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The hunt for the Action Directe terrorist group by the French police from 1979 to 1987. The scenario highlights that the Action Directe group was manipulated by a foreign state, Iran or the USSR, in order to commit assassinations aimed at hindering NATO in the deployment of Euromissiles or to put pressure on the French government for the supply of nuclear fuel within the framework of the Eurodif company, whose founder is Georges Besse, assassinated by Action Directe during his mandate as president of Renault. This is the thesis supported by journalists Romain Icard and Dominique Lorentz. The name of Iran, which the Eurodif dispute pitted against France, is often cited. This thesis, considered likely by Gilles Ménage (former cabinet director of François Mitterrand responsible for intelligence, police and security issues), is based in particular on the fact that Georges Besse, assassinated by Action Directe, had been president of Eurodif. Judge Alain Marsaud also indicated that at the time of their arrest, those responsible for the group (Jean-Marc Rouillan, Nathalie Ménigon, Joëlle Aubron and Georges Cipriani) were planning to kidnap and sequester the president of Eurodif. Yves Bonnet, former director of the DST, says he is convinced that Direct Action was sponsored for certain assassinations; it is based in particular on the proximity of Mohand Hamami, activist of the group, with the Lebanese Revolutionary Armed Fractions (FARL).
You can watch A.D. La guerre de l'ombre in United States through the following streaming services: .
You can watch A.D. La guerre de l'ombre in United States through the following streaming services: .
Overview
The hunt for the Action Directe terrorist group by the French police from 1979 to 1987. The scenario highlights that the Action Directe group was manipulated by a foreign state, Iran or the USSR, in order to commit assassinations aimed at hindering NATO in the deployment of Euromissiles or to put pressure on the French government for the supply of nuclear fuel within the framework of the Eurodif company, whose founder is Georges Besse, assassinated by Action Directe during his mandate as president of Renault. This is the thesis supported by journalists Romain Icard and Dominique Lorentz. The name of Iran, which the Eurodif dispute pitted against France, is often cited. This thesis, considered likely by Gilles Ménage (former cabinet director of François Mitterrand responsible for intelligence, police and security issues), is based in particular on the fact that Georges Besse, assassinated by Action Directe, had been president of Eurodif. Judge Alain Marsaud also indicated that at the time of their arrest, those responsible for the group (Jean-Marc Rouillan, Nathalie Ménigon, Joëlle Aubron and Georges Cipriani) were planning to kidnap and sequester the president of Eurodif. Yves Bonnet, former director of the DST, says he is convinced that Direct Action was sponsored for certain assassinations; it is based in particular on the proximity of Mohand Hamami, activist of the group, with the Lebanese Revolutionary Armed Fractions (FARL).
Claude-Michel Rome
Director
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