Posted on 02/05/2026 7:24:31 AM PST by delta7
President de Gaulle of France initiated the secret operation “Vide-Gousset” and repatriated 3,313 tonnes of gold reserves from the vaults of the Federal Reserve in New York and the Bank of England in London from 1963 until 1966. De Gaulle feared America’s deficit in its balance of payments would rupture Bretton Woods and lead to a devaluation of the dollar against gold.
All France’s dollars were converted into gold, and to avoid treachery, the metal was repatriated over the course of three years. It took 44 boat trips and 129 flights to bring home more than three thousand tonnes of gold to the Banque de France in Paris.
France’s decision turned out extremely well. As was foreseen by the French, the price of gold in dollars increased sharply, from $35 to $800 dollars an ounce, from 1968 until 1980—the dollar lost 96% of its value against gold. Countries that held on to their dollars were less fortunate.
More recently, after the Great Financial Crisis, the Banque de France repatriated 211 tonnes, upgraded all its bars to current wholesale standards, overhauled its vaults, revived Paris as a trading hub for institutional investors, and history repeats itself as we are in a gold bull market presently.
Introduction to Bretton Woods
At a conference in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, in 1944, delegates from 44 allied nations forged a new international monetary system. An agreement was made on a system of fixed exchange rates and free trade. Currencies were tied to gold via the dollar, as the Federal Reserve promised to buy and sell gold at a fixed price of $35 dollars per ounce, and foreign central banks had the obligation to keep their currencies within the “par values” to the dollar1.
The greenback was seen as “good as gold” because dollars could always be converted into gold at the Federal Reserve (Fed). And thus, next to gold, foreign central banks would hold dollars as international reserves, which made the Bretton Woods system comparable to the “gold exchange standard” from before the Second World War.
The newly erected International Monetary Fund (IMF) was to supervise Bretton Woods and support countries with short-term balance of payments deficits by lending reserves. With approval from the IMF, countries could devalue (revalue) their currency in case of persistent balance of payments deficits (surpluses) to restore equilibrium.
France’s Criticism of Bretton Woods
In 1959, former General of the French military Charles de Gaulle became the President of France and sided with his most influential economic advisor, Jaques Rueff. Rueff and de Gaulle were vocal critics of Bretton Woods and America’s “exorbitant privilege.”
Bretton Woods allowed the U.S. to pay for imports with dollars it created out of thin air, as the system inherently made foreigners need dollars as a trade, intervention, and reserve currency. Only foreign central banks could redeem dollars for gold at the Fed if the Fed allowed them to2. In addition, exported dollars caused inflation abroad as central banks were obliged to defend their exchange rates and thus had to print currency to buy dollars.
The United States was running a balance of payments deficit (more money was exported than imported) since the 1950s, which made U.S. official gold reserves decline—foreign central banks redeemed part of the imported dollars at the Fed. A tipping point was reached in 1960 when America’s external dollar liabilities exceeded its monetary gold holdings, prompting global concern regarding convertibility.
Chart 1. Instead of devaluing the dollar, which would harm the dollar’s power, the U.S. began selling of its gold, slashing their holdings from 20,312 tonnes in 1957 to 9,679 tonnes in 1968.
The Increase of France’s Gold Reserves at the Fed
In the decade from 1958 through 1968, France experienced strong economic growth and had a balance of payments surplus, generating an increase of its international reserves. In 1961, Rueff, as well as other advisors to De Gaulle, theorized that Bretton Woods couldn’t survive because central banks eventually would be unwilling to hoard dollars as the U.S. was running out of gold. The United States would be forced to either devalue the dollar against gold or suspend gold convertibility.
De Gaulle and his team painfully recalled what happened in 1931 when the U.K. devalued sterling against gold in a similar fashion, causing the Banque de France (BdF) to suffer a loss of 2.35 billion French francs, twice the size of its capital. The French Treasury (taxpayer) had to step in to bail out BdF.
France became more reluctant to accumulate dollars despite the interest dollar holders earned.
Chart 2. In 1960, France’s gold reserves were evenly distributed between the vaults of the Fed in New York, the Bank of England in London, and BdF in Paris, a situation then considered optimal. By November 1961, after the dollar gold price had briefly spiked in London, Fed President Alfred Hayes presented a plan at the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), Bazel, Switzerland, to jointly stabilize the price of gold in the free market (Bordo et al. 2017). European central banks assented to form a “Gold Pool” with the U.S. to buy and sell gold in the London Bullion Market with the objective of keeping the price at $35 dollars. France accepted to join on the condition the U.S. would fix its balance of payments deficit (Avaro, 2022).
alt_here De Gaulle and John F. Kennedy in Paris, 1961. Source: John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library, Boston.
Even as France had pledged to cooperate with the Pool’s operations in London, BdF converted newly acquired dollars into gold at the Fed in New York. Consequently, its gold holdings in New York grew relative to those in London and Paris.
France Repatriates Its Gold
De Gaulle opined that American imperialism supported its capital export. In January 1963, he told his spokesperson:
Western Europe has become an American protectorate without even realizing it. We must now rid ourselves of their domination. But the difficulty here is that the colonized don't really want to emancipate themselves. Since the end of the war, the Americans have subjugated us painlessly and without much resistance.
For the General, gold was also a tool to push back on America’s quest for domination, in which the dollar played a key role. Not long after, in March 1963, De Gaulle began to worry about the geography of the French gold and demanded that all of it was to be repatriated to Paris (Avaro, 2022). Any gold held abroad could be used as leverage against France.
Staff of BdF advised against repatriations, considering the costs of transportation and insurance. In a compromise, the secret operation “Vide-Gousset” was launched in September 1963 to repatriate 400 tonnes of gold from New York (Avaro, 2022; Bruneel, 2012).
Initially, transfers from New York were made by sea, as it was difficult to ensure transport by air. Involving the French Navy was considered, but that would have blown the operation’s cover. Instead, BdF used ocean liners from the Compagnie Générale Transatlantique, capable of shipping 25 tonnes at a pace of two trips per month. Notably, not all gold repatriated went to Paris, some went to a BIS account at the Bank of England (BOE). It’s possible that BdF had engaged with the BIS in location swaps.
Flandre, Compagnie Générale Transatlantique. Source: Wikimedia.
De Gaulle’s distrust of the U.S. for safekeeping the French gold went hand in hand with America’s ongoing balance of payments deficit. Great Britain, which De Gaulle viewed as an extension of the U.S., was experiencing a balance of payments deficit, too. Before the dollar, the pound sterling came under attack by speculators in 1964.
With pound sterling on the brink of devaluing, a dollar degradation became even more likely. From evaluating the finances of both America and Britain, the French took the decision to increase dollar conversion, accelerate repatriating gold from New York, and repatriate gold from London as well. The Banque de France was able to charter passenger planes from Air France to airlift gold from London to Paris starting in December 1964 (Bruneel, 2012).
The communication plan was to first announce one uncommon conversion of dollars; then, a French official would voice concerns regarding international monetary problems and demand America to reform. As planned, BdF publicly announced a conversion of $300 million dollars into gold (267 tonnes) in January 1965, which was followed by the General’s infamous press conference on February 4 at the Élysée Palace, where he advocated for a return to the gold standard. From the De Gaulle:
In the current system, the United States can go into debt for free, at the expense of other countries, because what the United States owes them from trade is paid, at least in part, with dollars only they can create3. Considering the serious consequences and the crisis that could arise from this situation, we think that measures should be taken to avoid this. We consider it necessary that international trade is settled, as was the case before the great misfortunes of the world [First and Second World War], on an indisputable monetary base. One that does not bear the mark of any particular country. What basis? In truth, nobody can really imagine any other standard than gold.
The supreme law, the golden rule that should be reapplied to international economic relationships, is an obligation to settle the balance of payments between one monetary zone and the next through deliveries and withdrawals of precious metals.
Right after his speech, De Gaulle suggested his colleagues send a “Colbert” missile cruiser to New York and pick up French gold in size 4. His Minister of Finance convinced him to give up on this idea as it could damage diplomatic ties inadvertently (Avaro, 2022).
The central bank of France proceeded with more dollar conversions and scheduled passenger and then cargo planes from Air France, capable of carrying roughly 30 tonnes each, to fly between New York and Paris in addition to the ocean liners. Repatriations were covered by the media at the time, but the size and details of the operations were unknown, as far as is disclosed in newspaper archives.
Chart 4. Distribution of France’s monetary gold (in millions of dollars valued at $35/ounce). The red bar represents the day of De Gaulle’s speech on the return to the gold standard. “Affaire 18” was the code name for repatriations from New York by sea, “Affaire 19” and “Affaire 20” were repatriations by air from London and New York, respectively. Source: A Gold Battle? De Gaulle and the Dollar Hegemony during the Bretton Woods era.
Within a year, nearly all of France’s gold was brought home. Though, as new dollars were acquired, the operation of Vide-Gousset expanded. In 1965 and 1966, no less than 94 air flights were organized, which allowed the repatriation of 1,175 tonnes of gold from London. A total of 1,638 tonnes were recovered from the U.S., divided over 24 boat trips and 35 air flights. In aggregate, 3,313 tonnes were repatriated, according to Honorary Director General of the Banque de France, Didier Bruneel, in “The Secrets of Gold” (Les Secrets de l'Or).
The Collapse of the Gold Pool and Dollar Devaluation
As imbalances in the global financial system kept growing, France saw no other option but to drop out of the London Gold Pool in June 1967. Later that year, the U.K. was forced to devalue pound sterling, and markets began eying the dollar next.
Slowly but surely, things started getting worse, and the Pool was confronted with substantial losses. From March 8 through 14, 1968, the gold syndicate had to sell almost 1,000 tonnes of gold to cap the dollar price of gold. “U.S. air force planes rushed more and more Fort Knox gold to London, and so much piled up in the Bank of England’s weighing room that the floor collapsed,” writes Timothy Green in “The New World of Gold.”
On March 15, 1968, the U.S. ordered the London Bullion Market to be closed for two weeks, and the Pool’s operations were terminated. Thereafter, a two-tiered gold system emerged: the price of gold was allowed to float in the free market, but the official gold price was unaltered at 35$ dollar. Private entities could trade gold at the free market price, and central banks could transact among each at the official price while not being allowed to sell in the free market. Of course, no central bank would sell gold to another central bank for $35 dollars, knowing the actual price was higher.
Ironically, the French franc came under pressure later in 1968, and BdF sold gold chiefly to defend its currency, as it had converted most of its dollars (see chart 1). De Gaulle's successor, Georges Pompidou, devalued the franc in 1969.
Although it was still possible for European central banks to convert dollars into gold at the Fed under the two-tier system, the Americans would intimidate or blackmail them not to. Finally, President Nixon closed the gold window on August 15, 1971, due to requests by France and Great Britain to exchange dollars for precious metals.
Bretton Woods de facto ended in 1968, but it stumbled on until 1971. Aside from formal changes in the IMF’s Articles of Agreement that were implemented down the line, the era of floating exchange rates began in 1971.
Due to raging inflation in the 1970s, the gold price went up from $35 dollars per ounce in 1968 to $800 in 1980. That’s an increase in the dollar price of gold of 2,200% or a dollar devaluation of 96%, whichever way one prefers to look at it.
France not only accurately predicted the devaluation of the greenback against gold, but it also acted appropriately by converting as much dollars as possible when it could. Repatriating the gold was not only to pressure America to reform but also to prevent uncomfortable outcomes. And virtually all French monetary gold is still stored in La Souterraine, the BdF’s vault in Paris.
France Has Once Again Positioned Itself for a Gold Bull Market....
It wasn’t a “secret.” The terms of the post WWII Bretton Woods Agreement meant the US Treasury openly gave it to them.
Linked:
Many sovereign nations are buying Gold secretly, (watch those Saudis), in historic quantities.
The terms of the post WWII Bretton Woods Agreement meant the US Treasury openly gave it to them.
President Trump had better get busy making good on his Gold audit, he is running out of time.
One thing you can trust French to do, which includes Quebec, is they will take care of themselves while claiming to support positions that would destroy others if they followed the French advice. I think it is a form of sabotage they engage in
De Gaulle does not get nearly the respect he deserves. Remember the 1961 coup attempt was launched 3 days after the Bay of Pigs. The CIA was hoping it would get lost in the confusion.
He repatriated their gold and kicked NATO bases out of France and pulled them from the NATO command structure.
He got France the bomb.
He handed France a fine post war legacy. The French government squandered it.
Why is he no longer commenting on going there?……and why is no one in the Press even asking him about going?
Why is he no longer commenting on going there?……and why is no one in the Press even asking him about going
The worse scenario, it has been raided and plundered. In any case, a full audit would be damning....a national security issue and Trump’s silence is even worse.
Due be aware, a full assay audit by professional auditors all say a full audit would take no less than 18 months. Trump had better get busy, he is losing support.
Much of the animus towards de Gaulle today is due to his egotism, i.e. his attitude of La France, c'est mois (first attributed to Louis XIV, repeated nearly 350 years later with half-ironic intent by de Gaulle), but the egotism was largely justified. To a large part, he indeed WAS post-war France. It's a shame that the Mitterands, Macrons, etc. all squandered the legacy.
I’m happy to see that someone here doesn’t have a knee-jerk hatred towards France and de Gaulle
Time to pay the Piper for decades of deceit. Trump needs to get this zGold issue resolved, and quickly.
One of the greatest leaders in history. Eisenhower applied huge pressure to stop France from getting the bomb, so DeGaulle secretly brought in Israeli scientists to build one, in exchange for giving Israel processed uranium (yellowcake) later for their own program - which JFK also aggressively tried (and failed, thankfully) to stop.
DeGaulle also planned and funded a massive push to make France energy independent using nuclear reactors, which his successor stupidly stalled until the Arab oil shocks scared them back into it. Today France gets 70% of its electric power from nuclear, compared to a pathetic 20% in the U.S.
If only America had leaders who gave a shit about the United States as DeGaulle did France.
De Gaulle saved France from going Communist.
Immediately after Paris was liberated, the Communists had control of the city, and were getting rid of their opposition by simply accusing them of being “Collaborators”. Without De Gaulle stepping in, Paris would have been a Communist bastion, from which they would have taken the entire country.
That said, an Epstein document ( email) from IMF Chief Strauss-Kahn to Epstein state ( dated 18 June 2011) he had proof the U.S. Gold was plundered, missing and much unaccounted for. Strauss in the e-Mail states the US could not deliver to the IMF 191 tons of Gold they pledged, and he had a CIA document stating US Gold was plundered.
Maybe why Trump was opposed to releasing the Epstein emails AND knows fully well our Gold Reserves have been plundered.
“NO GOLD IN FORT KNOX? Epstein File Suggests Man Was Tracked, Arrested for Knowing Vaults Are Empty”
OK, but then why is the MSM, which DESPISES Trump, not calling him on his promise?
I also agree about Trump’s silence since the election being very concerning,,,,,,especially since the rise of gold is almost in the news everyday now!
“Maybe why Trump was opposed to releasing the Epstein emails AND knows fully well our Gold Reserves have been plundered.”
Did you catch any suckers with that line?
Looks like the GatorFool finally finished his morning sippy cup, and got his diaper changed.
“Trump needs to get this zGold issue resolved, and quickly”
Interesting. Only the gold shills are talking about this.
The same shills that were pimping silver at $120.
Many still wonder what happened to all that Spanish Aztec Gold sent to Moscow for safekeeping in the 1930s. It seems to have disappeared before Franco whipped the Spanish commies and took over.
***and kicked NATO bases out of France***
I remember that! And a political cartoon showing De Gaulle standing in front of a US Military Cemetery in France saying...”Why do you Americans always stay where you are not wanted?”
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