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Jackal (the Day Of The Jackal)




  Codenames The Jackal, Chacal, The Englishman
  False Identities Alexander James Quentin Duggan, Per Jensen, Marty Schulberg, Andre Martin
  Assumed Identities Charles Calthrop
  Height over 6'
  Age mid 30s
  Year Of Birth between 1924 and 1932
  First Appearance The Day Of The Jackal by Frederick Forsyth


The Jackal is the main Character in the fiction Novel '' The Day Of The Jackal '' by Frederick Forsyth , which features a storyline centred on a professional Assassination attempt on Charles De Gaulle 's life in the summer of 1963. The book was published in 1971 shortly after Charles de Gaulle's death and became an instant bestseller.


CHARACTER INTRODUCTION

The Jackal is described as a gentleman with blond hair and grey eyes in his early thirties. He uses a numbered Swiss bank account to hold the proceeds of his work. He is a sophisticated man who thoroughly thinks out his plans. He is most likely English, considering that he lives in England and holds a British driving license, even though his nationality cannot be verified by either the reader or the police forces in the book. No police force in Europe has ever heard of the Jackal, implying that he might change his codename for each of his missions. It could be inferred that the Jackal could have served in the French Foreign Legion , considering these facts; the Jackal speaks fluent French, he is able to kill a person with his bare hands — training given in the Legion — and the fact that the conspirators wishing to kill De Gaulle were in the Legion explains how they were able to get a dossier about him so easily. It is also revealed the Jackal has a contact from Katanga (Louis, presumably a mercenary) who puts him in touch with a skilled armourer who fabricates the assassin's rifle and a forger who provides false identification papers. He could very well be an ethnic Englishman who was born outside of the United Kingdom yet raised in the U.K., thus no record of his birth date in UK records. Likewise if he served in the French Foreign Legion instead of the UK Regular forces, there would be no UK military record of normal Identity checks-such as fingerprints or photographs. When he gives his soon to be expired real driver's license to the forger he claims that the man it belonged to is dead — possibly he faked his own death, and now being "officially dead" — he lives in London under a assumed identity. The fact that his London residence is Holborn shows that he apparently takes only very expensive jobs.


Explanation of the character's name

The assassin invents the codename of the Jackal after he is hired by Rodin and his fellow conspirators. The codename stems from the name of the Animal , as both the assassin and the animal are both predators that hunt their prey. His name derives from his true English name, Charles Calthrop. His French employers name him "Chacal," or "Jackal" in English, from the first three letters of his first and last names. He is adept at killing people with his bare hands and he is an excellent shot with a rifle. It can also be inferred that the Jackal is proficient with hand guns since the two German scientists were both killed with a neat little bullet hole to the spine, most likely done with a low calibre pistol. The Jackal is chosen by his employers for his expertise and neutrality, and most importantly, his anonymity.


BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY

The Jackal's real name is unknown and details of his background are sketchy. He is in his thirties in 1963, so the Jackal was presumably born sometime between 1924 and 1933. He is either English or affects the manner of an Englishman. He is just under six feet tall, "reasonably good looking", with a muscular build. He has few distinguishing features; the desk clerk at the Hotel Kleist in Vienna — where the Jackal first meets the OAS — can offer only a poor description when interviewed by the French two months later. One distinguishing feature are his cold, lifeless eyes; he covers this by wearing dark wraparound sunglasses. He likes to wear striped shirts. He changes his hair color constantly.

The Jackal may have received Special Forces training from the Royal Marines and may have once been with the French Foreign Legion . He speaks fluent French and is able to kill a man with his bare hands. He is skilled with handguns and is a crack shot who can hit a water melon from one-hundred-and-fifty metres. He has worked in an office and commuted to work and despised it. Dreaming of "Cadillacs and Jaguars", he became a mercenary, specialising in individual killings. Unlike his rivals — ex-SS killer Hans-Dieter Kassel and South African mercenary Piet Schuyper — he has managed to remain anonymous except to a select few who recommend him for work. He considers his anonymity his greatest weapon. He is an acquaintance of a former Congo mercenary called Louis who he met in Katanga . He may have helped assassinate Rafael Leónidas Trujillo in the Dominican Republic by shooting the driver of his armoured car, causing it to crash (though Trujillo was not travelling in an armoured car at the time of his death, as he believed nobody would dare harm him. He would normally use his own car and the proof of this is that he had no armed escort guards while coming from the province of San Cristobal that night he was shot).

Prior to being approached by the OAS, the Jackal's only confirmed kills are of two German rocket scientists in Egypt who were helping Nasser build rockets to attack Israel . He performed this task at close range using a small-calibre weapon, a crime that left the Egyptian government baffled. The Jackal was paid by a Zionist millionaire in New York, who considered his money "well spent". The Jackal personally supervised the transfer of his payment from Beirut to Switzerland , where he has a large account in dollars and Swiss Francs . The Jackal keeps two thousand pounds in cash in a safety deposit box of a solicitor's office in Holborn , London .

The Jackal planned to continue as an assassin until he had enough money to retire. The money paid to the Jackal for the Egyptian kill was enough to keep him in luxury for several years, but the offer of US$ 500,000 from the OAS to kill De Gaulle gave him the opportunity to retire early. Despite his concern over the "security slackness of the OAS", the job is too tempting to turn down. Taking his usual elaborate precautions, the Jackal arranged a false passport to get him into France and forged identity papers to get him close to De Gaulle. He also stole two passports as contingent identities and bought disguises to match. Unfortunately, France's Action Service was able to kidnap and interrogate an OAS bodyguard, one of the few men who was aware of the plot to kill De Gaulle. Using OAS agent "Valmi" as cutout, the Jackal was kept fully informed of the French police's pursuit of him. This, plus his constant changes of identity, enabled him to stay ahead of the police until Liberation Day, August 25th 1963, when the Jackal tried to shoot De Gaulle with a rifle he had disguised as an aluminium crutch. However, De Gaulle moved his head at the last moment, causing the Jackal to miss. As the Jackal prepared for a second shot, he was discovered by French police detective Claude Lebel, who emptied a MAT 49 submachinegun at him. He was buried two days later in an unmarked grave; only Lebel attended, anonymously.

The Jackal is utterly ruthless but probably not psychopathic; he only kills those he has been paid to kill or those who compromise his mission. He likes precision. He habitually wakes at 7:30 a.m. His preferred drink is Campari and soda. He can be witty and behaves as a true gentleman while on a mission. He enjoys flirting with girls and is a great lover.


THE 1973 FILM

For the 1973 Adaptation , some of the Jackal's background details are clarified. The dossier the OAS read from states that the Jackal killed Trujillo and the man in the Congo ( Patrice Lumumba ?). This means that the Jackal probably used the name Charles Calthrop as a cover for his Caribbean mission, or the real Charles Calthrop name was mixed up. While Edward Fox portrays the assassin's ruthlessness and cunning, he also displayed mild hints of humor that were not evident in the novel.


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