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France's Algerian Nightmare
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: Did
FDR Lure Japan Into Attacking Pearl Harbor?
Marking the
50th anniversary of the end of the frightful Algerian
Independence War, French President Francois Hollande did the right
thing last Thursday by recognizing the "suffering" France
had inflicted on its former colony.
It was not
the outright apology that many Algerians had demanded, but it was
about as far as a French leader could go. Hollande acknowledged
"for 132 years, what Algeria had been subjected to was profoundly
brutal and unfair. That system had a name: colonialism."
France invaded
and occupied Algeria in 1830 under the pretext that its ruler had
struck the French ambassador in the face with a fly whisk. A million
French, Spanish and Italian farmers eventually settled in Algeria,
grabbing its richest lands. Algeria was proclaimed an integral part
of the French state.
In 1954, pro-independence
demonstrations erupted across Algeria. French settlers were attacked.
France sent in notoriously brutal Senegelese colonial troops to
rape and kill tens of thousands of Arabs and Berber. The Algeria
revolution had begun.
As a student
in Geneva, Switzerland, I became imbued, as youth will do, by the
cause of Algerian independence and a hatred for colonialism – an
anger I keep to this day. As violence spread across Algeria, I organized
student demonstrations supporting Algeria's FLN rebels and met with
rebel leaders in Paris.
At the tender
age of 17, I was targeted for death by La Main Rouge, a shadowy
group of assassins and bombers run by French Intelligence. Fired
by the unambiguous passion of youth, I sought to join FLN guerillas
fighting in Algeria's rugged mountains. My determined mother somehow
managed to meet with FLN leaders in Europe and get them to prevent
me from going to what was a likely death.
The Algerian
uprising set the tone for many other colonial wars: Indochina, Malaysia,
Kenya, Afghanistan, Chechnya, Iraq. They were all marked by industrialized
brutality, widespread torture, reprisals against civilians, masked
informers, secret executions, use of mercenaries.
As the war
dragged on, French became increasingly dismayed by the crimes committed
by its military and police. The use of torture spread back to the
mainland, where there was a large North African population. In short,
France, the cradle of liberty, human rights and reason was befouled
by repression and torture. The French Foreign Legion that did a
lot of the fighting in Algeria was filled with officers and men
of the former Nazi SS.
French troops
and their native allies, known as "harkis," committed
countless massacres of villages. The FLN was equally brutal in executing
"collaborators" and settlers. Bombs, throat slashing,
and electric tortures became the hallmark of the war for Algeria.
Not long after France's military had been defeated in the bloody,
ugly colonial war in Indochina, it became deeply corrupted by the
Algerian conflict.
America is
reliving this dark period today in Afghanistan as torture and killing
civilians becomes the norm.
After President
Charles de Gaulle called for an end to the war and freedom for Algeria,
parts of the French armed forces and Legion, led by neo-fascist
officers, mutinied. I vividly recall standing at Place de la Concorde
and feeling the sizzling tension as loyal army and police units
prepared to fight off an airborne invasion from France's revolting
army in Algeria.
The original
version of the marvelous film, "Day of the Jackel," depicts
the plots by extremist officers to assassinate de Gaulle during
this time.
In 1962, I
watched horrified as a demonstration by Algerians was crushed mercilessly
by French CRS riot police: 200 or more Algerians were beaten to
death in the street and thrown into the Seine River.
That same year,
the wise De Gaulle finally made France renounce its colonial pretensions
and grant freedom to Algeria.
We
who supported the freedom struggle were elated. But true to the
old adage, "the revolution devours its own young," the
leaders of Algeria's once noble cause were almost all consumed by
poisonous rivalries, murdered, jailed or exiled.
Algeria's victorious
revolutionaries became even more brutal and rapacious than their
former French rulers. Today, military-ruled Algeria has one of the
world's worst human rights records. Its income from oil and gas
is secreted abroad, leaving little for its surging population.
France's colonial
legacy haunts it: 5-6 million impoverished, neglected North Africans
living marginal existences.
December
25, 2012
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Eric Margolis
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