The Day

Royal who fought behind lines in WWII dies at 92

- By PHIL DAVISON

Prince Michel of Bourbon-Parma, a scion of one of Europe’s oldest royal families who trained as an Allied paratroope­r during World War II and helped liberate Nazi-occupied France — and later suffered 10 months of torture by the Viet Minh during a postwar assignment in French Indochina, died July 7 in Neuilly-sur-Seine, near Paris. He was 92.

His stepson Prince Dimitri of Yugoslavia, a jeweler with a global reputation, announced the death but did not disclose the cause.

Prince Michel, who received decoration­s from France, Britain and the United States for his military valor, was a businessma­n who, for a time, worked for Zodiac Nautic, the company that created the Zodiac Rigid Inflatable Boat, initially meant for military use but now a favorite of rescue workers and sailing buffs worldwide. He also was a liaison between French companies seeking government contracts in Iran until the Western-backed shah was overthrown during the Islamic revolution of 1979.

He was born in Paris and was an adolescent when he arrived with his family in New York City in 1940, just ahead of the Nazi occupation of France. His mother worked in a millinery on 57th Street to make ends meet. Kicked out of a Jesuit school for disobedien­ce — defending a younger brother from a priest who was beating him — the restless Prince Michel persuaded his father to let him join the U.S. Army at 17. “I told my father I had to kick Hitler out of France,” he once said.

He was sent to officer candidate school at Fort Benning, Ga., and was commission­ed as a second lieutenant.

“After the ceremony, a man approached and asked if I’d like to join the OSS,” he later told the Palm Beach Daily News in Palm Beach, Fla., referring to the Office of Strategic Services, the wartime precursor of the CIA. “He said I’d do a lot of traveling and probably see action soon. I asked about the pay, and he told me it was double what I was making then. I said ‘I’m in.’’’

The man was William Casey, who headed the OSS’ European Secret Intelligen­ce Branch and was seeking people with language skills. (Casey later became CIA director.)

Prince Michel received training in covert operations — “guns, knives and everything else,” he told the Palm Beach paper. “For a 17-yearold boy it was a game. I was enjoying myself and I was good at it.” He became known to his comrades as Michel Bourbon or sometimes simply Bourbon, a name they all liked to say.

He was then shipped to England and was assigned to Operation Jedburgh, a clandestin­e action in which the OSS and British special forces combined to parachute agents behind Nazi lines in occupied France. They became know as “the Jeds,” and their missions were hazardous. As the prince later put it, 80 percent of them “just disappeare­d.”

On June 8, 1944, two days after the Allied invasion of Normandy, the prince was part of a three-man sabotage team code-named Quinine, alongside the now-legendary Scottish commando Tommy (later Sir Thomas) Macpherson — the enemy later dubbed him “the kilted killer” — and British army radio operator Sgt. Arthur Brown.

Under his parachute-jumping smock, Macpherson was wearing the Cameron tartan kilt of his original regiment, the Cameron Highlander­s. Their initial mission was to prevent German armored divisions from getting to Normandy to stem the tide of the Allied attack.

Linking up with French resistance fighters, the three blew up train tracks and electrical towers. Prince Michel gained expertise in planting bombs in cow dung on roads on which the Nazis would drive. He also developed a miniature bomb that would go off in toilets, triggered by the flushing handle.

Prince Michel, Macpherson and Brown were told that a 23,000-strong column of German troops was moving toward the Allies’ Normandy beachhead and had to be stopped by whatever means necessary.

“I remember blowing up a bridge just as the first tanks were coming across and watching them all drop into the deep river,” the prince told the Palm Beach newspaper.

The three “Jeds” stole a Jeep-like German army vehicle and drove toward the German front-line headquarte­rs, where they were confronted by German Maj. Gen. Botho Henning Elster. Of the three, Macpherson was the only one “armed” — but only with his regimental sgian-dubh, the traditiona­l Scottish dagger, in his right sock.

He told Elster that the Allies had 20,000 crack troops nearby and that U.S. and Royal Air Force bombers were ready to bombard the Germans into surrender. It was a total bluff, but Elster surrendere­d on Sept. 16, 1944, on the Loire bridge at Beaugency, handing himself and 19,500 of his men over to U.S. Maj. Gen. Robert Macon and the 83rd Infantry Division — and to the French Resistance — an event recorded on U.S. Army film.

Prince Michel was subsequent­ly sent by the French authoritie­s to what was then French Indochina, from which the Japanese were retreating as the nationalis­ts of Ho Chi Minh were on the rise. On Aug. 28, 1945, an American B-24 Liberator bomber dropped him into the rice paddies of Hue, Vietnam. It was broad daylight, and he was immediatel­y captured by Viet Minh fighters who imprisoned him until June 16 the following year, giving him a bowl of rice with boiled leaves twice a day.

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