Lincsong
I'll Lock Up
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Germany, Japan and Italy. All three were aligned politically but which two are more closely aligned ideologically?
geo said:Other European Axis countries were Hungary, Romania, Finland. Not sure if Bulgaria wasn't one too. Spain, although a Fascist country, remained neutral. Any others?
feltfan said:Spain was not neutral. They provided the infamous Condor legion to fight with the Nazis.
feltfan said:Spain was not neutral. They provided the infamous
Condor legion to fight with the Nazis. They also
provided critical supplies to the Nazis, including wool
for uniforms. This was a huge sacrifice for Spain,
which was ruined and experiencing widespread
deprivation after their (German and Italian-suppressed)
failed revolution. The USA conveniently forgot all this in
exchange for military bases in the 1950s. It will always
be a black mark on our history that we did not follow up
in Spain and Portugal after Germany fell.
Vladimir Berkov said:The Condor Legion was a Luftwaffe unit.
Salv said:I'm not sure that I totally agree with your assessment there. In February 1936 the Spanish electorate voted into power the broadly left-wing Popular Front coalition. The Germans and Italians aided the July 1936 right wing rebellion which was made up of the fascist Falange, pro-Monarchists, ultra-Catholic Carlists, much of the military, and landowners and industrialists, all of whom were unhappy that the Spanish working classes were finally having some say in their own future. The Germans and Italians aided a rebellion against a democratically elected government, not against a left-wing revolution.
Salv said:It would have been difficult for the US, or for Britain, to have continued the war against Spain in 1945, as they had, along with France, colluded in depriving the elected Popular Front government of aid during the Spanish Civil War. Those three western democracies all agreed to a policy of non-intervention where Spain was concerned, giving aid to neither side. Germany and Italy had also signed the non-intervention treaty, but completely ignored it, and although there was plenty of proof that Germany and Italy were still sending planes, tanks and manpower to Spain nothing was done to stop them. Meanwhile the US, Britain and France refused to sell arms and food to the government, forcing the government to turn to Soviet Russia for aid. International law allowed an elected government to buy arms from whoever could sell them, but the western democracies refused to abide by this, citing the non-intervention policy and not wanting to show favour to either side. That is the real black mark on our collective histories where Spain is concerned. A democratically elected government attempted to buy arms from other democracies, to defend itself against an armed rebellion, and was refused.
By not selling arms to the government, and turning a blind eye to arms sales to the rebels by the Germans and Italians, not to mention the presence of German and Italian soldiers and airmen, the US, UK and France were to some degree responsible for the success of the rebellion. It has been argued that the democracies felt that a left-wing government in Spain would not have served their purposes. Once the Soviets were allowed to influence the Spanish government part way through the Civil War, thanks to their arms sales, there was no way the US and the UK would allow a Soviet-influenced government to remain in western Europe. Allowing Spain to remain a fascist dictatorship worked in their favour.
feltfan said:True, but you forget the Asturian miner's uprising
and other like events. Groups like the CNT/FAI
were not pro-government, either. And then there
were (are) the regional issues. Both revolution
and left government were brewing. The government
was not effective in producing land reform.
geo said:I wish there were revolutionaries fighting the elected German government during the same period.
geo said:The Spanish civil war is more complex than the working classes taking power and the Fascists chasing them. When the working classes took power, they set up a regime of terror against anybody who wasn't a worker or peasant. People avoided wearing ties, hats, collars, or anything remotely intellectual or upper class, for fear of being shot in the streets. Churchill justified not taking the side of the Spanish Republic against the Fascists by saying that had he lived in Spain, he would have been shot with his entire family.
geo said:It's not inherently wrong to fight against an elected government, depending on what the government is and does. I wish there were revolutionaries fighting the elected German government during the same period.
I didn't mean to hijack the thread away from a discussion of the actual Axis powers, but Franco was - although not himself a fascist - heavily reliant on the Axis to win the Civil War.Lincsong said:This thread has taken a turn I never would have expected. I'm not concerned as I find this course of discussion fascinating.
I agree with most of your points, especially about the US finding it easier to deal with Franco, but it's incorrect to think of the Franco-led rebels as left wing. The Falange were an authoritarian revolutionary fascist party, who believed in a corporate state, were devout Catholics and violently anti-Communist and anti-Anarchist; the Carlists were/are conservative monarchists, also devoutly Catholic; the bulk of the military generals were also devoutly Catholic and conservative, forming the Uni?ɬ?n Militar Espa?ɬ±ola which secretly communicated with Mussolinis regime; and the Catholic church and the landowners were all politically conservative too.Lincsong said:Thanks for all the information regarding the Spanish Civil War. I haven't studied it too much in depth, I should because my ancestral roots are in Andalusia. From what I'm under the impression, the U.S. saw the Spanish Civil War as a fight between two left wing governments and really didn't care who got beat up the most as long as the godless communists (Republic) lost. Franco thought of himself as the last defender of the Roman Catholic Church since France and Austria had become so secularized. He wanted to create a Roman Catholic state in contrast to the Protestant Materialistic U.S. and Britain. After WWII the U.S. figured it would have been easier to deal with Franco, than with someone aligned with the Soviets. The U.S. was worried that if the Soviets overran Western Germany, France would capitulate like a sheet of tin foil and Spain would be needed as a staging ground to launch ground assaults over the Pyrrennes. Keep up the great points so far.