. After the war, de Gaulle's 18 June broadcast was often identified as the beginning of the
French Resistance, and the beginning of the process of liberating France from the yoke of German occupation. The speech began de Gaulle's entire future career, what he later described as his "legitimacy". He was the first French public figure to oppose an armistice with Germany, and the speech gave reasons why continuing to fight the war was not hopeless. Although the 18 June speech is among the most famous in French history, few French listeners heard it; most accounts of having heard it are
false memories. It was broadcast on the BBC, a British radio station, which did not retain the unimportant recording. The broadcast, practically unannounced, was by an obscure brigadier general who had only recently been appointed as a junior minister. Consequently, of the 10,000 French citizens in Britain, only 300 volunteered. Of the more than 100,000 soldiers temporarily on British soil, most of them recently evacuated from
Norway or
Dunkirk, only 7,000 stayed on to join de Gaulle. The rest returned to France and were quickly made prisoners of war. However, de Gaulle's speech was undeniably influential and provided motivation for the people of
France and for the oppressed people of the rest of Europe. The themes of the speech would be reused throughout the war to inspire the French people to resist German occupation. Four days later, de Gaulle delivered a speech that largely reiterated the points made in his 18 June speech, and the second speech was heard by a larger audience in France. The content of the 22 June speech is often confused for that of 18 June. In addition, in early August a poster written by de Gaulle would be distributed widely in London and would become known as '''' (The London Poster). Variations of this poster would be produced and displayed in Africa, South America and France itself over the course of the war. The 70th anniversary of the speech was marked in 2010 by the issuing of a
postage stamp (designed by
Georges Mathieu) and a
€2 commemorative coin. In 2023, '''' commissioned a recreation of the speech using
artificial intelligence to replicate de Gaulle's voice, using a German-language transcription of the speech in Swiss military archives to find the French record of the speech closest to the original and recording a reading of the speech by
François Morel as "base audio" to be modified by vocal synthesis to be closer to de Gaulle's voice. ==
France has lost a battle, but has not lost the war==