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France Between the Black Mesa Incident and the Seven Hour War


Initial Context: Between National Sovereignty and European Coordination

When the Black Mesa incident tore through Earth's dimensional fabric in May 2001, France found itself in a paradoxical position. On one hand, it possessed one of Europe's most sophisticated armies with 260,000 active military personnel, an independent nuclear strike force, and a network of military infrastructures. On the other hand, the multiplication of portal storms and the rapid collapse of NATO and European Union structures forced it to accept supranational coordination that it had always jealously avoided.

Reluctant Integration into the ECDA

During the formation of the Oslo Defense Council at the end of May 2001, France played a characteristic double game. President Jacques Chirac, confronted with massive Xenian incursions in the eastern part of the country and the collapse of Lyon under extraterrestrial pressure, formally accepted French membership in the European Continental Defense Army (ECDA). However, he secretly maintained exclusive control of the French nuclear deterrent force, refusing to transmit launch codes to General Hägglund.

This decision, which would only be discovered in September 2001 during the purge of nationalist generals, created permanent tension between Paris and Oslo. General Bertrand Ract-Madoux, commander of French ground forces and rising figure of the ECDA staff, embodied this French resistance to excessive centralization. His confrontation with Hägglund would culminate during the Prague Crisis in October 2001.

Article 16 and Preparation for Sovereignty Transfer

Faced with multiplying incursions, President Chirac activated Article 16 of the Constitution on May 28, 2001, granting him exceptional powers. What was presented as a temporary measure quickly became a tool to facilitate the progressive integration of French administration into the ECDA structure. The territory was initially reorganized according to the defense and security zones system, but this national structure would rapidly be absorbed by the European Secured Population Zones (SPZ) system.


The Battle of Lyon and First Losses (June 2001)

Lyon was the first major test of French capacity to resist Xenian incursions. In June 2001, a massive wave of creatures emerged from multiple rifts in the Rhône valley, threatening to engulf France's second metropolis. General Ract-Madoux, commanding the defense operation, coordinated a combined Franco-German force under ECDA aegis.

The battle raged for four days. While ground forces finally managed to repel the incursion, the cost was catastrophic: nearly 40% of Lyon's population perished in the fighting, approximately 500,000 people. The city itself was so contaminated by Xenian spores that it had to be evacuated and declared XMZ-12 "Purple Valley" in August 2001.

This pyrrhic victory was nevertheless celebrated by ECDA propaganda as proof that European unity could triumph. General Hägglund personally decorated Ract-Madoux, still unaware that the latter would soon become his main opponent.

The Prague Crisis and French Purge (October 2001)

The Prague Crisis of October 2001 marked a turning point in relations between France and the ECDA. When the Czech capital, encircled by Xenian incursions, requested urgent reinforcements, Hägglund ordered a major rescue operation mobilizing German, Polish, and Austrian units.

Ract-Madoux, supported by a faction of the French staff, categorically refused to engage French divisions in what he considered a suicidal operation. He argued that these resources should be preserved to defend Paris and vital French zones. This insubordination, tacitly approved by Chirac who feared losing his best troops, contributed to the operation's failure. Prague fell, and 15,000 ECDA soldiers perished in the debacle.

Hägglund seized this opportunity to consolidate his power. Accusing Ract-Madoux and the "French nationalists" of having sabotaged the operation, he demanded and obtained the French general's resignation. Ract-Madoux was "promoted" to an administrative post in Reykjavik – a golden exile but effective removal from operational command. More importantly, this purge allowed Hägglund to impose a complete reorganization of French military administration, replacing national structures with the SPZ system directly controlled by the ECDA.

The Erosion of French Administration (Autumn 2001 - Spring 2002)

Progressive Transfer of Powers

Following the October 2001 purge, the French administration underwent radical transformation. The traditional system of prefectures and defense zones was progressively dismantled in favor of a centralized structure around Secured Population Zones (SPZ) controlled by the ECDA.

General Michel Mercier, named new commander of French forces after Ract-Madoux's disgrace, was a more malleable man, favorable to complete integration into the ECDA. Under his supervision, zone prefects were replaced by SPZ Commanders appointed directly by Oslo, often officers of other European nationalities.

Paris, Lyon (before its fall), Marseille, Bordeaux, Strasbourg, and Rennes became the centers of these SPZs, each administered according to ECDA standardized protocols. French republican institutions – local assemblies, civil services, national police – were progressively subordinated to European military authority.

Bureaucratic Resistance and Repression

This transformation did not occur without resistance. French civil servants, attached to republican structures, attempted to maintain traditional administrative procedures. But faced with the urgency of the Xenian crisis and pressure from Oslo, these attempts were systematically crushed. In January 2002, the French Council of State attempted to contest the legality of the sovereignty transfer, but was purely and simply dissolved by presidential decree under pressure from Hägglund.

Chirac himself, initially reluctant to this absorption, was progressively marginalized. By March 2002, he was nothing more than a figurehead, mechanically signing decrees written by the ECDA staff. French sovereignty had become a legal fiction, maintained for propaganda reasons but emptied of all real substance.

Brittany: Ephemeral Sanctuary (May 2001 - July 2002)

Providential Geography

While eastern and southeastern France collapsed under Xenian assaults, Brittany emerged as an unlikely sanctuary. Its peninsular position, surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean on three sides, created a natural barrier against rifts that propagate mainly by land. The Armorican massif, ancient geological base, seemed to exercise unexplained resistance to dimensional disturbances.

General Philippe de Saintignon, initially OGZDS of the Western Zone based in Rennes, was maintained in his position but under direct authority of ECDA command. He quickly established a defensive perimeter using existing military infrastructures: the Brest arsenal, the nuclear submarine base of Île Longue, the military ports of Lorient and Saint-Nazaire.

Massive Influx of Refugees

From July 2001, Brittany became the main refuge for populations fleeing the catastrophe. The first waves included nearly 200,000 Americans evacuated via Atlantic ports after the collapse of the American East Coast. Then came the Europeans: Germans fleeing the Bavaria and Saxony XMZs, Italians escaping the collapse of northern Italy, eastern French abandoning lost Alsace-Lorraine.

The Rennes-Brittany SPZ, under direct ECDA control, organized reception according to European standardized protocols. Refugee camps were established in rural communes, managed by ECDA multinational teams rather than traditional French local authorities.

By spring 2002, the population of historic Brittany had grown from 4.7 million to more than 8 million inhabitants, creating growing tensions. The Bretons, attached to their strong regional identity, watched with bitterness as their land was transformed into a refugee camp under foreign administration.

Insidious Contamination (June-July 2002)

First Signs

On June 15, 2002, an ECDA scientific team detected the first signs of Xenian contamination near Quimper. Unlike the explosive manifestations observed elsewhere, Breton contamination presented an insidious character: sporadic micro-rifts, discrete biological mutations of local fauna, subtle alterations of the coastal ecosystem.

The analysis suggested slow but inexorable propagation, probably favored by the exceptional population concentration and traces of residual contamination transported by refugees from infected zones. What had protected Brittany – its relative isolation – now became a trap: the peninsula was transforming into a zone of contamination concentration and amplification.

Rapid Escalation

In July 2002, the situation deteriorated catastrophically. Xenian creatures began appearing in rural areas. The first cases of zombification were confirmed in refugee camps. The marine ecosystem showed alarming signs of alteration, with the appearance of hybrid forms in coastal waters – potentially threatening to contaminate the entire North Atlantic.

General de Saintignon, in coordination with ECDA scientists, assessed that contamination could become irreversible within 3 to 6 months, transforming Brittany into a corruption zone comparable to the lost territories of Central Europe. Worse still, contamination could spread eastward, threatening Paris and the last safe zones of France and Europe.

The Massacre of Brittany: Operation Celtic Pyre (August 15-17, 2002)

The Decision of the Oslo Council

On August 15, 2002, the Oslo Defense Council, under Hägglund's direction, made the decision that would haunt European conscience: Operation Celtic Pyre. This time, Chirac was not even consulted – he was simply informed of the decision and received orders to provide necessary air assets.

This decision was based on several factors:

  • Existential threat: Breton contamination risked extending to all of Western Europe
  • Established precedent: Lyon's sacrifice had demonstrated ECDA's willingness to use extreme means
  • Power centralization: ECDA now had authority to make such decisions without consulting national governments
  • Scorched earth doctrine: faced with an extraterrestrial threat, traditional humanitarian considerations were deemed secondary

General de Saintignon, charged with execution, protested but received direct orders from Hägglund to proceed. The man who had transformed Brittany into a sanctuary would now have to destroy it.

Operation Execution

The operation mobilized massive air assets:

  • 48 Mirage 2000D and Jaguar equipped with napalm incendiary charges
  • 12 Super Étendard based at Landivisiau
  • Logistical support from Lorient and Lann-Bihoué bases
  • Coordination by ECDA rather than traditional French command

The evacuation order was only given 18 hours before strikes, creating indescribable chaos. Eastern roads were overwhelmed, ports saturated. Of the 8 million people present in Brittany, only 3.2 million could be evacuated to neighboring SPZs.

The napalm bombings, conducted from August 16-17, 2002, systematically targeted:

  • Areas of highest contamination (Quimper, Douarnenez, southern Finistère)
  • Refugee camps showing signs of infestation
  • Identified propagation corridors
  • Coastal areas affected by marine mutation

The Tragic Toll

The official toll, long classified, reported 2.3 million civilian victims:

  • 1.8 million refugees (Americans, Europeans, French from other regions)
  • 500,000 native Bretons

Entire cities – Quimper, Brest, Lorient, Vannes – were reduced to ash. Xenian contamination was effectively stopped, but at the cost of genocide whose responsibility now clearly fell to the ECDA and its supranational military logic.

Reorganized France: SPZ System and ECDA Administration

Dissolution of National Structures

After the Massacre of Brittany, any pretension to maintain autonomous French administration was abandoned. The territory was officially reorganized according to the Secured Population Zones (SPZ) system under direct ECDA control, completed by classification into four contamination levels.

The main French SPZs became:

  • SPZ Paris (Commander: German Colonel Hans Weber) - 12 million inhabitants
  • SPZ Marseille (Commander: Spanish Colonel Miguel Santana) - 3 million inhabitants
  • SPZ Bordeaux (Commander: Dutch Major Jan Vermeer) - 2.5 million inhabitants
  • SPZ Toulouse (Commander: Belgian Major François Dubois) - 2 million inhabitants
  • SPZ Strasbourg (border zone, Franco-German mixed command) - 1.5 million inhabitants

Each SPZ functioned according to ECDA standardized protocols:

  • Centralized resource rationing
  • Multinational patrols
  • Constant contamination monitoring
  • Mandatory civilian mobilization for defense work

The Four Contamination Zones

French territory was simultaneously divided according to Xenian threat level:

Green Zones - Under complete SPZ control

  • Parisian basin, southwest, parts of center
  • Direct administration by SPZ commanders
  • Population under strict military control
  • Agricultural and industrial production maintained

Orange Zones - Low to moderate contamination

  • SPZ peripheries, rural zones
  • Regular ECDA patrols
  • Reduced civilian population, under constant surveillance
  • Weekly "purification" operations

Red Zones - Heavy contamination

  • Former Alsace-Lorraine, PACA, Alpine zones
  • Complete civilian evacuation
  • Intermittent military control
  • XMZ-12 "Purple Valley" (Lyon) at center

Black Zones (10% of territory) - Lost zones

  • Post-bombing Brittany
  • Critical contamination pockets
  • Strictly forbidden access
  • Drone and satellite surveillance

Resistance, Survival and Terrorism

Autonomous Survival Organizations

In Red Zones and at the periphery of Black Zones, survival communities emerged, composed of civilians abandoned during chaotic evacuations. These groups, unlike organized resistance structures, focused solely on daily survival:

  • Alpine colonies: established in mountains, exploiting caves and high-altitude refuges
  • Forest communities: hidden in forests of the Massif Central and Vosges
  • Urban survivors: occupying ruins of abandoned cities like Lyon or Strasbourg

These organizations developed valuable anti-Xen camouflage techniques: use of herbs masking human scent, construction of underground shelters, techniques for hunting Xenian creatures for food. They avoided all contact with ECDA authorities, fearing either being "rescued" (and forced into overcrowded SPZs) or eliminated as potential contamination vectors.

The Brittany Liberation Front (BLF)

Among the 3.2 million evacuated Bretons, a radical group quickly emerged, the Brittany Liberation Front, nicknamed BLF to distinguish it from pre-crisis independence movements.

Led by former Breton military personnel like Colonel Yann Kervella (who had lost his entire family in the bombings), the BLF launched a terrorist campaign against SPZs starting in November 2002:

Notable attacks:

  • December 2002: explosion at ECDA headquarters in Paris
  • February 2003: sabotage of food reserves at Bordeaux SPZ
  • May 2003: suicide attack against German patrol in Rennes

The BLF justified its actions as legitimate vengeance against Breton genocide. Its members, infiltrated among refugee populations in SPZs, conducted urban guerrilla operations particularly difficult to counter. Their slogan, "Breizh atao" (Brittany forever), became a rallying cry for all those who contested ECDA authority.


The French Resistance

Parallel to Breton terrorism, a French resistance organized, composed mainly of former officers purged or forcibly retired during the ECDA takeover.

The Movement for the Restoration of the French Republic (MRFR), clandestinely led by General Ract-Madoux from his Icelandic exile, grouped:

  • Former French generals and colonels sidelined by Hägglund
  • Republican civil servants hostile to European occupation
  • Nationalist politicians considering ECDA a betrayal of French sovereignty
  • Intellectuals denouncing the "cosmopolitan military dictatorship"

The MRFR generally avoided terrorist attacks, concentrating on:

  • Passive sabotage: slowing production in ECDA-controlled factories
  • Clandestine propaganda: distributing leaflets calling for resistance against "European occupation"
  • Exfiltration network: helping French wanting to escape SPZs to join autonomous zones
  • Uprising preparation: accumulating weapons for future national liberation

In January 2003, the MRFR attempted an uprising in Marseille, encouraging the local French garrison to turn against their ECDA commanders. The revolt was crushed in 48 hours by German and Spanish units. More than 300 French officers were executed, and Ract-Madoux, implicated from Iceland, was arrested and imprisoned in a Norwegian base.

This brutal repression pushed certain MRFR elements toward total clandestinity.