The Daily Telegraph

Macron takes military out of Armistice commemorat­ion

- By David Chazan in Paris, Christophe­r Hope and Camilla Tominey

EMMANUEL MACRON has ordered that ceremonies in France marking the centenary of the end of the First World War next month must avoid commemorat­ing it as a military triumph.

Sixty heads of state and government, including Donald Trump, the US president, will attend ceremonies in Paris on Armistice Day, November 11.

The French president will make a speech at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier beneath the Arc de Triomphe. But Mr Macron’s office said an “overly military” ceremony would risk offending the French, who view the First World War as a “mass slaughter” rather than a victory. An Elysée Palace source said: “The combatants were mainly civilians who had been armed.” About 40million soldiers and civilians were killed or injured in the conflict.

Mr Macron communicat­ed his decision to downplay the commemorat­ions to Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, who agreed. However, the move is

likely to disappoint Mr Trump, who was so delighted to attend the Bastille Day military parade in Paris on July 14 that he announced plans to introduce a similar event in the United States.

Mr Macron was keen to avoid any homage to Marshal Pétain, a French hero of the First World War who is reviled for his later role as head of the Vichy government that collaborat­ed with the Nazis.

Mr Macron was criticised on social media, with Michel Goya, a historian and former infantry colonel, accusing him of “insulting the soldiers of 1918”.

Bénédicte Chéron, a military historian and author, said the Elysée was making a faux pas.

However, Gen Bruno Dary, the head of the committee in charge of the eternal flame at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, said that even without a largescale military parade, “the military dispositio­ns will be the same as in previous years”.

Mr Macron was criticised in August for failing to interrupt his holiday to join Theresa May and the Duke of Cambridge at a ceremony in Amiens, his home town, on the centenary of a battle that marked the beginning of the end of the First World War.

The British Government has been invited to attend the French ceremony and will send a “senior Government minister”, the Foreign Office said last night. Royal sources said it was likely that the Queen, with the Prince of Wales, the Duchess of Cornwall, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex would be at the Cenotaph.

Lord Dannatt, the chief of the general staff from 2006 to 2009, who has been on the UK’S First World War advisory board since 2013, welcomed Mr Macron’s tone, telling The Daily Telegraph: “Triumphali­sm, victory, those sort of notions are inappropri­ate … There is no need for jingoistic reaction at all and for Macron to be just coming to that conclusion now shows he is a pretty inexperien­ced politician.”

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