ABSTRACT

Unlike France, Britain viewed the Algerian conflict from 1958 to 1962 primarily as a colonial war. The British government regarded Algérie française as an anachronism, which France would have to relinquish one day. Though Britain was no stranger to ‘dirty’ colonial wars, as simultaneous operations against EOKA nationalists in Cyprus continued to prove, it was not averse to displaying a certain smugness at having averted the kind of mess Algeria seemed to represent. Britain’s interest in the latter stages of the Algerian conflict centred on four major areas: Perceptions of colonial warfare; de Gaulle’s Algeria policy; Algeria and Britain’s view of France in Europe and NATO; Negotiating the ceasefire and ending the conflict.