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Trinquier and over
After a brief stay in France as a director to the airborne school, Trinquier returned to Algeria in March 1958 to take over command of the 3rd Colonial Parachute Regiment, soon to be the 3rd Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment, when its commanding officer, Marcel Bigeard, was recalled to France.

Trinquier and GCMA
Declassified information about the GCMA include the name of its commander, famous Colonel Roger Trinquier, and a mission on April 30, 1954, when Jedburgh veteran Captain Sassi led the Mèo partisans of the GCMA Malo-Servan in Operation Condor during the siege of Dien Bien Phu.
Among French Jedburghs were Paul Aussaresses, later founder of the SDECE's 11e RPC, and counter-insurgency expert in French Algeria ; Jean Sassi, another who later served in the 11e RPC, who pioneered conventional guerrilla commandos GCMA with Roger Trinquier during the First Indochina War ; Guy Le Borgne, commander of the 8e Choc Parachute Battalion in Indochina, the 3rd Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment in Algeria and 11th Parachute Division.
In late December 1951, Trinquier was again in Indochina for his third tour-this time in the newly formed Groupement de Commandos Mixtes Aéroportés ( GCMA ) ( Eng: Composite Airborne Commando Group ) commanded by Edmond Grall.

Trinquier and early
Trinquier returned to France in 1936 and was assigned to the 41st Colonial Infantry Machine-gun Regiment ( 41e Régiment de Mitrailleurs d ’ Infanterie Coloniale, 41e RMIC ) at Sarralbe, where he commanded a company until he was sent to China in early August 1938.
On 26 January 1961, Trinquier asked for early retirement from the army into the reserve ( 2nd Section ).

Trinquier and .
Charles Lacheroy, Colonel Trinquier, who theorized the systemic use of torture in counter-insurgency doctrine in Modern Warfare: A French View of Counterinsurgency ( 1961 ), were members of it.
Roger Trinquier ( 20 March 1908 – 11 January 1986 ) was a French Army officer during World War II, the First Indochina War and the Algerian War, serving mainly in airborne and Special forces units.
Roger Trinquier was born on 20 March 1908 in La Beaume, a small village in the Hautes-Alpes department, to a peasant family.
Trinquier became commander of B4, one of the sub-units of the commando, recruited from the colonial infantry.
Trinquier returned to Indochina with the 2nd Colonial Commando Parachute Battalion ( 2e BCCP ), during November 1947.
On 12 December 1949, after thirty airborne operations and numerous ground operations, Trinquier and the battalion embarked on Pasteur, a French transport ship, and returned to France.
Trinquier returned to France in January 1955, being promoted to Lieutenant Colonel and assigned to the staff of General Gilles, commander of the airborne troops.
He became a member of the committee for public safety formed by Generals Massu and Salan during the May 1958 crisis, which brought Charles de Gaulle back to power ; Trinquier resigned from the committee on 11 June and returned to his regiment.
During the first half of 1959, Trinquier led the regiment during the Challe Offensive, proposed by the French commander in Algeria, Maurice Challe, to cripple the FLN.
Trinquier only stayed a few weeks in Congo before being thrown out by the United Nations.
Trinquier was also its first president from 1963 to 1965, before stepping down for General Jean Gracieux.
Trinquier is a theorist on the style of warfare he called Modern Warfare, an " interlocking system of actions-political, economic, psychological, military-which aims at the overthrow of the established authority in a country and its replacement by another regime.
The character of Julien Boisfeuras in the novels The Centurions and The Praetorians by Jean Larteguy was according to Larteguy not based on anyone, but believed by many to be at least partially inspired by Trinquier and Paul Aussaresses.
The character of Colonel Jean-Marie la Roncière in another of Larteguy ’ s novels, The Hounds of Hell ( Les chimères noires ), was certainly based on Trinquier and his activities during the Katanga rebellion.
* Roger Trinquier, La Guerre moderne, Paris: La Table ronde, 1961.
* Roger Trinquier, Le coup d ’ État du 13 mai.
Trinquier denounces the foundation of the French Fifth Republic as a coup d ' état.
* Roger Trinquier, Jacques Duchemin, and Jacques Le Bailley, Notre guerre au Katanga.
Trinquier relates his implication in Katanga.

took and over
Greg took the formation wide around three A-26 attack bombers that were headed north over the Gulf.
He rode in at the head of sixty trigger-happy and liquor-crazed desperadoes and took over a livery barn at the entrance to Main Street.
Citizens took the view that a lawman was expected to risk his life on the odd occasion anyway, but this fighting fury of a man risked it regularly over a period of half a century.
Harold, with brothers Frank, Joe and William, took over at the death of their father, Harry M. Stevens, who put a few dollars into a baseball program, introduced the `` hot dog '' and paved the way for creation of a catering empire.
In his first six weeks in office he presided over 96 conferences, attended 35 official breakfasts and dinners, studied and signed 285 official papers and personally took 312 telephone calls.
He did not really want to kill, but as in the sexual act, there was a moment when the impulse took over and could not be downed, even while you watched yourself giving way to it.
it took them over an hour to get back to the station where they should have changed, in order to take the line that went to the Place Redoute.
) The plants took zero nights in their stride, with nothing but a mat of straw over the glass to protect them.
the hostess in her took over.
The vision of a Lord Tennyson expressed in a poem 100 years ago took visible form over London in the air blitzes of 1941.
The attitudes which the Rebs and Yanks took toward each other were very much the same and ranged over the same gamut of feeling, from friendliness to extreme hatred.
So filled was Mel Chandler with the spirit of Garryowen that after Korea was over, he took on the job of writing the complete history of the regiment.
At one point in the game when the skinny old man in suspenders who was acting as umpire got in the way of a thrown ball and took it painfully in the kidneys, he lay there unattended while players and spectators wrangled over whether the ball was `` dead '' or the base runners were free to score.
It was his brag that he could beat everybody at anything, but especially at fighting, and he once took on the manager of his club and worked him over thoroughly with his fists.
When Ambassador Mikhail Menshikov took it over in 1957 from Georgi Zaroubin, he made a determined effort to change this idea.
I took the pint bottle from my pocket and handed it over as I sat down beside him on the spread blanket.
The Birds got five hits and all three of their runs off Kunkel before Hartman took over in the top of the fourth.
Jim Gentile bounced a hard shot off Kunkel's glove and beat it out for a single, and when Lumpe grabbed the ball and threw it over first baseman Throneberry's head Brandt took third and Gentile second on the error.
Then the pixies and the zombies took over while the banshees wailed in the distance.
Fiedler went on to make several other test flights before German pilots took over the Reichenberg missiles.
He made his fortune during World War 2, when he took over a number of dying steel plants and kept them alive until the boom.
The Belgian government itself took over administration, commencing a program of paternalism unmatched in the history of colonialism.
Olivetti took over Underwood, the U.S. typewriter maker, in late 1959.
Pakistan was created in 1947 expressly as a Muslim state, but when the army took over eleven years later it did so on a wave of mass impatience which was directed in part against the inability of political and religious leaders to think their way through to the meaning of Islam for the modern political situation.
George Shearing took over with his well disciplined group, a sextet consisting of vibes, guitar, bass, drums, Shearing's piano and a bongo drummer.

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