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Moroccan Goumier

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Goumier
Goum
The standard insignia of the "Mixed Moroccan Goumiers": a koummya (a curved Moorish dagger), inscribed with the letter G (Goum) and featuring gold North African decorations
Active1908–1956
Country France
TypeInfantry and mounted detachments
Part ofFrench Army
EngagementsMoroccan colonial campaigns,
World War II, Indochina 1946-54
Goumiers of the 2nd Group of Moroccan Tabors boarding a landing craft in Corsica headed to Elba

The Moroccan Goumiers (French: Les Goumiers Marocains) were indigenous Moroccan soldiers who served in auxiliary units attached to the French Army of Africa, between 1908 and 1956. While nominally in the service of the Sultan of Morocco, they served under French officers, including a period as part of the Free French Forces.

Employed initially as tribal irregulars, then in regular contingents, the goumiers were employed extensively during the French occupation of Morocco from 1908 to the early 1930s. They then served in North Africa, Italy, and France during World War II between 1942 and 1945. During this period four Moroccan tabor groups (groupes de tabors marocains - GTM) were created, each comprising three tabors (battalions), and each tabor comprising three or four goums (companies). Goumiers subsequently served in Indochina from 1946 to 1954.

Etymology

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The term goum designated a company of goumiers. It originates from the Arab Maghreb gūm and the Classical Arabic qawm, designating ”tribe” or ”people”. The term also refers to mounted contingents of Arab or Berber horsemen employed by tribal leaders during North African campaigns.[1]

The term tabor is originally a Turkish designation of tabur making reference to a battalion or by the intermediary Arab ṭābūr, also originally a Turkish designation.[2]

The word originated in the Maghrebi Arabic word Koum (قوم), which means "people". The non-specific designation "goumi" (French version "goumier") was used to circumvent tribal distinctions and enable volunteers from different regions to serve together in mixed units for a "common" cause. The president of Egypt Jamal Abdel Nasser also used the same designation (koum or koumia) to build the new United Arab Republic.

In French military terminology, a goum was a unit of 200 auxiliaries. Three or four goums made up a tabor. An engine or groupe was composed of three tabors. A goum in this case was the equivalent of a company in regular military units and a tabor would thereby be equivalent to a battalion. A tabor was the largest permanent goumier unit.

In addition to colonial campaigns during the first half of the 20th century, goumiers were employed as auxiliaries by the French Army in Italy during World War II. These irregular infantry came from the Atlas Mountains of Morocco where they were recruited from the indigenous Berber tribes.[3]

Origins

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The designation of "goumiers" was originally given to tribal irregulars employed as allies by the French Army in southern Algeria.[4] These mounted auxiliaries operated under their own tribal leadership and were entirely distinct from the regular Muslim cavalry (Spahi) and infantry (Tirailleur) regiments of the French Armée d'Afrique.[5] After 1870 the Algerian goums were replaced by the permanent indigenous corps.[6]

Subsequently, tribal police auxiliaries serving with the French gendarmerie in the settled areas of Morocco were also known as goumiers.

Morocco, 1908–1934

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Algerian goumiers were employed during the initial stages of the French intervention in Morocco, commencing in 1908. After their terms of enlistment expired, the Algerians returned to their homeland, but the advantages of indigenous irregulars were such that they were replaced by Moroccan levies. Retaining the designation of goumiers, the Moroccans served in detachments under French officers, and initially mostly Algerian NCOs, both of whom were usually seconded from the Spahis and Tirailleurs.[7] Moroccan sous-officers were in due course appointed.

These semi-permanently employed Moroccan goumiers were initially raised as six separate detachments of local militia by General Albert D'Amade in 1908, to patrol recently-occupied areas. Goumiers also served as scouts and in support of regular French troops, and in 1911 they became permanent units.[8]

Nominally, the goumiers were under the control of the Sultan of Morocco, but in practice, they formed an extension of the French Army and subsequently fought for France in third countries (see below). However, their biggest involvement was in Morocco itself during the period of French "pacification". As noted below, the goum units had the formal status of local police, though they fought and served as an integral part of the French Army of Africa. This had initially been a political subterfuge, since following the Algeciras Conference of 1906, France had undertaken not to recruit regular Moroccan troops while the Sultan remained nominal ruler of the country. With the outbreak of World War I this restraint was lifted and the French enlisted large numbers of regular Moroccan tirailleurs, spahis and artillerymen. The goumiers had however proven so valuable as auxiliaries that they continued their dual roles as tribal police and combat troops.[9]

Initially, the Moroccan Goums wore tribal dress with only blue cloaks as uniform items, but as they achieved permanent status they adopted the distinctive brown and grey striped jellaba (a hooded Moroccan cloak) that was to remain their trademark throughout their history with the French Army. Their normal headdress was a turban. Goums included both infantry and cavalry elements. Their traditional and favoured weapons were sabres or elongated daggers.

An equivalent force known as the Mehal-La Jalifiana was raised in Spanish Morocco using France's goumiers as a model.

World War I

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A Goumier cavalryman (in this case an Algerian spahi irregular) at Saleux (Somme), May–June 1915 during World War I.

The Moroccan Goumiers did not see service outside Morocco during the First World War, although the term was sometimes used for detachments of Algerian spahi irregulars employed in Flanders in late 1914. Their existence did, however, enable General Hubert Lyautey to withdraw a substantial portion of the regular French military forces from Morocco for service on the Western Front.

Between the world wars

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By 1924 twenty-seven Goum units were in the French service. They comprised mixed detachments of about three-quarters infantry and one-quarter cavalry. Together with partisan tribal irregulars the goumiers numbered about 10,000 men. French officers and NCOs continued to be seconded from regular units.[9] Remaining separate from the regular Moroccan regiments of the French Armée d'Afrique, the Goumiers gave valuable service during the Rif Wars of the 1920s. They subsequently became a form of gendarmerie, keeping order in rural districts of Morocco.

World War II

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A "Goum" featured in Yank magazine, shown sharpening his bayonet.

Four Moroccan groups (regimental-sized units, about 12 000 men in total) served with the Allied forces during World War II. They specialised in night raiding operations, and fought against the forces of Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany during 1942–1945. Goumier units were also used to man the front lines in mountainous and other rough terrain areas, freeing regular Allied infantry units to operate along more profitable axes of advance.

North Africa 1940–1942

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In May 1940, 12 Moroccan Goums were organized as the 1st Group of Moroccan Auxiliaries (French: 1er Groupe de Supplétifs Marocains – G.S.M.) and used in combat against Italian troops operating out of Libya. After the armistice of 1940, the Goums were returned to Morocco. To evade strict German limits on how many troops France could maintain in North Africa, the Goumiers were described as having Gendarmerie-type functions, such as maintenance of public order and the surveillance of frontiers, while maintaining military armament, organization, and discipline.[10]

Tunisia, 1942–43

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The 1st GSM (Groupe de Supplétifs Marocains) fought on the Tunisian front as part of the Moroccan March Division from December 1942, and was joined by the 2nd GSM in January 1943.

The 15th Army Group commander, British General Harold Alexander considered the French Moroccan Goumiers as "great fighters" and gave them to the allies to help them to take Bizerte and Tunis.[11]

After the Tunisia Campaign, the French organized two additional groups and retitled the groups as Groupement de Tabors Marocains (G.T.M.) Each group contained a command Goum (company) and three Tabors (battalions) of three Goums each. A Tabor contained four 81-mm mortars and totalled 891 men. Each infantry Goum was authorized 210 men, one 60-mm mortar, two light machine guns, and seven automatic rifles.[12]

Separate from the groups, the 14th Tabor did not participate in the fighting in Europe and remained in Morocco to keep public order for the remainder of the war.[10]

Italy, 1943–1945

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The 4th Tabor of Moroccan Goums fought in the Sicilian Campaign, landing at Licata on 14 July 1943, and was attached to the U.S. Seventh Army, commanded by Lieutenant General George S. Patton.[10][13] The Goumiers of the 4th Tabor were attached to the U.S. 1st Infantry Division on 27 July 1943 and were recorded in the U.S. 26th Infantry Regiment's log files for their courage. Upon their arrival many Italian soldiers surrendered en masse, while the Germans began staging major retreats away from the known presence of Goumiers.[14]

The Italian campaign of World War II is perhaps the most famous and most controversial in the history of the Goumiers. The 4th Group of Moroccan Tabors shipped out for Italy in November 1943 and was followed in January 1944 by the 3rd Group, then reinforced by the 1st Group in April 1944.[10] A total of 73,000 Moroccans (both auxiliary Goumiers and regular Tirailleurs) served in Italy during 1943-45. All were volunteers under the terms of the agreement establishing the Protectorate in 1912.[15]

In Italy, the Allies suffered a long stalemate at the German Gustav Line. In May 1944, three Goumier groupes, under the name Corps de Montagne, were the vanguard of the French Expeditionary Corps's attack, through the Aurunci Mountains during Operation Diadem, the fourth and final Battle of Monte Cassino. The corps was under the orders of General Alphonse Juin. "Here the Goums more than proved their value as light, highly mobile mountain troops who could penetrate the most vertical terrain in fighting order and with a minimum of logistical requirements. Most military analysts consider the Goumiers' manoeuvre as the critical victory that finally opened the way to the Italian capital of Rome."[1]

The U.S. Fifth Army commander, Lieutenant General Mark W. Clark, also paid tribute to the Goumiers and the Moroccan regulars of the Tirailleur units:

In spite of the stiffening enemy resistance, the 2nd Moroccan Infantry Division penetrated the [[Gustav Line|Gustave [sic] Line]] in less than two day's [sic] fighting. The next 48 hours on the French front were decisive. The knife-wielding Goumiers swarmed over the hills, particularly at night, and General Juin's entire force showed an aggressiveness hour after hour that the Germans could not withstand. Cerasola, San Giorgio, Mt. D'Oro, Ausonia and Esperia were seized in one of the most brilliant and daring advances of the war in Italy... For this performance, which was to be a key to the success of the entire drive on Rome, I shall always be a grateful admirer of General Juin and his magnificent FEC.

During their fighting in the Italian Campaign, the Goumiers suffered 3,000 casualties, of which 600 were killed in action.[16]

Reported atrocities

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The military achievements of the Goumiers in Italy were accompanied by widespread reports of war crimes: "...exceptional numbers of Moroccans were executed—many without trial—for allegedly murdering, raping, and pillaging their way across the Italian countryside. The French authorities sought to defuse the problem by importing numbers of Berber women to serve as "camp followers" in rear areas set aside exclusively for the Goumiers."[17] According to Italian sources, more than 7,000 people were raped by Goumiers.[18] Those rapes, later known in Italy as Marocchinate, were against women, children and men, including some priests. The mayor of Esperia (a comune in the Province of Frosinone) reported that in his town, 700 women out of 2,500 inhabitants were raped and that some had died as a result. In northern Latium and southern Tuscany, it is alleged that the Goumiers raped and occasionally killed women and young men after the Germans retreated, including members of partisan formations.[19]

A British journalist commented, "The Goums have become a legend, a joke.... No account of their rapes or their other acts is too eccentric to be passed off as true."[20]

In his book Up Front, American war cartoonist Bill Mauldin referred to the silent killing of one of a pair of sleeping soldiers (thus leaving one alive to awaken and find the other) as "an old Ghoum trick."[21]

The CEF executed 15 soldiers by firing squad and sentenced 54 others to hard labor in military prisons for acts of rape or murder.[16] In 2015, the Italian state recognized compensation for a victim of these events.[22]

Corsica, 1943

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In September 1943 the 2nd Group of Moroccan Tabors participated in the liberation of Corsica, and fought the Germans in the mountains near Bastia, by Cape Corse.[2]

Elba, 1944

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The 2nd Group of Moroccan Tabors was part of the French Forces that took Elba from the Germans in June 1944. The operation was called Operation Brassard. The island was more heavily defended than expected, and there were many casualties on both sides as a result of the severe fighting.

Mainland France, 1944

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The 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Groups of Moroccan Tabors fought in the campaigns in southern France, Vosges Mountains, and Alsace during late 1944 and early 1945. The Goumiers started landing in southern France on 18 August 1944. Attached to the 3rd Algerian Infantry Division, all three groups took part in the combat to liberate Marseille from 20 to 28 August 1944. The 1st Group was subsequently used to secure France's Alpine frontier with Italy until late October 1944, and then took part in the forcing of the Belfort Gap in November. During late September and early October 1944, the 2nd and 3rd Groups fought in the areas of Remiremont and Gérardmer. All three groups fought in the Vosges Mountains during November and December 1944, facing extremely cold weather and bitter German resistance. After hard fighting in the Vosges Mountains and the Colmar Pocket, the 3rd Group was repatriated to Morocco in April 1945. It was replaced in Europe by the 4th Group, which had returned to North Africa after French forces left Italy.[23] [3]

Germany, 1945

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The 1st, 2nd, and 4th Groups of Moroccan Tabors fought in the final operations to overrun southwestern Germany in 1945.[23] The 1st Group fought through the Siegfried Line in the Bienwald from 20 to 25 March 1945. In April 1945, the 1st and 4th Groups took part in the fighting to seize Pforzheim. During the last weeks of the war, the 2nd Group fought in the Black Forest and pushed southeast to Germany's Austrian border. During the same period, the 1st and 4th Groups advanced with other French forces on Stuttgart and Tübingen.

The 3rd (3e Tabor Marocain) occupied an area between Stuttgart and Tübingen from about April 20, 1945. When they got to Waldenbuch, they entered every house and raped and plundered. Some women were badly injured. Pastor Pfäfflin managed to get them to the Hospital in Tübingen. The pastor wrote a protest note to the International Red Cross. After the total surrender of Germany on 8 May 1945, a military government was established in Stuttgart. This ended the rape and pillaging.[24]

By mid-1946, all three groups had been repatriated to Morocco.

Goumier casualties in World War II from 1942 to 1945 totaled 8,018, of which 1,625 were killed in action.[13]

Indochina, 1949–1954

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Following World War II Moroccan goumiers saw service in French Indo-China from June 1949 until the fall of Dien Bien Phu in 1954. Stationed in the northern frontier zone of Tonkin, the goumier units were used mainly for convoy escort and quadrillage de zone (regional search and destroy) duties. By contrast with the regular Moroccan tirailleurs, who enlisted for fixed terms of service, the goumiers were contracted to serve specifically in Indo-China for the period of hostilities only.[25]

As in previous campaigns, the goumiers were organised in battalion sized Tabors, each comprising several Goums or companies. The proportion of French officers to Moroccan other ranks was low, with normally only two in each company. Locally recruited Indochinese auxiliaries were attached to each Tabor as reconnaissance units. Brigaded for administrative purposes in the Groupement de Tabors Marocain d'Extreme Orient there were, at any one time, usually three Tabors serving in Indochina during the war against the Viet Minh. In October 1950 the 11e Tabor was overrun at Na Kheo, with only 369 survivors out of 924 goumiers and French officers.[26]

During this, their final campaign in French service, the goumiers continued, at least for parade and in cold weather, to wear the distinctive flat-topped turbans and brown-striped djellabas that had distinguished these units since 1911.

Following Moroccan independence

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With Moroccan independence in 1956, the Goums were incorporated into the new Royal Army of Morocco. Following negotiations between the French, Spanish and Moroccan governments, it was agreed that both regular and auxiliary Moroccan units could be transferred into the new Forces Armées Royales or FAR.

Fourteen thousand Moroccan personnel were accordingly transferred from French service. The modern Moroccan military includes both a Royal Gendarmerie and Auxiliary Force Companies. Both forces have an overlapping rural policing role and are in that sense the successors of the Goumiers.

Traditions

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Fanion of the 1eGTM.

Decorations

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In France, citations made during World War I, World War II or colonial conflicts were accompanied with awards of a Croix de Guerre (Cross of War) with attachments on the ribbon depending on the degree of citation: the lowest being represented by a bronze star (for those who had been cited at the regiment or brigade level) while the highest degree is represented by a bronze palm (for those who had been cited at the army level). A unit can be mentioned in Despatches. Its flag is then decorated with the corresponding Croix. After two citations in Army Orders, the men of the unit concerned are all entitled to wear a fourragère.

Second World war[27]

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In total, between 1942 and 1945, the Group of Tabors, Tabors and Goums earned the Croix de Guerre with bronze palm (Army level) seventeen times and the Croix de Guerre with silver gilt star (corps level) nine times:[28]

First Indochina War[27]

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In 1945, the Goumiers received their first flag, from Charles de Gaulle. In 1952 this standard was awarded the Legion of Honour, the highest decoration in France.[29][a]

In fiction

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A scene in which women are raped by goumiers during the 1944 Italian Campaign of World War II has a key role in Alberto Moravia's 1958 novel Two Women (Orig. title in Italian La Ciociara) and the 1960 film based on the novel.

Similarly, in the novel Point of Honor by Mortimer R. Kadish (1951), whose setting is the American Army campaign in Italy in 1944, the closing pages depict the protection by Americans of Italian villagers against a threat of rape and murder by "Ayrab" or "Goum" troops.

See also

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Similar organizations

Notes

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  1. ^ Its flag is decorated with the insignia of a knight, which is a different award than the fourragère.

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ Définition de GOUMIER – CNRTL
  2. ^ Définition de TABOR – CNRTL
  3. ^ Bimberg, Edward L. The Moroccan Goums: Tribal Warriors in a Modern War
  4. ^ Montagon, pp. 94 & 197.
  5. ^ Maghraoui, Driss (Spring 1998). "Moroccan colonial soldiers: between selective memory and collective memory – Beyond Colonialism and Nationalism in North Africa". Arab Studies Quarterly.
  6. ^ Montagon, p. 94.
  7. ^ Larcade, Jean-Louis. Zouaves & Tirailleurs: les regiments de marche et les regiments mixtes. Vol. 1. pp. 280–283. ISBN 2-9515171-0-6.
  8. ^ Jacques Augarde, page 10 "La longue route des tabors", éditions France Empire, 1983 (ISBN 2-7048-0325-0)
  9. ^ a b General Staff (July–August 1925). "Foreign Military Notes". The Field Artillery Journal. Military Intelligence Division: 395–404.
  10. ^ a b c d Gaujac, p. 68
  11. ^ Alexander, Harold (1962). The Alexander Memoirs, 1940–1945. London: Cassell. pp. 37–38. To help them I gave them the French Moroccan Goumiers, who were experienced mountain troops and great fighters.
  12. ^ Gaujac, p. 58
  13. ^ a b Lescel, François (March 2002). "Goumiers, Goums, Tabors". Fédération des Amicales Régimentaires et des Anciens Combattants (in French). Archived from the original on Apr 22, 2002.
  14. ^ "S-1 Journal, 26th Infantry Regimental Combat Team" (PDF). bluespader.org. Retrieved 2007-05-16.[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ Montagnon, p. 342.
  16. ^ a b Gaujac, p. 69.
  17. ^ Stone, Bill (September 1999). "Review of Bimberg, Edward L. The Moroccan Goums: Tribal Warriors in a Modern War. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1999". Stone & Stone: Second World War Books. Archived from the original on Apr 24, 2003.
  18. ^ "1952: The case of the "morocchiana" in Parliament". Studio Cassinati. 1 April 1952. Parliamentary Acts: Chamber of Deputies night sitting Monday 7 April 1952: PRESIDENCY OF VICE PRESIDENT TARGETT
  19. ^ Federici, Giusy. "LE MAROCCHINATE - «STUPRATE LE ITALIANE" (PDF). From Volturno to Cassino (in Italian). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-09-28. Durante la seconda guerra mondiale diecimila tra donne e bambini furono violentati dalle truppe francesi, con il consenso del comando, nel Centro-sud. Un capitolo rimosso che una denuncia ha ora riaperto.
  20. ^ Parker, Matthew. Monte Cassino: The story of the hardest-fought battle of World War Two. p. 269.
  21. ^ Mauldin, p. 45.
  22. ^ "Violentata a 27 anni viene risarcita quando ne ha quasi 100". Corriere della Sera. 23 September 2015. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  23. ^ a b Gaujac, p. 71
  24. ^ Lipp, Anne; Schmauder, Andreas (1996). Ein Jahrhundert Leben in Waldenbuch (in German). Stuttgart: WEGRAhistork-Verlag. pp. 111–113.
  25. ^ Bellec, Olivier (November 2009). "Les Tabors Marocains". Militaria (in French) (292).
  26. ^ Windrow, Martin (1998). The French Indochina War 1946–54. Oxford: Osprey Military. ISBN 1-85532-789-9.
  27. ^ a b "Les Fourragères". France Phaleristique (in French). Archived from the original on Mar 7, 2005.
  28. ^ Guillaume, Augustin (1977). Un homme en guerre (in French). France: Empire. p. 185.
  29. ^ "Ordre de la Légion d'honneur". France Phaleristique (in French). Archived from the original on 2010-01-05. Collectivité décorées de la Légion d'honneur, Goums marocains

Sources

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  • Bimberg, Edward L. (1999). The Moroccan Goums: Tribal Warriors in a Modern War. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
  • Gaujac, Paul (1985). L'Armée de la Victoire. Vol. 3. Paris: Charles Lavauzelle.
  • Martins, Ralph A. (Sep–Oct 1943). "Goumier Flanked U.S. Troops in Sicily". Cavalry Journal (52): 30–31.
  • Mauldin, Bill (1945). Up Front. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0393038165.
  • Montagon, Pierre (2012). L'Armee d'Afrique. De 1830 a l'independence de l'Algerie. Paris: Pygmalion. ISBN 978-2-7564-0574-2.
  • "Moroccan Goums". U.S. Intelligence Bulletin: 1–8. June 1946.
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