Prelude was an armoured division commander and a minister in the
Reynaud government during the
Battle of France. On 10 May 1940,
Nazi Germany invaded France and the
Low Countries, rapidly defeating the Dutch and Belgians, while armoured units attacking through
the Ardennes cut off the Franco-British strike force in Belgium. By the end of May, the British and French northern armies were trapped in a series of pockets, including
Dunkirk,
Calais,
Boulogne,
Saint-Valery-en-Caux and
Lille. The
Dunkirk evacuation was only made possible by the resistance of these troops, particularly the French army divisions at Lille. From 27 May to 4 June, over 200,000 members of the
British Expeditionary Force and 140,000 French troops were evacuated from Dunkirk. Neither side viewed this as the end of the battle; French evacuees were quickly returned to France and many fought in the June battles. After being evacuated from Dunkirk,
Alan Brooke landed in
Cherbourg on 2 June to reform the BEF, along with the
1st Canadian Division, the only remaining fully equipped formation in Britain. Contrary to what is often assumed, French morale was higher in June than May and they easily repulsed an attack in the south by
Fascist Italy. A defensive line was re-established along the Somme but much of the armour was lost in Northern France; they were also crippled by shortages of aircraft, the vast majority incurred when airfields were over-run, rather than air combat. On 1 June, Charles was promoted to brigadier general; on 5 June, Prime Minister
Paul Reynaud appointed him Under Secretary of State for Defence, a junior post in the
French cabinet. was known for his willingness to challenge accepted ideas; in 1912, he asked to be posted to
Pétain's regiment, whose maxim 'Firepower kills' was then in stark contrast to the prevailing
orthodoxy of
Attaque à outrance. He was also a long-time advocate of the modern
armoured warfare ideas applied by the
Wehrmacht, and commanded the
4th Armoured Division at the
Battle of Montcornet. However, he was not personally popular; significantly, none of his immediate military subordinates joined him in 1940. The new French commander
Maxime Weygand was 73 years old and like Pétain, an Anglophobe who viewed Dunkirk as another example of Britain's unreliability as an ally; de Gaulle later recounted he 'gave up hope' when the Germans renewed their attack on 8 June and demanded an immediate Armistice. was one of a small group of government ministers who favoured continued resistance and Reynaud sent him to London in order to negotiate
the proposed union between France and Britain. When this plan collapsed, he resigned on 16 June and Pétain became President of the Council. flew to
Bordeaux on the 17th but returned to London the same day when he realised Pétain had already agreed to an armistice with the
Axis powers.
De Gaulle rallies the Free French during the war, reproductions of the
18 June appeal were distributed through
underground means as pamphlets and plastered on walls as posters by supporters of the
Résistance. This could be a dangerous activity. On 18 June 1940, General spoke to the
French people via
BBC radio, urging French soldiers, sailors and airmen to join in the fight against the
Nazis: :"France is not alone! She is not alone! She has a great empire behind her! Together with the
British Empire, she can form a bloc that controls the seas and continue the struggle. She may, like England, draw upon the limitless industrial resources of the United States". Some members of the
British Cabinet had reservations about 's speech, fearing that such a broadcast could provoke the Pétain government into handing the French fleet over to the Nazis, but British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill, despite his own concerns, agreed to the broadcast. In France, 's "Appeal of 18 June" () was not widely heard that day but, together with his BBC broadcasts in subsequent days and his later communications, came to be widely remembered throughout France and its colonial empire as the voice of national honour and freedom.
Armistice On 19 June, again broadcast to the French nation saying that in France, "all forms of authority had disappeared" and since its government had "fallen under the bondage of the enemy and all our institutions have ceased to function", that it was "the clear duty" of all French servicemen to fight on. This would form the essential legal basis of 's
government in exile, that the armistice soon to be signed with the Nazis was not merely dishonourable but illegal, and that in signing it, the French government would itself be committing treason. On the other hand, if Vichy was the legal French government as some such as
Julian T. Jackson have argued, and his followers were revolutionaries, unlike the
Dutch,
Belgian, and other
governments in exile in London. A third option might be that neither considered that a fully free, legitimate, sovereign, and independent successor state to the
Third Republic existed following the Armistice, as both Free France and
Vichy France refrained from making that implicit claim by studiously avoiding using the word "republic" when referring to themselves. In Vichy's case, underlying reasons were compounded by ideals of a stamping out France's republican heritage. On 22 June 1940, Marshal Pétain signed an
armistice with Germany, followed by
a similar one with Italy on 24 June; both of these came into force on 25 June. After a parliamentary vote on 10 July, Pétain became the leader of the newly established authoritarian regime known as
Vichy France, the town of
Vichy being the seat of government. was
tried in absentia in Vichy France and sentenced to death for treason. He, on the other hand, regarded himself as the last remaining member of the legitimate Reynaud government and considered Pétain's assumption of power to be an unconstitutional coup d'état.
Beginnings of the Free French forces , during the
Battle of Britain Despite 's call to continue the struggle, few French forces initially pledged their support. By the end of July 1940, only about 7,000 soldiers had joined the Free French Army in Britain. Three-quarters of French servicemen in Britain requested repatriation. France was bitterly divided by the conflict. Frenchmen everywhere were forced to choose sides, and often deeply resented those who had made a different choice. One French admiral,
René-Émile Godfroy, voiced the opinion of many of those who decided not to join the Free French forces, when in June 1940, he explained to the exasperated British why he would not order his ships in
Alexandria harbour to join : :"For us Frenchmen, the fact is that a government still exists in France, a government supported by a Parliament established in non-occupied territory and which in consequence cannot be considered irregular or deposed. The establishment elsewhere of another government, and all support for this other government would clearly be rebellion." Of France's far-flung empire, only the
French domains of Saint Helena (on 23 June at the initiative of Georges Colin, honorary consul of the domains) and the Franco-British ruled
New Hebrides condominium in the Pacific (on 20 July) answered 's call to arms. It was not until late August that Free France would gain significant support in
French Equatorial Africa. inspecting the Free French forces in England, 24 August 1940 Unlike the troops at Dunkirk or naval forces at sea, relatively few members of the
French Air Force had the means or opportunity to escape. Like all military personnel trapped on the mainland, they were functionally subject to the Pétain government: "French authorities made it clear that those who acted on their own initiative would be classed as deserters, and guards were placed to thwart efforts to get on board ships." In the summer of 1940, around a dozen pilots made it to England and volunteered for the
RAF to help fight the
Luftwaffe. Many more, however, made their way through long and circuitous routes to French territories overseas, eventually regrouping as the
Free French Air Force. The
French Navy was better able to immediately respond to 's call to arms. Most units initially stayed loyal to Vichy, but about 3,600 sailors operating 50 ships around the world joined with the
Royal Navy and formed the nucleus of the
Free French Naval Forces (FFNF; in French: FNFL). Many of the men in the French colonies felt a special need to defend France, their distant "motherland," eventually making up two-thirds of 's Free French Forces.
Composition '' in June 1942 The Free French forces included men from the French Pacific Islands. Mainly coming from Tahiti, there were 550 volunteers in April 1941. They would serve through the North African campaign (including the
Battle of Bir Hakeim), the
Italian Campaign and much of the Liberation of France. In November 1944, 275 remaining volunteers were repatriated and replaced with men of French Forces of the Interior to deal better with the cold weather. The Free French forces also included 5,000 non-French Europeans, mainly serving in units of the
Foreign Legion. There were also escaped Spanish Republicans, veterans of the
Spanish Civil War. In August 1944, they numbered 350 men. The ethnic composition of divisions varied. The main common difference, before the period of August to November 1944, was armoured divisions and armour and support elements within infantry divisions were constituted of mainly white French soldiers and infantry elements of infantry divisions were mainly made up of colonial soldiers. Nearly all NCOs and officers were white French. Both the
2e Division Blindée and
1er Division Blindée were made up of around 75% Europeans and 25% Mahgrebians, which is why the 2e Division Blindée was selected for the
Liberation of Paris. The
5e Division Blindée was almost entirely made up of white Frenchmen. in Egypt, 1941 Records for the Italian campaign show that both the
3rd Algerian Infantry Division and
2nd Moroccan Infantry Division were made up of 60% Mahgrebians and 40% Europeans, while the
4th Moroccan Infantry Division was made up of 65% Mahgrebians and 35% Europeans. The three North African divisions had one brigade of North African soldiers in each division replaced with a brigade of French Forces of the Interior in January 1945. Both the
1st Free French Division and 9th Colonial Infantry Division contained a strong contingent of
Tirailleurs Sénégalais brigades. The 1st Free French Division also contained a mixed brigade of French
Troupes de marine and the Pacific island volunteers. This was also when many new Infantry divisions (12 overall) began to be recruited from mainland France, including the 10th Infantry Division and many Alpine Infantry Divisions. The 3rd Armoured Division was also created in May 1945 but saw no combat in the war. The Free French units in the
Royal Air Force,
Soviet Air Force, and British SAS were mainly composed of men from metropolitan France. Before the addition of the assemblies of Northern Africa and the loss of the runaways who fled France and went to Spain in the spring of 1943 (10,000 according to Jean-Noël Vincent's calculations), a report by the major state general of the Free French Forces in London from October 30, 1942 records 61,670 combatants in the Army, of which 20,200 were from colonies and 20,000 were from the Levant's special troops (non-Free French forces). In May 1943, citing the Joint Planning Staff, Jean-Louis Crémieux-Brilhac alludes to 79,600 men who constitute ground forces, including 21,500 men from special Syro-Lebanese troops, 2,000 men of color supervised by Free French Forces in northern Palestine, and 650 soldiers assigned to the general headquarters in London. in Scotland, 17 July 1943 According to the tally of Henri Écochard, an ex-Free French Forces serviceman, there were at least 54,500 soldiers. In 2009, in his work on the Free French Forces, Jean-François Muracciole, a French historian specializing in Free France, reevaluated his count with that of Henri Écochard, while considering that Écochard's list had greatly underestimated the number of colonial combatants. According to Muracciole, between the creation of the Free French forces in the Summer 1940 and the merger with the Army of Africa in summer 1943, 73,300 men fought for Free France. This included 39,300 French (from metropolitan France and colonial settlers), 30,000 colonial soldiers (mostly from sub-Saharan Africa) and 3,800 foreigners. They were divided up as follows: Army: 50,000; Naval: 12,500; Aviation: 3,200; Communications in France: 5,700; Free French Forces committees: 1,900. General Leclerc's second armored division included two units of female volunteers: The Rochambeau Group with the Army (dozens of women) and the Woman Service of the Naval Fleet with the Navy (9 women). Their role consisted of administering first aid to the first line of injured soldiers (often to stop bleeding) before evacuating them by stretcher to ambulances and then driving these ambulances under enemy fire to care centers several kilometers behind the lines. The following anecdote by
Pierre Clostermann suggests the spirit of the times in the Free French Forces; a commander reproaches one of Clostermann's comrades for having yellow shoes and a yellow sweater under his uniform, to which the comrade responds: "My Commander, I am a civilian who voluntarily came to fight the war that the soldiers don't want to fight!" ==Cross of Lorraine==