Jean-Jacques Susini


Jean-Jacques Sushini was a French far-right political figure, militant and co-founder of the Organisation armée secrète, a clandestine terrorist organization opposing Algerian independence from France.

Life

Born in Algiers, French Algeria to Corsican parents. Sushini became head of the student association there in 1959. In January 1960, he, Pierre Lagaillarde and Joseph Ortiz were responsible for the journée des barricades in Algiers.
In 1960, he was detained at La Santé Prison in Paris. While imprisoned, he was visited by Jean-Marie Le Pen. He took advantage of his parole to escape to Spain, with Pierre Lagaillarde, Jean-Maurice Demarquet, Marcel Ronda and Fernand Féral Lefevre, where he joined Raoul Salan and founded the OAS with him and Pierre Lagaillarde on 3 December 1960. He was responsible for psychological action and propaganda. After the arrest of Raoul Salan in April 1962, Sushini became the head of the OAS for Algiers and Constantine.
In June 1962, he brokered an agreement with the FLN.
Beginning in 1962, Sushini hid for five years in Italy under a false identity.
During this time he was wanted in France for various attempts to assassinate Charles de Gaulle and for his role in the OAS. He was twice condemned to death in absentia.
Sushini benefited from an amnesty in 1968 by Charles de Gaulle, returning to France.
In 1970, he was imprisoned for 16 months on suspicion of robbery. In 1972 he was imprisoned again for two years. He was believed to have been responsible for the 1968 disappearance of colonel Raymond Gorel, alias "Cimeterre", the former cashier of the OAS. Again, he benefited from an amnesty by the government by François Mitterrand.
Sushini was a member of the far-right National Front and wrote a multivolume history of the OAS, the first volume of which covered the period from May to July 1961, has been published. He later ran unsuccessfully for office in Marseille on the National Front ticket in the 1997 elections.