Georges was appointed as Gamelin's deputy, but they had a mutually-hostile relationship. On the outbreak of the
Second World War in September 1939, Georges became commander of all French field armies. Gamelin and Georges assured Daladier that France had the greatest army in the world and were shocked when the Allied front was broken through at
Sedan by the
Wehrmacht. According to the memoirs of Captain
André Beaufre, after the front was broken, the feeling was rife in Georges's headquarters staff that the battle with the Germans had been lost, with Beaufre himself witnessing Georges breaking into tears. On 19 May 1940, both Gamelin and Georges were both dismissed, and General Weygand returned as head of the French Army. Once Marshal Pétain took power after the
fall of France and the collapse of the
French Third Republic, Georges refused to play any significant role in the new
Vichy France government.
Winston Churchill wanted Georges to become commander of French forces in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia after the invasion of North Africa in November 1942. In that aim, Churchill was unsuccessful.
Franklin Roosevelt insisted for the post go to General
Henri Giraud instead. In January 1943, Giraud and General
Charles de Gaulle became co-presidents of the
French Committee of National Liberation (CFLN). Georges was appointed minister without portfolio, but well before the end of the year, he, like Giraud, was ousted by de Gaulle. Thereafter he took no part in politics. He died in 1951. ==References==