Louis Dio
Birth nameLouis Dio
Born(1908-10-14)October 14, 1908
Vannes, France
DiedJune 15, 1994(1994-06-15) (aged 85)
Toulon, France
AllegianceFrance
Service/branchTroupes coloniales
Years of service1926-1969
RankGénéral d'armée
Commands heldRégiment de marche du Tchad
French 2nd Armored Division
French Protectorate of Tunisia (Territories of Tunisian South)
Ground Forces of Cambodia
French Forces in French Equatorial Africa
Battles/warsWorld War II
AwardsGrand-croix de la Légion d'honneur
Compagnon de la Libération
Croix de guerre 1939-1945
Other workFree French Forces
Liberation of Paris
Liberation of Strasbourg

General Louis Dio (October 14, 1908, in Vannes – June 15, 1994, in Toulon), was a French army general.

Biography

After studying at the Collège Jules Simon between 1914 and 1925, he was accepted at age 18 at the French military academy of Saint-Cyr.

Upon his graduation from the military academy and commissioning as an officer in 1928, Second Lieutenant Dio was assigned to the 18th Senegalese Infantry Regiment (Régiment de Tirailleurs Sénégalais, RTS) based in southern Tunisia. The young Breton officer promptly adapted to and embraced the austere desert lifestyle of the Tiralleurs. He perfected his knowledge of Arabic, the study of which he had undertaken at Saint-Cyr, and was also introduced to local African dialects.

He chose to serve with the French Camel-mounted Troops (Méharistes), whose distinctive military culture was characterized by a nomadic existence in order to remain in permanent contact with the local populations. He immersed himself completely in this lifestyle, as evidenced, for example, by the customary, "beautiful tattoos that went down to the fingers of his hands” he had drawn on his arms.[1]

Before the Second World War, apart from two brief stays in mainland France, he served three times in the most desolate and underdeveloped areas of the Sahara. From 1929 to 1933, he was posted north of Timbuktu in Arwan, French Sudan (present-day Mali). In 1933, he took command of the Groupe Nomade d’Arouan while still a lieutenant. He was cited for having successfully fought against looters at El Ksaib in 1932.

Promoted to captain, he served from 1934 to 1937 in the Nema region, in the south-east of Mauritania. He commanded the Groupe Nomade du Hodh. In June 1935, he led a reconnaissance of more than 2,000 kilometers in inhospitable and previously unexplored areas of Nema.

In 1938, he was assigned to northern Chad where he took command of the Groupe Nomade du Tibesti. Conversant in their language, he immersed himself in the local society and befriended the traditional chiefs. He became a confidant to Bey Ahmed, the spiritual leader of the Senoussis, as well as to the "Alifa" of Mao, who had authority over all the Kanem region. He maintained very close relations with them, and, in an unusual and unprecedented arrangement for a Roman Catholic officer of the French army, was authorized to sign "canouns"(legally binding judgments) rendered within the framework of Muslim civil law.[2]

When the war broke out, he was tasked with organizing a detachment of the Senegalese Infantry Regiment of Chad (Régiment de Tirailleurs Sénégalais du Tchad, RTST), destined to be sent as reinforcements to mainland France. Dio was taken unaware by the armistice of June 1940, which was concluded while he was awaiting the transport which was to repatriate him to France in Douala, Cameroon.[3]

On August 27, 1940, he was the first French officer to join Colonel Leclerc who had been sent from London by De Gaulle to rally the troops of the French Colonial Empire.[4] With the active participation of the unit commanded by Captain Dio, Leclerc would seize Douala and then Yaoundé. With Gabon not willing to submit to Free France, Dio was put in charge of the column which departed from Cameroon and seized Mitzic then Lambaréné, on November 5, 1940.[5]

Appointed major at the end of 1940, he was called to Chad by Leclerc. His comprehensive knowledge of the human and geographical environment of the north of this country, which was in contact with the forces of the Axis, was invaluable to Leclerc. Together they took the Italian fort at Kufra in Southern Libya on March 1, 1941. This was the first combat victory for the French army in World War II. Leclerc swore his famous "Kufra oath" there after the Italian defeat, pledging to continue the fight until the Tricolor again flew over Strasbourg Cathedral.[6] During the fighting, Major Dio was seriously injured while carrying out a night grenade assault on an Italian position. He was subsequently made a Companion of the Liberation by the head of Free France (decree of 7.12.1941).

In 1942, he commanded the main unit of the Leclerc Column in the Fezzan, and gave the following instructions to his European troops: "the natives of Fezzan are our future citizens... the natives will be respected in their person and their property".[7] At the beginning of 1943, with "Force L", he was first to enter Tripoli alongside British troops(January 26, 1943).[8]

In the summer of 1943, then a colonel, he took command of the Chadian Infantry (Marching) Regiment (Régiment de Marche du Tchad, RMT) which had recently been established and organized in Morocco by General Leclerc. In August 1944, he landed with this unit in Normandy and participated in the liberation of France within the 2nd (French) Armored Division, as commander of the Tactical Group Dio (Groupe Tactique Dio, GTD). He entered Paris on August 25, 1944, and subsequently continued to pursue the eastward offensive into Lorraine and Alsace. When he liberated Strasbourg on November 23, 1944, Leclerc said to him, "This is it, old Dio. Now we can both croak".[9] The Tactical Group Dio ended the war in Berchtesgaden where, in early May 1945, its units were part of the conquest of Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest.

In June 1945, faithful among the faithful, Colonel Louis Dio was personally chosen by General Leclerc to succeed him as commander of the 2nd (French) Armored Division. In October of the same year, at age 37, he became the youngest brigadier general in the French army.

From 1946 to 1950, he commanded French forces in the territories of southern Tunisia, before serving in the Far East from 1950 to 1952 as commander of the land forces of Cambodia.

Promoted to major general in 1955, he assumed command of the armed forces of the defense zone of French Equatorial Africa and Cameroon. He was opposed to the then emerging operational doctrine of "revolutionary war" espoused by many high-ranking officers of the French army, because of the "psychological methods" which it incorporated. He believed such methods were neither relevant to nor likely to be successful in confronting "individuals with reflexes conditioned by a feudal or tribal sense of political and social relations and by an innate respect for absolute authority".[10] Dio, who had learned to love and respect the African peoples by sharing their lives during his years as méhariste, believed that this new doctrine of counter-revolutionary warfare, derived from the French experience of war in Indochina, was not applicable to Africans still steeped then in their ancient traditions.

Considered to be the "conscience of the Colonial corps",[11] he was appointed in 1961, as chief of the General Staff of the Land Forces Stationed Overseas, a temporary organization created to undertake the military planning needed in the era of the independence of the new African states. The main heads of state of French-speaking Africa relied on consultations with General Dio for assistance and support in the establishment of their new armed forces.

From 1962 to 1969, his military responsibilities now less burdensome, he agreed to assume the presidency of the Association of Free French at the request of General de Gaulle. On July 6, 1962, he gave the eulogy for General Edgard de Larminat at his funeral.[12]

In 1965, he was promoted to the rank of general of the army and assumed duties as Inspector General of the Army.

General Louis Dio, having reached the statutory age limit for military service, was placed on the retired list of the cadre of general officers in 1969 and thereupon retired to Toulon. He led a simple and discreet life, never looking back on his past and seeking neither honors nor glory, as evidenced by his will, in which he specified: "I essentially want to be buried like an anonymous soldier, which I have never ceased being throughout my life in the deepest recesses of my heart".[13]

He died in 1994 and was buried in private, according to his wishes, in the Colonial officers' section of Toulon cemetery, where he rests in perpetuity with his brothers in arms.

On July 1, 2010, the RMT (régiment de marche du Tchad), of which he had been the first commander, occupied the garrison at Colmar-Meyenheim Air Base 132, which was renamed Quartier Colonel Dio in his honor.

References

  1. SALBAING, Jacques (1992). Ardeur et réflexion. Cahiers d'un chef de section d'Infanterie de Marine dans la Division Leclerc (in French). Paris: La Pensée Universelle. p. 83. ISBN 978-2-214-09072-5.
  2. Testimonial from Colonel Pierre Robedat, officer in the Troupes de Marine who served with Dio in Tchad from 1955 to 1957 and between 1961 and 1963 at the General Staff of the Land Forces Stationed Overseas (EMFTSOM). Colonel Robedat would serve later as president of the First Free French Division.
  3. CHETOM, Fréjus (June 1940), archive 18H296 dossier 2 testimonial Jacques Chauderon (in French)
  4. MOUCHET, Jean (1978). Leclerc : débuts méconnus de son historique épopée, Londres-Cameroun, 1940 : récit historique (in French) (Editions du Midi ed.). p. 47.
  5. CORBONNOIS, Didier (2003). L'Odyssée de la Colonne Leclerc (in French). Histoire et Collection. p. 19. ISBN 978-2-913903-85-2.
  6. Moore, William Mortimer (2011). Free France's Lion, the Life of Philippe Leclerc, De Gaulle's Greatest General. Casemate Publishers. p. 121. Swear that you will never lay down your arms until our colours, our beautiful colours, are flying afresh on Strasbourg Cathedral
  7. JENNINGS, Eric T. (2015). Free French Africa in World War II, The African Resistance. Cambridge University Press. p. 132. ISBN 978-2-262-03247-0.
  8. INGOLD, Francois (1945). L'Epopée Leclerc au Sahara (in French). p. 222.
  9. NOTIN, Jean-Claude (2005). Leclerc (in French). Perrin. p. 298.
  10. DELTOMBE, Thomas; DOMERGUE, Manuel; TATSITA, Jacob (2019). Kamerun! Une guerre cachée aux origines de la Françafrique, 1948 – 1971 (in French). La Découverte. p. 255.
  11. PONS, Roger; LUCHESI, Jean (1994). La Mémoire des Français Libres (in French). pp. 2584–2586. Le General Louis Dio, ancien président de l'AFL
  12. "Edgard de Larminat | Chemins de mémoire". www.cheminsdememoire.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved 7 February 2019.
  13. "Le Musée des Troupes de Marine" (exhibited document). Musée des Troupes de Marine, 167 avenue Troupes de marine, 83600, FREJUS.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
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