Jean Doise

Jean Doise (1917-2006) is a historian French.

Historian, former student of the National university, aggregate of history and geography, former member of the French School of Rome, reserve officer of the Service of State Major, Jean Doise is military specialist in Histoire.

In its test a Secrecy kept well , it defends, with many evidence, the thesis according to which the Affaire Dreyfus would have been actually an operation of intoxication against German espionage aiming at preserving the secrecy on the development of the future gun of 75 mm. This intoxication would have been assembled by colonel Sandherr, chief of French military against-espionage (service dissimulated under the name of “Statistical office”). To implement this intoxication, Sandherr had made use of the commander Ferdinand Walsin Esterhazy, this last being a former member of against French espionage (this last fact is incontestably proven by the files of the historical Service of the army). Sandherr would have acted under the direct impulse of the general Auguste Mercier who himself had been influenced by the Delloye general, director of Artillery.

According to Jean Doise, the State general Major had not been informed of this handling French secret services. It thus reacts in good faith by accusing Dreyfus on the basis of a form recovered by a cleaning lady and French spy to the embassy of Germany. This form, which had been manufactured by Esterhazy, quoted a new piece of artillery of 120mm and its brake of retreat. This reference to an artillery prototype was to start the inculpation of Dreyfus.

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