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Title: A French hero
Author: Avis de TempĂŞtes
Language: en
Topics: France
Source: Translated from Avis de tempĂŞtes, anarchist bulletin for social war, issue 4, 15th of April 2018. Published on avisdetempetes.noblogs.org on 16/04/2018

Avis de TempĂŞtes

A French hero

He's a French gendarme. He belongs to an army corps, and his pride might

reside in the fact that he serves one of the rare States which entrusts

– in times of peace and day in day out – the tasks of control and

repression of the civil population on 95% of the territory to the

military. Sure, the motto of the Gendarmerie Nationale, "For country,

honour and law", isn't as explicit as the one of their transalpine

colleagues, "Loyal over the centuries", but that never prevented our

cops to do without flinching the dirty work when the ruling regime gave

the order to do so. Moreover, a motto which stresses more "the law" than

the continuity of oppression is surely not a sign of freedom, as an old

enemy of all power pointed out: "the most dreaded tyranny is not the one

which takes up the form of the arbitrary, but the one that presents

itself with the mask of legality". To what end then bring up this past

of legal barbed-wire internment and then deportation camps, well guarded

by well French gendarmes? And anyway, who still recalls their historical

studded socks, these regular boots praised in post-war songs on a Java

tune? You know, those boots that "get into friendly contact/with an eye

or a back/of the bystander who has no purpose" and that "reforming the

idle youth/wage active propaganda/in the stomach or in the mouth"? Maybe

those same idle youth who where humming a year later out loud the

following verses: "seeing those brave cops/being at very close to

succumb/me, I pressed foot 'cos I adore them/in the form of dead

bodies"? Those who still remember all this, who remember the mounted

gendarmes cutting down strikers and the beaters of the mobile brigades

during the anarchist walks, are for sure old folks keen on history,

zombies of the last century who never called upon state justice and

shitted on the celestial one. Luckily, all this has changed. To defend

the property of the rich and to preserve the order of dominion by

crushing the skulls of protestors is but a bad memory. It's the 21th

century, what the heck! And if the boots of the gendarmes continue

sometimes to tread on the cracking corps of some poor devil, that's for

sure not a consequence of an excess of love for order, because nowadays

such a very honourable and very patriotic passion can easily be

expressed from a distance. In the form of a volley of rubber bullets of

40mm diameter, tear gas grenades, deafening stun grenades and sting-ball

grenades, for example. Too bad for the eyes shot out, the fingers ripped

off and the bodies pierced with shrapnel. A true know-how of "democratic

crowd control" à la française, which gets quite well exported, from

Bahrain in full Arab spring in February 2011 (87 dead and hundreds of

wounded) until Togo in open revolt against its dictator in October 2017

(16 dead and hundreds of wounded). Yes, they're talented people, those

military instructors of the Gendarmerie appointed to international

cooperation...

But frankly, being a gendarme is not but just a way to show power that

one's a canine a bit more obedient or disciplined than the others. It

offers for example also the possibility to travel around, in spite of

the unavoidable annoyances of any travel in battle-grey under the French

flag in countries like Iraq, Mali or Afghanistan, where crowds of

thankless and hostile subjects give our brave exporters of peace

sometimes a hard time. And it offers, let's not hide it, the pleasure of

enjoying here, in the heart of our charming countryside and our

sparkling housing schemes, a permanent license to kill. A license which

is not stupidly restricted to the rules of “self-defence” (we're talking

military here!) and therefore lets you get away with it in case of major

problems.

By the way, that's how Joseph Guerdner got killed. Three bullets in the

back in Draguignan in May 2008, when he was escaping from Gendarmerie

quarters, shackled, after having jumped through a window when he was in

custody. That's how RĂ©mi Fraisse got killed. Beheaded by an offensive

grenade in Sivens in October 2014, during a demonstration against the

building of a dam. And that's how JĂ©rĂ´me Laronze got killed. Three

bullets face on in Sailly in May 2017, when he was on the run after

resisting sanitary controls of his livestock. As we haven't got the

souls of accountants, we spare you the rest of the list of murders

committed by gendarmes who got away with it in the name of those

particular rules of engagement.

Anyhow, when some generous hearts then occasionally warm up the virile

atmosphere at the barracks by burning there duty vehicles, their

personal cars or their scientific laboratory as happened last year, and

the choirs of happy imbeciles then pretend to ask themselves “why?...”,

it doesn't come as a surprise that others rather deepen the question by

adding “... doesn't it happen more often?”.

“I do my job, mum, that's all, he often said.”

His mother

“He felt intrinsically gendarme.”

His wife

He was a gendarme.

A soldier who acts on command. He was a human being, obviously, but of a

very particular kind. Of those who freely choose to sacrifice all

individuality and become a weapon of war in the hands of the state, a

lethal one as well, against all those which the state indifferently

labels as enemies. Over here as well as over there. This

lieutenant-colonel of the Gendarmerie died on the 23th of March 2018 in

a work accident in Trèbes, when he lost his singular duel against the

supporter of a competing state. A duel between two soldiers, sharing a

same commitment to indiscriminate violence at the service of an almighty

power, the one with faith in the Law, the other following the law of his

Faith.

At present, this gendarme isn't but a name keyed in the streets and the

schools all around the country, a simple name that power intends to

transform into a symbol. Because it seems that he was a hero. One of

those heroes of French state terrorism, ready for all sacrifices and all

missions to satisfy the state: paratrooper at the EPIGN [Paratrooper

Intervention Squad of the Gendarmerie Nationale], interventions in Iraq,

commander in charge of the security of the presidential palace,

consultant in “economic intelligence” for a ministry, and ultimately

supporting officer of the commander of the Gendarmerie of Aude, for

which he organized antiterrorist exercises.

With the death in service of such a loyal employee, the state couldn't

resist. It jumped on the occasion to organise a bombastic national

tribute to edify the masses, and the idle youth in particular. Indeed,

what can be more exemplary for authority than a person who doesn't

hesitate to risk his life, not as a singular individual and in the name

of his own ideas, but as a soldier and in the name of the country, this

story that unites rulers and ruled in the same melting pot of

submission? During his speech at the Invalides, the head of state

therefore praised as is right and proper his quality as a cog of the

coldest of cold monsters (“he was committed and swore to form one body

with something bigger and higher... serving France”), before daring in a

surge the most audacious and dreadful comparisons.

Because if military legends like the one of an ex-shepherdess crowning a

King or of an exiled general in London may well stir up the fantasies of

those who have the French colours where usually the brains are located,

it is a whole different endeavour to annex the determination of “the

partisans of the maquis” or of the “Justes” to the one of the

lieutenant-colonel of the Gendarmerie, modern hero of the war on

terrorism.

Should we recall that most of the Justes were singular individuals who,

in a minority way but with a very personal and dissident conscience,

risked their lives and their freedom confronting the law which the

gendarmes were applying? The main internment camp for deportation

towards the Nazi concentration camps, where 9 out of 10 Jews who where

deported from France (67 000) were processed, was the camp of Drancy.

And who was in charge of it? The Gendarmerie. And who escorted until

1943, in the company of German soldiers, these convoys heading straight

for Auschwitz? Again, the Gendarmerie. And who was in charge of the

tracking of Jews in the city (during the raids of Vel d'Hiv in 1942 for

example) as well as on the countryside, at the same moment when the

Justes risked their necks to hide them from the men in uniform? Oh yes,

yet again the Gendarmerie.

And concerning the “partisans of the maquis” shamelessly evoked during

the presidential tribute to this lieutenant-colonel who died during a

work accident, well, not only were they officially declared “terrorists”

by the French state, and as such they got also killed, detained, beaten

up or handed over to the Gestapo, and in particular by the Gendarmerie.

At the polar opposite of the Gendarmerie which consisted of little

soldiers moved by sacred obedience to the Law whatever it might say, the

maquisards were outlaws who took up arms violating the monopoly of

legitimate violence of the state and who, by the way, didn't hesitate to

finish off this or that cop. Obviously we are talking about the years

before 1944, before the outcome became clear and many gendarmes and

policemen started to change sides or to play both sides... however,

without preventing the last death trains getting filled up or leaving

the country, like the convoy that left from Toulouse on the 3rd of July

1944 (700 partisans and Spanish republicans) and which crossed the

country during 53 days before reaching Germany, like the one which left

from Pantin on the 15th of August (2400 political prisoners from all

Parisian prisons) or the one which left from Tourcoing on the 1st of

September (870 prisoners of Loos).

“His striking heroism will arouse,

I believe so, many imitators,

ready to sacrifice themselves for France

and its Christian joy.”

Canon

The death of this lieutenant-colonel of the Gendarmerie, in spite of his

heroisation with great fanfare, didn't sadden or even stirred us, let's

speak plainly. But it also didn't rejoice us, and not because that would

overstep the thin margins of public expression tolerated still tolerated

by power when a terrorist commits an attack. Would this soldier have

been a head of state who died in his bed, maybe we could have reacted

like Malatesta when a famous tyrant passed away: “Lenin is dead. Long

live freedom.” Would he have been an officer, a boss or a head of state

killed by a revolutionary, yes, then we would have had something to

celebrate. But a watchdog of authority killed by another of the same

kind (even when the state of this last one is having less success

lately), what could that have possibly stirred in us a part from a shrug

of shoulders?

During the national tribute at Invalides on the 28th of March, the

President also awarded his new here the Legion of Honour posthumously,

the award that compensates the “eminent services” rendered to the

Nation. The same medal adorns the chests of Bachar al-Assad since 2001,

and our Chief of state refuses despite all to take it away from him, in

spite of the bombs and the massacres. He surely also has rendered some

“eminent services” to the French Nation.

Even until his grave, the gendarme got thus the honours of the medal of

state terrorism which he deserved so badly...