Action Directe
Action Directe was a communist
guerilla organization
active in France between 1979 and 1987. AD grew out of the French
autonomist scene,
drew heavy inspiration from both the struggles of the Third World
proletariat
and the intellectual legacy of the new communist currents of the 1960s
and
70s. It carried out a number of spectacular attacks, many of which were
in
cooperation with West Germany's Red
Army Faction.
See also: Interview
with Joelle Aubron of Action Directe, conducted in 2002 and 2003
for the webzine Future Noir.
Chronology
(translated from
http://perso.magic.fr/nac/webnac4/fs/ad.html)
Here is a historical timeline of Action Directe. It is mainly (but not
only) comprised of information from a document that was distributed a
few months ago in the autonomist "movement".
1972-1976: the background
At the end of the 1960s, the most revolutionary elements of post-68
were grouped around the group Gauche Proletarienne, whose newspaper was
called Cause du Peuple (CDP). The political context is understood as
being a « new fascism » heading towards « civil war
».
A « new resistance » develops within the anti-authoritarian
youth movement and workers’ struggles.
Certain activists from GP are killed by the police and factory guards,
and so the GP organized an illegal armed group, « la Nouvelle
Résistance Populaire » (NRP – translation : New Popular
Resistance).
The NPR tries to kidnap a deputy, kidnaps a Renault company officer,
but ends up disolving itself after a little while, refusing to take the
step to armed struggle and entertaining hjigh hopes for the social
movements like the self-management of the LIP wtach factory or the
occupation of military land at Larzac.
Yet this is not the end of armed struggle in France. In May 1974 the
Groupes d'Action Révolutionnaire Internationaliste (GARI –
trans. : Groups for Revolutionary Internationalist Action) are formed.
The GARI intended to offer financial, material and military support to
the struggle against Francoism in Spain, especially the ex-MIL
(Mouvement Ibérique de Libération, tran. : Iberian
Liberation Movement). From 1971 to 1973 the MIL had carried out
expropriations and published revolutionary texts…
One of its best known activists was Salvador Puig-Antich, killed with a
garrot on March 2nd 1974.
The GARI intend to « struggle by direct action against the Franco
dictatoriship, against Capital, against the State, for the liberation
of Spain, Europe and the world.”
On March 3rd 1974 the GARI kidnap the bank director from Bilbao in
Paris, carry out 25 attacks and 5 hold-ups in Paris, in the Midi of
France and in Belgium. The GARI are dismantled after a certain time.
Next to appear are the Brigades Internationales (BI – trans.
International Brigades). The BI form “a politico-military
anti-imperialist Maoist organization of revolutionary French
militants.” (Libération, June 30th 1976)
Formed after the coup in Chili in 1973 to remedy the “inability of the
revolutionary organizations to mount an adequate response”, the BI
carry out very hard actions for three years and are never destroyed by
the police.
On December 9th 1974 the BI Raul Sendi group (named after the founder
of the Tupamaros) executes Colonel Trabal, Uruguayan military attache.
On October 8th 1975 the BI Juan Manot group (names after a Basque
militant who was killed by firing squad on September 27th 1975) tries
to execute the Spanish military attache Garcia.
On May 10th 1976 the BI Che Guevara group executes the Bolivian
ambassador in Paris.
On November 2nd 1976 the BI Reza Rezay group (named after an Iranian
militant killed on June 16th 1973) attempts to execute the Iranian
cultural attache.
On July 7th 1977 the BI Ouali Sayed attempts to execute the ambassador
from Mauritania.
The Noyaux Armés Pour l'Autonomie Populaire (NAPAP – trans.
Armed Nuclei for Popular Autonomy) formed next. On March 25th 1977
Jean-Antoine Tramoni was execited – he was the factory guard who had
killed the GP miltant Pierre Overney.
On March 27th the NAPAP set fire to the Renault-Flins factory parking
lot; on April 3rd there was an attack against the CFT; on June 6th an
attack and gunfire against Chrylser-France; October 8th an attack
against the Sceaux guardhouse; on October 14th against the Supreme
Court and the Minietr of Justice; finally an attack against a Mercedes
exposition hall.
Who are the NAPAP?
We have nothing to do with the
‘Maoist’ label the press has stuck on us. If it is true that some
former Maoists belong to the NAPAP, it is not only as a result of the
liquidation of Gauche Proletarianne…
It is clear that we are not the
fighting party of whatever, and even less the new ‘Baader gang’.
We have learnt the lessons of the
politico-military experience in other countries, which leads the
fighter ‘specialists’ in solitary and suicidal struggle against the
modern State apparatus. Our practice is a part of the construction of
workers’ autonomy within the popular movement.
Our goal is not to call for the
formation of A, 10, 100 NAPAP controlled by a central leadership in the
manner of a General Staff of the people’s potential violence.
We are entering a new stage which
consists of our melting into the movement’s activity, not trying to
lead it either officially or through intrigue.
1977-78: preparation
In France the autonomous offensive, meaning the autonomist movement,
started from small groups which confronted the police during the big
anti-nuclear demonstration in Malville.
"Malville brutally brought back those who had been drifting aimlessly
since 1972.” (the autonomist magazine “Camarades” #6)
The autonomist movement does not reject armed struggle, as can be seen
by its slogans (« armed struggle and workers’ autonomy ».
“autonomy and attack”, « offensive autonomy, armed struggle, for
communism ») for « the developpment of violence is a fact
of the movement.” (Camarades #4-5)
But by the same token, the violence cannot be the simple act of an
organization, it depends on the movement.
"The movement is read and able, without waiting for permission from the
lefties, to defend its needs and massively assume a high level of
conflict with the State… so that the entire movement can recognize
itself in the each violent action acrried out by small groups.”
(Camarades #6)
The militants from Action Directe, which does not exist yet, carry out
sabotage and other illegal actions.
And so there is a night of co-ordinated action against the construction
of the Malville nuclear plant (23 attacks claimed by CARLOS –
“coordination autonome radicalement en lutte ouverte contre la
société” – trans. “Autonom9ous Coordination Radically In
Struggle Against Society).
Another night of coordinated activities against the extradition of
Klaus Croissant, the lawyer of prisoners of the Germany Red Army
Faction, actions following the news of the RAF prisoners’ “suicides”;
in Toulouse the CACT (coordination autonome contre le travail; trans.:
Autonomous Coordination Against Work) attacks the ANPE and temp
agencies.
In the summer of 1978 militants from MATRA (Mouvements armés
terroristes révolutionnaires anarchistes – trans. Reviolutionary
Anarchist Terrorist Armed Movements) are arrested, accused of 35
attacks against ANPEs, EDF buildings, temp agencies, police stations,
court-houses, etc.
1979: the beginning
May 1st : the organization "Action Directe" appears, claiming the
machine-gunning of the CNPF ((conseil national du patronat
français, trans.: French National Employers’ Association)
building in Paris.
September 15th: Attacks against the Ministry of Labour and the Ministry
of Health.
September 16th: the destruction of the SONACOTRA headquarters (a mixed
corporation that manages immigrant workers’ housing) after the massive
police evictions following a rent strike that had gone on for several
months. Machine gunning of the offices of the secretariat of immigrant
workers (in the same building as the Ministry of Labour).
September 27th: attack against the employers’ offices in charge of
managing employment for the Paris region.
1980: armed propaganda
February 3rd and 5th: attacks against the management of the inspection
of work.
February 10th : attack against the UCPI, a real estate company
implicated in the expropiration of housing in the working class
neighbourhoods of Paris.
March 12th : attack against another real estate company implicated in
above expropriations.
March 14th: attack against the offices of the section of the DST
(direction de la surveillance du territoire) in charge of surveillance
of foreign political and trade union organizations. Atttack against the
office of the l'Organisation Internationale de Coopération des
Polices.
March 16th : a commando enters the Ministry of Cooperation; Minister
Galley barely escapes the shots fired.
March 27th-28th : 32 autonomist militants - close to or members of
Action Directe - are arrested; this is answered by actions against the
Maison-Alfort Fort (a GIGN barracks) and against the central police
station in Toulouse.
April 15th : attack against the Ministry of Transport, missile fired
against the same Ministry and against the direction of Roadway Safety.
July 4th : The City Hall of 14th Arrondissement of Paris is pillaged by
an armed group.
August 28th: An armed confrontation between police and AD members in
Paris during an attack on a bank.
September 13th : a dozen militants are arrested after a gunfight.
September 17th : machine gunning of the guard post at the School of
Warfare.
1981: end of the first match
Action Directe suspends its actions for the opresiential campaign.
April 15th: gunfight during an attack on a bank at Place des Ternes in
Paris; a police officer is killed.
After the election of Mitterand two hunger strikes within six months
and a large campaign of political support on the outside (around the
newspaper Rebelles) leads to the liberation of all of the communist and
anarchist political prisoners.
Action Directe splits into four different tendencies; two of which
(so-called « movementists ») stop all armed struggle, and
one embarks into militant anti-Semitism (the so-called "Lyons branch").
In November Action Directe takes part in the occupation of clandestine
workshops (illegal sweatshops) in the Sentier and buildings in
Barbès.
December 22nd: Laouri " Farid " Benchelal, an AD militant, is beaten to
death in the Helsink central police station a few hours after his
arrest.
December 24th/25th : 7 attacks againts luxury stores, like Rolls Royce
in Paris and in the countryside.
1982: once again…
February 13th : AD executes Gabriel Chahine, a Lebanese refugee who
gave the police information about militants’ safehouses.
February 19th : attack against the headquarters of Turkish fascist
organizations in Paris.
March 30th : machine gunning of the Israeli Ministry of Defense
headquarters in Paris by a commando made up of AD members and Turkish
revolutionaries.
April : " Pour un projet communiste" (trans. : For a Communist Project)
is published. The AD’s line can be said to be "libertarian communist" ,
or more precisely anarcho-Marxist. No references to Lenin or Mao - AD
calls itself anarchist but wants a “communist society.”
It is a month of arrests, raids on the Barbès squats, the
organization’s headquarters is destroyed a few hours after the police
come by.
June: To protest the G-7 Summit in Versailles, AD carries out a major
attack against the European seat of the IMF and the World Bank
(Benchellal Combat Unit).
The text “On Imperialism” is released, in which the USA and USSR are
put on the same level.
August : The Lebanese Phalange massacres Palestinians under the eyes of
the Israeli Army in the Sabra and Shatilla refugee camps. Action
Directe (Marcel Rayman Combat Unit, whose members are of Jewish origin)
carries out actions against Israeli and American companies, including
the Chase Manhattan Bank, and describes itself for the first time as
part of the “anti-imperialist front.”
August 19th : The State dissolves Action Directe – any sympathiser can
be accused of « reconstituting a dissolved organization ».
The newspaper Minute is attacked.
1983: ...running forward
May 31st : gunfight on Trudaine Street in Paris between an AD commando
and the police. Two police officers are killed and another is seriously
wounded. The police freak out, and demonstrate (some of them in
uniform) in front of the Ministry of Justice.
July 30th : An attempted expropriation on the jeweler Aldebert at Place
de la Madeleine.
September 26th : attack against the National Navy.
September 29th: Attack against the Inter-Allied Military Circle.
October 14th : Gunfight in the 17th Arondissmenet in Paris; Ciro
Rizzato, an Italian militant with the COLP (communistes
organisés pour la libération prolétarienne; trans.
Communists Organized for Proletarian Liberation) is killed and two
police officers are wounded. There were court cases against Italians
and French as a result of this gunfight.
Autumn: The monthly “Internationale” appears; it consists of texts from
the armed struggle groups in West Europe and trhe United States (and,
rarely, the Third World).
1984: towards the Front
January 29th : attack against Panhard.
February: Ten militants are arrested in France and Italy.
March 13th: AD militants escape a trap set by the police in Brussels,
Belgium. A few days later a number of militants are arrested.
Spring : AD and revolutionary militants in Belgium expropriate from
banks and rob the Vielsam barracks’ armory, and make off with almost a
ton of explosives from the barracks in Ecaussines.
July 11th : AD launches its offensive for the « unity of
revolutionaries in Western Europe” with an attack against the Atlantic
Institute. “The ability to organize the advanced sections of the
proletariat in the metropoles depends on the success or failure of
imperialism’s plans: superexploitation, war, annihilation…”
July 12th : attack against the Institute of Atlantic Affairs (Ciro
Rizzato Combat Unit).
July 13th : Attack against the Ministry of Defense’s research and
programming office’s computer services and the offices of SIAR
(Industrial Surveillance of Armements) (Benchellal Combat Unit).
July 14th : Attack aginst the Ministry of Industry’s annexes.
By attacking one of NATO’s pillars and attacking French imperialism
head on, Action Directe is showing once again the ablity of the working
class to hit imperialism at the right moment, as well as its desire to
militarily sabotage the transition the political project of global
restructuring of production by imperialist war.
By attacking the Ministry of
Industry, Action Directe is showing it is determined to oppose the mass
layoffs in the automobile and steel industrues, and the ever-increasing
superexploitation of millions of proletarians. (Régis
Schleicher, AD militant who was later arrested, in his July 1984
statement).
August 8th: attack against the headquarters of the European Space
Agency.
August 23rd: a booby-trapped car is parked in front of the Assembly of
the West European Union.
August 28th : Attack against the headquarters of the Socialist Party
and against the Ministry of Defense.
September: Thirty eight Action Directe prisoners begin a hunger strike
against solitary confinement and for regroupment. Other political and
social prisoners join them.
October 20th/21st : Attacks against the Hispano-Suza and Dassault arms
merchants.
December 18th: The explosives used in the RAF action against the NATO
Officers’ School in Oberamärgau in South Germany come from the
stock expropriated from the Ecaussine barracks.
December: The collective who publish Internationale are arrested. They
receive heavy fines for “association of troublemakers”, some are
released on appeal after four years in preventitive detention!
Internationale is taken down without facing repression which
specifically targets the press. It must be said that any idiot who read
Internationale would be able to tell it was connected to Action Directe…
December 31st: AD militants narrowly escape arrest; in Bonn (FRG) there
is an attack against the technical arms mission of the French Embassy.
1985: the Front
January 15th : A common Red Army Faction – Action Directe statement is
released. The RAF and AD decide to struggle together in a front against
imperialist projects.
January 25th : The Elisabeth Van Dyck Commando of Action Directe (Van
Dyck was a RAF member killed during her arrest) execute General Audran,
who was in charge of international affairs for the Ministry of Defense.
April 13th : Attack against the Leumi bank and the ONI.
April 14th: Attack against Minute (Sara Meidle Combat Unit).
April 24th : A Turkish revolutionary is arrested on the French-Belgian
border with two kilos of dynamite coming from the Ecaussines barracks.
He was identified as being close to Action Directe and as havinglived
in the Barbès squats.
April 27th: Attack against the IMF’s European headquarters.
April 30th: Attack against the TRT and SAT arms merchants (Benchellal
Combat Group).
June 26th : A failed attack against General Blandin, Controler General
of the Army. The attempt is claimed by the Commando Antonio Lo Muscio
(an Italian militant from the Noyaux Armés Prolétariens
who was killed while being arrested).
July/August: Discovery of safehouses and arms caches belonging to
Action Directe and the FRAP(front révolutionnaire armé
prolétarien, trans.: Armed Proletarian Revolutionary Front).
August 8th: A joint RAF-AD commando (named George Jackson after the
martyr of the Black Liberation movement in Amerika) attacks the U.S.
airbase in Frankfurt; 3 American soldiers are killed.
September 5th: Attacks against ATIC, Péchiney, Renault, and
Spie-Batignolles (Winthertur tower).
October: Attacks against Radio-France, Antenne 2, and the Audiovisual
Higher Authority.
1986: the Front continues
February : interview in the German anti-imperialist underground
newspaper "zusammen kämpfen " (trans. Struggle together).
April 15th: the Christos Kassimis Commando claims an attack against Guy
Brana, the vice-president of the CNPF and the Director General of the
arms branch of the Thomson multinational.
May 16th : The Kepa Crespo-Gallende commando manages to get inside the
Interpol headquarters and machineguns the different offices and leaves
several dozen kilos of dynamite.
July 21st : The Ciro Rizzato Combat Unit claims an attack against the
OCDE headquarters.
September 9th: The French State adopts extraordinary anti-terrorist
legislation : 30 year sentences, special courts, establishment of a
special professional jury, extension of preventative detention…
November 17th: the Pierre Overney Commando (named after a Maoist
militant killed by a Renault factory guard) executes George Besse,
Director General of Renault.
1987: military defeat
February 21st : Nathalie Ménigon, Joëlle Aubron, Jean-Marc
Rouillan and Georges Cipriani are arrested.