The
 head of French military intelligence, Gen Eric Vidaud, is losing his 
job after failing to predict Russia's war in Ukraine, reports say.
Seven
 months after he took on the role, one report said he was blamed for 
"inadequate briefings" and a "lack of mastery of subjects".
The US correctly assessed that Russia was planning a large-scale invasion, while France concluded it was unlikely.
Gen Vidaud was blamed for that by France's military chief, a source said.   
However,
 the military source told AFP news agency that his job was to provide 
"military intelligence on operations, not on premeditation". As Gen 
Vidaud's service concluded that Russia had the means to invade Ukraine, 
the source said that "what happened proves him right".
Early
 in March the head of French armed forces, Gen Thierry Burkhard 
acknowledged that French intelligence had not been up to the level of US
 or UK briefings, which were publicised to pile pressure on Russia's 
Vladimir Putin. "The Americans said that the Russians were going to 
attack, they were right," he told Le Monde newspaper.   
"Our
 services thought instead that the cost of conquering Ukraine would have
 been monstrous and the Russians had other options" to bring down the 
government of Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky, he added.
France's
 misreading of President Putin was all the more embarrassing because 
President Emmanuel Macron had spoken to him regularly in the days 
leading up to the invasion on 24 February.   
Intelligence
 specialist Prof Alexandre Papaemmanuel told AFP it was too easy to 
blame military intelligence for the failure, which lay with France's 
entire intelligence community.
But Gen Vidaud, France's former special forces commander, appears to have been squeezed out for other reasons too. 
Weeks
 after he took charge of military intelligence, his service came in for 
criticism when Australia scrapped a multi-billion dollar submarine 
contract with France in favour of a security pact with the US and UK. 
The Aukus pact came out of the blue in France and prompted a diplomatic 
spat.   
 
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