Highlandcharge wrote:Antony Beevors book on the subject
Resume of the book (extracts):
More politically adroit handling or more gradual introduction of the reforms by the government might have softened the harsh reactions. But given the left's intense pressure and extreme and unquenchable demands, and the sclerosis of the vested interests on the right, it's doubtful the government could have forged a compromise among the polarized interests.
The fact that the anarchists were among the best organized of the dozen or so constituent Republican parties indicates the extent to which the Republicans suffered from disarray. (...)
Many of the Republican parties commanded their own militias, further complicating a centralized military command. They were generally poorly trained and many were sent into battle with shotguns and little or no food, bullets, maps or other supplies. The military structure, increasingly communist-controlled, would only supply communist-led battalions.
the anarchists were among the (...) constituent Republican parties
The majority of Spaniards resided in the political centre and supported some or all of the Republic's reforms.
Extract of an other book resume:
The vacuum was filled by local committees, loyal to the parties that had created them rather than to the state. The journalist Franz Borkenau reported, ‘All the villages and towns we passed through, though passionately guarding their own territory, had not sent a single man to the front.’ With no regular army at the disposal of the government, the improvised militia columns were likewise loyal to the parties that had formed them.
Some supporters of the Republic still believe that a victory of the left in Spain would have defeated fascism and saved Europe from the horrors to come.
Nationalists, on the other hand, argue that the civil war, almost a world war by proxy, was in fact the opening round of the Cold War between western civilisation and Soviet dictatorship.
Erik Springelkamp wrote:I just finished Antony Beevor as well. Left a bitter taste in my mouth.
Anyway, I started to play the game with the Northern scenario, and to my surprise, by just assembling the forces and attacking towards Bilbao, I got a sudden death victory in May.
Leibstandarte wrote:Let me check this Erik.
Gen. Monkey-Bear wrote:This war is almost unheard of on this side of the Atlantic except among only the leftists, I wonder if this is the same in Europe?
Erik Springelkamp wrote:In the Netherlands we generally only heard about it being the testing ground for German panzer and the Luftwaffe, and the attact on Guernica, and the fellow travellers, a little bit about the Republican infighting, but the international diplomatic picture was never taught clearly to me at school.
Gen. Monkey-Bear wrote:ERISS, good insight as usual,
I think the Anarchist forces are not given enough credit for saving the Republic in 1936.
Let me ask, does your knowledge on this subject come from personal involvement, interest, or are the schools in Europe really that much better than the United States?
This war is almost unheard of on this side of the Atlantic except among only the leftists, I wonder if this is the same in Europe?
TheDoctorKing wrote:Anti-communist leftists like my dad saw the Republic as a glorious cause that was betrayed by Stalin (and by the French Socialists) but could still serve as a possible model for future evolution of a democratic left. When I was a little kid, I remember my father telling me that July 18th was the "day God died in Spain".
I was certainly aware of the Republic growing up in America, of course my father knew all those people and was active in the American government's relationship with Franco and with Spanish leftists in the 1960s. But I think that other American leftists know about the Republic. Anti-communist leftists like my dad saw the Republic as a glorious cause that was betrayed by Stalin (and by the French Socialists) but could still serve as a possible model for future evolution of a democratic left. When I was a little kid, I remember my father telling me that July 18th was the "day God died in Spain".
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