The Force X was a squadron of the French Navy, assembled on 29 April 1940, [1] after the outbreak of the Second World War, to deter Italy from striking in the Levantine Sea. [2] It consisted of the old battleship Lorraine; the three modern heavy cruisers Duquesne , Tourville and Suffren; [1] the light cruiser Duguay-Trouin; three destroyers Basque, Forbin, Fortuné; and the submarine Protée . [3] [4] [2]
Under Admiral Godfroy, the squadron departed Toulon on 25 April 1940, arriving at Alexandria on 24 May, [2] where she met with her British counterpart under Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham.
On 4 July 1940, a secret order from British Prime Minister Churchill, Operation Catapult, tasked the Royal Navy to destroy, neutralise or capture French naval forces. [4] Godfroy and Cunningham having a trusting relationship, and their families being related by alliance, they engaged in negotiations and managed a compromise, [5] whereby French ships would remove fuel from their bunkers and firing mechanisms from their weapons, and the remaining crews would not attempt to escape; in return, Cunningham promised to repatriate most of the crews, [3] accepted that the ships retain their French commanding officers, and would not be scuttled. [1] [6] The heavy cruiser Duquesne would be allowed to radio official messages, and private messages once a week. [1] On the occasion, several officers deserted to join the Free French, such as Commander Auboyneau, [7] or Lieutenant-Commander d'Estienne d'Orves [4] [8] and his companions Roger Barberot [9] and André Patou. [10] The ships were then interned at Alexandria with skeleton crews. Godfroy and Cunningham signed the convention on 7 July, and renewed it on 20 June 1942. [1]
On 30 May 1943, following the invasion of the so-called Free Zone by the Nazis, the whole of Force X joined the Allies. [2] Admiral Godfroy was thus granted authorisation from the British to put to sea, and put his forces at the disposal of the provisional government in Algiers, as the French Committee of National Liberation was put in place. The squadron rallied Dakar through the Suez Canal and Cape Town, before arriving at Algiers. [11] Upon his arrival, Godfroy, suspected of favouring General Giraud over De Gaulle, was retired [4] by decree in December 1943. [6]
The French Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean, also known as CECMED is a French Armed Forces regional commander. He commands the zone, the region and the Mediterranean maritime arrondissements. He is usually an admiral of the French Navy, and is under the direct authority of the French Chief of the Defence Staff. As of 2015 the position was held by Admiral Yann Tainguy.
Duguay-Trouin was the lead ship of her class of French light cruisers, launched in the early 1920s. She was named after René Duguay-Trouin. She patrolled the Mediterranean during the Spanish Civil War, and after the outbreak of the Second World War, she hunted Nazi pocket battleships before being interned after the Fall of France and until 1943. She then took part in Allied operations in the Mediterranean, supporting the Provence Landings and shelling Nazi and Fascist troops on the coasts of Italy until the end of the war. Duguay-Trouin then took part in the decolonisation wars in Algeria, and in Indochina.
René-Émile Godfroy was a French admiral, commander of the Force X at the outbreak of the Second World War. He was interned with his command at Alexandria until 1943, and then retired on suspicion of favouring Henri Giraud over Charles De Gaulle.
Counter-admiral Gabriel Paul Auphan was a French naval officer who became the State Secretary of the Navy of the Vichy government from April to November 1942.
Philippe Marie Joseph Raymond Auboyneau was an officer in the French Navy. As an admiral, he was commander of the Free French naval forces in the Pacific and the Mediterranean during the Second World War. He was awarded the Ordre de la Libération for his service to the country.
The Levant Fleet was the designation under the Ancien Regime for the naval vessels of the Royal French Navy in the Mediterranean. The fleet carried out operations such as asserting naval supremacy and protecting convoys. Its counterpart was the Flotte du Ponant, which saw service in the English Channel and in the Atlantic Ocean.
Louis René Charles Marie Dartige du Fournet was a French vice admiral during World War I.
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Sabre was a Arquebuse-class destroyer contre-torpilleur d'escadre built for the French Navy in the first decade of the 20th century. Completed in 1904, the ship was initially assigned to the Far Eastern Division. She returned to France in 1907 and was assigned to the Northern Squadron. Sabre became part of a local defense unit in Brittany four years later.
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Jacques Marie Charles Trolley de Prévaux was a French Navy officer and member of the Resistance. After a brilliant career in the Navy as a pioneer of the Aéronavale and having risen to the rank of captain, he fell out of favour with the Vichy Regime for his sympathies with the Resistance. He became a leader of an intelligence network focused on the Mediterranean, and was eventually betrayed and assassinated by the Nazis, along with his wife, Lotka Leitner. Both were posthumously and jointly made Compagnons in the Ordre de la Libération.