A History of the World From the 20th to the 21st Century

(Jacob Rumans) #1
tanks saved Madrid in November 1936. Britain
and France, ostensibly with German, Soviet and
Italian agreement, set up a Non-Intervention
Committee whose undertaking not to send
weapons to either side was honoured only by the
two Western democracies. The Germans sent
tanks and experts and the notorious Condor
Legion, which, with a hundred planes, played an
important role and horrified the democracies by
bombing defenceless towns. The wanton destruc-
tion of Guernica (26 April 1937) symbolised the
terror of war on civilians. The lesson was not lost

on the British who week after week saw on their
cinema screens the horrible effects of those air
raids. Not surprisingly it strengthened the desire
of the British people to keep out of war and to
support those politicians who were trying to do
so, though the committed did go to fight in
Spain. Mussolini sent over 70,000 volunteer
troops. The Russians, from headquarters in Paris,
organised the volunteer International Brigades
and sent tanks and planes. All this foreign aid suc-
ceeded in staving off defeat for either side for a
time, but it was not sufficient to ensure a victory.

1

THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR AND EUROPE, 1936–9 219

PORTUGAL

SPAIN

FRANCE

GALICIA

ASTURIAS

LEÓN
OLD CASTILLE

Burgos

Gijón Santander

Bilbao

BASQUE
NAVARRE

Toulouse

Barcelona

Zaragoza CATALONIA

ARAGON
Guadalajara

Valencia

NEW MAJORCA
CASTILE

Madrid

Toledo

Córdoba
Seville
Málaga

Gibraltar (British)
Tangier Ceuta

Controlled by
Nationalists in 1936

Cádiz

Granada

Oran

0
0

200 miles
200 km

Lisbon

Salamanca

R.T
agus

Teruel

Palma

Cartagena

ALERIA
(French)
SPAN
ISHMORO
CCO

Strait of Gibraltar

R. Ebro

The Spanish Civil War,

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