General Henri Guisan (21 October, 1874 - 7 April, 1960) was the most recent General of the Swiss army, as Commander in Chief during World War II, and probably Switzerland's most famous soldier.
He is best remembered for effectively mobilizing the Swiss army and Swiss people in order to prepare resistance against a possible invasion by Nazi Germany in 1940.
Henri Guisan was born in 1874 in Mézières, in the canton of Vaud, a Protestant part of French-speaking Switzerland. He was the descendant of Huguenot protestants who emigrated from France in 1685. He attended school in Lausanne, and initially studied agricultural medicine. Upon entering the Swiss military in 1894, he was assigned to a horse-drawn artillery unit in Biere as a Lieutenant. He was promoted several times, reaching the rank of Colonel in 1920.
On July 25 1940, General Guisan delivered a historic address to the entire Swiss Officer Corps assembled on the hallowed ground of Rütli, where the first oath of the Swiss Confederation, the Rütlischwur, was sworn in 1291.
He made it very clear that Switzerland would resist any Nazi invasion. If they ran out of bullets they were to resort to the bayonet. He said that Switzerland would defend itself against any invader and would never surrender.http://www.thingsworthhaving.com/mot-books/book/972557202.html The Swiss government had a decentralised structure, so even the Federal President was a relatively powerless official with no authority to surrender the country. Indeed, Swiss citizens had been instructed to regard any surrender broadcast as enemy lies and resist to the end.
As a consequence, General Guisan developed his famous "Reduit Concept" in summer 1940, according to which the Swiss Army would have retreated into the Alps relatively soon if attacked, but would have kept up resistance based on some sort of guerilla tactics from there. The main strategy, however, was deterrence rather than fighting. Even though tiny Switzerland had an army of only 430,000 men, Germany never risked invasion. On August 20, 1945, General Guisan left his command, considering his mission was fulfilled. He died on April 7, 1960.
1874 births | 1960 deaths | Natives of Vaud | Swiss generals
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