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Pierre Messmer

Pierre Joseph Auguste Messmer (French pronunciation: ​[pjɛʁ mɛsmɛʁ]; 20 March 1916 – 29 August 2007) was a French Gaullist politician. He served as Minister of Armies under Charles de Gaulle from 1960 to 1969 – the longest serving since Étienne François, duc de Choiseul under Louis XV – and then as Prime Minister under Georges Pompidou from 1972 to 1974. A member of the French Foreign Legion, he was considered one of the historical Gaullists, and died aged 91 in the military hospital of the Val-de-Grâce in August 2007. He was elected a member of the Académie française in 1999; his seat was taken over by Simone Veil.[1]

Pierre Messmer
Pierre Messmer in 1988
Prime Minister of France
In office
5 July 1972 – 27 May 1974
PresidentGeorges Pompidou
Alain Poher (Acting)
Preceded byJacques Chaban-Delmas
Succeeded byJacques Chirac
Personal details
Born
Pierre Joseph Auguste Messmer

20 March 1916
Vincennes, Seine (now Val-de-Marne), France
Died29 August 2007(2007-08-29) (aged 91)
Paris, France
Political partyUDR
OccupationCivil Servant

Early career

Pierre Joseph Auguste Messmer was born in Vincennes in 1916. He graduated in 1936 in the language school ENLOV and the following year at the Ecole nationale de la France d'outre-mer (National School of Oversea France).[1]

He then became a senior civil servant in the colonial administration and became a Doctor of Laws in 1939. In the outbreak of World War II, he was sous-lieutenant of the 12th regiment of Senegalese tirailleurs, and refused France's capitulation after the defeat.[1] He then hijacked in Marseille an Italian cargo ship (the Capo Olmo), along with his friend Jean Simon (a future French General), and sailed first to Gibraltar, then London and engaged himself in the Free French Forces as a member of the 13th Demi-Brigade of the French Foreign Legion.[1][2]

Messmer then participated to the campaign in Eritrea, in Syria, in Libya, participating to the Battle of Bir Hakeim, and in the Tunisia campaign.[1] He also fought at the Battle of El Alamein in Egypt.[3] He joined in London General Koenig's military staff and participated in the landings in Normandy in August 1944 and the Liberation of Paris.[1]

Named Compagnon de la Libération in 1941,[2] he received the Croix de guerre (War Cross) with six citations after the Liberation, as well as the medal of the Resistance.[1]

After World War II

After World War II, he returned to the colonies and was a prisoner of war of the Vietminh, during two months in 1945, after the outbreak of the First Indochina War.[1] He was named the following year general secretary of the interministerial committee for Indochina and then head of staff of the high commissary of the Republic.[1]

Colonial Administrator in Africa

Messmer began his high-level African service as governor of Mauritania from 1952 to 1954, and then served as governor of Ivory Coast from 1954 to 1956, when he briefly returned to Paris in the staff of Gaston Defferre, Minister of Overseas Territories who enacted the Defferre Act granting to colonial territories internal autonomy, a first step towards independence.

That same year, Messmer was nominated as governor general of Cameroun, where a civil war had started the preceding year following the outlawing of the independentist Union of the Peoples of Cameroon (UPC) in July 1955. He initiated a decolonization process and imported the counter-revolutionary warfare methods theorized in Indochina and implemented during the Algerian War (1954–62).[4] Visiting de Gaulle in Paris, he was implicitly granted permission for his change of policies in Cameroon, which exchanged repression for negotiations with the UPC.[4]

A "Pacification Zone" – the ZOPAC (Zone de pacification du Cameroon) was created on 9 December 1957, englobing 7,000 square km controlled by seven infantry regiments.[4] Furthermore, a civilian-military intelligence apparatus was created, combining colonial and local staff, assisted by a civilian militia. Mao Zedong's people's war was reversed, in an attempt to separate the civilian population from the guerrilla. In this aim, the local population was rounded-up in guarded villages located on the main roads, controlled by the French Army.[4]

Messmer served as high commissioner of French Equatorial Africa from January 1958 to July 1958, and as high commissioner of French West Africa from 1958 to 1959.[citation needed]

Minister of Armies (1959–1969)

From 1959 to 1969, under Charles de Gaulle's presidency and in the turmoil of the Algerian War, he was Minister of Armies. He was confronted with the 1961 Generals' Putsch, reorganized the Army and adapted it to the nuclear era.[1]

In 1960, Messmer visited Lisbon and expressed lament for the United Nations resolutions against colonialism, approving of the Estado Novo regime's hardline stance against decolonisation on the grounds that Portugal represented the last vestige of white, Western civilisation on the African continent.[5]

Messmer gave permission for former Algerian War veterans to fight in Katanga against the newly independent Congo and United Nations peacekeeping forces. He confided to Roger Trinquier that it was de Gaulle's ambition to replace the Belgians and control a reunited Congo from Élisabethville.[6]

Along with the Minister of Research, Gaston Palewski, Messmer was present at the Béryl nuclear test in Algeria, on 1 May 1962, during which an accident occurred. Officials, soldiers and Algerian workers escaped as they could, often without wearing any protection. Palewski died in 1984 of leukemia, which he always has attributed to the Beryl incident, while Messmer always remained close-mouthed on the affair.[7][8]

De Gaulle said of Messmer that, along with Maurice Couve de Murville, he was "one of his two arms.[3] " In May '68, he advised de Gaulle against the use of the military.[1][clarification needed]

Messmer became a personality of the Gaullist Party and was elected deputy in 1968, representing Moselle département. A member of the conservative wing of the Gaullist movement, he criticized the "New Society" plan of Prime Minister Jacques Chaban-Delmas, and thus won the trust of Georges Pompidou, elected President in 1969.[3] He quit the government after de Gaulle's resignation and founded the association Présence du gaullisme (Presence of Gaullism).[1]

From the 1970s to the 2000s

He occupied cabinet positions again in the 1970s, serving first as Minister of state charged of the Overseas Territories in 1971,[9] then as Prime Minister from July 1972 to May 1974.

Messmer's cabinet (July 1972 – May 1974)

He succeeded in this function to Jacques Chaban-Delmas, who had adopted a parliamentary reading of the Constitution, which Messmer opposed in his investiture speech.[9] Messmer had been chosen by Pompidou as a guarant of his fidelity to de Gaulle, and his cabinet included personalities close to Pompidou, such as Jacques Chirac, named Minister of Agriculture.[10]

Due to President Georges Pompidou's illness, he dealt with the everyday administration of the country and adopted a conservative stance opposed to Chaban-Delmas' previous policies. Henceforth, he stopped the liberalization of the ORTF media governmental organization, naming as its CEO Arthur Conte, a personal friend of Pompidou.[10]

Under his government, the Union des Démocrates pour la République (UDR) presidential majority negotiated with Valéry Giscard d'Estaing's Independent Republicans an electoral alliance, which enabled it to win the 1973 elections despite the left-wing union realized with the 1972 Common Program.[10] Messmer's second cabinet excluded several Gaullists, among whom Michel Debré, while he named several Independent Republicans members, such as Michel Poniatowski, close to Giscard, himself named Minister of Economy and Finances.[10] A Ministry of Information was also re-created and put under the authority of an ultra-conservative, Philippe Malaud.[10] In June 1974, he initiated the construction of 13 nuclear plants in order to confront the "choc pétrolier" (oil crisis).[1][11]

In 1974, when Pompidou died, those close to Messmer encouraged him to run for president. He accepted at the condition of Chaban-Delmas, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing and Edgar Faure's withdrawals. Faure accepted, as well as Giscard on the condition that Chaban-Delmas also withdrew himself. However, Chaban-Delmas, despite the Canard enchaîné's campaign against him, maintained himself, leading Messmer to withdraw his candidacy. Finally, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, a conservative rival of the Gaullists, was elected. He served as prime minister for another few weeks after Pompidou's death, ending his term after the presidential elections. Jacques Chirac replaced him on 29 May 1974.[12] After the election of Giscard, he never held again ministerial offices, and became one of the historical voices of Gaullism.[3]

Later career and death

Messmer remained a member of Parliament for the Moselle department until 1988, and served as President of the Lorraine regional assembly from 1968 to 1992. He was mayor of the town of Sarrebourg from 1971 to 1989. Messmer was also president of the Rally for the Republic (RPR) parliamentary group during the first cohabitation (1986–1988), under Jacques Chirac' government.[1] In 1997 he testified as a witness during the trial of Maurice Papon, charged of crimes against humanity committed under the Vichy regime, and declared: "The time has come when the Frenchmen could stop hating themselves and begin to grant pardon to themselves.".[13] Along with some other former Resistants, he demanded Papon's pardon in 2001.[1]

He died in 2007 aged 91, just four days after fellow Prime Minister Raymond Barre. He was the last surviving major French Politician to have been a member of the Free French forces.

Political career

Governmental functions

  • Prime Minister: 1972–1974
  • Minister of State, Minister of Departments and Overseas Territories: 1971–1972
  • Minister of Armies: 1960–1969

Electoral mandates

National Assembly

Regional Council

  • President of the Regional Council of Lorraine: 1978–1979
  • Regional councillor of Lorraine: 1968–1992

General Council

  • General councillor of Moselle: 1970–1982

Municipal Council

Honours

An important figure of the French Resistance during World War II, Pierre Messmer was a member of the Ordre de la Libération, and the recipient of numerous decorations including the highest rank of the Légion d'honneur. In 2006, he was named Chancellier de l'Ordre de la Libération after the death of General Alain de Boissieu.[2] He was also an officer of the American Legion.[2]

In 1992 he became president of the Institut Charles de Gaulle and, in 1995, of the Fondation Charles de Gaulle.[1]

He also became elected as a member of the Académie française (the French language academy) in 1999, replacing a Gaullist comrade, Maurice Schumann.[1] He was also a member of the French Academy of Moral and Political Sciences since 1988, and, since 1976, of the Académie des sciences d'outre-mer (Academy of Sciences of Overseas Territories). He was named perpetual secretary of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences in 1995.[2] He was also chancellor of the Institut de France (1998–2005) before becoming honorary chancellor.[2]

In October 2001, Messmer succeeded to the General Jean Simon as President of the Fondation de la France libre (Foundation of Free France).[2]

Messmer's First Ministry, 5 July 1972 – 2 April 1973

Changes

  • 15 March 1973 – André Bettencourt succeeds Schumann as interim Minister of Foreign Affairs.
  • 16 March 1973 – Pierre Messmer succeeds Pleven as interim Minister of Justice.

Messmer's Second Ministry, 6 April 1973 – 1 March 1974

Changes

Messmer's Third Ministry, 1 March – 28 May 1974

Changes

  • 11 April 1974 – Hubert Germain succeeds Royer as interim Minister of Posts and Telecommunications.

Bibliography

  • 1939 Le Régime administratif des emprunts coloniaux. Thesis for his Doctorate of Laws (Librairie juridique et administrative)
  • 1977 Le Service militaire. Débat avec Jean-Pierre Chevènement (Balland)
  • 1985 Les Écrits militaires du général de Gaulle, in collaboration with Professor Alain Larcan (PUF)
  • 1992 Après tant de batailles, Mémoires (Albin Michel)
  • 1998 Les Blancs s’en vont. Récits de décolonisation (Albin Michel)
  • 2002 La Patrouille perdue (Albin Michel)
  • 2003 Ma part de France (Xavier de Guibert)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Thomas Ferenczi, Le gaulliste Pierre Messmer est mort 8 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Le Monde, 29 August 2007 (in French)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Pierre Messmer est mort 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Le Figaro, 29 August 2007 (in French)
  3. ^ a b c d Messmer, légionnaire et baron gaulliste 2 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Radio France International, 30 August 2007 (in French)
  4. ^ a b c d David Servenay, Pierre Messmer, un soldat que le Cameroun n'a pas oublié 3 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Rue 89, 30 August 2007 (in French)
  5. ^ Byrnes, Melissa K. (26 May 2019). "Diplomacy at the end of empire: evolving French perspectives on Portuguese colonialism in the 1950s and 1960s". Cold War History. 19 (4): 477–491. doi:10.1080/14682745.2019.1597857. S2CID 191733021. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  6. ^ Othen, Christopher (7 September 2015). Katanga 1960–63: Mercenaries, Spies and the African Nation that Waged War on the World. ISBN 978-0-7509-6580-4. from the original on 14 December 2021. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  7. ^ La bombe atomique en héritage, L'Humanité, 21 February 2007 (in French)
  8. ^ Pierre Messmer : désinformation et opacité sur le nucléaire civil et militaire 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Sortir du nucléaire, HNS, 2 September 2007 (in French)
  9. ^ a b Discours de politique générale 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine (General Politics Speech) of Messmer during his 1972 investiture, French government's website (in French)
  10. ^ a b c d e Le gouvernement de Pierre Messmer 19 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, politique.net, (in French)
  11. ^ Interview of Pierre Messmer 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine on 3 June 1974 (film), on the French government's website (in French)
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 September 2007.
  13. ^ French: "Le temps est venu où les Français pourraient cesser de se haïr et commencer de se pardonner", quoted by Thomas Ferenczi in Le gaulliste Pierre Messmer est mort 8 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Le Monde, 29 August 2007 (in French)

External links

  • L'Organisation des Nations Unies et les guerres civiles by Messmer (in French)
  • Museum of the Order of the Liberation page on Pierre Messmer (in French)
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of the Armies
1960–1969
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Minister of Overseas Departments and Territories
1971–1972
Succeeded by
Preceded by interim Minister of Justice
1973
Succeeded by

pierre, messmer, pierre, joseph, auguste, messmer, french, pronunciation, pjɛʁ, mɛsmɛʁ, march, 1916, august, 2007, french, gaullist, politician, served, minister, armies, under, charles, gaulle, from, 1960, 1969, longest, serving, since, Étienne, françois, cho. Pierre Joseph Auguste Messmer French pronunciation pjɛʁ mɛsmɛʁ 20 March 1916 29 August 2007 was a French Gaullist politician He served as Minister of Armies under Charles de Gaulle from 1960 to 1969 the longest serving since Etienne Francois duc de Choiseul under Louis XV and then as Prime Minister under Georges Pompidou from 1972 to 1974 A member of the French Foreign Legion he was considered one of the historical Gaullists and died aged 91 in the military hospital of the Val de Grace in August 2007 He was elected a member of the Academie francaise in 1999 his seat was taken over by Simone Veil 1 Pierre MessmerPierre Messmer in 1988Prime Minister of FranceIn office 5 July 1972 27 May 1974PresidentGeorges PompidouAlain Poher Acting Preceded byJacques Chaban DelmasSucceeded byJacques ChiracPersonal detailsBornPierre Joseph Auguste Messmer20 March 1916Vincennes Seine now Val de Marne FranceDied29 August 2007 2007 08 29 aged 91 Paris FrancePolitical partyUDROccupationCivil Servant Contents 1 Early career 2 After World War II 2 1 Colonial Administrator in Africa 2 2 Minister of Armies 1959 1969 3 From the 1970s to the 2000s 3 1 Messmer s cabinet July 1972 May 1974 3 2 Later career and death 4 Political career 5 Honours 6 Messmer s First Ministry 5 July 1972 2 April 1973 7 Messmer s Second Ministry 6 April 1973 1 March 1974 8 Messmer s Third Ministry 1 March 28 May 1974 9 Bibliography 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEarly career EditPierre Joseph Auguste Messmer was born in Vincennes in 1916 He graduated in 1936 in the language school ENLOV and the following year at the Ecole nationale de la France d outre mer National School of Oversea France 1 He then became a senior civil servant in the colonial administration and became a Doctor of Laws in 1939 In the outbreak of World War II he was sous lieutenant of the 12th regiment of Senegalese tirailleurs and refused France s capitulation after the defeat 1 He then hijacked in Marseille an Italian cargo ship the Capo Olmo along with his friend Jean Simon a future French General and sailed first to Gibraltar then London and engaged himself in the Free French Forces as a member of the 13th Demi Brigade of the French Foreign Legion 1 2 Messmer then participated to the campaign in Eritrea in Syria in Libya participating to the Battle of Bir Hakeim and in the Tunisia campaign 1 He also fought at the Battle of El Alamein in Egypt 3 He joined in London General Koenig s military staff and participated in the landings in Normandy in August 1944 and the Liberation of Paris 1 Named Compagnon de la Liberation in 1941 2 he received the Croix de guerre War Cross with six citations after the Liberation as well as the medal of the Resistance 1 After World War II EditAfter World War II he returned to the colonies and was a prisoner of war of the Vietminh during two months in 1945 after the outbreak of the First Indochina War 1 He was named the following year general secretary of the interministerial committee for Indochina and then head of staff of the high commissary of the Republic 1 Colonial Administrator in Africa Edit Messmer began his high level African service as governor of Mauritania from 1952 to 1954 and then served as governor of Ivory Coast from 1954 to 1956 when he briefly returned to Paris in the staff of Gaston Defferre Minister of Overseas Territories who enacted the Defferre Act granting to colonial territories internal autonomy a first step towards independence That same year Messmer was nominated as governor general of Cameroun where a civil war had started the preceding year following the outlawing of the independentist Union of the Peoples of Cameroon UPC in July 1955 He initiated a decolonization process and imported the counter revolutionary warfare methods theorized in Indochina and implemented during the Algerian War 1954 62 4 Visiting de Gaulle in Paris he was implicitly granted permission for his change of policies in Cameroon which exchanged repression for negotiations with the UPC 4 A Pacification Zone the ZOPAC Zone de pacification du Cameroon was created on 9 December 1957 englobing 7 000 square km controlled by seven infantry regiments 4 Furthermore a civilian military intelligence apparatus was created combining colonial and local staff assisted by a civilian militia Mao Zedong s people s war was reversed in an attempt to separate the civilian population from the guerrilla In this aim the local population was rounded up in guarded villages located on the main roads controlled by the French Army 4 Messmer served as high commissioner of French Equatorial Africa from January 1958 to July 1958 and as high commissioner of French West Africa from 1958 to 1959 citation needed Minister of Armies 1959 1969 Edit From 1959 to 1969 under Charles de Gaulle s presidency and in the turmoil of the Algerian War he was Minister of Armies He was confronted with the 1961 Generals Putsch reorganized the Army and adapted it to the nuclear era 1 In 1960 Messmer visited Lisbon and expressed lament for the United Nations resolutions against colonialism approving of the Estado Novo regime s hardline stance against decolonisation on the grounds that Portugal represented the last vestige of white Western civilisation on the African continent 5 Messmer gave permission for former Algerian War veterans to fight in Katanga against the newly independent Congo and United Nations peacekeeping forces He confided to Roger Trinquier that it was de Gaulle s ambition to replace the Belgians and control a reunited Congo from Elisabethville 6 Along with the Minister of Research Gaston Palewski Messmer was present at the Beryl nuclear test in Algeria on 1 May 1962 during which an accident occurred Officials soldiers and Algerian workers escaped as they could often without wearing any protection Palewski died in 1984 of leukemia which he always has attributed to the Beryl incident while Messmer always remained close mouthed on the affair 7 8 De Gaulle said of Messmer that along with Maurice Couve de Murville he was one of his two arms 3 In May 68 he advised de Gaulle against the use of the military 1 clarification needed Messmer became a personality of the Gaullist Party and was elected deputy in 1968 representing Moselle departement A member of the conservative wing of the Gaullist movement he criticized the New Society plan of Prime Minister Jacques Chaban Delmas and thus won the trust of Georges Pompidou elected President in 1969 3 He quit the government after de Gaulle s resignation and founded the association Presence du gaullisme Presence of Gaullism 1 From the 1970s to the 2000s EditHe occupied cabinet positions again in the 1970s serving first as Minister of state charged of the Overseas Territories in 1971 9 then as Prime Minister from July 1972 to May 1974 Messmer s cabinet July 1972 May 1974 Edit He succeeded in this function to Jacques Chaban Delmas who had adopted a parliamentary reading of the Constitution which Messmer opposed in his investiture speech 9 Messmer had been chosen by Pompidou as a guarant of his fidelity to de Gaulle and his cabinet included personalities close to Pompidou such as Jacques Chirac named Minister of Agriculture 10 Due to President Georges Pompidou s illness he dealt with the everyday administration of the country and adopted a conservative stance opposed to Chaban Delmas previous policies Henceforth he stopped the liberalization of the ORTF media governmental organization naming as its CEO Arthur Conte a personal friend of Pompidou 10 Under his government the Union des Democrates pour la Republique UDR presidential majority negotiated with Valery Giscard d Estaing s Independent Republicans an electoral alliance which enabled it to win the 1973 elections despite the left wing union realized with the 1972 Common Program 10 Messmer s second cabinet excluded several Gaullists among whom Michel Debre while he named several Independent Republicans members such as Michel Poniatowski close to Giscard himself named Minister of Economy and Finances 10 A Ministry of Information was also re created and put under the authority of an ultra conservative Philippe Malaud 10 In June 1974 he initiated the construction of 13 nuclear plants in order to confront the choc petrolier oil crisis 1 11 In 1974 when Pompidou died those close to Messmer encouraged him to run for president He accepted at the condition of Chaban Delmas Valery Giscard d Estaing and Edgar Faure s withdrawals Faure accepted as well as Giscard on the condition that Chaban Delmas also withdrew himself However Chaban Delmas despite the Canard enchaine s campaign against him maintained himself leading Messmer to withdraw his candidacy Finally Valery Giscard d Estaing a conservative rival of the Gaullists was elected He served as prime minister for another few weeks after Pompidou s death ending his term after the presidential elections Jacques Chirac replaced him on 29 May 1974 12 After the election of Giscard he never held again ministerial offices and became one of the historical voices of Gaullism 3 Later career and death Edit Messmer remained a member of Parliament for the Moselle department until 1988 and served as President of the Lorraine regional assembly from 1968 to 1992 He was mayor of the town of Sarrebourg from 1971 to 1989 Messmer was also president of the Rally for the Republic RPR parliamentary group during the first cohabitation 1986 1988 under Jacques Chirac government 1 In 1997 he testified as a witness during the trial of Maurice Papon charged of crimes against humanity committed under the Vichy regime and declared The time has come when the Frenchmen could stop hating themselves and begin to grant pardon to themselves 13 Along with some other former Resistants he demanded Papon s pardon in 2001 1 He died in 2007 aged 91 just four days after fellow Prime Minister Raymond Barre He was the last surviving major French Politician to have been a member of the Free French forces Political career EditGovernmental functions Prime Minister 1972 1974 Minister of State Minister of Departments and Overseas Territories 1971 1972 Minister of Armies 1960 1969Electoral mandatesNational Assembly Member of the National Assembly of France for Moselle 1969 1971 1974 1988Regional Council President of the Regional Council of Lorraine 1978 1979 Regional councillor of Lorraine 1968 1992General Council General councillor of Moselle 1970 1982Municipal Council Mayor of Sarrebourg 1971 1989 Municipal councillor of Sarrebourg 1971 1989Honours EditAn important figure of the French Resistance during World War II Pierre Messmer was a member of the Ordre de la Liberation and the recipient of numerous decorations including the highest rank of the Legion d honneur In 2006 he was named Chancellier de l Ordre de la Liberation after the death of General Alain de Boissieu 2 He was also an officer of the American Legion 2 In 1992 he became president of the Institut Charles de Gaulle and in 1995 of the Fondation Charles de Gaulle 1 He also became elected as a member of the Academie francaise the French language academy in 1999 replacing a Gaullist comrade Maurice Schumann 1 He was also a member of the French Academy of Moral and Political Sciences since 1988 and since 1976 of the Academie des sciences d outre mer Academy of Sciences of Overseas Territories He was named perpetual secretary of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences in 1995 2 He was also chancellor of the Institut de France 1998 2005 before becoming honorary chancellor 2 In October 2001 Messmer succeeded to the General Jean Simon as President of the Fondation de la France libre Foundation of Free France 2 Messmer s First Ministry 5 July 1972 2 April 1973 EditPierre Messmer Prime Minister Maurice Schumann Minister of Foreign Affairs Michel Debre Minister of National Defense Raymond Marcellin Minister of the Interior Valery Giscard d Estaing Minister of Economy and Finance Jean Charbonnel Minister of Industrial and Scientific Development Joseph Fontanet Minister of National Education Labour Employment and Population Rene Pleven Minister of Justice Andre Bord Minister of Veterans Jacques Duhamel Minister of Cultural Affairs Jacques Chirac Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Olivier Guichard Minister of Housing Tourism Equipment and Regional Planning Robert Galley Minister of Transport Jean Foyer Minister of Public Health Hubert Germain Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Yvon Bourges Minister of Commerce Roger Frey Minister of Administrative Reforms Edgar Faure Minister of Social AffairsChanges 15 March 1973 Andre Bettencourt succeeds Schumann as interim Minister of Foreign Affairs 16 March 1973 Pierre Messmer succeeds Pleven as interim Minister of Justice Messmer s Second Ministry 6 April 1973 1 March 1974 EditPierre Messmer Prime Minister Michel Jobert Minister of Foreign Affairs Robert Galley Minister of Armies Raymond Marcellin Minister of the Interior Valery Giscard d Estaing Minister of Economy and Finance Jean Charbonnel Minister of Industrial and Scientific Development Georges Gorse Minister of Labour Employment and Population Jean Taittinger Minister of Justice Joseph Fontanet Minister of National Education Andre Bord Minister of Veterans and War Victims Maurice Druon Minister of Cultural Affairs Jacques Chirac Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Robert Poujade Minister of Natural Protection and Environment Bernard Stasi Minister of Overseas Departments and Territories Olivier Guichard Minister of Housing Tourism Regional Planning and Equipment Yves Guena Minister of Transport Joseph Comiti Minister of Relations with Parliament Michel Poniatowski Minister of Public Health Hubert Germain Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Philippe Malaud Minister of Information Jean Royer Minister of Commerce and Craft Industry Alain Peyrefitte Minister of Administrative ReformsChanges 23 October 1973 Philippe Malaud becomes Minister of Civil Service Jean Philippe Lecat succeeds Malaud as Minister of InformationMessmer s Third Ministry 1 March 28 May 1974 EditPierre Messmer Prime Minister Michel Jobert Minister of Foreign Affairs Robert Galley Minister of Armies Jacques Chirac Minister of the Interior Valery Giscard d Estaing Minister of Economy and Finance Yves Guena Minister of Industry Commerce and Craft Industry Georges Gorse Minister of Labour Employment and Population Jean Taittinger Minister of Justice Joseph Fontanet Minister of National Education Alain Peyrefitte Minister of Cultural Affairs and Environment Raymond Marcellin Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Olivier Guichard Minister of Regional Planning and Equipment Hubert Germain Minister of Relations with Parliament Michel Poniatowski Minister of Public Health Jean Royer Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Jean Philippe Lecat Minister of InformationChanges 11 April 1974 Hubert Germain succeeds Royer as interim Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Bibliography Edit1939 Le Regime administratif des emprunts coloniaux Thesis for his Doctorate of Laws Librairie juridique et administrative 1977 Le Service militaire Debat avec Jean Pierre Chevenement Balland 1985 Les Ecrits militaires du general de Gaulle in collaboration with Professor Alain Larcan PUF 1992 Apres tant de batailles Memoires Albin Michel 1998 Les Blancs s en vont Recits de decolonisation Albin Michel 2002 La Patrouille perdue Albin Michel 2003 Ma part de France Xavier de Guibert See also EditPolitics of France France in the 20th centuryReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Thomas Ferenczi Le gaulliste Pierre Messmer est mort Archived 8 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Le Monde 29 August 2007 in French a b c d e f g Pierre Messmer est mort Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Le Figaro 29 August 2007 in French a b c d Messmer legionnaire et baron gaulliste Archived 2 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Radio France International 30 August 2007 in French a b c d David Servenay Pierre Messmer un soldat que le Cameroun n a pas oublie Archived 3 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Rue 89 30 August 2007 in French Byrnes Melissa K 26 May 2019 Diplomacy at the end of empire evolving French perspectives on Portuguese colonialism in the 1950s and 1960s Cold War History 19 4 477 491 doi 10 1080 14682745 2019 1597857 S2CID 191733021 Retrieved 15 March 2023 Othen Christopher 7 September 2015 Katanga 1960 63 Mercenaries Spies and the African Nation that Waged War on the World ISBN 978 0 7509 6580 4 Archived from the original on 14 December 2021 Retrieved 24 April 2018 La bombe atomique en heritage L Humanite 21 February 2007 in French Pierre Messmer desinformation et opacite sur le nucleaire civil et militaire Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Sortir du nucleaire HNS 2 September 2007 in French a b Discours de politique generale Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine General Politics Speech of Messmer during his 1972 investiture French government s website in French a b c d e Le gouvernement de Pierre Messmer Archived 19 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine politique net in French Interview of Pierre Messmer Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine on 3 June 1974 film on the French government s website in French Video of the passing of powers between Messmer and Chirac Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 French Le temps est venu ou les Francais pourraient cesser de se hair et commencer de se pardonner quoted by Thomas Ferenczi in Le gaulliste Pierre Messmer est mort Archived 8 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Le Monde 29 August 2007 in French External links EditL Organisation des Nations Unies et les guerres civiles by Messmer in French Museum of the Order of the Liberation page on Pierre Messmer in French Political officesPreceded byPierre Guillaumat Minister of the Armies1960 1969 Succeeded byMichel DebrePreceded by Minister of Overseas Departments and Territories1971 1972 Succeeded by Preceded byRene Pleven interim Minister of Justice1973 Succeeded byJean Taittinger Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pierre Messmer amp oldid 1150988654, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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