Spain THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR
Figure 4. Territorial Control During the Spanish Civil War, 1936-37
Unavailable
Civilians observing an aerial dogfight during the Civil War
Courtesy Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress
Gil Robles's influence, as a spokesman for the right in
the
new parliament, waned. The National Block, a smaller
coalition of
monarchists and fascists led by Jose Calvo Sotelo, who had
sought
the army's cooperation in restoring Alfonso XIII, assumed
CEDA's
role. Calvo Sotelo was murdered in July 1936, supposedly
in
retaliation for the killing of a police officer by
fascists.
Calvo Sotelo's death was a signal to the army to act on
the
pretext that the civilian government had allowed the
country to
fall into disorder. The army issued a
pronunciamiento. A
coup was expected, however, and the urban police and the
workers'
militia loyal to the government put down revolts by army
garrisons in Madrid and Barcelona. Navy crews
spontaneously
purged their ships of officers. The army and the left
rejected
the eleventh-hour efforts of Indalecio Prieto (who had
succeeded
Azana as prime minister) to arrive at a compromise.
The army was most successful in the north, where
General
Emilio Mola had established his headquarters at Burgos
(see
fig. 4). North-central Spain and the Carlist strongholds in
Navarre
and Aragon rallied to the army. In Morocco, elite units
seized
control under Franco, Spain's youngest general and hero.
Transport supplied by Germany and Italy ferried Franco's
African
army, including Moorish auxiliaries, to Andalusia. Franco
occupied the major cities in the south before turning
toward
Madrid to link up with Mola, who was advancing from
Burgos. The
relief of the army garrison besieged at Toledo, however,
delayed
the attack on Madrid and allowed time for preparation of
the
capital's defense. Army units penetrated the city limits,
but
they were driven back, and the Nationalists were able to
retain
the city.
A junta of generals, including Franco, formed a
government at
Burgos, which Germany and Italy immediately recognized.
Sanjurjo,
who had been expected to lead the army movement, was
killed in a
plane crash during the first days of the uprising. In
October
1936, Franco was named head of state, with the rank of
generalissimo and the title el caudillo (the
leader).
When he assumed leadership of the Nationalist forces,
Franco
had a reputation as a highly professional,
career-oriented,
combat soldier, who had developed into a first-rate
officer.
Commissioned in the army at the age of eighteen, he had
volunteered for service in Morocco, where he had
distinguished
himself as a courageous leader. Serious, studious,
humorless,
withdrawn, and abstemious, he had won the respect and the
confidence of his subordinates more readily than he had
won the
comradeship of his brother officers. At the age of
thirty-three,
he had become the youngest general in Europe since
Napoleon
Bonaparte.
Franco opposed Sanjurjo in 1932; still, Azana
considered
Franco unreliable and made him captain general of the
Canaries, a
virtual exile for an ambitious officer. Though by nature a
conservative, Franco did not wed himself to any particular
political creed. On taking power, he set about to
reconcile all
right-wing, antirepublican groups in one Nationalist
organization. The Falange, a fascist party founded by Jose
Antonio Primo de Rivera (the dictator's son), provided the
catalyst. The Carlists, revived after 1931, merged with
the
Falange in 1937, but the association was never harmonious.
Jose
Antonio's execution by the Republicans provided the
Falange with
a martyr. The more radical of the early Falange programs
were
pushed aside by more moderate elements, and the
Nationalists'
trade unionism was only a shadow of what Jose Antonio had
intended. The Nationalist organization did keep its
fascist
facade, but Franco's strength lay in the army.
Nationalist strategy called for separating Madrid from
Catalonia (which was firmly Republican), Valencia, and
Murcia
(which the republic also controlled). The Republicans
stabilized
the front around Madrid, defending it against the
Nationalists
for three years. Isolated Asturias and Vizcaya, where the
newly
organized Basque Republic fought to defend its autonomy
without
assistance from Madrid, fell to Franco in October 1937.
Otherwise
the battlelines were static until July 1938, when
Nationalist
forces broke through to the Mediterranean Sea south of
Barcelona.
Throughout the Civil War, the industrial areas--except
Asturias
and the Basque provinces--remained in Republican hands,
while the
chief food-producing areas were under Nationalist control.
The republic lacked a regular trained army, though a
number
of armed forces cadres had remained loyal, especially in
the air
force and the navy. Many of the loyal officers were either
purged
or were not trusted to hold command positions. The
workers'
militia and independently organized armed political units
like
those of the Trotskyite Workers' Party of Marxist
Unification
(Partido Obrero de Unificacion Marxista--POUM) bore the
brunt of
the fighting in the early months of the Civil War. For
example,
the anarchist UGT militia and the Assault Guards (the
urban
police corps established by the Republic to counterbalance
the
Civil Guard--Guardia Civil--the paramilitary rural police
who
were generally considered reactionary) crushed the army
garrison
in Barcelona. Moscow provided advisers, logistics experts,
and
some field-grade officers. Foreign volunteers, including
more
than 2,000 from the United States, formed the
International
Brigade. The communists pressed for, and won, approval for
the
creation of a national, conscript Republican army.
The Soviet Union supplied arms and munitions to the
republic
from the opening days of the Civil War. France provided
some
aircraft and artillery. The republic's only other conduit
for
arms supply was through Mexico. The so-called spontaneous
revolutions that plagued the industrial centers hampered
arms
production within Spain.
Nationalist strength was based on the regular army,
which
included large contingents of Moroccan troops and
battalions of
the Foreign Legion, which Franco had commanded in Africa.
The
Carlists, who had always maintained a clandestine militia
(requetes), were among Franco's most effective
troops, and
they were employed, together with the Moroccans, as a
shock
corps. Italian dictator Benito Mussolini (Fascist premier,
1922-
45) dispatched more than 50,000 Italian "volunteers" (most
of
them army conscripts) to Spain, along with air and naval
units.
The German Condor Legion, made infamous by the bombing of
Guernica, provided air support for the Nationalists and
tested
the tactics and the equipment used a few years later by
the
Luftwaffe (German air force). Germany and Italy also
supplied
large quantities of artillery and armor, as well as the
personnel
to use this weaponry.
A nonintervention commission, including representatives
from
France, Britain, Germany, and Italy, was established at
the Lyon
Conference in 1936 to stem the flow of supplies to both
sides.
France and Britain were concerned that escalating foreign
intervention could turn Spain's Civil War into a European
war.
The commission and coastal patrols supplied by the
signatory
powers were to enforce an embargo. The net effect of the
nonintervention agreement was to cut off French and
British aid
to the republic. Germany and Italy did not observe the
agreement.
The Soviet Union was not a signatory. By 1938, however,
Stalin
had lost interest in Spain.
While the Republicans resisted the Nationalists by all
available means, another struggle was going on within
their own
ranks. A majority fought essentially to protect republican
institutions. Others, including the communists, were
committed to
finishing the Civil War before beginning their anticipated
revolution. They were, however, resisted by
comrades-in-arms--the
Trotskyites and anarchists--who were intent on completing
the
social and political revolution while waging war against
the
Nationalists.
Largo Caballero, who became prime minister in September
1936,
had the support of the Socialists and of the communists,
who were
becoming the most important political factor in the
republican
government. The communists, after successfully arguing for
a
national conscript army that could be directed by the
government,
pressed for elimination of the militia units. They also
argued
for postponing the revolution until the fascists had been
defeated and encouraged greater participation by the
bourgeois
parties in the Popular Front. The UGT, increasingly under
communist influence, entered into the government, and the
more
militant elements within it were purged. POUM, which had
resisted
disbanding its independent military units and merging with
the
communist-controlled national army, was ruthlessly
suppressed as
the communists undertook to eliminate competing leftist
organizations. Anarchists were dealt with in similar
fashion, and
in Catalonia a civil war raged within a civil war.
Fearing the growth of Soviet influence in Spain, Largo
Caballero attempted to negotiate a compromise that would
end the
Civil War. He was removed from office and replaced by Juan
Negrin, a procommunist socialist with little previous
political
experience.
The Republican army, its attention diverted by internal
political battles, was never able to mount a sustained
counteroffensive or to exploit a breakthrough such as that
on the
Rio Ebro in 1938. Negrin realized that Spaniards in Spain
could
not win the war, but he hoped to prolong the fighting
until the
outbreak of a European war, which he thought was imminent.
Barcelona fell to the Nationalists in January 1939, and
Valencia, the temporary capital, fell in March. When
factional
fighting broke out in Madrid among the city's defenders,
the
Republican army commander seized control of what remained
of the
government and surrendered to the Nationalists on the last
day of
March, thus ending the Civil War.
There is as much controversy over the number of
casualties of
the Spanish Civil War as there is about the results of the
1936
election, but even conservative estimates are high. The
most
consistent estimate is 600,000 dead from all causes,
including
combat, bombing, and executions. In the Republican sector,
tens
of thousands died of starvation, and several hundred
thousand
more fled from Spain.
Data as of December 1988
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