The French named one of their aircraft carriers after Ferdinand Foch, a man who once said "Airplanes are interesting toys but of no military value".
France Named an Aircraft Carrier After a Guy Who Hated Planes
Sometimes history has a wicked sense of humor. Case in point: Marshal Ferdinand Foch, the French military strategist who allegedly declared in 1911 that "airplanes are interesting toys but of no military value." Fast forward a few decades, and France decided to name one of its most powerful warships—an aircraft carrier—after him.
The irony is so thick you could cut it with a propeller blade.
The Man Who Underestimated Aviation
Ferdinand Foch wasn't just some random skeptic. He was a Professor of Strategy at France's prestigious École Supérieure de Guerre (War School) when he supposedly made this spectacularly wrong prediction. This was the guy teaching France's future military leaders how to think about warfare.
To be fair to Foch, in 1911 airplanes were pretty primitive. The Wright Brothers had only achieved powered flight eight years earlier. Military aviation was essentially dudes in leather caps dropping hand grenades out of fragile wood-and-canvas contraptions.
But here's the thing: Foch lived to see how catastrophically wrong he was. Just three years after his dismissive comment, World War I broke out, and airplanes proved crucial for reconnaissance, artillery spotting, and eventually aerial combat. By the time the war ended in 1918, Foch himself had been promoted to Marshal of France and served as Supreme Allied Commander—coordinating forces that relied heavily on air power.
The Ultimate "Told You So"
In 1963, France commissioned the FS Foch (R-99), a Clemenceau-class aircraft carrier. At 265 meters long and displacing 32,800 tons at full load, she was the largest ship in the French Navy at the time. She could carry about 40 aircraft, including fighter-bombers, reconnaissance planes, and helicopters.
Naming this vessel after Foch was either:
- A touching tribute to a war hero who learned from his mistakes
- The most savage institutional trolling in naval history
- Someone in the naming committee had an absolutely wicked sense of humor
The carrier served France admirably for 37 years, proving every single day that airplanes were, in fact, quite useful militarily. She participated in operations from the Mediterranean to the Pacific, conducted nuclear testing support missions, and even test-flew the Dassault Rafale fighter jet before being sold to Brazil in 2000.
A Cautionary Tale
Foch's quote (though difficult to verify from primary sources) has become one of history's most famous examples of technological myopia—when experts completely fail to grasp the potential of emerging innovations. He's in good company with other spectacularly wrong predictions, like the head of IBM supposedly saying there's a world market for "maybe five computers."
The beautiful irony is that Foch's legacy became more memorable because of his mistake. Without that quote, he'd just be another WWI marshal. With it, he's the poster child for why we should be humble about dismissing new technology.
And somewhere in the afterlife, every time that carrier launched another aircraft, you have to imagine Foch either cringing or laughing at himself. Hopefully the latter.

