Reduit
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Commonly, the réduit is a fortified defence structure which is used in order that the defending troops can survive and hold out an attack.
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[edit] Classical fortifications
Réduits are the strongest fortifications which should provides protection during a persistent attack. The citadel, for example, is the réduit of a classical fortification.
[edit] Meaning during the Second World War
During World War II, "réduit" referred to the concept of a heavily defended, "untakeable" region of a country which provided a last hard spot of resistance, and hopefully a base for a counter-attack, should a large part of a country be invaded.
During the Battle of the Netherlands, the last province to resist invasion was Zeeland, which was the only part of the country not to surrender after the bombing of Rotterdam.
In France, when it became clear that the Battle of France could not be won against the Nazis, the idea of a "réduit" in Brittany was suggested as an alternative to letting the whole mainland France at the hands of the invaders.
For Switzerland, neutral country then surrounded by a Nazi-occupied Europe, and which had witness the astonishing fall of France, defence was quickly re-designed and articulated over the idea over a réduit in the Swiss Alps.
[edit] Réduit in the Swiss alps
In Switzerland, the concept of "réduit" is a recurring theme of the Swiss concept of defence. Having avoided fighting during World War II, Switzerland retained the concept for its plans of resistance against a putative Soviet invasion, thus shaping a part of the national folklore, and a strong influence in the Swiss concept of neutrality.
[edit] History
After Switzerland was surrounded by German and Italian forces, General Henri Guisan revealed at the so-called Rütlirapport, a meeting of the Swiss army staff at the founding site of the Swiss confederation on 25th July 1940, that in case of attack the Swiss would only defend the high Alps including the important transport routes. If a defence would not be possible, the army would destroy the access routes to these alpine passes.
On the other hand, this plan meant that the populated lowlands - including the economic centres of the country - would be factually presented to the Germans. Many billions of Swiss Francs have been invested in building the fortifications in the mountains, which are partly still used by the army. The most important buildings of the Réduit were the fortifications of Sargans, St. Maurice (Valais) and the Gotthard region. The caverns of those time were equipped with the needed infrastructure, beside cannons and howitzers they consisted of dormitories, kitchens, field hospitals, rooms for the sick and bakeries; and they provided space enough to accommodate 100 to 600 soldiers for a timespan of up to several months. Because the tensions between the western countries and the USSR cooled down and bunkers became more or less obsolete because of newer weapon systems, a great number of the Réduit buildings were closed down. Some of them have been reopened as museums and can be visited.
[edit] Folklore and myths
As a result of the strict secrecy, many myths and legends were born. One of them says that a secret airport was constructed in a mountain, and that the aircraft would leave and enter the fortification by large holes or even by aircraft carrier-like catapults - but this myth may have been born because actually some military airfields are located adjacent to caverns, where aircraft and maintenance personnel can be sheltered; and the airfield of Meiringen is an example for this. (It is true that one of today's Swiss fighter aircraft - the F/A-18 - is a naval airplane, still having tailhooks. But when this myth originated in the cold war, Switzerland didn't have naval aircraft.) Another myth says that one could march right through the Alps because the army built so many caverns. However, it is possible to spot many "secret" army buildings while hiking or travelling in the Swiss Alps.
The image of Switzerland as a locked-in, but bravely defending country - as it is symbolized by the Réduit - developed into a national myth; it was defended mainly by the troops that actually served during World War II. The Réduit myth, the brave Switzerland in the midst of the Hitler and Mussolini regimes, was part of the so-called "intellectual defence of the homeland", Geistige Landesverteidigung in German; and the Réduit myth was also used during the tension between the USA and the USSR - even if the Soviet troops would have bypassed the Alps and its fortifications during a possible invasion of western Europe. At the height of the crisis, in 1964, the army's pavilion at the Swiss Fair (Landesausstellung) in Lausanne had the shape of a giant hedgehog made of concrete.
[edit] Political influence
The legacy of the Réduit was finally put in question because of the report of the 1999's Bergier Commission which had to resolve how the Swiss government and economy helped the Hitler regime during World War II. To the younger generations it became clear that it was political and economic cooperation with Germany, and not the army, which saved the country from an invasion.
For conservative political parties, the Réduit is still an argument in favour of maintaining strict independence and non-membership in the European Union; and they even use the Réduit model as a method to fight terrorism - hence, cartoonists have ridiculed this view by displaying Swiss tourists wearing a "I'm neutral"-t-shirt while walking carefree through bomb-ridden Egyptian cities.