Foreign Legion fading
with time after campaigns from Algeria to Vietnam, Madagascar to
Mexico
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AUBAGNE,
France, Oct. 31, 2006 By SLOBODAN
LEKIC Associated Press Writer
(AP)
(AP) The Foreign Legion isn't what it
used to be. Murderers on the run are no longer welcome, and unhappy
recruits have a year to back out without being branded
deserters.
These days a bigger issue faces the 175-year-old
force that made its name fighting France's overseas battles in
jungle and desert. Its key role _ to be a crack professional force
available for rapid, no-questions-asked deployment in far-flung
conflicts _ has all but evaporated.
In campaigns from Algeria
to Vietnam, Madagascar to Mexico, Legionnaires made up the bulk of
the combat forces and suffered most of the casualties. Even in
Bosnia a decade ago, serving as U.N. peacekeepers for the first
time, they made up a significant portion of the French troops
there.
But this summer, when Paris contributed a 2,000-strong
contingent to the U.N. force in Lebanon, it included only 200 Legion
engineers.
For a 7,770-strong force with a carefully nurtured
identity epitomized by its trademark white hats or kepis, there's no
longer much to set the Legion apart from the rest of the French
army. Four years after France ended conscription, all 250,000
members of the armed forces are like the Legionnaires _
professionals and volunteers.
"They are an anachronism, the
last remnants of a medieval mercenary tradition," said Dominique
Moisi, a political analyst. "While they were the only professionals
in a conscript army, they made sense, but not now that everybody
else is professional too."
Ironically, the decline comes as
the Internet has opened whole new world of recruiting for the Legion
which already boasts 130 nationalities in its ranks. The Web site
http://www.legion-recrute.com gives instructions in 13 European
languages on how to apply.
Legion spokesman Lt. Col.
Christian Rascle insisted that France, still intent on being a force
abroad, will continue to need the Legion.
"It will
politically always be easier to dispatch foreigners rather than
French soldiers to such places," Rascle said.
Throughout its
history, the Legion repeatedly has endured threats to its survival.
Even King Louis-Philippe, who established the corps in 1831, tried
to abolish it several years later.
In the 1960s, President
Charles de Gaulle sought to disband the Legion after several
regiments mutinied against his decision to end French rule in
Algeria.
Then, as now, most recruits are men driven from
their homelands by political turmoil, economic hardship or by the
need "to start life all over again," Rascle said.
"We know
that a lot of our guys are not exactly angels, but unless they're
hardened criminals we're prepared to give them a second, third or
even a fourth chance," he said.
Although the Legion quickly
weeds out serious criminals in cooperation with Interpol and the
French police, those seeking to "set some distance between
themselves and the law" for minor offenses are welcome to assume new
identities in the Legion, Rascle said.
Only male recruits are
accepted, but many female officers of the regular French army work
as liaisons with the Legion. Applicants must be foreign, but about
20 percent are French nationals who join posing as nationals of
other French-speaking countries such as Belgium.
Foreigners
can apply for French citizenship after serving their five-year
contracts, and 80 percent do.
Ronald Starr, an American who
administers psychological tests to Legion recruits, said he took
French citizenship when, after 14 years of service, he married a
local woman. A chief sergeant, he now lives in Marseille with his
wife and three children.
The Legion has long had an aura of
"march-or-die" camaraderie and brutality. A century ago, it was said
to punish deserters by burying them up to the neck in sand and
abandoning them to the jackals.
It was also romanticized in
pop culture, most memorably in the 1939 Hollywood classic "Beau
Geste," in which Gary Cooper battled Sahara Bedouins on
camels.
No such perils face today's recruits, but the entry
tests are still rigorous _ only one in eight candidates who arrive
in this gritty southern French town pass them. Desertions which
historically plagued the corps are rare because recruits have a year
to reconsider and return to civilian life.
Otherwise, all
regulations are now identical to the French army's. Punishments
generally involve stockade time and suspension of
pay.
Recruits tend to come in waves _ Germans in the 1940s,
Hungarians in the 1950s, English-speakers in the 1980s, and lately,
east Europeans.
Jasmin Beganovic, a Bosnian, said he enlisted
after ethnic war broke out in his homeland.
"I'm half-Serb,
half-Muslim and everybody wanted me to join their side," the 14-year
veteran said. "Instead, I joined the Legion."
And the spirit
of the unit's motto _ "Legio Patria Nostra" ("The Legion our
Fatherland") _ remains strong.
When a reporter recently asked
a receptionist at Legion headquarters about his nationality, the
corporal replied: "Me? I'm a Legionnaire."
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