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POLICE

France to deploy thousands more soldiers as terror alert raised

French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said on Monday that 4,000 soldiers extra soldiers would be mobilised, after the country raised its security alert to the highest level following the Moscow concert hall attack.

France to deploy thousands more soldiers as terror alert raised
French soldiers of the Sentinelle security operation patrol on the banks of the river Seine. Photo by GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT / AFP

“Given the claim of responsibility for the attack by the Islamic State and the threats weighing on our country, we have decided to raise the Vigipirate status to its highest level: emergency attack,” said Attal on Sunday, raising the level again just three months after it was lowered in January.

On Monday, the prime minister told French media that an additional 4,000 soldiers were “on alert and mobilised” in addition to the 3,000 soldiers already deployed at sensitive sites across the country.

“The Islamist terrorist threat is real, strong, and we are fully mobilised to face it,” the prime minister said during a visit to the security headquarters at the Saint Lazare train station in Paris. 

“We are on the alert all the time, with our Operation Sentinel soldiers, our SNCF security guards and our intelligence services (…) The threat is serious and the safety of the French people is paramount, which is why we have increased our vigilance,” Attal said.

France spent the final part of 2023 on the maximum terror alert after an Islamist-inspired attack in a school in Arras, northern France in October, in which a teacher was killed and two other staff members wounded.

After that attack the government also deployed some 7,000 soldiers to security duties.

Operation Sentinelle

If you’ve been in a French city – or at a railway station or airport – since 2015, you will likely have noticed soldiers on patrol.

These are the ‘sentinelles’ (guardians) who conduct regular patrols – their name comes from Opération Sentinelle, which is the military name for the security operation, and they have become a regular sight in recent years.

It began in 2015 after the terror attacks at the Charlie Hebdo magazine offices, which killed 12 people.

Then-president François Hollande ordered soldiers to be deployed to provide extra security for anywhere that was likely to be a terror target. They are generally deployed at high-profile tourist sites such as the Eiffel Tower or at mainline train stations and airports. 

They also do regular street patrols and you will often see them either patrolling on foot or travelling in marked patrol cars.

Since October 2023 they have also been deployed at schools and at Jewish religious sites, in the context of increasing tensions since the Hamas attacks in Gaza and Israel’s military response.

Who are they?

Soldiers on patrol with Opération Sentinelle are regular members of the French army – units do a rotation of Sentinelle duties, so you will see a variety of different regiments (with different headgear) on patrol.

Once they have finished their period of duty with Sentinelle, soldiers return to their normal military duty – whether that is in France or overseas.

At any one time, 10,000 soldiers will be under the command of Operation Sentinelle, of which 3,000 are military reservists.

The majority of them are French, but soldiers of the Légion Etrangère – French Foreign Legion – also take part in patrols.

They patrol in uniform with weapons and their role is purely security and anti-terror focused – they don’t take part in other policing activities such as catching pickpockets or dishing out parking tickets.

After nine years, they’ve become a normal sight in French cities and at lunchtime you might see them queuing up – big guns and all – in the boulangerie for lunch.

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FRANCE EXPLAINED

Why are berets so synonymous with France?

If you walk by a tourist shop in Paris, the chances are very high that they will have a full assortment of berets to choose from. But why is this fashion choice even associated with France?

Why are berets so synonymous with France?

If you were to believe the TV shows and movies about France’s capital, everyone in the city owns a beret, drives a moped, smokes cigarettes, and carries baguettes under their armpits.

While some of these stereotypes might be more true than others (hint: baguette transportation), the anglophone world has been convinced that berets never go out of style.

READ MORE: Baguettiquette: Weird things the French do with bread

These days, a person walking around Paris in a beret is just as likely – if not more likely – to be a tourist than a French person.

That being said, the English-speaking world does have good reason to associate berets with the French.

The word beret is thought to be of Gallic (pre-French) origins, dating all the way back to the Romans, though similar styles of headgear have been found in archeological sites across the ancient world.

Officially, beret begins to appear in the French dictionary around the 15th century, and by the 19th century the waterproof headgear had become popular.

Napoleon associated them with the Basque country and the Pyrenees, though different versions of berets were worn across the French countryside, including the people who would go on to be known as ‘onion johnnies’ in Brittany.

French Onion Johnnies

Brits have a specific reason to associate the French with berets, according to writer Margo Lestz with the Curious Rambler blog.

From the mid-1800s to mid-1900s, it was common for Brits to see French men in berets, riding bicycles and carrying onions.

“These beret-wearing, onion-laden cyclists arrived in the UK every summer to peddle their wares. They came from the area around Roscoff, Brittany in western France. This area was (and still is) known for its special pink onions. They were sweet, had a long storage life – and the British loved them.

“As it happened, many of these onion-sellers were called Yann, a common Breton name which is the equivalent of Jean in French and John in English. The British soon took to calling them “Onion Johnnies”. The Johnnies didn’t mind and happily adopted their new English nickname.

“They would go door to door from July through December across the UK, then would return to Brittany. Since the Onion Johnnies were the only contact that many Brits had with a Frenchman, they naturally assumed that all Frenchmen wore berets,” Lestz wrote.

READ MORE: Why we think the French all wear berets and carry onions

Military gear to street fashion and revolutions

Another reason we associate the French with berets has to do with official military uniforms. Beginning in the 1880s and continuing into World War I, France’s Chasseurs Alpins, infantry soldiers the Alps, began to wear berets as part of their uniform. 

Aloïs Guinut, the author of the book ‘Dress like a Parisian’ told 20 Minutes that “Shepherds wore them first, then soldiers, schoolchildren, and then golfers, mountaineers, and even cyclists adopted it.”

Guinut said that once the headwear became popular with athletes, it started to became stylish in general.

“Gabrielle ‘Coco’ Chanel was one of the first to use it as a fashion accessory in the 1930s,” Guinot explained, noting that around that time French cinema was growing in popularity, and more French actresses were sporting berets, including the leading lady Michele Morgan in the film ‘Le Quai des Brumes’.

READ MORE: Where does the ‘romantic, sexy French’ stereotype come from?

By the 1940s, berets were so connected to French identity that they became an essential accessory for the resistance during World War II.

Afterwards, other resistance movements began to incorporate berets too, including the revolutionary Che Guevara.

What about now?

Several military uniforms across the world include berets, including parts of the French military like paratroopers and the French foreign legion.

As for Parisians, “there are [some] who do wear berets. I see them regularly. But it’s true that tourists love wearing berets when they visit Paris, so it is a bit of a tourist accessory,” Guinut said.

It continues to be part of the ‘Parisienne’ appearance as luxury fashion companies use it in their yearly collections – like Dior in 2017.

Meanwhile, tourist shops play up the beret, while pop culture continues to give us images of the beret-wearing Frenchwoman – most recently, Emily in Paris, with the main character frequently accesorising with a bright red beret.

Let us know what you think about berets in the comments below. Do you consider them stylish?

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