Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
French student observed: “The
boche
is well disciplined; in Poland, he
is ordered to murder and rape: he murders and rapes. In France, he
must smile and excuse himself.”4 After more than three centuries of
empire building, most Frenchmen understood that imperial conquest
meant domination and extraction.
Faced with the prospect of a total Nazi victory, Prime Minister
Paul Reynaud’s government made choices that struck many contemporary observers as cowardly but were typical of how defeated peoples responded to an imperial conquest. While some of Reynaud’s
military advisors called for a last stand in Brittany under the cover
of the British navy, the speed of the Nazi advance ruled this out.
The prime minister also appealed to Franklin Roosevelt for military
aid, but the American president provided only words of encouragement. Desperate to keep the French fi ghting, the British government offered to create a permanent political union with France that
would have entailed common citizenship, economic integration, and
full cooperation in postwar reconstruction. Right-wing politicians
blocked the proposal by depicting it as a British plot to turn France
into a dominion.
Instead, French leaders recalled Marshal Henri-Philippe Pétain,
the eighty-four-year-old hero of World War I, to take control of the
government and salvage what remained of France’s pride and sovereignty. Pétain had made his reputation defending the Verdun fortress
against relentless German attacks and was one of the forty “immortals” in the Académie Française. Now he concluded that France’s
cause was lost, and on June 17 he made a radio broadcast announcing
his intention to seek a negotiated peace with Germany to preserve
France’s autonomy, fl eet, and empire. In doing so, Pétain overruled a
faction in the cabinet that called for a French government in exile, and
he had the parliamentary deputies who escaped to Morocco arrested
and brought home.
Casting himself as the savior of France, Pétain signed an armistice
with the Nazis on June 22, 1940, in the same railway car in which
Germany had accepted the Allied powers’ terms for the end of the
First World War. The agreement was not a formal peace treaty but a
France under the Nazis 355
temporary truce under the international law of belligerent occupation
that theoretically left French sovereignty intact. Both sides expected
the British to come to terms with the Germans and bring the fi ghting
in the west to a quick end. Ultimately, however, the Franco-German
armistice lasted more than fi ve years as the war dragged on.
While Pétain miscalculated tragically, the continuing confl ict saved
the French from bearing the full weight of imperial subjecthood. Hitler could not spare the resources to rule France directly while Germany remained at war with Britain and later the Soviet Union and
the United States. At the very least, a hostile exiled French government and army in North Africa would have tied down his forces and
put the French Empire in Allied hands. Scheming to turn Pétain into
a client, the Nazis were relatively restrained in dictating the terms of
the armistice, which in essence imposed a system of indirect imperial
rule on France. The agreement froze the German advance and divided
the country into an occupied northern zone and an autonomous
southern zone that remained under Pétain’s
état français
(French
state). This arrangement left the strategic Atlantic coast and France’s
industrial and agricultural heartlands in German hands, but Pétain’s
regime, which took its informal name from the marshal’s capital at
Vichy, retained technical sovereignty over the entire country. In the
occupied north, the French prefects and bureaucrats who in practice
worked for the German military administration continued to answer
to Pétain as the legitimate ruler of France.
Under the terms of the armistice, Vichy France nominally became
a neutral power with the right to legislate and govern, but it bore little resemblance to the republican regime that it replaced. On July 10,
1940, the French parliament voted overwhelmingly to give Pétain
absolute and authoritarian legislative and executive powers. But this
was just the illusion of sovereignty. The armistice forced the French to
pay the crippling costs of their own occupation, a fi gure that amounted
to twenty million reichsmarks per day. The Vichy regime could not
enact policies that confl icted with Germany’s interests as the “occupying power,” and the French army demobilized its major combat
units and surrendered its heavy weapons. The two million prisoners
of war in Germany also stayed in captivity as hostages to ensure that
the French remained cooperative and compliant. In the end, Pétain’s
only major achievement was keeping the fl eet and overseas empire
under French control.
356 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
The Vichy authorities claimed that they came to terms with the
Nazis to protect France from the destruction of total war and the full
weight of imperial domination. Pétain clung to the illusion of sovereignty and promised the French public that “the government remains
free, France will be administered by Frenchmen.”5 Pierre Laval, the
Vichy minister of state, recalled the devastation of occupied France in
World War I and asked rhetorically after the German defeat in 1945:
“Would it have been in the greater interest of France to abandon it
to disorder and to the cruel domination of the conqueror rather than
to make the attempt . . . to hold off the conqueror by negotiation?”6
The Atrebatian chieftain Togodumnus, the Visigothic nobleman Theodemir, the Inkan prince Manqu, and the Bengali
nawab
Mir Jafar all
would have understood these sentiments. The Vichy regime also had
much in common with the Italian notables who retained their status
by rallying to Napoleon and with the Kikuyu elites who tried to make
the most of their subjecthood by becoming colonial chiefs.
In signing the armistice agreement, Pétain and his allies assured
themselves that they were working in partnership with the Germans
rather than working for them as imperial subjects. They gambled that
a quick Nazi victory would pave the way for a formal peace treaty,
thereby ensuring France a prominent place in a new German Europe.
As the right-wing ex-communist Jacques Doriot insisted: “France
must pass from the camp of the conquered into the camp of the conquerors.”7 The Vichyites justifi ed this desertion from the Allied cause
by claiming that Britain conspired to destroy France by encouraging
French forces to fi ght on while secretly negotiating a separate peace
with Germany. On July 3, 1940, the British appeared to confi rm these
allegations when the Royal Navy attacked the Algerian ports of Oran
and Mers-el-Kebir to keep the French fl eet out of Nazi hands. The
raid, which destroyed a battleship and killed more than thirteen hundred sailors, led Pétain to break off diplomatic relations with Britain.
History has judged the Vichy regime harshly, but in the summer
of 1940 the French public largely supported Pétain’s actions. Recalling the millions left dead and maimed from four years of carnage
in the Great War, many people praised Pétain for sparing precious
French blood. In casting about for scapegoats they blamed incompetent generals, cowardly Belgians, perfi dious Britons, decadent and
atheistic French socialists, two-faced domestic communists, and Jewish plotters for France’s quick defeat. General Charles de Gaulle, the
France under the Nazis 357
great hero of the resistance who fl ed to London after the armistice,
initially had little success in rallying the French. Most people ignored
his defi ant call to reject Pétain and fi ght on:
France has lost a battle! But France has not lost the war! Nothing
is lost, because this war is a world war. In the free world, there are
tremendous forces which have not yet been engaged. The day will
come when these forces will crush the enemy. France, on that day,
must be present at the victory. Then she will recover her liberty and
her greatness.8
This passionate appeal fell on deaf ears, and most of the fi fteen
thousand French soldiers that the British evacuated from Dunkirk
chose to return home to occupied France rather than join his Free
French forces. Most Frenchmen wanted peace in 1940, which allowed
Pétain to strip de Gaulle of his rank and ignore the British-sponsored
Provisional French National Committee.
Just as Christian Iberians blamed the Umayyad invasion on Roderic’s violation of Hercules’s tower, and the peoples of the Andean
and East African highlands used millenarian tales of pestilential butterfl ies and fi re-belching iron snakes to explain how they fell victim
to foreign invaders, many Frenchmen similarly equated the Nazi
invasion with the end of the world. Religious pilgrimages increased
in the fi rst year of the occupation as many sought help from the
Virgin Mary and Catholic saints. Aiming to turn this millenarian
catastrophe into an opportunity for national redemption, the Vichyites pledged to create a revitalized France that would return to global
preeminence.
Pétain and his followers should have known better. No imperial
power ever allowed its subjects any measure of real autonomy. Hitler never ceased to view France as a mortal enemy and simply used
Pétain and his allies as a means to an end. According to one of his confi dants, the Nazi
Führer
(leader) had decided France’s fate in 1939:
I shall come to France as a liberator. We shall present ourselves to the
French petite bourgeoisie as the champions of a fair social order and
eternal peace. . . . I shall long since have established contacts with men
who will form a new government, a government that suits me. We
shall fi nd plenty of men of that kind. We shall not even need to buy
them. They will come to us of their own accord, driven by ambition,
blindness, partisan discord and pride.9
358 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
Hitler always intended to impose the full weight of imperial
subjecthood on the French by destroying them as a nation and
co-opting and subverting their own institutions to wring as much
wealth out of them as possible. Not surprisingly, Pétain’s vision of
a new France evaporated in the face of Nazi exploitation, and the
marshal found himself and his government reduced to the status of
imperial puppets.
In attempting to work with Hitler, the Vichyites introduced a new
term into the vocabulary of empire:
collaboration
. In its most literal
and benign sense, the word referred to some sort of mutually benefi cial joint project or venture. But in the context of the Second World
War it came to mean traitorous cooperation with the Nazis. Pétain
spoke of “setting out along the road of collaboration” in seeking a
working relationship with the Germans, a strategy that Togodumnus,
Theodemir, Manqu, Mir Jafar, and Koitalel’s son Lelimo all would
have understood. Like his forerunners, the French marshal hoped to
salvage a measure of dignity, autonomy, and prestige from the collapse of the old order and sought power and infl uence in the new
imperial world.
Nevertheless, defeat did not obligate Pétain and his allies to collaborate. Like most people in occupied Europe, many Frenchmen adopted
a strategy of
attentisme
(wait and see) instead of allying with the
Nazis or the puppet Vichy regime. The Vichyites, however, viewed
the Third Republic’s defeat as an opportunity to remake France in
their own image. Unlike the Italians who rallied to Napoleon or the
Kenyan chiefs who made British indirect rule possible, they did not
profi t personally from collaboration. Pétain lived simply in a Vichy
hotel room, and his state minister, Pierre Laval, was already rich. Hoping to exercise the same kind of civilizing infl uence on the Germans
that the ancient Greeks had on the Romans, the Vichyites gambled
that the Nazis would have to give them a real measure of autonomy
to make their empire work. The French were imperial rulers themselves, and if they had bothered to understand the realities of imperial subjecthood, they would have realized that this assumption was
tragically naive.
Conventional narratives of this dark period in European history
rightly cast the German subjugation of France as brutal, totalitarian, and above all profoundly unjust. More fundamentally, European
historians tend to depict the Nazi regime as exceptional and unique
France under the Nazis 359
in its violence and barbarity. To be sure, the crimes of the Holocaust
are without parallel in human history, but the Nazis clearly have
their place in the long history of empire. The Martiniquais poet Aimé
Césaire was certainly correct in arguing that Hitler “applied to Europe
colonialist procedures which until then had been reserved exclusively for the Arabs of Algeria, the coolies of India, and the blacks of
Africa.”10 While they were criminals of the highest order, the Nazis
at least exposed the hypocrisy of the new imperialism by treating the
French like Africans and Asians. Many Frenchmen would have been