Jean Bastien-Thiry

Jean Bastien-Thiry

Mug shot of Bastien-Thiry
Born 19 October 1927
Lunéville, France
Died 11 March 1963(1963-03-11) (aged 35)
Ivry-sur-Seine, France
Allegiance  France
Service/branch French Air Force
Rank Lieutenant colonel
Battles/wars World War II
Algerian War
Other work Aerospace engineer

Jean-Marie Bastien-Thiry (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ maʁi bastjɛ̃ tiʁi]; 19 October 1927 – 11 March 1963) was a French Air Force lieutenant-colonel and military air weaponry engineer. He was the creator of the Nord SS.10/SS.11 missiles. He attempted to assassinate French President Charles de Gaulle on 22 August 1962, following de Gaulle's decision to accept Algerian independence. The attack made international headlines. Bastien-Thiry was the last person to be executed by firing squad in France.

Though the assassination attempt came very close to claiming de Gaulle's life, the President and his entire entourage escaped without injury. The event is chronicled in detail in the (otherwise fictional) 1971 work The Day of the Jackal and the 1973 film adaptation of the same name, the latter of which has character actor Jean Sorel playing Bastien-Thiry.

Life

Bastien-Thiry was born to a family of Catholic military officers in Lunéville, Meurthe-et-Moselle. His father had known de Gaulle in the 1930s and was a member of the Gaullist RPF. He attended the École Polytechnique, followed by the École nationale supérieure de l'Aéronautique, then entered the French Air Force where he specialized in the design of air-to-air missiles. In 1957, he was promoted to principal military air engineer. He was married to Geneviève Lamirand, the daughter of Georges Lamirand (1899–1994). The latter had been Vichy France General Secretary of Youth from September 1940 to March 1943, but the rest of the family was Free French.[1] He had three daughters with her.

Assassination attempt

Since 1848, French Algeria had been considered an integral part of France. After having returned to power with the stated intention of maintaining the French Départements of Algeria, in September 1959, de Gaulle reversed his policy and supported the secession of Algeria. Until this time, Bastien-Thiry had been a Gaullist; now he became an opponent.[1] Due to this new policy, two referendums on self-determination were held, one in 1961 and the second on 8 April 1962 (the French Évian Accords referendum).

Bastien-Thiry, who was involved with the still-mysterious organization, "Vieil État-Major", tried to make contact with the Organisation de l'armée secrète (OAS), which led the opposition to de Gaulle's policy and against the FLN. According to Dr Pérez, OAS chief of intelligence and operations section (ORO), Vieil État Major messenger Jean Bichon met him in Algiers, but his prerequisites were not acceptable to the OAS. Bastien-Thiry never had contact with the OAS organization and he never stated that his direct chief was Jean Bichon, arrested later.

Bastien-Thiry led the most prominent of several assassination attempts on de Gaulle. His group made preparations in the Paris suburb of Petit-Clamart. On 22 August 1962, de Gaulle's car (a Citroën DS) and some nearby shops were raked with machine-gun fire. De Gaulle, his wife and entourage escaped, uninjured. After the attempt, holes from fourteen bullets were found in the president's vehicle, one of which barely missed the president's head; another twenty were found to have struck the nearby Café Trianon; and an additional 187 spent shell casings were found on the pavement. This event was fictionalized in the 1971 book The Day of the Jackal. De Gaulle credited the unusual abilities of the DS vehicle with saving his life —even though the shots had punctured two of the armoured tires, the car escaped at full speed.[2]

Arrest and trial

Bastien-Thiry was arrested when he came back from a mission in the United Kingdom. He was brought to trial before a military tribunal presided over by General Roger Gardet, which ran from 28 January to 4 March 1963. He was defended by a legal team consisting of attorneys Jacques Isorni, Richard Dupuy, Bernard Le Coroller, and Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour who was later a candidate for the presidency in 1965. While claiming that the death of de Gaulle would have been justified by the "genocide" of the European population of newly independent Algeria (a reference mainly to the Oran massacre of 1962) and the killing of several tens or hundreds of thousands of mostly pro-French Moslems (harkis) by the FLN,[3] he claimed that while the other conspirators might admittedly have been trying to kill the head of state, he had only been attempting to capture de Gaulle so as to deliver him to a panel of sympathetic judges. Bastien-Thiry, who had been certified as "normal" by psychiatrists in spite of a history of clinical depression (caused by an overworked period) was convicted and sentenced to death, as were two of his associates: Lt de la Tocnaye and Prevost (a former volunteer in Korea and in Vietnam). The only would-be assassin to escape was OAS member Georges Watin (also known as "The Limp"), [4] who died February 1994 at age 71.

Possibility of clemency

As president, de Gaulle had the power of clemency. He pardoned those who fired the shots, but refused to pardon Bastien-Thiry, despite an appeal from Bastien-Thiry's father. Before the trial, the President expressed his intention to grant clemency to Bastien-Thiry, saying the "idiot" would "get off with twenty years and in five years I'll free him".[5] However, according to his son-in-law Alain de Boissieu, after the conspirators' conviction, de Gaulle stated his reasons for refusing to alter the sentence.

  1. Bastien-Thiry had directed his subordinates to fire on a car in which there was an innocent woman present (Madame Yvonne de Gaulle).
  2. He had endangered civilians, namely the Fillon family, who had been travelling in a car near that carrying de Gaulle.
  3. He had brought foreigners, specifically three Hungarians, into the plot.
  4. During his trial, he claimed he intended to kidnap de Gaulle, not kill him. Asked how he intended to confine the President, Bastien-Thiry replied, "We would just have taken away his spectacles and braces." His defense lawyer was heard to mutter, "he has just signed his own death warrant," as it was much anticipated that while de Gaulle might have pardoned an assassin, he would not pardon an assassin who publicly mocked him.
  5. Finally, and most serious in de Gaulle's eyes, while the other conspirators did the actual firing and had thus placed themselves in some danger, Bastien-Thiry had only directed events from afar, acting as a lookout for the gunmen.

Execution

The execution took place only one week after the trial, which was unusual. Probably the biggest security plan in French judicial history was organized to take Bastien-Thiry from his cell to the place of his execution.[6] There were 2,000 policemen posted along the way and 35 vehicles used. The government feared an escape was planned, and there had been a plan, but it was abandoned. Ironically, the plan was headed by Jean Cantelaube, one of de Gaulle's former security officers. He has been recently identified as an intelligence agent who provided information to Bastien-Thiry's organization.[7]

Only one week after the trial and despite a law question likely to cancel the sentence about to be taken by the Conseil d'État (French supreme public court), Bastien-Thiry was executed by firing squad at the Fort d'Ivry on 11 March 1963, while clutching his rosary. He refused to be blindfolded. He was 35 years old. That very evening, President de Gaulle offered a dinner party to the presidents of the special courts, including the one who sent Bastien-Thiry to his death.

About Bastien-Thiry, de Gaulle said "The French need martyrs ... They must choose them carefully. I could have given them one of those idiotic generals playing ball in Tulle prison. I gave them Bastien-Thiry. They'll be able to make a martyr of him. He deserves it."[8]

References

  1. 1 2 Jean Lacouture, Charles de Gaulle – Le souverain 1959-1970, p. 276-279.
  2. George, Patrick (22 July 2012). "How The Citroën DS Saved A French President's Life". Jalopnik. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  3. «Statement of Colonel Bastien-Thiry», 2 February 1963, Cercle Jean Bastien-Thiry, bastien-thiry.com
  4. Forsyth, Frederick (1971). The Day of the Jackal. United Kingdom: Hutchinson & Co. ISBN 0-09-107390-1.
  5. Jean Lacouture, Charles de Gaulle – Le souverain 1959-1970, p. 328.
  6. Bastien-Thiry by Jean-Pax Meffret
  7. Cantelaube's notes quoted in Jean-Pax Meffret's book; attempt accomplice interviewed by Olivier Cazeaux.
  8. Lacouture, 329

See also

Sources

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