placed under his own orders until he arrived at Gibraltar and met
General Eisenhower and his staff,^ Even after Giraud had accepted the
Africa, h© still attested to sell the Allied command m his plan of in
sound," wrote I/anger xn Our Vichjjr Cxamble* But tins was not tne opinion
of General Eisenhower.
against de Gaulle* It was difficult for th® to believe that a nan who
was so old-fashioned in all other respects did not carry bis habitual
had many occasions to see him at work and finally concluded that % e had
in their hostility against him* Pierre fan Paassen called him «& mili
tary nonentity*1*^
capacities but many thought at first that this was one -more outstanding
quality, the sum of which led. Ann© Q'ftare McCormick to conclude that
wGiraud wm cast for the role he now assumes#*^ ibis curious argument
mentality. It satisfied those who believed that th© north African Im
solution was thus to find, a French leader who was as naive m American
diplomat© and generals in a political seme. But it did not take very
Newspapers which supported the State Department policy did not cast doubt
comforted themselves by stating that "after all Giraud never was a good
politician.
At the time of the Kosdgstaia escape, the Hew York Times had
"Ee is admired for his personal qualities, Ids resourceful courage and gay
Dantes, of Bayard, of the Chi, of Inland and Olivier, arid the heroes of
the Chansons de C-este*w^7 There was a name which did not figure in that
servers the most striking characteristic of Giraud was the stubborn way
head,^ and m m the most radical eXeaerrts could not resent too m ch his
prejudices made him so easy a p m j for the more dangerous Fascist® who
crowded the lorth African stage. Giraud was too much like a s a m piecej
one could only1look at M m curiously and wonder. That Giraud held the
same political views a® P^tain was never contest®! by anyone*^ The Amer
ican public soon learned that fact from their liberal n»papers,31 Bat
the campaign against Harlan .had naturally emphasised the latterr© active
average American to learn that Giraud, who had afeays been praised as
rtfl
Price, Ciraud and the African Scene, p. 60,
10
Langer, Our Victor Gamble, p* 273*
mw uim * -wwwrtUWew.wgg6.Mi
■?i
r . & , January 22, 19h3>
32-.,
Xbid#
33fe
Giraud *b emanations of the French defeat would have been viewed
in a very different light by many Americans if they* had placed them .in
the south® of some of their own. leaders but they catered to too many pop
instance, summarised a report which Giraud had written for Petain after
toy schools, He compared him with de Gaulle and noted that, having been
a general for a much longer time, Giraud had Settled into the role more
had not occurred to Giraud for year®. The painter he suggests is not
H Greco, but Yeissoz&er. ”3^ luprossed by the fact that Giraud had m o m
named his own native province. But Mots is a garrison town, the most
lock, Price also emphasised the role played by Giraudfa military career
Liebling*
1?
Many people considered that he wan more or less appointed by the American
cessor to Bortli African leadership, and wrote: With relief Mr* Murphy
turned to the only course open to him, he asked General Giraud to step in
would act as a mediator between the Free French and the Vichy administra
In spite of the strict censorship, news coming fro® Africa was ex
tremely ominous for all those who feared lest the Vichy regime 'be continued
under a different head* Host surprising in its brevity was the report
that French people were being arrested f or planning to murder Giraud and
Robert B&pfay.© The murder of Darlm was still, sxxetezious and, although
the official French ccwunique had purportedly mentioned the fact that
that the Admiral had been the victim of an Axis agent* It was much store
logical to think that the de G&ulXist opposition to Vicky was at the root
of the murder. It was also logical to guess that the arrests were directed
against radical elements atiich were opposed to the Barlam regime* Ths Bar
The announcement was followed by comments on the acute need of food and
dispatches© in &r$r other way but as trying to convey to the American public
tophy were in danger of suffering the sme fate at the hands of hungry
and anarchic mobs ready to turn their blind, toy against the Allied forces.
behind P^iain and the Vichy regime# "North Africa, it is emphasised, was
Marshal Henri jphlltpp© Petaln were said still to stand In shop windows
there Hadio eomentator Bagnaosti Grm Swing claimed that 9of the mil
lion Frenchmen lining there, by far the greater part are extreme conserva
viously, many observers and most official experts judged French opinion
in North Africa by the same criteria that had been used by Admiral Leahy
servations which were limited to the small upper crust of the population.
held good for the great landowners of forth Africa nihm oost African ob
servers jigged re&ctionaiy, narrow and bigoted* Both opponents and sup
porters of the official policy agreed on that fact* In his Victeiy throuji
Africa Samuel Baefciell noted before the landing that »to colonists- who in
the main. were rich, well provided for* and remote from the law* showed
their usual apathy toward everything but making money In Journey into
War John MacVan© recorded how disgusted he was with Algiers * bars and
hotels and preferred the atmosphere at the front* He talked of the B®hal-
Our Share of lligfat Brew Mddleton pointed out that «the shopkeepers and
his Impression of the French upper and middle classes in Horfch Africa* he
statedi
As is always the case when one people^In this case the French)
dominates another (in this case t o Arabs) economically* socially*
and politically, t o dominant people Is debased. Intolerant, nar
row, and fearful, t o French in iforth Africa constituted a bour
geoisie more reactionary than any tot could bo found in France while
t o rich outdid t o rich of France in their hatred of t o great
principles upon which the Third Republic had bean founded*53
^Ibid., p, 190*
339
ment experts could claim that the French preferred their Vichy regime to
Brew H|ddleton*s skillful dispatches to the Hew York Times was?© very sig
in North Africa, the various groups which supported Vichy, and Mth© great
The liberals always refused to believe tlmt the North African masses were
clared that all French people #10 had collaborated with the G o t w were
was not coEspleto was shared by some in high circles* General Ftoenhower
approached the question front the de GauHist angle which created much coir-
enjoyed a distinct popularity with the civilian® and this sentiment pro
Allied successes, but it should b© noted tot General Elsenhower was al
ways conscious of It and that it became more obvious with the gradual
Allied successes*
were very gloomy* indeed, but which exonerated American policy makers of
or at least all its "sound elements,” was VIchyite m d tot the dements
were seme de oaullists in North Africa. The emphasis on the need for
food and clothing ceuM give the impression tot t o de OanlXist demagogue©
recruited their supporters from among people whoa hunger had tmatfoxmd
®v?
Eisenhower, Crusade to Europe, p. 131*
unity in which Frenchmen find themselves in that theatre of war mid ©lee-
ican official policy* "Unity* * *can be achieved soonest and most ef
be expected to find cosaon ground, rather than upon the political plane,
in January, 391*31 was not fully appraised in America because of the polit
to Paris, pictured the $«1-P&sclrb regime of North Africa which had been
<9
Mm Xoxfc Times, Januaxy 3, 191*3*
do
Ilebling, t o Hoad Back to Fails, p* 219#
men respected in North African life."^ Among the® wm Dr. Haphael
Aboulker who had read Giraod% original proclamation on the day of the
walked off into another room and earn® bade carrying a black Han-*
burg .hat* She handed it to me* It was quit© a good hat, made by
Christy*® of London, the kind that anybody who wanted to be mistaken
for a Foreign Office man night b© glad to wear*
"The hat of M# MirpbyP* t o said* "He left it here tot evening
of the landing* He said* *I,11 be right back* and went out. He
h&sn*t been here sincelwo3
It is true that even people who were not used to criticising the American
^Ibid., p. 231.
®lMd.
3*0
X have no brief for the asarmar in which de Gaulle and his followers
m m treated -when the Allies were solidly entrenched in French North
Africa* The Allies obstinately maintained Oiraud and his pseudo*
totalitarian regiue in Algeria and Morocco* * *and it was not until
public opinion in the United States and Great Britain forced the issue
that the Allied representatives in Algiers protest®! against the im
prisonment of the men who had prepared, the way for the landings in
Horfch Africa*^
peperaen to a cocktail, in his villa and tried to explain how difficult the
whole situation was*^ Girsmd received the angry reporters and was ©c-
lem impressed the journalists * They were irritated by the attitude of the
the situation they were discussing# Host of us had worked on many hundred
norance, Rlgmilt, the Algiers police chief, explained to John baeVane that
•American and British reporter must take good care not to reveal the
This— I'lgault went on— wcmXd infuriate the local population and make union
impossible, H&eVane mad other reporters were not fooled by this appar
ent concern for the good name of do Gaulle in Horth Africa* They thought
that this sort of thing with a Horth .African official ®fteans that he
tms that Mews and. Frenchmen who had publicly stressed satisfaction at
our landing trere .now serving jail sentences fo r their bad taste* ♦ ♦ »
came more serious when some British newspapers began to criticise openly
the American policy end its official source, the Supreme .Allied. Coriander,
of angry protests from some American newspapers which accused the British
Britain and America as between Africa and America, a United Press dispatch
dated January 13, \% 3* quoted an article of the london Nam Chronicle *H I#n,i w*ww'w<iHwiM*lww»wwmi*
to the delay in the assault on Tunisia and to the obscure political situ
ation In Algiers, the Newe Chronicle had declared? "This deplorable situ
the }im York Sun# "that General Eisenhower has been plunged into the sddst
who# like all other commanders of our farces# lias not the slightest inter*
est in Burcjfpoan politics*,{^ terrene© suspected that "the Free French ele
ments in London# which are vejy close to the British Goveimeni and the
British press# have not forgiven General Eisenhoirer for' putting- the late
Admiral Darlaa in ccmiand and they are detensined to oust due American
it seemed for a while that the position of General ii&sanhower was endan
gered* As early as Januaay 7# Arthur Krock atinitted that there were one
hm & r 9 however, and ’It worried some correspondents greatly that he did
not ask© it plain that he was responsible only in so far as he* approved
the hope that the situation wild shortly improve "with the appointment of
with fall power over Hoherfc inrphy and all diplomatic representatives on
the scene.w® This suggestion Boomed to indicate the real target o f at*
alassiing reports from Worth Africa. The Count of Parts# prompt ire hair
French mnarehy* His almost childish intrigues were never taken seriously
show that American policy had. made worth Africa an easy prey for all anti-
proving that there was m solution to the French political problem and
do Gaulle alone could restore French moralej other® chatted that he would
only bring civil war*®** Anne 0*T!ara !\c€orrfick eophasissed the difficulties
of the situation*
to convey the idea that m o h of what was said about the royalists could
to veil doings more sinister than the Koyalists * rather pathetic demon-
86
Chicago Tribune# January 2h? 19h3*
87
Hew fork Times# January 16# 1543»
that the French forth African leaders were in mo hurry to cany cut
political ref©nas*
On the basis of such, reportsf newspapers like the New lark Herald.
Tribune gave up their policy of watchful waiting and announced that "the
some wholesome drafts of fresh air be let into the festering Berth
African situation***^
An
Broadcast over the Columbia Broadcasting System on January It,
I9h3*
90
New totfc Urnee, damasy 3i, 1& 3.
^%ew loik Herald Tribune, Jaraiaiy lh, I$i3#
3h9
censorship and propaganda In which they have been wrapped, the one
worst m l most dinnapting thing about the course of events in north
Africa has been the dense &%mk of 'suspicious mystery and confusion
which has been thrown over them* « • *
the reasons are uMorstandable * The practical results are la*
menfcable# There has not been really frnik or Intelligent neat dis*
patch from north Africa since the landing of the A3igl<Hk5ierlcan
force acre than two months ago. Ho one, either in this country or
Great Britain, has any mild idea of what has actually been going
on there# It has become is|>osslble to believe that the reqtdrements
of legitimate military secrecy can support this extreme of suppres
sion#?®
The lew lork Timm also chafed that "the news from North Africa, now the
focal point for translating a french policy into action, lias hem obscure,
lew York Times maintained the official line and, although praying for
iraft given unusual publicity# wllliara L. Shirer did not hesitate to admit
propaganda# He considered that its success was considerable but that "the
chological mistake, not because the parley m s not Important but because
Giraud and de Gaulle m m deeply felt. American opinion saw in the hand
shake between the two generals a premise of unity tfcich was not fulfilled.
Observers on the spot had realised that it was "not a spontaneous ges
mistic but it was clear ttmt m agreement had been reached. As Waverley
Hoot rioted, "about the only thing thsy had In common m m teat both wanted
the part devoted to the French situation in the final canEtunique of the
Gaulle c<Erani<pe.n^
For most newspapers* the very fact that Ftooem&i and Churchill
had taken the French problem into their am. hands was in itself a guar
can reaction to the may efforts towards a solution of the thorny question
was especially true of liberal newspapers and of all those which wer©
optimism was in the long run more harmful to French interests in the United
States than a more realistic view of the situation. 0n3y well-trained per
t^ee to^s that the French problem had been or was about to be solved.
ambitions.
French military circles. Tills was so obvious that most Americans did not
see that a capital problem loomed beyond this personal ami psychological
deadlock* This lack of political insight was the result largely of ih®
of the problem but inclined to deny its existence because they were hos
tile to any solution which would take in account the Leftist friends of
de Gaulle. They were delighted when they saw that the American policy
makers neglected to take into account tee ideological aspect of tee French
situation,*^ On the other hand, tee liberals had decided that the Glrand-
that de Gaulle would refuse to have anything to do with Gir&ud until the
cratic principle® oar by the nature of his political support was trivial.
!Io was the only one to jspestc In the m m of and act in conformitiy with
On January 21* X9b3* the Bew Toik Herald Tribune daroied a large
comments *
The editorial concluded* rather ©irangely, that among the teedSja.be re
sults of the conference vrm »& n m unity on the part of our French Allies**
falter Ilppm&rm* too,, was satisfied and believed that the conference was
The two old masters at Casablanca have now set in a new perspective
the Parian affair,' the Psyrouton affair* the problem of General
Giraud and General do Gaulle, and the intimations which have re
cently come underlie# out o f certain official quartos In Washington
— namely that we were so pleased with the Parian affair that we might
make it the model for- all our dealings in Europe#
A gale of fresh air hi® been blown into this miasm of double-
talk and super-dnper realteuW
This optimism was somewhat shaken whm the disappoints and re
sentful President Poosevelt declared, that the French problem had not
Goalie was still the only <mn entitled to speak for Franco because %@
was continuing the fight of the French Republic before Pehain% coup
the belief that he was qi% a tool of ^British Imperialisms This belief
had increased since the attacks of the British press upon Eisenhower* It
was devious that for George SoJealski of the Hew Yori: Sun the presence of
The President bets made strides to solve the Horbb. Africa prob
lem* the squabbles among the different French factions* the differ
ence of opinion between the Untied State and Great Britain* * *&nd
the divorcing of political fro® military activities in that area*
Certainly our caaroan&er, General Eisehhower, or ishoover say succeed
him* ought not to be Im^olvcd in the typo of Buropeasi Intrigue end
double-crossing which m American Is tested to understand*. We are
a nation that plays with four aces in the deck and some of the
Europeans play it a different way*311
n
Most Americans had never heard of or did not remeraber the name
their newspapers informing them that he had given M s support to the Par
ian regime in Horth Africa* Ho was then in Argentina where ho had held
fo r k Sun* J a a m a iy 29, X 9U 3 *
355
well known In France for hie administrative career in forth Africa and
politician! the heft looked upon him as a Fascist* There was on© very
rested in the name of Retain on December 13, 191$* General Elsenhower was
tunate choice but that he bad had to yield to the authority of the military
tried to block the request, twice held it up, but finally it went through
press conference took place on December 30, X9is2, but ^>parently the first
reports did not reach America until January 6.11? lAebling, in The Road
Back to Pari®, recorded that ,?Mr. Itepby introduced the name of larcel
Peyrouton and asked us what we thought of him. Everybody who had been in
In the United States, the first attacks against Peyrouion for his pro~
116.
See p. 31(3,
for denying a request by Murphy which had been transmitted with the
authority of General Heenhmmr. (All.cables out of north Africa
y e signed with Meas&oeyhf name# 7 ^ ll^ ey ro a iizf^ iE id
Algiers, a w © i % ULfKii"i^mt ffle"same time Roosevelt arrived at
CasublajKsa*l*l
tended trip to north Africa might give the impression that he had never
any rate did not disapprove, the appointment of I. Poyrouton which took
place while Mr* Roosevelt was at Casablanca and in eonsecrtion with which
the President later said he and !r* Churchill had given some advice*ffl^
Apparently, ndther the President nor the Secretary of State wanted to ap
however, took up the matter and began a campaign which surpassed in in
120_. n, .
Italics- mine*
After the Casablanca conference "the outraged protests fawn the United
State® and Britain were plainly audible in the villa *Dar m S&ada.
had earlier' approved the theory of "military necessity*' and had accepted
the Parian deal. But' now, irritated by the censorship, be claimed that
charged that the laaparfe&tion of Peyrouton was opposed even by the Petate-
bsts as "uhmIs®," and that Americans were ki$>t ignorant of the real situa
tion. H© refused to believe that this last mistake was the work of Eisen
hower. "fh&t likelihood is there that General Eisenhower had ever- heard
of M* Feyronton, imch lees of his record? let that is the kind of burden
can ccHssaander*"^
of collaboration and friendship with those very French authorities who or
ganised resistance to our landing and who today slap tta© elves an the
American policy*
¥ar Economy*w The dispatch asserted that this was "the .first step toward
end trade organisations *tt Anyone acquainted with Fascist economic theories
^ F * M * , J a m m y 22$ 19h3*
tonic c*a policy in llerth Africa reached its climaa; when Edgar Ansol Wmr&r
According to him, "the deal with the FIchylies was planned deliberately
Kenneth Crawford, a writer for P*I* and the Chicago Sun, who ar
rived in. flortti Africa in February, 19143, on the other hand, m e impressed
by Robert Murphy*® good faith and wrote a book, Report on Worth Africa,
which was an apology for the official policy# Referring to the attacks
AVen liebling, who was not tender with the State Department, recorded?
"Rsw&abering the Harlan days* the liberal press refused to accept any
thing that was said about North Africa thereafter*" He suspected that
because there was little to say fro® the doctrinal level in favor of the
&aru After repeating quite a few times that he was Laval*s temp and had
was difficult to imp00 e democracy on people who did rnt want ih.1^ He*
lying on the State Department % public opinion esperte, H&ymoix! Gram Swing
thought that American policy should aim at enlisting the support of all
,
Frenchmen*
Thus Swing looked upon the Feyroutmi ^ointment almost as the result of
in Victory through Africa, wrote s "And once more, I met remind myself
■^Itdd.
conservatives went farther* Although the Chicago Tribune did not mention
attacked violently the attitude of the American liberals» Once more, ac
situation a proof that "the allies that fate^ has given us are allies
for ma t of whom, the French Bopublic is dead and no regime that does not
Pcyroutonists" reached such proportions that many Americans got the im
pression that the political factions of the Third Republic had established
headquarters in the editorial rooms of some Hew York newspapers ami were
^tetter to the editor of the Net lork Times, February 28, 19h3*
taking some of his critics into camp*** wrote Kenneth C-. Crswfoxd In Report
governorship was a good idea# flpeyrooton had decided that we were going
to win the war, and he saade an excellent ferret for us# bringing numerous
admit that the political situation was Smproving) he related hot# when
Kenneth 0* Crawford reported to his employers that there was very little
to get indignant about in Worth Africa# *ihey decided he had gone over to
newspapers claimed that minor improvements in Africa did not bring any
improvements when ‘
they were sure that they were not <m3y written down on
paper but translated into facts* It mis, however# difficult for most of
^Letter to the editor of the 7je*r York Times# February 3.5# I$0*
US "
of the Casablanca conference# Sozcie of them even shared how mch wgood
Whatever the role of Feywmton may have been and whatever his eon*
m that point#
Kenneth G* Crawford* mho thought that American policy in Borih Africa was
nnjustly accused* came to the same conclusion. »ln liberal eyes the Fey*
don and the Horth African administmtion. All FrencJmen fitting Germny
felt that unity should be achieved m early as possible for obvious n&~
unity os their own terms. the Fighting French refused to ocefprcndae with
people who had been associated with the Uichy goveiment*®^ enviously
the North Africa administration wanted to reduce the liberal and radical
rulers held all the advantage* In this struggle# They were the masters of
normal that the bigger partner should finally elimimi© the smaller in
case of a m rg e r of the two rival parts of the French Bhtplre, It was also
obvious that Giraud enjoyed the support of the American averment whose
influence was supreme in French North and fast Africa. The French North
African rulers could afford to temporise in the hope that the Fighting
French power and influence could not survive th© agreements between North
Africa and its allies* America was .©quipping a fighting force of 300,000
which ©rayone felt would weigh a great deal in future .political dealings
ising tactic® were not those of the North African adidnlstmtion but of
French unity*3-®
Hoosev©lt*s role in this matter did not m & with the conference
of th© New Io2k Herald Tribun© to a conference, because he was very saich
The charges made attest General Girand by liberal® and feXXosr trav
eler® are well known to us*. Bat these weary ehargee are made against
General do Gaulle by Oaullists m d socialists In Zmsdmi* The Jean
f m r w group, which presents French socialist refugees in England,
recently aqnmmed its concern met de Gaulle and the French national
Committee in terms which hear a singular^resemblance to those which
ere applied to Oiraud by Mr* Mmm &ohn.l6l
another factor which played against de GtaXle# This was precisely why
the French North African rulers had made concessions* The political
This liberalisation, hmmmr# did not amount to more than the r m oval or
the shift of nom of the sit sharply criticised officials^ and the re
in his fight for political preferment# even to sabotage the French war ef
Romraslts successes In Ttontolft* Arthur Krock wot© In the lim tork Times
that the presence of these ships m s "the met striking symbol of the
commander# held & press conference announcing that the morale of every
m m in the crews wm very high* The Hew Yoric Times printed a sketch
showing three battleships flying the French, British and American flags*
They were sailing together# "one for all arid all for ono»nl66
had been volunteering for service In the Fighting French forces*3® A few
naval authorities for help*3^ The navy referral than to the State Depart-
sent,*® and finally the Xadgr&tloa Departnent sent out officers to arrest
the sailors in lew York Citya3?® On March 9 twelve French sailors were
sent to KLXis Island* liberal commentator Wfiverley Foot spoke over radio
profoundly*®
French sailor are being arrested m the streets of' Bar York m&
sent to mils Island-* Their only exam© Is that they iwtsfc to fight
for as against the &&mm+ * « * The entire Imident m y seem
slight in itselfj it is only m the system is slight compared with
the disease* It is an indication of a fundamental rottenness in
m r entire thinking in regard to the profound philosophical and
political principles for which we are fighting.W
the nest day newspapers published full stories and the liberals
Justice explained that the « had been arrested for illegal entry into
the United States*^ It appeared, however, that the charge had little
York*X74
who were hostile to Aaeriea* It was reported that a French officer had
long before in cider to joia do Goalie* They had enlisted in the ¥ichy
tlon to strike back at the eaBKgr*1* Their shore leave in New York was
their first opportunity. The pro**!© Gaulle Hew York Herald Tritoe took
last American observer eapmsed their azaaaement at this unusual and dis
)
lew loads Times, llareh l l , 19k3*
179
Ibid., larch l£, 3$h3*
m
Tbs 'letter which idgar Ansel W m m r wrote to the Hew York fixm in answer
to this Mltorial showed that# for mor American liberals, the question
they resented was the American intervention to protect the Oiraud officers,
Mowrer accused the Times of being l,Petuini$tM and denied that the terra
The sailors were soon released but the effect of the incident was
argument against rearming the French Most people did not go into the
Gaulle, who appeared to erne like the head of a dangerous gang of revo
•TOI
was the easing of the authoritarian rule in Africa, !3ary American ob
servers noted curiously that Africa became °de Cauilloh* after do Gaulle>s
or it could maintain the Vichy regime and safeguard its own position. It
supposed to because there was much opposition In America, "Thar® was some
criticism of the fact that while American pilot® were without ships to
fly, aircraft >?ere being made available to the French* *^3 The fear was
ican g&rexwmi%$ that Oirsnd or some other general might use the French
was not hlgSu#^® It seated t!mt some officers were nostalgic for the un
adulterated Yieby regime and many soldiers must have felt like th© Hde~
sorters** of the Richelieu, llacfan© reported that during the second week
dynamic Fighting French £woes with the British .Eighth Army* The nest
spectacular exploit of the Fighting French had. been the campaign of Qmr
This is the third time that the Fighting French tee broken out
of the Lake Chad region to invade Fesaan and capture the Italian
posts in southern Libya, With each major offensive the band of
The Fighting Fronch reached Tripoli in the fourth week of January, 1943*
his most iapartarrb advantage* The first half of February, 1943, was a
period of great political activity for the Fro© French movement* General
lishment of the 1ms of the Kepubli© was the only basis on which the union
movement was very strong, since it liad continued th® republican legality
in the part of the French Lmpire it controlled and since the Allies had
The practical effect of this strategy was obvious in the following editor
was naturally store outspoken* The Hew Tork Herald Tribune found th© re-
mrks of d© Gaulle Mas direct as that of the little boy in the faixy
story who pointed out that the prince had no clothes oxuM That observa
tion led the same newspaper to point out that the present conduct of the
dence came from his agreement with the French. Resistance lavement. Th©
which he explained that th© French people could not be satisfied with th©
Third Kepublic and wanted a new om, assuming that de Gaulle1® statement
F r a n c e . E v e n the New York Herald Tribune took the bait and quoted
d© Kerillis* article.
The maneuver was not entirely successful, however, since the Herald Tribune
concluded that
the Host loik Herald Tribune accepted de Kerillis* remarks showed that very
Hot until dun© 19h2 did de Gaulle cut himself loose £rm the dead
hulk of th© Third Republic, Then, after sever&l months of nego
tiation©, th© leaders of the growing resistance normat within
France agreed to throw in their lot with de Gaulle* The negotiations
had made it abundantly clear that at least ninety per cmt of th©
resistance leaders would have nothing to do with a restoration of the
Third Republic m m if th© latter were to be remodeled, at once. Be
Gaulle met thcdr wishes in a declaration which the resistance leaders
accepted as a binding pact; "A moral, social, political, economic
regime, abdicated in defeat after having paralysed itself in license*
Another regime, born of a criminal capitulation, now emits itself
on the basis of personal power* Th© French people condemn both*
While they unify their strength for victoiy, they assemble for a
revolution*!^
which the constitutional problem involved la this action was treated did
not valid in Africa, to what legislation was North Africa subject? Sup
porters of the State Department*© policy had emphasized that it was im
possible to suppress Vichy authority with one stroke of the pen* But
this Giraud had done in Ids cosmmique. Unfortunately he had not re
this prc&taau
in & detailed manner the Fro© French conditions for a union of th© French
Aspire* Giraud promised to abolish all fichy laws in the near future*
for the official policy climbed to 50 per cent# about what it had been
just -’*after th© Casablanca conference.*® Th© law Xork Times thought th©
Giraud*® speech was proof that he was just as democratic as do Gaulle and
that the flatted States should, not waver in its support of the iforth Afri
Hew York Herald Tribune was aure that Giraud had complied with the four
of the State Department like Edgar Ansel Mwrer* He had just written a
in & foreword that "since this pamphlet mm first set in type, General
Henri Giraud has broadcast to the world his speech of March Ikth, guar
the Republic
visers. The Associated Frees dispatch preceding the text of the address
stated frankly that "the liberal tone of his speech* coupled with promise
Bat a few liberal observers were not cofflplotely satisfied: with the tone
sentence which followed the amwiusccweat that ©11 Vichy racial legislation
was abolished. "With th© wrne desire to eliminate all racial. discrimina
Status between th© native Kbalems and native Js?m is abrogated."^ Ap
parently* the editors of the dispatch which preceded the text- of the
speech did not knew what the Cremieux decree was* since they held to re
peat nfraud fs own utterance on this subject in their smmmy of the major
Cremieux decree declared all th© native Jem of Algesia to be French citi
zens. Th© Moslems still had to seek naturalization under an older law if
action did not. increase the rights of the Arabs but diminished those of
the Jews. Liberal newspapers partioflarly resented the fact that cessing
OmtfLmx Decree was presented ass another reactlonaiy I m which should have
disappeared long ago. Spewing over KQIR* Lisa Sergio launched a violent
General Giraud suddenly repealed in his speech not only the tiehy
laws, but in a sweeping- gesture eliminated an ancient law of 1670
which was mad© under the Eepublie and which therefore could only be
abrogated by the republic but not by a tesrapor&xy government, ©stab*
lished in only one part of French territory such a© Giraud1® actually
is. Henry Torres, one of Franc©*® greatest lawyers today, questioned
th© legality of this repeal* He added that Giraud acted ostensibly
on th© pretext that the law represented racial discrimination, but
the actual result is that an entire category of French citizens will
suddenly be excluded from French citizenship which had been granted
them by the EepubHc * * * * The truth as it appear® to so many
students of this complex picture 1® that this situation will enable
the Viehytstes* * .to make discrimination against the Jewsin forth
Africa even more effective than Vichy itself had made i t . ™
Liberals were especially worried because the very text of the ad
reference to the Gettysburg Address was due to his o m pen or that of his
March 16,
210
loot, Casablanca to Katyn, p. 382*
m
only vague prci&ass in it* They concluded ndth W&verley Boot la Casa
was necessary because "both Arab and Jewish residents of Berth Africa mat
jMp
be placed on the same footing. Most Jews would qualify for Immediate
did not satisfy liberal ewtenb&iors. Georg© Hamilton Combs, Jr., de
clared over station WH?J that the qualification for naturalisation as "lit
our poll taxes and literacy tests in the South. Few weH-lnfomed
cosmcntaiers denied that the measure had been taken tinder American in
in Report m Berth Africa that the repeal was decided at the Casablanca
the Arabs at the expense of the Jews," and reported that "except for minor
^%HM, quoted in P.M., March 23, 19k3* Se© also Vaiian Fry in
The Hew Republic, ISsy 10, WES*
tiareat**^ Ssmol DashM!# however, in Victory through Mtlea, was
are not run to please us, bat to. please toe&selves*® Apparently still
farther convinced American liberals that unity between the rival French
authorities could not wait any longer* On March 19# 19ii3> the French mili
tary mission in Washington announced tot French Guiana had joined forces
read the surprising news tot there were two new anti-Axls French gover-
pi7
nors of Guiana on their w^y to assume charge* 1 One had been appointed
by General Giraud# the other by General de Gaulle* Once again the Free
«$on the race#1' and Johannes Steel reported, over station WUCA tot ,rihe
out**23'® lisa Sergio thought that America was in danger of losing the
loot r^jorted that editorial, support for American policy tcmrd Francs#
which had risen to $0 per cant after Giraud *s speech, "slumped 22.3 %9
leaving the State Department with only 2?*? % of th© papers of th© nation
Admiral Hobart had been resumed because the accord reached la XPhX ^peered
government and not even recognising his relations 'with Vichy* ”22^
and, without giving any details, stated that it rendered m American oc
that Admiral M>ert was taking advantage of the GLrand-de Gaulle rivalry
to maintain the Vichy regime in the French Antilles * when the State De
tion of Martinique "ano®alcmt":at a tir n when the bulk of th® French em
pire was back in th© war on the allied ©Ide.22^ .After the recall of the
tbs staid of Admiral Bobert vrm m&e possible only by the disunity of the
Georges C&troux had left for Algiers and conferred with Giraud in the m m
^ T b U . t Kay 1, 19^3.
public* The controversy htrtzmm Giraud and de Gaulle had almost become a
domestic issue in America* Some people maintained that Giraud could not
in th® French problem was not limited to Washington and Hew Toxic* The
Richmond Wews Leader, for instance, tried to analyse the reasons behind
have been wrong in north Africa was merely due to "feebleness" or "venal
ity1* on the part of the French rulers* There was no mention of d© Gaulle*s
lost chain and local newspapers were following the lead of the
State Dcpastment on foreign policy and the State department did not even
evidence of this whm, follosdng the meetings between C&troux and Glr&nd,
had asked him not to ceae*®* The M York Herald Tribune considered the
Gaulle was being kept out for political reasons. Borne thought that he
was "too friendly with the Coemnlsts,*1 others that there was an ag re m m b
between Men and the American govermmi to keep General Giroud in power*®*
Eoosovelt*®^ The llm York Times, however, accepted the official version
of the incident* Ita editorial was entitled ,fWar comes first,w and ad*
23W
&%tz
M&eV&ne, Journey Into War, p# 169*
3$9
terious, when it wm reported that General Eisenhower had read with sur
for the postponement of de Gaulle*© trip*237 this situation led the Horth
name had been used for strictly political purposes*239 consenting in The
° 8I W . , April 9, 19!i3.
Gabes in Tunisia cabled it® allegiance to him.2^3- Gabes had been occupied
by Fighting French force® but# a® the Hew fork Herald, frihaae points out#
gate this encroachment upon his domain* The other Franc® m m getting very
near his France *"2li2
It' was getting nearer all the tine* De Gaulle finally went to
semed to have abandoned M s champion and did not mention the Fighting
French In his victory speech after the capture of Tunis#21*3 this omission
There were more days of anxiety before the transfer of the Fighting
French capital of Algiers# and the opposition to the official policy in
two separate parts of the French Bsipire had finally joined hands* When
summed up in his column the results of the official American policy from
Our French policy lias been vitiated by the radical error of our
diplomatic agents in failing to understand and therefore to report
corrects to the State Department and to the White House the domi-
sating and ascending is^ortaace of the national t m m m % which ha®
rallied around General Charles de Gaulle. Aa a result m find our*
selves with a French policy which is not based on the realities. , • •
We were assured m supposedly high authority that General de
Gaulle had only a small following in France and practically none in
North Africa* forgetting that General de Gaulle now speaks for a
federation of powerful organisations inside of Franco# we have been
told that the problem of French unity was a question of getting two
proud generals to come to a personal understating. * * *
Finally# we had drifted to a point where m have been in grave
danger of fostering a French political authority of our oim~~an
authority based not upon the French nation but upon cur military and
economic power, this is something that cannot be done# and we shall
burn our fingers badly if’we do not look out .W
ward French unity. Although the uneasy union achieved between General de
Gaulle and General Giraud in no way bridged the gap which divided French
men ideologically# the formation of the committee marked the end of Vichy
■and created a single authority to represent France among the Allied power®.
fidence in the future. This confidence was usually shared by the American
people who had sometimes held different views on the best way to assure
French unity but had never failed to agree on the basic objective of
A. AKBRICAJS SOOHBES
I. Htmpapera
Baltimore B m
Boston Herald
Boston transcript
394
rm s t e i (m m m m tim )
Bwwl«B S S S M E
rMl^^phla im^ulrty
MO!«*$ leader
saginwr (li<Mim) m m
Tm Chrtotiaa Castey
M— O i ^ m n w«ni m i r iirM!») iwl»n w>>
CTOey S m m
Th& C m m m m l (Catholic)
Cmrrmt Kfeteay
Fore&m Affaire
Fyrto» (eomerv&tiw)
nanwr'a Mtgaalfla
596
Uviag k m
fimamdk
Opinion (Jewish)
The Patriot
Scholastic
Time
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pp. 39-40. ’
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January 10, 1942, p. 27. *-- ^ ----- -- -
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m
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1140*4043, passim*
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of the Men Who Betrayed the French Motion by Amir© Simone/ The
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1940, pp. 775-774* “ ™ “
Kirchwey, Freda, “Laval Takes Over,” The Motion* vol* 154, April 25,
1942, pp. 477-478.
Krock, Arthur, MXn the Nation/ column in the Mow Tork Tim m 9 1940-1943,
asafr
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1942, pp. 691-605*
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599
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pp. 291*502,
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1942, p. 527#------------- --------
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1940, pp. 778*779, *
Harris, Prank, "Free France, Poor and Paralysed, Waits for Germany to
Finish the War," Life, vol. 9, September 25, 1940, pp* 78-80.
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passim.
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November *8, 1942, pp. 665-566* ~
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/
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