Article
from The Journal of Strategic Studies

'Stay-Behind' in France: Much Ado about Nothing?

Abstract

Stay-behind networks in France were set up starting in 1948 and were aimed at responding to the possibility of a Soviet armed attack into Western Europe. Participants were identified, and arms and explosives cached, to be activated in case of hostilities. This activity became folded into a multilateral effort under the Allied Coordination Committee (ACC) of NATO. In France, the network was run as a highly compartmented activity under the French external intelligence service (DGSE). As the Soviet threat receded, the stay-behind activity became more and more dormant, and in 1990 it was quietly disbanded, immediately after the P-2 scandal broke in Italy.

Recommended citation

Cogan, Charles. “'Stay-Behind' in France: Much Ado about Nothing?.” The Journal of Strategic Studies, December 2007