Gamelin, Maurice-Gustave
Publié le 22/02/2012
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Gamelin, Maurice-Gustave (1872–1958)
general in command of all French
forces at the outbreak of World War II
Paris-born Maurice-Gustave Gamelin graduated
from Saint-Cyr, the French military academy, in
1893 and, at the outbreak of World War I, in August
1914, served as a staff officer, operations section,
under French commander in chief Joseph Joffre.
He remained a highly placed staff officer throughout
most of the war but was given field command
of a division before it ended.
After the armistice, Gamelin was appointed to
head a military mission to Brazil, serving there
from 1919 to 1925, when he was appointed chief of
staff to General Maurice Sarrail, who commanded
all French forces in the Levant. In 1926, Gamelin
succeeded Sarrail, serving in the Levant through
1930. He was elevated to army chief of staff in 1931
and vice president of the Supreme War Council as
well as army inspector general in 1935. In 1938,
Gamelin was named chief of staff for national
defense, effectively becoming the commander of all
French forces.
As chief, Gamelin directed the French mobilization
at the outbreak of World War II, in September
1939, and he was in command during the
Battle of France, which began on May 10, 1940.
Gamelin was neither better nor worse than most of
the rest of the senior French command, which,
unfortunately for France, meant that he was a
mediocrity, dedicated to the status quo. He had
done nothing to streamline and rationalize the
complex, cumbersome, and counterproductive
command structure of the French Army. He had
done nothing to address deficiencies of training
and the even graver deficiencies of morale. He had
denigrated the value and the role of air power. He
had done little to address shortages of adequate
antiaircraft and antitank weapons. With the rest of
the French high command, he had blindly assumed
that a second world war would, of necessity, be a
repetition of the first—fought as static combat
from trenches—and he therefore operated only
according to a defensive plan, which proved disastrously
inadequate to stem the German invasion
Blitzkrieg.
During the opening moves of the invasion,
Gamelin blundered into the German trap, sending
mobile forces into Belgium to meet the expected
advance there. Instead, the main panzer thrust
came through the Ardennes, which Gamelin (and
others) had considered impassable. Stunned,
Gamelin dithered in response and was dismissed
by Premier Paul Reynaud, who replaced him with
the more aggressive, albeit superannuated, Maxime
Weygand on May 19.
On September 6, 1940, Gamelin was arrested
on charges of having been responsible for the military
defeat of France. Gamelin never accepted the
charges and refused to testify at his trial. He was
imprisoned in France, then deported to Buchenwald
concentration camp by the German occu-
G
piers in the spring of 1942. He was held at
Buchenwald and then at Itter, from which he was
liberated by U.S. troops in May 1945. He returned
to France and, between 1946 and 1947, published
his three-volume memoir, Servir.
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