Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
and free zones who rallied to the new regime kept their jobs, but the
Vichyites fi red anyone whom they considered politically or socially
suspect. They also ignored democratic election laws, appointing mayors and municipal councils directly. The Nazis were generally satisfi ed
with these developments and pretended that Pétain’s administrative
reach extended to the entire country so long as he did not threaten
their strategic interests and fulfi lled France’s fi nancial obligations to
the Reich.
For the most part, the Vichy regime rarely gave the Nazis any
trouble, for it focused most of its attention inward. In justifying
390 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
their collaboration, the Vichyites planned to restore the true France
through what it called a National Revolution. Dispensing with the
revolutionary virtues of
liberté, égalité, fraternité
(liberty, equality,
fraternity), they made
travail, famille, patrie
(work, family, fatherland) their watchwords. Out of the ashes of the morally bankrupt
Third Republic the National Revolution aimed to create a corporatist political and social order as an alternative to capitalism and communism. The Vichy social revolutionaries believed that they could
substitute state-directed corporations of employers, workers, and
peasants for the divisiveness of the free market and Marxist class
struggle. They also forged an alliance with the church by banning
Masonic lodges and repealing most of the Third Republic’s anticlerical laws. In return, senior cardinals and archbishops issued a decree
requiring Catholics to give their “absolute loyalty to the legitimate
power in France.”
Equally important, the National Revolution aimed to restore
moral order by returning women and children to their proper places
in society. Blaming France’s defeat on falling birth rates and domestic
chaos, Vichy ideologues stepped up their efforts to expel women from
the workplace. They banned divorce and advertisements for contraceptives, increased penalties for abortions, and gave nursing mothers
and women bearing more than four children medals and increased
rations. To make these children proper Frenchmen the regime fi red
leftist teachers, restored religious instruction in the state curriculum,
and subsidized private Catholic schools. Additionally, dour Vichy offi cials banned youths from cinemas on weekday afternoons and outlawed dancing and excessively strong alcoholic beverages. To make
sure young men spent their time properly, they created the Compagnons de France (Companions of France) for boys fi fteen to twenty
and the Chantiers de la Jeunesse (Youth Workshops) for those of
draft age who normally would have gone into the army. In the short
term, the members of these groups would serve France through their
labor. Eventually they would become the nucleus of a reconstituted
national army.
While the Vichyites looked forward in imagining a new France,
they also used the German victory as an opportunity for revenge.
Obsessed with the need for national unity to ensure that anti German resistance did not give the Nazis an excuse to interfere with
the National Revolution, they went to great lengths to suppress dis-France under the Nazis 391
sent. This effectively made Vichy France a police state. The Vichyites
took over and centralized municipal police forces into a new Police
Nationale (National Police) and supplanted the
gendarmerie
with the
paramilitary Groupes Mobiles de Reserve (Mobile Reserve Groups)
that swore loyalty directly to Pétain. A state spy network tapped
phones and read mail and telegrams to identify traitors and troublemakers who faced prosecution in “special courts.” In 1941, Pétain
and Darlan allowed Joseph Darnand, a decorated veteran and former
Cagoule member, to recruit a right-wing militia from the ranks of
the more moderate French Legion of Veterans. Known as the Service
d’Ordre Légionnaire (Legion Security Force, SOL), it specifi cally targeted the regime’s enemies.
The roster of people and groups who fell into this category was
quite extensive. It included communists, Freemasons, Jews, foreigners,
followers of the exiled general Charles de Gaulle, and the leftist leaders
of the Third Republic. The Vichy regime even prosecuted Blum, Daladier, Reynaud, and several other politicians and generals for leading
France into a disastrous war, but the Germans ended the trials when
they became nationalistic inquiries into the French defeat. Vichy offi cials had a much freer hand in dealing with their other enemies and
jailed them along with criminals and black marketeers in a network of
forty-nine detention camps. To control the immigrant contamination,
Pétain’s government revoked the citizenship of half a million naturalized Frenchmen to pave the way for their arrest and deportation.
Predictably, Vichy authoritarianism fell most heavily on Jews. Acting on their own initiative, Vichy offi cials enacted laws banning them
from public offi ce, the civil and colonial services, and the professions.
Although they grudgingly accepted well-assimilated Jews as Frenchmen, they created the General Commissariat for Jewish Questions
in response to German pressure and set about segregating all Jews
from greater French society. Only Jewish veterans, Legion of Honor
holders, and distinguished artists were exempt. Some Vichyites hated
Jews passionately, but their willingness to abet Hitler’s anti-Semitic
agenda was born as much from pragmatic self-interest as from ideology. In setting up their own version of the Nazi aryanization programs, they hoped to defend French sovereignty and keep the wealth
of French Jews out of German hands.
The Nazis approved, but they played no direct role in pushing the
Vichy regime to adopt these anti-Semitic policies. More important,
392 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
they had no interest in the National Revolution, and like all empire
builders, their primary concern was obedience and extraction. From
the German perspective, collaboration was a clever ruse to keep the
French divided and complacent. Hitler reportedly had trouble even
pronouncing the German version of the word,
Kollaboration
, and
made no secret of his true intentions for France in discussions with
his inner circle. According to Goebbels: “Talk of collaboration is only
designed for the moment. . . . [Hitler] said, should the war turn out as
he wished, then France must pay dearly, because it caused and inaugurated it.”38 In the short term, the
Führer
let the French believe that
collaboration was an escape from full subjecthood. From the Nazi
standpoint, the threat of direct military rule, German control of the
Vichy border, and the millions of French POWs in Germany ensured
that the
état français
did not become unmanageable.
Responding to the lure of restored sovereignty, the Vichyites were
actually the driving force behind collaboration in the fi rst two years of
the occupation. After the British attack on Mers-el-Kebir, an enraged
Pétain offered to give the Germans access to French bases in North
Africa, while Laval suggested fi ve hundred French pilots might help
fi ght the Battle of Britain. In October 1940, Pétain and Laval went a
step further by meeting directly with Hitler as he traveled through
France to confer with General Francisco Franco in Spain. Seeking permission to rebuild the armed forces and reinforce the overseas empire,
the Vichy leaders obligingly acknowledged that France was responsible for the war. They fl inched, however, when Hitler demanded that
France join the war as an Axis junior partner.
Laval’s successor Darlan was more willing to accept the inherent
risks of collaboration by accepting the German conditions. His primary objective was a formal peace treaty that would end Nazi occupation in exchange for France’s acceptance of a supporting economic
and strategic role in a unifi ed Nazi Europe. Vichy economic planners proposed a network of highways and canals linking the French
and German economies and offered to help develop the Reich’s
new eastern “colonies.” In promising to use the French navy and
empire to defend the continent as part of an “Atlantic shield,” Darlan implicitly signaled a willingness to fi ght the Allies and acknowledge permanent Nazi rule in Europe. This bellicose stance was in
part a response to the undeclared naval war in the Mediterranean
resulting from attempts by French ships to run the Royal Navy’s
France under the Nazis 393
blockade of continental Europe. In May 1941, Darlan even made
a radio broadcast accusing Britain of planning to seize the French
Empire and reduce France to the status of a “second-class dominion,
a continental Ireland.”
The Vichy premier’s offer to take a more active role in the fi ghting
was tempting, and the Nazis strung him along. Ignoring his plea for
a permanent peace treaty, they offered to reduce the occupation bill
and relax control of Vichy’s borders in exchange for tangible French
military aid. The draft of these Paris Protocols gave the Afrika Korps
access to French railways and military bases in North Africa, turned
over fi fteen hundred French trucks, and required the French fl eet to
escort German naval convoys in the Mediterranean. This was too
much even for Pétain. Signing the Paris Protocols would have alienated the United States and exposed France’s overseas territories to
Allied attack. Overruling his minister of state, Pétain only allowed
the Germans to use Syrian airfi elds to supply anti-British rebels in
Iraq. Darlan trumpeted the Syrian arrangement as an example of
successful collaboration, but Hitler’s paltry concessions damaged the
admiral’s credibility. However, the Vichy regime was stuck with collaborationism, and in August 1942 Pétain congratulated Hitler publicly for “cleansing” French soil by repelling an Allied raid on the port
of Dieppe. He then went on to offer to “open a French crenellation in
the Atlantic Wall” if the Nazis allowed the French army back into the
occupied zone.
While Hitler manipulated the Vichy leaders masterfully, earlier
generations of conquerors would have recognized his bait-and-switch
tactics as one of the most time-tested strategies of imperial rule. In
accepting a subordinate role in the Nazi empire, the Vichyites tied
their authority and status to the new imperial regime. Togodumnus, Theodemir, Prince Manqu, and Mir Jafar were in similar predicaments. While German offi cials were surprised at how closely the
French obeyed the terms of the armistice agreement, Pétain and his
allies cooperated with the Nazis primarily because they needed some
sort of concession to demonstrate that collaboration worked.
The Nazis were able to control France with a relatively small
cohort of troops and administrators by exploiting this Vichy quandary. The trauma of the French military collapse threw established
conceptions of French patriotism into question and opened the way
for Frenchmen to imagine alternative conceptions of France without
394 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
appearing overtly treasonous. For these ambitious men the Germans
became useful allies against rival nationalists.
The Nazis nurtured and profi ted from the resulting discord by
alternately supporting and abandoning the various French factions
who were still fi ghting the battles of the 1930s. Exploiting the partition
of France, the Germans allowed some leftists and many right-wing
extremists to operate relatively freely in Paris as a counterweight to
Pétain. Prominent fi gures in the latter motley group included Marcel
Deat, a former socialist turned Nazi sympathizer, Jacques Doriot, the
ex-communist founder of the fascist Parti Populaire Français, and the
Cagoulard leader Eugène Deloncle. All of these men founded new
collaborationist versions of their organizations, but Doriot’s Parti
Populaire Français had the widest following and was Pétain’s most
serious rival. There was also Marcel Bucard, whose Mouvement Franciste (Francist Movement) made the easy transition from one of the
most extreme interwar right-wing leagues to collaborationist party.
Finally, Abetz introduced another divisive element into Paris politics
by installing Laval in the French capital as a future bargaining chip
after the premier fell from power in Vichy.
Although all of these groups professed an ultranationalistic love
of France, they competed for the privilege of defi ning what form the
French nation would take in the new Nazi Europe. The Germans
indulged them by allowing them to recruit, organize, hold parades,
and fl y tricolor fl ags, but there were no elections to be won or political
spoils to be divided. They often fought each other in the Paris streets
and bars, and rumors fl ew that the “Gaullist agent” who tried to assassinate Laval and Deat at a public ceremony was really in the pay of
Deloncle. Ultimately, however, the Paris collaborationists competed
primarily by trying to outdo each other in proving their usefulness
to the foreign imperial regime. Each aspired to supplant Pétain, but
they all had to pay him public deference as one of France’s greatest
heroes. In practical terms, they understood that their fortunes were