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LTC Stephen F.
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Thank you, my friend SGT (Join to see) for reminding us that on August 25, 1944, Paris was liberated from more than four years of German occupation.

Paris - Liberation in August 1944 (in color and HD)
After the Normandy landings of the American on June 6, 1944 (D-Day) the French Resistance with support of the United States Army liberated Paris in August 24, 1944.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1oVABc12js

The French government departed Paris on June 10, 1940 and the Germans occupied the city on June 14, 1940.
On June 22, 1940 capitulating leaders of France signed an armistice with the Germans, and a puppet French state was set up with its capital at Vichy. What would be known as the Free French evacuated and was led by General Charles de Gaulle.
Sadly the French Foreign Legion regiments individually aligned with the Vichy government or the Free French government. In Syria, French Foreign Legion legionnaires fought against each other. The 13th Demi-Brigade of the Foreign Legion aligned with the Free French and fought against the 6th Foreign Infantry Regiment at Damascus.
"The French Foreign Legion, like the rest of the French empire, was now sharply divided. The 13th Demi-Brigade had given its allegiance to the Free French, while the rest of the Legion, scattered throughout North Africa, Syria and Indochina, remained under the thumb of the Vichy government, which meant being under the sharp watch of the German Armistice Commission."
"As he had at Dakar, de Gaulle hoped that the Vichy regime in Syria would turn its coat and join the Free French, but it was not to be. Dentz obeyed his orders from Vichy France and resisted the invasion. The battle for Syria was sad for all the French forces, but particularly so for the soldiers of the Foreign Legion. Not only was it Frenchman against Frenchman, but in the case of the 13th Demi-Brigade, it was the Free French Legion against the Vichy Legion. For a military unit whose motto was Legio Nostra Patria, the Legion is our country, it was a family fight.
The Free French Legionnaires crossed into Syria from Palestine in the only transport that could be scraped together, a bunch of rickety civilian trucks, cars and buses that kept breaking down at various inopportune moments. The 13th Demi-Brigade, along with elements of the 7th Australian Division, was given the objective of taking Damascus. The march was similar in many ways to the Eritrean experience. Suffocating heat, blowing sand, burning sun, shortages of water all made the march sheer hell–the Legion was in its element.
After several days in the desert, the 13th Demi-Brigade reached the hilly country near Damascus, where the fighting began in earnest. The Legion had no air support and no anti-aircraft artillery, and Vichy French planes took a heavy toll. The Legion was bereft of any effective anti-tank weapons, and it appeared they would be overrun by the Vichy tanks, but at the last moment Free French World War I-vintage 75mm artillery came to the rescue, firing point-blank and destroying the tanks.
Furious infantry fighting erupted all along the line as the Legion slowly advanced toward Damascus. On the outskirts of the city, the 13th Demi-Brigade met its brother legionnaires of the Vichy 6th REI face to face. The 13th Demi-Brigade hesitated–were the other legionnaires friends or enemies? They stared at each other for what seemed to be a very long time. Finally, the 13th sent out a patrol. As it approached the Vichy outpost, the Vichys turned out a guard who smartly presented arms–then took the patrol prisoner!
It was a typically Legionlike gesture, a demonstration of respect from one legionnaire to another. It was also the signal to begin the fight, and attack was followed by counterattack, bayonet charge by grenade assault. In the end, the Vichyites were overpowered, and the 6th REI fell back. On July 21, the 13th Demi-Brigade, battered, bloody and exhausted, marched into Damascus in triumph.
There was more heavy fighting before all the Vichy forces in the Levant capitulated. An armistice, signed on July 14, gave the Vichy troops the opportunity to join the Free French. About 1,000 survivors of the 6th Regiment came over to the 13th Demi-Brigade, enough to form a third battalion. The dead of both sides were buried together. That battle was the end of the division in the Legion that had begun with the Nazi infiltration just before the war. The Syrian affair was the last time the Legion was at war with itself."

FYI Sgt (Join to see)SFC (Join to see)cmsgt-rickey-denicke
SGT Forrest FitzrandolphCWO3 Dave AlcantaraSgt John H.
PVT Mark ZehnerSGT Robert R.CPT Tommy Curtis
SGT (Join to see)SGT Steve McFarlandCol Carl Whicker
SP5 Billy MullinsSGT Mark AndersonSSG Michael Noll
CPT Daniel CoxSFC David Reid, M.S, PHR, SHRM-CP, DTMSFC Jack Champion
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
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Great WWII history.
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PVT Mark Zehner
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Bet they were happy!
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