France’s acknowledgment of a war in Cameroon has immediately stoked demands for the next logical step: opening all relevant state archives for full disclosure. Activists and historians argue that a true understanding of the conflict is impossible without unrestricted access to the documents that detail France’s actions.
President Emmanuel Macron’s admission was based on the work of a joint commission, but that commission itself may not have had access to every classified file. State security, military, and intelligence archives from the 1945-1971 period could hold even more damning evidence about the planning and execution of the repressive campaign.
Full disclosure would shed light on key unanswered questions. Who specifically ordered the assassination of Ruben Um Nyobè? What was the full extent of French military involvement after 1960? Were there other war crimes that have not yet come to light?
An acknowledgment of responsibility is a political act, but opening the archives is an act of historical transparency. For many, until France commits to full disclosure, its admission will be seen as a curated confession, revealing only what it is comfortable with, rather than the complete, unvarnished truth.






