Réseau AGIR

The Réseau AGIR (English: Network for ACTION) was a World War II espionage group founded by French wartime resister Michel Hollard that provided decisive human intelligence on V-1 flying bomb facilities in the North of France.[4] Thanks to Hollard's reports and information from his agents of the Réseau AGIR, the V1 launch sites located across North-Eastern Normandy to the Strait of Dover, were systematically bombed during Operation Crossbow.

Network for ACTION
Réseau AGIR
Vertical photographic-reconnaissance aerial of a flying-bomb launch site under construction at Bois Carre, near Yvrench, discovered and documented by the agents of the Réseau AGIR.
Active1941[1]
CountryOccupied France
AllegianceAllies of World War II
TypeFrench Resistance
RoleHuman intelligence (espionage)
Sizeup to 200 informants[2][3]

Creation and organisation

Plaque commemorating the 20 people who were killed in action for the Réseau AGIR during World War II. It is located in Paris, at the rue de Bercy 207, where was situated the former Hotel d'Annecy where the command post of the Réseau AGIR.

The Réseau AGIR was created by Michel Hollard in 1941.[4] The espionage network had no contact with other French resistance groups and reported directly to the British Secret Intelligence Service (S.I.S.).[5]

During the war, the network was codenamed "Z 165" after the codename given to Hollard himself by the Intelligence Service. AGIR or Réseau AGIR only emerged after Hollard's return from the Liberation of France.[6][7][8]

Early 1941, Hollard became the concessionaire for the Seine department for the "Maison Gazogène Autobloc", headquartered in Dijon, that, among other things, produced wood gas generators for automobiles and supplied its clients with charcoal. Hollard was allowed to travel in search of wood nationwide and purchase wood to turn it into charcoal to preserve the increasingly scarce fuel in occupied France.[9]

In 1941, Hollard traveled to the French Free Zone and crossed the Swiss border for the first time to offer his services as a spy to the British embassy in Bern. He was greeted icily despite intelligence about France's wartime automotive manufacturing capabilities that he had brought with him to show his goodwill.[10] When he came back a month later, the second meeting was much warmer since the British military attaché had made the necessary checks about him. Hollard was tasked to report the position and description of the German forces in the French Occupied Zone, especially the armored divisions.[11] He committed to delivering intelligence every three weeks.[12]

His job enabled him to travel around France using his job as a cover. Mostly traveling by train, he primarily established contacts with railway employees who, due to their work, had knowledge of the occupying forces' activities or knew how to obtain it.

From the very beginning, Hollard insisted that all actions should be organized through personal contacts only and that the exchange of researched material should only be forwarded or handed over to him personally. He distrusted the means of communication, such as the telephone or even radio, and saw in it a source of vulnerability for the network for the enemy.[13] AGIR used signals with basic code like e.g. an open barn door indicated a Swiss border clear of soldiers.[14] Entirely self-sufficient, the network did not rely on parachute drops or wireless transmitters. Intelligence was collected and sent to Switzerland every 3 weeks.[15]

Hollard paid for the AGIR expenses, out of his pocket, until the British intelligence recognized the importance of the information collected by the network and offered to finance it.[16] The network could rely on safe houses to cross the Swiss border and a safe place near Compiègnes disguised as a peat-based fuel factory next to a bog in the marshes of the river Oise.[17]

Early 1942, Hollard had recruited a total of 6 agents, distributed throughout the Occupied Zone, to report the movement of German forces as requested by the British. All of them were personally financed by Hollard.[18] The network could also rely on volunteers to gather information on German facilities like aerodromes and factories. Railway employees and station masters also played an important to report changes in enemy positions.[15] When the Zone libre was placed under German military administration in November 1942, the network needed to grow to gather information in the whole of France. Hollard recruited hotel personnel and domestic workers working in requisitioned hotels or private houses to cater to German troops.[19]

On 30 juin 1942, Réseau AGIR member Olivier Giran was captured in Dijon, later transferred to the Fresnes prison and executed in April 1943 in Angers.[3][20][21][22]

Hollard smuggled information from Occupied France first to the British military attaché in Bern, Switzerlandand later, to his handler of the Intelligence Service in Lausanne . He made a total of ninety-eight crossings of the Swiss border from 1941 through February 1944 when he was betrayed and arrested on 5 February 1944.[23][24] Michel Hollard and 4 other AGIR agents (including Henri Dujarier and Jules Mailly) were arrested during a cafe meeting on the Rue du Faubourg-Saint-Denis.[25][26] Hollard was tortured and subjected to waterboarding five times by the Gestapo and the Milice, and imprisoned first at Fresnes prison and in June 1944 as a forced laborer at the main Neuengamme concentration camp.[27][25][28] Jules Mailly died in Mathausen concentration camp.[29]

The network was composed of about two hundred agents and informants at its peak, among which French poet Robert Desnos.[4][2][7] Arrested by the Gestapo on 22 February 1944, Desnos provided information collected during his job at the journal Aujourd'hui and made false identity papers.[30]

In total, 20 agents and informants of Réseaux AGIR were arrested, 4 executed and 17 died in or as a result of deportation.[6]

V-1 espionage

AGIR provided HUMINT on V-1 flying bomb "ski sites", e.g., some had launch ramps ("P", bottom),[31] here Maisoncelle.[32][33][34][35]
World War II map showing the two areas where the Germans were setting up their secret V-1, V-2 and V-3 weapons to bombard London. This sites were systematically bombed during the Operation Crossbow.

Daudemard, an AGIR railway engineer at Rouen reported in July 1943 unusual constructions in Upper Normandy.[36][36][37] Michel Hollard's report of September 1943 to the British Secret Intelligence Service identified six V-1 flying bomb facilities: "Bonnetot le Faubourg [sic],[38] Auffay [sic], Totes, Ribeaucourt, Maison Ponthieu and Bois Carré".[39]

AGIR prepared a more detailed report in October about Bois Carré, which is located 1.4 km east of Yvrench,[40] that claimed it had "a concrete platform with the center axis pointing directly to London".[27][41] AGIR reconnoitered 104 V-1 facilities and helped pinpointing the Watten bunker, the first V-2 launching site.[23][42]

AGIR also provided sketches of V-1 launching sites such as one by André Comps of Bois-Carré.[43][44][27] It was labeled "Yvrench B2" to deceive the Germans. "B" stands for "Bois" in French and "2" stands for the square root which in French is "Carré", hence Bois-Carré. Hollard had the site infiltrated by Comps, who worked as a drafter and copied "the blueprints"— a copy of the compass swinging building blueprint and the Bois-Carré sketch were published in 1978.[45][39][46]

At the same time, André Bouguet, SNCF station director and AGIR informant, noticed transports that led north via Rouen. The destination of these transports was the Auffay train station.[47] With the help of René Bourdon, the station manager there, and his assistant Pierre Carteron, Hollard was able to penetrate a shed of the local sugar factory in which the transported V-1 were stored, hidden under a tarpaulin and made precise dimensional sketches of the devices.[48] The S.I.S. found an astonishing resemblance to Danish Lt-Colonel Hasager Christiansen's sketch that he had made of an aircraft that crashed on Bornholm on 22 August 1943.[49][50]

Thanks to Hollard's reports and information from his agents of the Réseau AGIR, the V1 launch sites located in the North of France, across North-Eastern Normandy to the Strait of Dover, were systematically bombed by the Royal Air Force between mid-December 1943 and March-end 1944, as a part of the Operation Crossbow. Nine V1 sites were destroyed, 35 badly damaged and partially damaged another 25 out of the 104. As a result, the Germans changed their strategy and started building lighter and more camouflaged positions.

In his book Crusade in Europe General Eisenhower wrote that had the Germans been able to develop their weapons six months earlier and to target Britain's south coast, Operation Overlord would have been near impossible, or not at all possible.[51] Winston Churchill, in Triumph and Tragedy also paid tribute to the sources of the British intelligence and reckoned that "Our intelligence had played a vital part. The size and performance and the intended scale of attack were known to us in excellent time [...] The launching sites and the storage caverns were found, enabling our fighters to delay the attack and mitigate its violence."[52]

Post-war

AGIR agents received various British and French military awards (including Hollard's DSO for V-1 espionage, second Croix de Guerre and Légion d'honneur),[53][54] and Hollard's biographies provide AGIR history.[55] Decorated with the Légion d'honneur, the French Croix de Guerre and the British King's Medal for Courage, Joseph Brocard was the last surviving AGIR agent and died in 2009.[56]

The flag of the AGIR network is on display at the Imperial War Museum, London.[57]

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References

  1. "The man who saved London". The Independent. November 20, 2003.
  2. Lee 2001, p. 264.
  3. Hollard 1950.
  4. "Michel Hollard: Heros de la Resistance". michelhollard.com (in French). Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2010-02-09.
  5. Lyman 2014, p. 13.
  6. Granet 1950, p. 9.
  7. Dumas, Marie-Claire. "Plaque commémorative : "Ici vécut Robert Desnos"". Musée de la résistance en ligne. Retrieved 2020-06-20.
  8. Martelli 1960, p. 73.
  9. Martelli 1960, p. 32-33.
  10. Martelli 1960, p. 49-51.
  11. Martelli 1960, p. 60-61.
  12. Martelli 1960, p. 60.
  13. Martelli 1960, p. 75-76.
  14. Martelli 1960, p. 88.
  15. Martelli 1960, p. 75.
  16. Martelli 1960, p. 109.
  17. Martelli 1960, p. 107.
  18. Martelli 1960, p. 74-75.
  19. Martelli 1960, p. 106-107.
  20. Guignepain 1949.
  21. Granet 1950.
  22. Gogendeau, Bertrand. "GIRAN Olivier, Marcel – Maitron". fusilles-40-44.maitron.fr. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
  23. Jeffery 2010, p. 534-535.
  24. Richardot 2002, p. 185-189.
  25. Williams 2013, p. 163.
  26. Jones 1978, p. 364.
  27. Jones 1978, p. 362.
  28. Florian Hollard (2005), Michel Hollard: le Français qui a sauvé Londres (in French), Le Cherche Midi, p. 214
  29. Williams 2013, p. 163-164.
  30. Conley, Katharine (2003). Robert Desnos, surrealism, and the marvelous in everyday life. Lincoln, NE.: University of Nebraska Press. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-8032-1523-8.
  31. Gurney 1962.
  32. Dupuy, Trevor Nevitt (1963). The Air War in the West – June 1941 – April 1945. The Military History of World War II. 7. New York: Franklin Watts, Inc. pp. 52.
  33. "Übersicht der V1-Feuerstellung 639, Maisoncelle; Département Pas-de-Calais, Frankreich". www.christianch.ch (in German). Retrieved 2020-06-07.
  34. "V1-FSt 639, Maisoncelle". www.christianch.ch (in German). Retrieved 2020-06-07.
  35. "Overview of the V1 firing position 639, Maisoncelle; Pas-de-Calais, France · V1-FSt 639". www.christianch.ch (in German). Retrieved 2020-06-07.
  36. Michel 1949.
  37. Breuer 1988, p. 221-224.
  38. Bonnetot le Faubourg, also known as "La Ferme de Bonnetot"(49°42′7.97″N 1°2′45.5″E)
  39. AfterTheBattle 1974, p. 3.
  40. "Michel Hollard" (in German). christianCH.ch. Retrieved 2020-06-06.
  41. "ROYAL AIR FORCE: OPERATIONS BY THE PHOTOGRAPHIC RECONNAISSANCE UNITS, 1939–1945". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 2020-06-06.
  42. Lichfield, John (2002). "Michel Hollard". Mémoire et Espoirs de la Résistance (in French). Retrieved 2020-06-05.
  43. Jones 1978, p. 363.
  44. Martelli 1960, p. 70-71.
  45. Jones 1978, p. 362-363.
  46. Desquesnes 2003, p. 100.
  47. Young 1978.
  48. Martelli 1960, p. 164-165.
  49. Jones 1978, p. 350.
  50. Mindling & Bolton 2008, p. 4.
  51. Eisenhower, Dwight D. (1948). Crusade in Europe. London. pp. 284.
  52. Churchill 2014, p. 49.
  53. Distinguished Service Order citation for Michel Hollard. 1945. Hollard, at great personal risk, reconnoitered a number of heavily guarded V1 sites and reported on them with such clarity that models were constructed which enabled effective bombing to be carried out.
  54. Foot, M. R. D. (1993-08-25). "Obituary: Michel Hollard". The Independent. Retrieved 2020-06-06.
  55. Martelli 1960.
  56. "Last remaining member of resistance network dies". Radio France Internationale. 2009-02-17. Retrieved 2010-02-09.
  57. Imperial War Museum. "Flag of "AGIR" French resistance association".

Bibliography

Primary sources
Secondary sources
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