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A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in...

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The Algerian War A case study of violent decolonization
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Page 1: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

The Algerian WarA case study of violent decolonization

Page 2: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

Origins of the Algerian War

Page 3: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

The Algerian War1954-1962War between Algeria

and France resulting in Algerian independence

Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000 killed

Terrorism, guerilla warfare, torture, and atrocities on both sides

Case study of independence through violence

Page 4: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

French Colonialism1830: France

invades Algeria1848: Algeria

becomes a departement of France

French settlers (pieds-noirs or colons) migrate in large numbers

Page 5: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

Why Revolt?Land

French government distributed prime land to pieds-noirs

Economic inequalityPower

French citizens had more rights than Algerian Muslims

Settlers blocked moves to give Muslims more rights

Worldwide trend of decolonization, 1945-1960s

Page 6: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

Founded November 1, 1954

Coalition of Algerian nationalist groups

Became the major combatant against the French in the Algerian War

The National Liberation Front (FLN)

Page 7: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

The “Savage War of Peace”

Page 8: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

May 8, 1945: V-E DayActivists demonstrated

for Algerian independence

Fight between protesters and French police

Muslim protestors killed 103 Europeans that evening

French military cracked down and took revenge, killing thousands

The Sétif Massacre

Page 9: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

March 13 – May 7, 1954

Battle in Vietnam resulting in defeat of French army by Vietnamese nationalists

Resulted in French withdrawal from Vietnam

Sign of French military weakness

The Battle of Dien Bien Phu

Page 10: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

November 1, 1954: FLN launched coordinated attacks across Algeria, killing 7 people

FLN declared goal of establishing an independent Algeria

Sparked a series of attacks and counter-attacks by French and Algerian forces

Toussaint Rouge (Red All Saints’ Day)

Page 11: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.
Page 12: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

Guerrilla War: An Interlude

Page 13: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

Irregular combatantsSurprise attacksHigh mobilitySabotageAvoidance of direct confrontationOften used by weaker forces against more

conventionally powerful opponents

Guerrilla Warfare

Page 14: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

And now, back to the war!

Page 15: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

August 1955FLN massacred 123

people in Philippeville, including civilians – a change in tactics

French army responded with massive retaliation, killing thousands

Terrorism succeeded – generated tremendous support for the FLN

The Philippeville Massacre

“There were so many [dead Muslims] that they had to be buried with bulldozers.”

“European mothers were found with their throats slit and their bellies dashed open… infants in arms had their brains dashed against the wall.”

Page 16: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

September 30, 1956: women bombed three sites in Algiers, the capital

Started a year-long guerilla campaign in Algiers

Civilian casualties; heavy-handed response

Bombings spread a sense of insecurity – war was everywhere

FLN aimed to draw more attention by attacking cities

The Battle of Algiers

Page 17: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

FrenchTortureIllegal executionsMilitary rule – no

democracyForced

disappearancesCensorship

TortureTerrorismTargeting civilians –

especially Muslims

Atrocities (and other, less bad, things)

Algerian

Page 18: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

Ending the War

Page 19: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

The Return of De GaulleAlgeria and other

crises undermined faith in the French government

May 1958: angry pieds-noirs demanded the return of Charles de Gaulle to keep Algeria French

De Gaulle took over France on June 2, 1958

Page 20: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

Why Give Up Algeria?ExpenseDomestic oppositionInternational opposition

September 1959: de Gaulle offered Algeria a vote on its future status after violence stopped

Possibility of independence angered pieds-noirs, led to unrest

Page 21: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

Fall 1961: France began secret negotiations with FLN

March 1962: ceasefire signed

April 1962: 90% of French voters endorsed Algerian independence

July 1, 1962: Algerians voted for independence, 6 million versus 17,000

July 3, 1962: Algeria became an independent state

The End of the War

Page 22: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

Signed March 18, 1962Provisions:

CeasefireFrance recognizes Algeria’s right to

independence and agrees to withdraw troopsAlgeria guarantees political and economic

rights to pieds-noirsViolently opposed by some radical settlersApproved by French and Algerian voters by

July 1962

The Evian Accords

Page 23: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

Nearly 1 million Europeans left Algeria before independence

Organization de l’Armee Secrete (OAS)Founded December 3, 1960Radical French settlers dedicated to keeping

Algeria FrenchAttempted to stop the progress of Algerian

independenceAssassination attempts against de Gaulle and

SartreReprisals against supporters of France

The Aftermath

Page 24: A case study of violent decolonization. 1954-1962 War between Algeria and France resulting in Algerian independence Extremely violent: perhaps 300,000.

HarkisAlgerian Muslims who

fought for or supported the French

Significant contribution to the French war effort – roughly 236,000 by 1962

Many fled to France after the end of the war

Between 50,000 and 150,000 Harkis and families killed after independence


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