The military strength of the communists was still relatively feeble at the end of 1941, but the rapid growth of the FTP ensured that French communists regained their reputation as an effective anti-fascist force.
Arthur Dallidet was placed in charge of security. Dallidet was recognized talking to a woman in a cafe beside the
Reuilly metro station on the evening on 28 February 1942. He was arrested, taken to
La Santé Prison, chained, handcuffed and severely beaten. He did not reveal any information, but had been carrying a long list of names and addresses. This led to other arrests including "Betty" (
Madeleine Passot), his most important liaison officer. Further names and addresses were found in Betty's apartment. Gradually the FTP developed a more military organization, with sections, companies and battalions, each containing three lower-level groups. There were often gaps in this paper organization. The FTP complained that the British and Gaullists were deliberately depriving them of arms, although more likely the problem was that they did not have the necessary contacts to arrange delivery. In November 1943
Joseph Epstein, the FTP Chief of Staff, was arrested and subjected to extreme torture, but revealed nothing. This was followed by a major police operation that largely destroyed the FTP's Paris organization. From the end of 1943 the national organization began to intensify preparation for a national uprising to support the expected Allied landings in Europe. By 1944, the FTP had an estimated strength of 100,000 men and women. In March 1944 General
Charles de Gaulle placed all the
French Forces of the Interior (''Forces françaises de l'intérieur'', FFI) under the authority of General
Marie-Pierre Kœnig, but the FTP retained its de facto independence. During the Allied
Normandy Campaign the FTP conducted delaying actions in the center and southwest of France against the German troops who had been recalled to the battle zone.
Liberation of Paris From June to August 1944 Ouzoulias coordinated the FTP's military action in the Paris region. Ouzoulias and Colonel
Henri Rol-Tanguy, who led the
Île-de-France Resistance movement, planned a major rising in Paris which played a vital role during the August 1944
Liberation of Paris. The FFI in Paris led by
Alexandre Parodi and
Jacques Chaban-Delmas urged patience while Tanguy wanted to start a revolt, being deterred only by the fact that the Resistance in Paris had about 15,000 men, but only 600 guns, mostly rifles and machine guns. On 19 August 1944, the Paris police, until then still loyal to Vichy, went over to the Resistance as a group of policemen hosted the
tricolore over the Préfecture de Police on the Ile de la Cité, which was the first time the tricolor had flown in Paris since June 1940. Emboldened, Tanguy and his men started to attack German forces on the
Boulevard Saint-Michel and
Boulevard Saint-Germain, leading to a mass insurrection as Parisians started to build barricades in the streets. By the end of the day, about 50 Germans and 150
résistants had been killed and not wanting the Communists to have the credit for liberating Paris, the Gaullist Parodi sanctioned the uprising. Among those participating in the fighting were those resisters freed on 19 August Four in a Nordling negotiated prisoner exchange. These included 19 year-old
Madeleine Riffaud who on 23 August led the FTP operation that trapped a train carrying loot and munitions from the city in the
Buttes-Chaumont tunnel and secured the surrender of the 80 German soldiers aboard. On the 25 August, after an advance unit of
General Leclerc's
2nd Armored Division, "
La Nueve" (160 men, most of whom were
Spanish Republicans) had broken into the city and reached the
Hotel de Ville, von Choltitz capitulated. The last FTP operation in the city (in which Riffaud also participated) was on the 26th, an attack on the barracks on
Place de la République, whose garrison who refused to accept von Choltitz's order to surrender.
Demobilisation On 28 August 1944 de Gaulle put Ouzoulias in charge of the FTP and the FFI. In the autumn of 1944 Ouzoulias was charged by de Gaulle with integrating the FTP members with the regular French army. In October 1944 the communist militias were dissolved and the FTP was integrated into
General de Lattre's army. In 2019, a surviving member of FTP, Edmond Réveil, revealed details of the June 1944 execution of up to 40 Nazi occupiers, taken during the
Tulle uprising, along with a woman collaborator, at , near
Meymac. After delay due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, forensic examination of the likely burial site only began in May 2023, initially using
ground-penetrating radar. 11 bodies had been found at the site in 1967; by August 2023 artefacts had been unearthed, but no further bodies. ==See also==