| Roger Blaizot | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1895 |
| Died | 1981 |
| Allegiance | |
| Service/branch | French Army |
| Rank | Général de corps d'armée |
| Unit | French Liaison Officer to Supreme Allied Commander South-East Asia[1] |
| Commands held | 1st Motorized Colonial Division 9th Colonial Division Forces Francaises Extrême Orient[1] |
| Battles/wars | World War II First Indochina War |
Roger Charles André Henri Blaizot (1895–1981) was a French military leader, who commanded French forces during the World War II and the First Indochina War.[1] Blaizot served in Indochina through the last two years of the World War II,[2] having been sent to command the Far East French Expeditionary Forces (Forces Francaises Extrême Orient) by Charles de Gaulle.[3] Following the war, Blaizot led a fifty-member staff group to Indochina as part of a cooperation between British Special Operations Executive agents of Force 136 and the French government to ensure French retention of South East Asia,[4] this having been approved by Lord Philip Mountbatten in 1943.[5] Blaizot then went on to command the French forces in Indochina from 1948 until 1949,[6] succeeding Jean-Étienne Valluy and being succeeded himself by Marcel Carpentier.[7]
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