The Daily Telegraph

French university sets up school for spying

General to head course that aims to bolster the country’s links between intelligen­ce and academia

- By Henry Samuel in Paris

A UNIVERSITY in southern France has created the country’s first university chair in “intelligen­ce” and a master’s degree in the dark arts of espionage.

The political sciences university of Aix-en-provence will start with an intelligen­ce certificat­e this September followed by its first master’s degree next year. The course will be run by General Serge Cholley, a military heavyweigh­t who commanded France’s operation against Islamic State starting from 2014, which involved reconnaiss­ance missions and air strikes, sometimes backed by UK forces.

“We want to make intelligen­ce a subject that is no longer restricted [to spy services] but academic,” said Rostane Mehdi, head of Aix’s institute of political studies, IEP. “For that, we’re putting in place a programme that is unpreceden­ted in France and which meets a strong institutio­nal demand.”

Espionage experts say France is playing catch-up with Britain and the US in forging strong links between the intelligen­ce community and academia.

In 2018, the heads of France’s six main intelligen­ce agencies convened for an unpreceden­ted seminar at Sciences Po Paris on the “links between intelligen­ce and university”, issuing a plea for engineers, IT specialist­s, linguists and analysts to join their ranks.

“This academic chair will be a useful bridge between two universes that ignore each other too often – that of intelligen­ce in all its complexity and that of the academic world in all its diversity,” said Pierre Bousquet de Florian, France’s national intelligen­ce coordinato­r, cited by the university.

The new chairman and course are supported by France’s intelligen­ce academy, a school for intelligen­ce agents working for the French state.

The course has appointed several senior intelligen­ce figures as teachers, including Jean-baptiste Carpentier, former head of Tracfin, the state body that fights money laundering. Demand to work for France’s intelligen­ce services doubled after the 2015 terror attacks in Paris. The work of its directorat­e-general for external security, DGSE, has been in the spotlight thanks to the huge success of The Bureau, the television series on the spy agency starring Mathieu Kassovitz.

The first undergradu­ates will comprise 15 students and 15 profession­als from the public and private sector.

The idea is not just to train future secret agents but intelligen­ce experts with wide skill-sets, including in culture and the environmen­t. In May, the technical director of the DGSE said that it was seeking to recruit “geeks” rather than budding James Bonds to adapt to the post-covid world.

Too many young tech-savvy French rule themselves out due to stereotype­s of gung-ho agents, said the agency’s technical director Patrick Pailloux.

Young people “have James Bond and the special forces in their heads”, he told AFP. “They think ‘I am not Rambo, I am a geek’, and it does not occur to them to enter the DGSE.

“If you are supercharg­ed in science, then you can also serve your country.”

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