― “Many years after the war, an American journalist asked Jeannie Rousseau, one of Marie-Madeleine’s operatives, why she had risked her life to join Alliance. ‘I don’t understand the question,’ replied Rousseau, who was responsible for one of the greatest Allied intelligence coups of the war. ‘It was a moral obligation to do what you are capable of doing. It was a must. How could you not do it?’”
― Lynne Olson, Madame Fourcade's Secret War: The Daring Young Woman Who Led France's Largest Spy Network Against Hitler
It took just six weeks in the spring of 1940 for Germany to invade and defeat France. Between May 9 and June 22 of that year, the German assault punched through the defending French forces and raced across northern France. It also witnessed the retreat of the British Army and its evacuation from Dunkirk. On 22 June the French signed an armistice, surrendering to the Germans. France had fallen. The world was stunned. The French army had the equipment and personnel – five million men. How had one of the most powerful armies in the world been so quickly vanquished? The armistice, signed by Adolph Hitler and the French leader, Marshal Petain, divided the country geographically into two large sectors, one occupied by Nazi Germany and one governed by a new regime from the town of Vichy, ostensibly designated as free but really controlled by the Nazis.
Nevertheless, small pockets of resistance began to spring up around France. Many of the people who chose to resist were isolated at best, captured, tortured, deported, or executed. However, the largest spy network had some important success. Georges Loustaunau-Lacau, a fiercely anticommunist army major, recruited a young woman by the name of Marie-Madeleine Fourcade. A married mother of two, blond, in her early 30s, she seemed a most unlikely recruit. Yet Loustaunau-Lacau worked with Fourcade to build France’s largest spy network before turning over its operations to her. Named Alliance, the operation consisted of a vast network of spies and radio operators who worked all over France.
In December 1940, when Fourcade walked into a bar in the port city of Marseille to recruit a source named Gabriel Rivière, the potential recruit was stunned, to say the least. “Good God!” he shouted. “It’s a woman!” Nevertheless, he joined the network and became an important source of information about maritime traffic in the Mediterranean. This “woman” led some 3,000 agents in the largest and most important French secret intelligence network against the Nazis. Not only did a woman lead the network, many of the agents were women.
― “…women accounted for some twenty percent of its agents over the five years of its existence. Like their male counterparts, they represented all classes of society, from maids and laundresses to Paris socialites.”
― Lynne Olson, Madame Fourcade's Secret War: The Daring Young Woman Who Led France's Largest Spy Network Against Hitler
It begs the question, why in the world have we never heard of Marie-Madeleine Fourcade, the only woman to lead a major French resistance network? Fortunately, author Lynne Olson (Freedom's Daughters: the Unsung Heroines of the Civil Rights Movement and Citizens of London: The Americans who Stood with Britain) seeks to correct this unfortunate oversight. Her biography of Fourcade challenges our notions about who deserves to be called a hero (I personally think that it is one of the most overused words in our modern vocabulary).
Raised in a well-to-do French family, Marie-Madeleine Fourcade was extremely independent for her time and refused to comply with the unstated rules of proper feminine behavior. “All her life,” writes Olson, “she rebelled against the norms of France’s deeply conservative, patriarchal society.” When she was approached to work with the resistance, she accepted the position with little hesitation. She organized, recruited, trained, and raised funds. Fourcade was always on the run from the Gestapo or their French associates. She traveled in disguise using false documents, changed her hair styles and hair color, and even wore a dental prosthetic. Despite her attempts to conceal her identity, Fourcade was arrested and tortured by the Nazis. Nevertheless, she twice escaped her captors. But approximately 450 members of the network were killed by the Germans.
The author chronicles the actions of Fourcade and Alliance from 1936 to 1945. The information they gleaned provided information to MI6 and the Allies that changed the course of the war. This included information about submarine operations, as well as the development of the V1 and V2 rockets and their location, allowing the Allies to bomb these sites. In one fascinating account, Olson describes how Robert Douin, a flamboyant artist in Caen, led a team of forty to create a highly-detailed 55-foot-long map of the Normandy coast that was delivered to the Allies months before the D-Day invasion.
While Alliance’s work saved countless thousands of lives, the Nazis hunted down, imprisoned, tortured, and often executed hundreds of the network’s agents. After the war, when Charles De Gaulle created a list of those whom he deemed heroes in the fight for France’s liberation, Forcade did not make the list. However, when Fourcade passed away in 1989 at the age of 79, she became the first woman to be granted a funeral at Les Invalides, the complex in Paris where Napoleon I and other French military heroes are buried.
Olson honors Fourcade’s fight for freedom with a fascinating narrative that will interest World War II history buffs. Even more, the book provides some long-overdue recognition for a woman who played an important, even crucial, role in the Allied victory during World War II.