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== Infobox ''commanders and leaders'' again ==
== The war's start date ==


Hi there. I've been trying to educate myself on this war's history but I have a problem. The dates of the war do not match between articles. Here are a few examples:
Having read the discussion above I wonder whether there is any official WP “policy” or whatever (“guidelines”, “recommendations” etc) as to who should be listed among “leaders and commanders” in infoboxes of articles on wars and battles. Currently the assortment of people listed appears to be a fairly disputable selection to me (as to the point above, I believe Lister should be out). Please let me share my thoughts.


* The article here states it began July 18, 1936.
'''Republicans''':
* The [[Battle of Badajoz (1936)|Battle of Badajoz]], says it began on July 19, 1936.
* The [[Badajoz massacre]] says it began on July 17, 1936.


So which article has the right one and what are the rules for dates? That is to say, which article should be the authority of these dates? The Badajoz articles should fall under the article here, right?
There are obvious must-be people:
* Azaña (president of the Republic)
* Largo Caballero (prime minister)
* Negrin (prime minister)
* Rojo (central military commander)
* Miaja (central military commander)


I'm so confused! How do we check all articles related to this war for accuracy?
However, among the rest none appears a must-be:
[[User:Magnoliasouth|MagnoliaSouth]] [[User_talk:Magnoliasouth|talk]]) 09:26, 14 May 2024 (UTC)


:@[[User:Magnoliasouth|Magnoliasouth]] Maybe refering to an encyclopedia could help. I'm also at a loss ^^; [[Special:Contributions/112.206.240.221|112.206.240.221]] ([[User talk:112.206.240.221|talk]]) 11:51, 10 October 2024 (UTC)
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! scope="col" style="width: 100px;" | name
! scope="col" style="width: 850px;" | role
! scope="col" style="width: 100px;" | my suggestion
|----
| Prieto || minister of war from May 1937 till Apr 1938, also minister of air & navy from Sep 1936 till May 1937. Besides, one of PSOE leaders with major impact on party policy and policy-making in the Republican zone. After spring of 1938 barely relevant || in
|-
| Casado || key protagonist behind the March 1939 coup, which had enormous impact on war developments. Besides this, he was commanding at the army level (March 1938 - March 1939), but there are many who also were and are missing in the infobox (Army of Extremadura: Joaquín Pérez Salas, Ricardo Burillo, Adolfo Prada Vaquero, Antonio Escobar Huerta, Army of Andalusia: Adolfo Prada Vaquero, Domingo Moriones Larraga, Francisco Menoyo Baños, Army of Levante: Juan Hernández Saravia, Leopoldo Menéndez López) || in
|-
| Companys || President of Catalan autonomous government throughout the entire war, though with decreasing decision-making capacity. However, he was an important player within the Republican coalition almost until the end (except 2 final months)|| in
|-
| Aguirre|| President of Basque autonomous government, effectively in power in only 1 out of 3 Basque provinces and only between Oct 1936 and June 1937. Later, because he commanded no resources, his political role was negligible || out
|-
| Martínez Cabrera || Yes, he was the chief of staff, but effectively merely for 3 months (mid-November 1936 till mid-Feb 1937) and is not known for having any impact on war developments. Manuel Matallana, who was also chief of general staff since late 1938, is not listed in the infobox || out
|-
| Modesto|| Commanding at the army level from August 1938 till March 1939, but there are many who also were and are missing in the infobox || out
|-
| Hernández Saravia|| He was the minister of war during one month, between Aug and Sep 1936, and his impact on war developments was close to naught (also Luis Castelló Pantoja was briefly minister of war, but is not in the infobox). Later he briefly commanded Army of the South, again with little impact and again, there are many who also were and are missing in the infobox || out
|-
| Durruti|| Though an iconic person among the Anarchists of then and today, he barely classifies among “commanders and leaders”. In terms of command, he briefly (July – Nov 1936) led loose troops of few thousand people, comparable perhaps to a regiment. In terms of political leadership, the Anarchists were led by García Oliver, who is missing in the infobox || out
|-
| Ascaso|| Barely known for any military role, politically in Aug 1936 – Aug 1937 he led Regional Defense Council of Aragon, a local governing body, and then became a non-person. Between August 1936 and October 1937 a certain Belarmino Tomas was president of the local Asturias Council/Committee, a semi-sovereign body which certainly governed more people than the Aragon Council, but Tomas is out from the infobox|| out
|}


--
Also, there are some individuals which might merit consideration as to their place in the infobox, though I would leave them out:


[[User:Magnoliasouth|MagnoliaSouth]], thanks for flagging this, inconsistencies across the articles are unfortunately sort of Wikipedia’s trademark.
* Giral (prime minister July to Sep 1936)
* Garcia Oliver (Anarchist leader, with major impact, CNT-FAI is listed among "Belligerents")
* Diaz (Communist leader, with major impact)
* Matallana (chief of staff; if Martínez Cabrera is in, Matallano also should be)
* Buiza (commander of Republican navy)
* Hidalgo de Cisneros (commander of Republican air force)
* Castelló Pantoja (minister of war in Giral government)


If you go to GoogleBooks and type “the Spanish Civil War began on July 18, 1936” you will get a number of works. If you type “the Spanish Civil War began on July 17, 1936” you will get lots of books as well. You might get also a number of other versions, like “on July 17-18”. However, I have not found any claim as to “July 19, 1936”. Most of these books would not be about the war itself but rather would be somehow related to the war and only some would be written by professional historians.
'''Nationalists''':


Encyclopedias are of little help, as they usually (or at least these which I have checked, Britannica and Larousse) point to years only. Well, I found one “Encyclopedia Iberoamericana” online, which claims that the war was fought “entre el 17 de julio de 1936 y el 1 abril de 1939”, but I have no idea what the credibility of this thing is, guess rather not comparable to this of Britannica or Larousse.
Undisputable candidates are few:
[[File:Books on Spanish Civil War.jpg|thumb]]
* Franco (since Oct 1936 supreme military commander and head of state, de facto leader)
I have just checked the monographs on the war which I have on my shelf (pictured), all written by professional Hispanists (well, except Beevor) specializing in recent history (Payne, Casanova, Thomas, Esdaile, Beevor, Preston and Graham).
* Queipo (leading southern troops throughout the entire war)
* Mola (leading northern troops from July 1936 till June 1937)
* Davila (leading northern troops from June 1937 till March 1939, minister of war from Jan 1938 onwards)


* In none of them I found a clear and explicit statement as to on which day exactly the war did begin. The narrative they offer might start at various points, e.g. in 1931 (when the Second Republic was established) or even in the 19th century. When already done with background, run-up, conspiracy etc and when they arrive in mid-July 1936, they write about “the coup” which began on July 17 (also “rebellion”, “insurgency”, and similar). Whether these scholars consider July 17 the beginning of the war is anybody’s guess.
and now the doubtful ones:
* Graham in her “Chronology” section as the very first entry placed “July 17-18: Military rebellion begins in Spanish North Africa and spreads to garrisons in mainland Spain”
* [[Julián Casanova|Casanova]] begins his "Timeline" section with sub-heading "1931", where the first entry is April 12, 1931, then under sub-heading "1936" there are few dates, with the last one "17-20: Military rising in Morocco and the Peninsula", and then.... there is sub-heading "Civil War", with the first entry "20 July: The republican Jose Giral forms a government; the government appeals to France; Franco sends emissaries to Italy and Germany"
* Information on the cover of an older monograph by Gabriel Jackson claims that “The Spanish Civil War was fought from 17 July 1936 to 1 April 1939”, but as I do not have this book on my shelf I can not tell you whether this is a marketing bla-bla-bla or indeed whether Jackson wrote something in the like.


Moreover, while some scholars claim that “the coup” was part of “the civil war”, there are some who sort of suggest that the two are separate things, and that it was only at one point in time when “the coup” got transformed into “the civil war”. When was this point? I do not remember any explicit statement, but segmentation of some works might suggest a range from late July (when supposedly it was clear that the coup failed, see Casanova) to November 1936 (when the rebel attempt to seize Madrid failed). And apart from this, it is also possible to find statments – perhaps intended metaphorically, but I am not sure – that the war began in October 1934 (the Asturias revolution) or at any other earlier date (e.g. in May 1936, as the [[Events of Yeste|Yeste incident]]).
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! scope="col" style="width: 100px;" | name
! scope="col" style="width: 850px;" | role
! scope="col" style="width: 100px;" | my suggestion
|----
| Sanjurjo || pre-agreed leader of the coup, but died in aviation accident before the coup well unfolded. A must-be in an article on conspiracy, and perhaps in an article on a coup, but not on the war || out
|-
| Yague || commander of various military formations, from a "column" to a corps, but never above this level (never commanded an army), even though in the summer of 1936 his military role was vital. However, even commanders at the army level among Nationalist are out (Centre: Saliquet, Levante: Orgaz)|| out
|-
| Cabanellas || president of makeshift rebel executive between July and September 1936. Leader of the coup in Aragon, apart from this no major military role. Anyway since mid-1937 seriously ill, died 1938 || out
|-
| Varela || since mid-war commanded formations comparable to a corps, but never above this level. Rather minor political role due to his monarchist leaning and loose links to Carlism || out
|-
| Goded || led the coup in Barcelona, captured in July 1936 and executed. An imporant person in an article on the coup, but totally out of place among war leaders and commanders|| out
|-
| Hedilla || following imprisonment of Jose Antonio provisional leader of Falange, one of 2 most important political groupings supporting the rebels. However, with negligible impact on war developments or politics in the Nationalist zone. Anyway, even this minor role was over in April 1937, when arrested, tried and totally marginalised || out
|-
| Fal || political leader of the Carlists, one of 2 most important political groupings in the rebel zone. However, with negligible impact on war developments or politics in the Nationalist zone. In December 1936 arrested and exiled, later merely on sidelines of wartime politics, with no impact and decision-making capacity whatsoever || out
|-
| Roatta || commander of CTV between Sep 1936 and Aug 1937. CTV was 35-50,000 people, so comparable to a strong corps or a weak army, but other army commanders are generally not listed, either in the Republican or the Nationalist rubric || out
|-
|Bastico|| commander of CTV between Aug and Oct 1937. 3 months of command seems a bit short to merit a place in the infobox, especially that CTV was a merely one of many corps || out
|-
| Sperle || commander of Legion Condor, Nazi airforce group which formed perhaps the most important component of the Nationalist aviation. However, it was just one of many components, and Sperle commanded it merely from Sep 1936 till Oct 1937. If he is in, why the following Condor commanders, Volkmann (Nov 1937 - Oct 1938) and Richthoffen (Oct 1938 - March 1939) are out? || out
|}


'''So, where do we go from here?'''
As to individuals who might merit consideration as to their place in the infobox (again, I would leave all of them out):


Splitting hair aside (when the coup turned into war?), logically it would make sense to opt for July 17, the day when first shots of the conflict were fired. However, my humble suggestion would be '''to opt for July 18'''. The reason is that for decades, among the Spaniards of both sides it has been July 18 remembered as the breaking point, and its anniversaries were the days to celebrate or to mourn. “18 de julio” functioned as sort of a symbol. As far as I can tell not being a Spaniard and not living in Spain, also now it is July 18, not July 17, when national newspapers (local ones might opt for day when the coup occurred locally, so also the 19.) or TV stations publish anniversary materials.
* NN - chief of General Staff (Jefe de Estado Mayor del Cuartel General - but who was he? have never found out)
* Berti (CTV commander from late 1937 till end of the war, if Roatta and Bastico are in he should be in as well)
* Kindelan (head of Nationalist aviation)
* Moreno Fernandez (head of Nationalist navy)
* Serrano Súñer (key Franco political adviser and to some extent decision-maker, minister of interior Jan 1938 till the end)
* Volkmann (Condor commander, if Sperle is in he should be as well)
* Richthoffen (Condor commander, if Sperle is in he should be as well)
* Orgaz (head of Army of Levant)
* Saliquet (head of Army of Centre, member of Junta de Defensa)
* Ponte (member of Junta de Defensa)
* Gil (member of Junta de Defensa)


As per your initial comment, I took the liberty of changing both Badajoz entries to July 18.
In case of both Republicans and Nationalists some names seem derived from "Belligerents" section of the infobox, i.e. the logic being that each "belligerent party" deserves its leader to be listed. First, I do not think so. Then, "belligerents" also contains a fairly nonsensical selection, e.g. there is "Army of Africa" among the Nationalists (what about all other armies, and navy, and airforce) and there is POUM among the Republicans (and PCE, far more important, is missing), let alone that "Germany" and "Italy" are listed among Nationalist belligerents, while the USSR is not listed among the Republican ones. But perhaps targeting the "Belligerents" section is the task to do once we are done with this.


And BTW, there is also sort of controversy when the war ended. I have once read an article by Spanish historian, published in scientific review, with the claim that the war ended in 1944, as in 1939 it was merely transformed from a war fought by 2 regular armies into a war between regular troops and guerilla units.
Final general comment: I believe stuffing the infobox with 15 "commanders and leaders" on each side is an overkill. To my taste, 5-6 would be perfectly OK. rgds, --[[User:Hh1718|Hh1718]] ([[User talk:Hh1718|talk]]) 13:32, 4 December 2023 (UTC)


regards, --[[User:Hh1718|Hh1718]] ([[User talk:Hh1718|talk]]) 08:30, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
:@[[User:Hh1718|Hh1718]]: Figured this deserved a response, as you've clearly put a lot of thought and effort into it. I don't think having a lot of commanders in the infobox is overkill, as this war is incredibly multi-faceted; neither the Republicans nor the Nationalists were easily reduced to a few commanders, locales or factions. But I do agree that it should probably be trimmed back a bit and I broadly agree with most of the points made here. The only two removals I would disagree with are:
:*Agirre: He was a pretty big figure in the Basque country's efforts and the northern front in the war. I think you need some representation of that effort in there, even if not necessarily Agirre himself.
:*Durruti: While his scope of action was obviously limited to the beginning of the war, I'd argue his role was an absolutely vital commander in that phase of the war. This was during a period where the Republican state functionally didn't exist and Durruti was one who led the militia system during this time, not to mention his leading role in defeating the coup in Barcelona.
:--[[User:Grnrchst|Grnrchst]] ([[User talk:Grnrchst|talk]]) 11:38, 21 January 2024 (UTC)


== Inappropriate to represent the Viriatos with the Portuguese flag next to the Condor Legion ==
==Greece==


{{u|FarSouthNavy}} While Portugal was openly and officially pro-Franco during the Spanish Civil War, it should not be classified as a belligerent country alongside Germany and Italy. Unlike the Condor Legion and the Italian Corpo Truppe Volontarie, which were official military units sent by their respective governments with full state support, the Portuguese involvement was more indirect. The Viriatos, a group of Portuguese volunteers who fought for Franco, were not officially sanctioned or equipped by the Portuguese government. They were motivated by personal and ideological commitments rather than state directives.
On November 17, 2023, an anonymous user with IP (109.242.250.254) pointing to Greece edited the “Foreign Involvement” section. The edit consisted of moving the “Greece” sub-sub-section from the sub-section “Support for the Republicans” to the newly-created sub-section “Neutrality”. No rationale has been provided either in Comments or in talk page and not a single word has been added to the text.
It is also inappropriate to represent the Viriatos with the Portuguese flag next to the Condor Legion, as the latter was a formal and state-supported military intervention. If we were to include the Portuguese flag for the Nationalists due to the Viriatos, consistency would require the inclusion of flags for various other international volunteer groups on both sides. This would include the German flag for the Republicans because of the Thaelmann Battalion, the American flag for the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, the Italian flag for the Garibaldi Brigade, and the French flag for the Commune de Paris Battalion, etc. Additionally, there were Irish volunteers (the Irish Brigade led by Eoin O'Duffy) and Russian volunteers on Franco's side. These battalions, driven by individual ideological motivations without state sponsorship, fundamentally differ from officially supported military units, and this distinction should be clearly maintained in historical representations. [[User:JPratas|J Pratas]] ([[User talk:JPratas|talk]]) 06:45, 28 June 2024 (UTC)


:Hi {{u|JPratas}}. While you can discuss about the "official" status of the Portuguese volunteers (Viriatos was a generic name indeed), Salazar support to Franco is undeniable as a well-established fact, so the flag of Portugal should remain in the infobox as a key contributor to Nationalist victory, as per sources.
* First, creating a sub-section “Neutrality” within a section “Foreign Involvement” seems rather dubious to me. If so, I would expect to find chapters about Britain and France, who actively pursued a neutralist policy, though I am still not sure this classifies as “involvement”; to me, it rather seems to be an effort not to get involved and prevent the others from getting involved. Finding just a section on Greece seems totally odd, as among other countries Greece seemed hardly active when pursuing the non-intervention policy.
:Regarding the volunteers, there is no Portuguese flag representing them in the current version of the article, just like there are neither Italian nor German flags for the CTV or the Condor Legion.
:I want to make clear that all the foreing combatants in the Spanish war were volunteers; it's basically true that the so called Viriatos were not Portuguese regular forces, but you can say the same of the Germans and the Italians, since both the CTV and the Condor Legion were ad hoc military groups with no direct involvement of the Wermacht or the Regio Esercito.
:On the other hand, sources report that "A Portuguese Military Observation Mission with members drawn from all three branches of the Portuguese military was present in Spain from 1937 onwards, with the dual objectives of protecting the interests of Portuguese foreign volunteers and collating information on the lessons learned during the civil war (...) its air force contingent took part in combat missions.[https://www.google.com.ar/books/edition/The_Spanish_Civil_War_1936_39_1/8ManCwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Portuguese+Military+Observation+Mission+%22Spanish+Civil+War%22&pg=PA22&printsec=frontcover]. Therefore, it's pretty valid to claim an official Portuguese intervention on the battlefield, even if minimal. [[User:FarSouthNavy|Darius]] ([[User talk:FarSouthNavy|talk]]) 12:19, 28 June 2024 (UTC)


:::{{u|FarSouthNavy}} Portugal's support for Franco is well-documented and indeed undeniable. However, Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy are widely considered belligerents due to their direct and significant military interventions. The Condor Legion, a unit of the German air force (Luftwaffe) detailed by Hermann Göring, was sent to Franco’s Nationalist forces with the stipulation that it remain under German command. Similarly, the Corpo Truppe Volontarie (CTV) was an official military unit from Italy. These forces, equipped and coordinated by their respective governments, involved significant numbers of personnel and extensive military resources, and were integrated into the Nationalist military operations in a way that the Viriatos, Portuguese volunteers, were not. Placing the Portuguese flag alongside Germany and Italy as a belligerent nation is misleading, as there are no reputable sources classifying Portugal as a belligerent. The claims made by Alejandro Quesada are fringe and unsourced. Esteemed works by historians such as Hugh Thomas, Stanley G. Payne, Paul Preston, Antony Beevor, and Burnett Bolloten do not classify Portugal as a belligerent, underscoring the distinction between indirect support and active military intervention.For the integrity of Wikipedia, it is crucial to rely on reputed academic sources and avoid forcing fringe points of view by quoting minor works. Let's ensure our content is based on well-supported, scholarly research to maintain the highest standards of accuracy and reliability.[[User:JPratas|J Pratas]] ([[User talk:JPratas|talk]]) 20:21, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
* Second, the chapter on Greece – which I have written myself down to a single dot, and have placed in the “Support for the Republicans” sub-section – rather clearly demonstrates that in practical terms, the Greek support for the Republicans was far greater than assistance provided to the Nationalists. The data available is for 1937 only, and it is $10.9m worth of supplies to the Republicans and $2.7m to the Nationalists. Moreover, we know about other contracts, signed in 1938, which featured expected deliveries to the Republicans of some $10m (not sure what was actually delivered) and none such info for supplies to the Nationalists. To my reasoning, all this supports the opinion of Greece having been de facto the Republican supporter, even though formally the Athens government declared non-involvement. And if you prefer to take governmental declarations as the key criterion, probably we would have to classify also Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia as “neutrals”.
::::{{u|JPratas}} Since Portuguese support to the Nationalist is, as you said, undisputable as per reliable sources, then further discussion about the flag issue is irrelevant, at least if you want to also take out France and Mexico flags from the infobox for the sake of consistency (both countries supported the Republic and volunteers from both countries fought for the Frente Popular). The infobox in its current status also makes clear the the Portuguese volunteers fought on their own.
::::The Portuguese Military Observation or ''Mission or Missão Militar Portuguesa de Observação em Espanha'' (M.M.P.O.E.E.), composed of regular soldiers and on the ground since March 1937, is mentioned in English primarly by historian [https://www.planetadelibros.com/libro-las-brigadas-internacionales-de-franco/1644 Christopher Othen] and also by Portuguese and Spanish authors like [https://www.google.com.ar/books/edition/A_Guerra_civil_Espanhola/48VnAwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=missao+militar+espanha&pg=PT129&printsec=frontcover Buades] and [http://hispanismo.org/portugal/4307-ou-viriatos.html Ëmilio Herrera Alonso]. Alonso details some combat missions flown by Portuguese pilots. It´s also worth to mention that most of the ''Viriatos'' were members of the state-sponsored Legiao Portuguesa (see [https://oliveirasalazar.org/download/documentos/Hist%C3%B3ria%20da%20LP___C2CD8D24-96F5-46C6-BFC9-C519D8427237.pdf Luis Nuno Rodrigues] and [https://journals.openedition.org/lerhistoria/2593?lang=en Manuel Loff]). [[User:FarSouthNavy|Darius]] ([[User talk:FarSouthNavy|talk]]) 19:54, 29 June 2024 (UTC)


{{od}} {{u|FarSouthNavy}}Thank you for your response, Darius. I appreciate the sources you have added to this discussion. However, after carefully reviewing these sources, I believe they do not support the claim that the Portuguese flag should be placed as a belligerent in the same way as Germany's and Italy's flag.
Placing Greece back in the “Support for the Republicans” sub-section.


Portuguese Support and the Viriatos:
rgds, --[[User:Hh1718|Hh1718]] ([[User talk:Hh1718|talk]]) 09:28, 4 December 2023 (UTC)


It is undisputed that Salazar supported Franco, but it is important to clarify that the "Viriatos" were not an official military unit. According to Rui Aballe Vieira in "Tomar o Pulso ao Tigre: Missões Militares Portuguesas em Espanha, entre a vigilância e a cooperação (1934 – 1939)," the Viriatos were Portuguese volunteers integrated into various Nationalist units (such as the Spanish Legion, Falange militias, requetés, rebel aviation, or regular army brigades), without forming a specific Portuguese unit. Vieira emphasizes that Salazar and the military leadership did not look favorably upon any direct intervention that would be difficult to distance from in front of the International Non-Intervention Committee. This is fundamentally different from the Condor Legion, which was a formal, state-supported military intervention by Germany.
== Concern re: use of Payne & Palacios ==


Portuguese Military Observation Mission (MMPOE):
I just went through the article and found that we have a fair amount of information cited to ''Franco: A Personal and Political Biography'', a [[hagiography]] written by the American historian [[Stanley G. Payne]] and Spanish neo-Nazi [[Jesús Palacios Tapias]]. While I am not the biggest fan of Payne, I don't doubt the scholarly integrity of his earlier work and think it could contribute to a well-balanced article that gives due weight to different perspectives. But I don't extend the same assumption of good faith to his work with Palacios, which I think is a rather [[WP:QUESTIONABLE|questionable source]], to say the least.


The MMPOE, created in March 1937, primarily served an observational role rather than engaging in combat. The mission's objectives were to gain knowledge of new weapons and military techniques, ensure a privileged position for Portugal in the new European scenario, and provide assistance to Portuguese combatants.The support provided by the MMPOE was more humanitarian, akin to what an embassy would offer, rather than direct military engagement.
The introduction of information from this source has brought in some very [[WP:DUBIOUS|dubious claims]]: i.e. that the Republican Left tried to annul the 1933 election; that Mola had no role in the White Terror; and that Republicans "conducted more indiscriminate air raids on cities and civilian targets than the Nationalists". I have not seen such claims supported in any other source I have available to me, so I worry this amounts to flat-out [[Revisionism (Spain)|historical revisionism]]. I can say for certain that Mola was a chief proponent of the White Terror (see Preston 2006); and I find the suggestion that the Republicans had the capacity to out-do the nationalists on air raids laughable, given the infamously terrible capabilities of the [[Spanish Republican Air Force]] (see Beevor 1982).


Decree Prohibiting Volunteer Enlistment:
I have already provided in-text attribution to these claims, but I don't think this goes far enough. Given this would be a bold move, I wanted to bring it up in the talk page to seek [[WP:CONSENSUS|consensus]] first: I think we should remove this source from the article altogether. I don't think it's a remotely [[WP:RS|reliable source]] and think this article actively suffers from its inclusion. --[[User:Grnrchst|Grnrchst]] ([[User talk:Grnrchst|talk]]) 12:39, 27 December 2023 (UTC)


In February 1937, under pressure from the London Committee, the Salazar government published a decree prohibiting the enlistment of volunteers on either side of the conflict. This further reinforces Portugal's official stance of non-intervention.
:The claim that the Republican Left tried to annul the 1933 election is from Payne, not from Palacios, Payne has made this claim in several of his books. See for example "Alcala Zamora and the failure of the Spanish Republic, 1931-1936" [https://flinders.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay/alma997173006701771/61FUL_INST:FUL]. There are other historians making the same claim. Example: Enrique Aguilar Gavilán says that the socialists went even further in their desire to change the election results. Juan Negrín, on behalf of his parliamentary group, urged Mr. Niceto Alcala Zamora, the President, to immediately cancel the election results and form a new government led by left-wing republicans, which would prepare a new electoral law. [https://helvia.uco.es/bitstream/handle/10396/17778/P%C3%A1ginas%20desdeBRAC-3.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y]. Aguilar Gavilan uses the book "Alcalá Zamora, Niceto: Memorias, Barcelona 1977, pp. 258-259" as the primary source. [[User:JPratas|J Pratas]] ([[User talk:JPratas|talk]]) 21:25, 12 January 2024 (UTC)

::Thanks for looking into that! I have now removed the dubious tag on that claim, but dubious tags are still in place for the other two claims I mentioned. I'm still inclined towards removing the Payne & Palacios source from the article. --[[User:Grnrchst|Grnrchst]] ([[User talk:Grnrchst|talk]]) 16:48, 20 January 2024 (UTC)
Comparative Representation in the Infobox:
::::Payne's books are major scholarly studies. You can disagree with his often-favorable views of Franco--but that comes from the political viewpoint of bias of the observer. SO let's not call a major book "questionable" because it takes sides in scholarly arguments. [[User:Rjensen|Rjensen]] ([[User talk:Rjensen|talk]]) 03:29, 22 January 2024 (UTC)

:::::I'm only questioning the reliability of one specific book, not his entire oeuvre (as I said in my original comment, I think most of his works are valuable). And I'm calling this book questionable because it has introduced some claims I think are dubious into the article. If someone can address these remaining claims, my mind may change. --[[User:Grnrchst|Grnrchst]] ([[User talk:Grnrchst|talk]]) 09:02, 22 January 2024 (UTC)
Placing the Portuguese flag alongside those of Germany and Italy as belligerents is misleading. The Condor Legion and the Italian Corpo Truppe Volontarie (CTV) were official military units sent with full state support, involving significant personnel, resources and military equipment, under the command of German and Italian high rank officials. In contrast, the Portuguese involvement was indirect and did not constitute an official military intervention. If we include the Portuguese flag due to the Viriatos, consistency would require including the flags of other countries with volunteer groups, such as the German flag for the Thaelmann Battalion, the American flag for the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, and the French flag for the Commune de Paris Battalion. Additionally, there were Portuguese militiamen fighting for the Republic, which are not represented with a flag in the infobox.
In summary, while Salazar’s support for Franco is undeniable, the nature of Portuguese involvement through the Viriatos and the MMPOE does not equate to the direct military interventions by Germany and Italy. It is important to rely on reputable academic sources and avoid misrepresenting the historical context. Thank you for considering these points.[[User:JPratas|J Pratas]] ([[User talk:JPratas|talk]]) 15:28, 14 July 2024 (UTC)

== Ideology of the initial Nationalist uprising ==

In [[Spanish Civil War#Background 2|the background section about the military coup]], the revolt was said to have been {{tq|devoid of ideology, the goal was to put an end to anarchical disorder}}{{Sic}}. Other than the potential grammatical error there, this claim is immediately contradicted with plans about the politics of a new Spanish government.

If I remember correctly, a {{tq|semi-pluralist authoritarian}} government has an ideology. As [[Emilio Mola|Mola]] planned for such a government, and had emerged as the leader of the resistance, it is obvious that the revolt was not devoid of ideology.

I do not intend to say that having an ideology is wrong; what I intend to say is that these two pieces of information conflict. Thus, the revolt should not be said to have had no ideology.

[[User:AEagleLionThing|AEagleLionThing]] ([[User talk:AEagleLionThing|talk]]) 04:05, 29 June 2024 (UTC)

::{{u|AEagleLionThing}} The statement "the revolt was said to have been devoid of ideology, the goal was to put an end to anarchical disorder" originates from Carlton Hayes, p103. Hayes aimed to convey that the initial motivation of the military coup was to restore order rather than to implement a specific ideological agenda. This perspective explains why various individuals, including intellectuals like Miguel de Unamuno, initially supported the coup, hoping it would end the prevailing anarchy. Even Franco, in his initial manifesto, emphasized the restoration of peace, fraternity, and justice, rather than outlining a specific ideological framework. Franco's manifesto does not present a clear ideology, supporting the view that the initial revolt was not ideologically driven. Although Emilio Mola had plans for a semi-pluralist authoritarian government, according to Stanley Payne, Mola's program was vague and only a rough sketch, and there were disagreements among coupists and his ideological vision was not universally shared among the rebels. Therefore, the statement from Hayes accurately reflects the initial stage of the revolt, where the focus was on restoring order rather than pursuing a specific ideological agenda. Franco himself is often regarded as a military leader without a clear ideological orientation at the outset and whose ideology was always flexible in order to keep himself in power. But I agree that the paragraph needs to be reworded. The sequence is not coherent. [[User:JPratas|J Pratas]] ([[User talk:JPratas|talk]]) 05:25, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
:::If it were intended to highlight the main focus of the revolt, then there ''might'' be no point in putting such a statement that is contradicted by the surrounding text; the following statement makes that perfectly clear.
:::One could maybe associate that statement with Hayes, which might allow for it to stay. And if he made it clear that it was to make a point, maybe one could add that? These are just suggestions; I don't have access to the source.
:::[[User:AEagleLionThing|AEagleLionThing]] ([[User talk:AEagleLionThing|talk]]) 08:03, 29 June 2024 (UTC)

:[[User:AEagleLionThing|AEagleLionThing]]: to my taste, there is no contradicion between being “devoid of ideology” and being “political”. In various countries from time to time there are governments which pose as “technical”. I think the world record belongs to Belgium, where a caretaker prime minister was running the country for more than a year. In my country there was once a prime minister (leader of a large party) who upon taking office declared that his prority would be to ensure “there is hot water in the tap”.

:As to this article, I would leave the pieces in question as they are. Yes, there are serious scholars who claim that the coup was “Fascist”, which perhaps merits some acknowledgement in a footnote. However, the opinion which – at least as I see it – prevails is that there was no “ideology” behind the coup. Yes, it was clearly intended against the radical Left (Anarchists, Communists, Socialists), thought to have been mounting a revolution, but I believe for most scholars this counter-revolutionary profile falls rather short of an “ideology”. Regards, --[[User:Hh1718|Hh1718]] ([[User talk:Hh1718|talk]]) 09:46, 11 October 2024 (UTC)

== Length ==

The article is tagged as being {{tlx|too long}}, at 116 kB (18337 words) of readable prose. Further summarizing {{slink|Spanish Civil War#Foreign involvement}} looks like the biggest opportunity to save on length. We already have a dedicated summary style split out on the topic ([[International response to the Spanish Civil War]]) but that split has some shorter country sections than the main article. A high-level overview here with specifics in the subarticle should suffice. <span style="background:#F3F3F3; color:inherit; padding:3px 9px 4px">[[User talk:Czar|<span style='font:bold small-caps 1.2em sans-serif;color:#871E8D'>czar</span>]]</span> 13:51, 11 November 2024 (UTC)

== British Intelligence role in moving Franco from Canary Islands ==

Is the claim "With the help of the British intelligence agents" really substantiated? I've heard this referred to as a conspiracy theory, can't seem to find anything else about this. [[Special:Contributions/24.6.106.163|24.6.106.163]] ([[User talk:24.6.106.163|talk]]) 21:06, 11 November 2024 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 21:06, 11 November 2024

Former good articleSpanish Civil War was one of the Warfare good articles, but it has been removed from the list. There are suggestions below for improving the article to meet the good article criteria. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
On this day... Article milestones
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November 1, 2004Peer reviewReviewed
March 4, 2006Good article nomineeListed
June 30, 2006Good article reassessmentDelisted
September 10, 2011Good article nomineeListed
May 9, 2013Good article reassessmentKept
August 9, 2013Good article reassessmentKept
January 29, 2015Good article reassessmentKept
April 29, 2015Good article reassessmentDelisted
May 26, 2020Good article nomineeNot listed
On this day... Facts from this article were featured on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "On this day..." column on March 28, 2004, March 28, 2005, April 1, 2006, July 17, 2006, July 17, 2007, July 17, 2008, July 17, 2009, July 17, 2010, July 17, 2011, July 17, 2013, and July 18, 2020.
Current status: Delisted good article

The war's start date

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Hi there. I've been trying to educate myself on this war's history but I have a problem. The dates of the war do not match between articles. Here are a few examples:

So which article has the right one and what are the rules for dates? That is to say, which article should be the authority of these dates? The Badajoz articles should fall under the article here, right?

I'm so confused! How do we check all articles related to this war for accuracy? MagnoliaSouth talk) 09:26, 14 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

@Magnoliasouth Maybe refering to an encyclopedia could help. I'm also at a loss ^^; 112.206.240.221 (talk) 11:51, 10 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

--

MagnoliaSouth, thanks for flagging this, inconsistencies across the articles are unfortunately sort of Wikipedia’s trademark.

If you go to GoogleBooks and type “the Spanish Civil War began on July 18, 1936” you will get a number of works. If you type “the Spanish Civil War began on July 17, 1936” you will get lots of books as well. You might get also a number of other versions, like “on July 17-18”. However, I have not found any claim as to “July 19, 1936”. Most of these books would not be about the war itself but rather would be somehow related to the war and only some would be written by professional historians.

Encyclopedias are of little help, as they usually (or at least these which I have checked, Britannica and Larousse) point to years only. Well, I found one “Encyclopedia Iberoamericana” online, which claims that the war was fought “entre el 17 de julio de 1936 y el 1 abril de 1939”, but I have no idea what the credibility of this thing is, guess rather not comparable to this of Britannica or Larousse.

I have just checked the monographs on the war which I have on my shelf (pictured), all written by professional Hispanists (well, except Beevor) specializing in recent history (Payne, Casanova, Thomas, Esdaile, Beevor, Preston and Graham).

  • In none of them I found a clear and explicit statement as to on which day exactly the war did begin. The narrative they offer might start at various points, e.g. in 1931 (when the Second Republic was established) or even in the 19th century. When already done with background, run-up, conspiracy etc and when they arrive in mid-July 1936, they write about “the coup” which began on July 17 (also “rebellion”, “insurgency”, and similar). Whether these scholars consider July 17 the beginning of the war is anybody’s guess.
  • Graham in her “Chronology” section as the very first entry placed “July 17-18: Military rebellion begins in Spanish North Africa and spreads to garrisons in mainland Spain”
  • Casanova begins his "Timeline" section with sub-heading "1931", where the first entry is April 12, 1931, then under sub-heading "1936" there are few dates, with the last one "17-20: Military rising in Morocco and the Peninsula", and then.... there is sub-heading "Civil War", with the first entry "20 July: The republican Jose Giral forms a government; the government appeals to France; Franco sends emissaries to Italy and Germany"
  • Information on the cover of an older monograph by Gabriel Jackson claims that “The Spanish Civil War was fought from 17 July 1936 to 1 April 1939”, but as I do not have this book on my shelf I can not tell you whether this is a marketing bla-bla-bla or indeed whether Jackson wrote something in the like.

Moreover, while some scholars claim that “the coup” was part of “the civil war”, there are some who sort of suggest that the two are separate things, and that it was only at one point in time when “the coup” got transformed into “the civil war”. When was this point? I do not remember any explicit statement, but segmentation of some works might suggest a range from late July (when supposedly it was clear that the coup failed, see Casanova) to November 1936 (when the rebel attempt to seize Madrid failed). And apart from this, it is also possible to find statments – perhaps intended metaphorically, but I am not sure – that the war began in October 1934 (the Asturias revolution) or at any other earlier date (e.g. in May 1936, as the Yeste incident).

So, where do we go from here?

Splitting hair aside (when the coup turned into war?), logically it would make sense to opt for July 17, the day when first shots of the conflict were fired. However, my humble suggestion would be to opt for July 18. The reason is that for decades, among the Spaniards of both sides it has been July 18 remembered as the breaking point, and its anniversaries were the days to celebrate or to mourn. “18 de julio” functioned as sort of a symbol. As far as I can tell not being a Spaniard and not living in Spain, also now it is July 18, not July 17, when national newspapers (local ones might opt for day when the coup occurred locally, so also the 19.) or TV stations publish anniversary materials.

As per your initial comment, I took the liberty of changing both Badajoz entries to July 18.

And BTW, there is also sort of controversy when the war ended. I have once read an article by Spanish historian, published in scientific review, with the claim that the war ended in 1944, as in 1939 it was merely transformed from a war fought by 2 regular armies into a war between regular troops and guerilla units.

regards, --Hh1718 (talk) 08:30, 11 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Inappropriate to represent the Viriatos with the Portuguese flag next to the Condor Legion

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FarSouthNavy While Portugal was openly and officially pro-Franco during the Spanish Civil War, it should not be classified as a belligerent country alongside Germany and Italy. Unlike the Condor Legion and the Italian Corpo Truppe Volontarie, which were official military units sent by their respective governments with full state support, the Portuguese involvement was more indirect. The Viriatos, a group of Portuguese volunteers who fought for Franco, were not officially sanctioned or equipped by the Portuguese government. They were motivated by personal and ideological commitments rather than state directives. It is also inappropriate to represent the Viriatos with the Portuguese flag next to the Condor Legion, as the latter was a formal and state-supported military intervention. If we were to include the Portuguese flag for the Nationalists due to the Viriatos, consistency would require the inclusion of flags for various other international volunteer groups on both sides. This would include the German flag for the Republicans because of the Thaelmann Battalion, the American flag for the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, the Italian flag for the Garibaldi Brigade, and the French flag for the Commune de Paris Battalion, etc. Additionally, there were Irish volunteers (the Irish Brigade led by Eoin O'Duffy) and Russian volunteers on Franco's side. These battalions, driven by individual ideological motivations without state sponsorship, fundamentally differ from officially supported military units, and this distinction should be clearly maintained in historical representations. J Pratas (talk) 06:45, 28 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Hi JPratas. While you can discuss about the "official" status of the Portuguese volunteers (Viriatos was a generic name indeed), Salazar support to Franco is undeniable as a well-established fact, so the flag of Portugal should remain in the infobox as a key contributor to Nationalist victory, as per sources.
Regarding the volunteers, there is no Portuguese flag representing them in the current version of the article, just like there are neither Italian nor German flags for the CTV or the Condor Legion.
I want to make clear that all the foreing combatants in the Spanish war were volunteers; it's basically true that the so called Viriatos were not Portuguese regular forces, but you can say the same of the Germans and the Italians, since both the CTV and the Condor Legion were ad hoc military groups with no direct involvement of the Wermacht or the Regio Esercito.
On the other hand, sources report that "A Portuguese Military Observation Mission with members drawn from all three branches of the Portuguese military was present in Spain from 1937 onwards, with the dual objectives of protecting the interests of Portuguese foreign volunteers and collating information on the lessons learned during the civil war (...) its air force contingent took part in combat missions.[1]. Therefore, it's pretty valid to claim an official Portuguese intervention on the battlefield, even if minimal. Darius (talk) 12:19, 28 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
FarSouthNavy Portugal's support for Franco is well-documented and indeed undeniable. However, Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy are widely considered belligerents due to their direct and significant military interventions. The Condor Legion, a unit of the German air force (Luftwaffe) detailed by Hermann Göring, was sent to Franco’s Nationalist forces with the stipulation that it remain under German command. Similarly, the Corpo Truppe Volontarie (CTV) was an official military unit from Italy. These forces, equipped and coordinated by their respective governments, involved significant numbers of personnel and extensive military resources, and were integrated into the Nationalist military operations in a way that the Viriatos, Portuguese volunteers, were not. Placing the Portuguese flag alongside Germany and Italy as a belligerent nation is misleading, as there are no reputable sources classifying Portugal as a belligerent. The claims made by Alejandro Quesada are fringe and unsourced. Esteemed works by historians such as Hugh Thomas, Stanley G. Payne, Paul Preston, Antony Beevor, and Burnett Bolloten do not classify Portugal as a belligerent, underscoring the distinction between indirect support and active military intervention.For the integrity of Wikipedia, it is crucial to rely on reputed academic sources and avoid forcing fringe points of view by quoting minor works. Let's ensure our content is based on well-supported, scholarly research to maintain the highest standards of accuracy and reliability.J Pratas (talk) 20:21, 28 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
JPratas Since Portuguese support to the Nationalist is, as you said, undisputable as per reliable sources, then further discussion about the flag issue is irrelevant, at least if you want to also take out France and Mexico flags from the infobox for the sake of consistency (both countries supported the Republic and volunteers from both countries fought for the Frente Popular). The infobox in its current status also makes clear the the Portuguese volunteers fought on their own.
The Portuguese Military Observation or Mission or Missão Militar Portuguesa de Observação em Espanha (M.M.P.O.E.E.), composed of regular soldiers and on the ground since March 1937, is mentioned in English primarly by historian Christopher Othen and also by Portuguese and Spanish authors like Buades and Ëmilio Herrera Alonso. Alonso details some combat missions flown by Portuguese pilots. It´s also worth to mention that most of the Viriatos were members of the state-sponsored Legiao Portuguesa (see Luis Nuno Rodrigues and Manuel Loff). Darius (talk) 19:54, 29 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

FarSouthNavyThank you for your response, Darius. I appreciate the sources you have added to this discussion. However, after carefully reviewing these sources, I believe they do not support the claim that the Portuguese flag should be placed as a belligerent in the same way as Germany's and Italy's flag.

Portuguese Support and the Viriatos:

It is undisputed that Salazar supported Franco, but it is important to clarify that the "Viriatos" were not an official military unit. According to Rui Aballe Vieira in "Tomar o Pulso ao Tigre: Missões Militares Portuguesas em Espanha, entre a vigilância e a cooperação (1934 – 1939)," the Viriatos were Portuguese volunteers integrated into various Nationalist units (such as the Spanish Legion, Falange militias, requetés, rebel aviation, or regular army brigades), without forming a specific Portuguese unit. Vieira emphasizes that Salazar and the military leadership did not look favorably upon any direct intervention that would be difficult to distance from in front of the International Non-Intervention Committee. This is fundamentally different from the Condor Legion, which was a formal, state-supported military intervention by Germany.

Portuguese Military Observation Mission (MMPOE):

The MMPOE, created in March 1937, primarily served an observational role rather than engaging in combat. The mission's objectives were to gain knowledge of new weapons and military techniques, ensure a privileged position for Portugal in the new European scenario, and provide assistance to Portuguese combatants.The support provided by the MMPOE was more humanitarian, akin to what an embassy would offer, rather than direct military engagement.

Decree Prohibiting Volunteer Enlistment:

In February 1937, under pressure from the London Committee, the Salazar government published a decree prohibiting the enlistment of volunteers on either side of the conflict. This further reinforces Portugal's official stance of non-intervention.

Comparative Representation in the Infobox:

Placing the Portuguese flag alongside those of Germany and Italy as belligerents is misleading. The Condor Legion and the Italian Corpo Truppe Volontarie (CTV) were official military units sent with full state support, involving significant personnel, resources and military equipment, under the command of German and Italian high rank officials. In contrast, the Portuguese involvement was indirect and did not constitute an official military intervention. If we include the Portuguese flag due to the Viriatos, consistency would require including the flags of other countries with volunteer groups, such as the German flag for the Thaelmann Battalion, the American flag for the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, and the French flag for the Commune de Paris Battalion. Additionally, there were Portuguese militiamen fighting for the Republic, which are not represented with a flag in the infobox. In summary, while Salazar’s support for Franco is undeniable, the nature of Portuguese involvement through the Viriatos and the MMPOE does not equate to the direct military interventions by Germany and Italy. It is important to rely on reputable academic sources and avoid misrepresenting the historical context. Thank you for considering these points.J Pratas (talk) 15:28, 14 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Ideology of the initial Nationalist uprising

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In the background section about the military coup, the revolt was said to have been devoid of ideology, the goal was to put an end to anarchical disorder [sic]. Other than the potential grammatical error there, this claim is immediately contradicted with plans about the politics of a new Spanish government.

If I remember correctly, a semi-pluralist authoritarian government has an ideology. As Mola planned for such a government, and had emerged as the leader of the resistance, it is obvious that the revolt was not devoid of ideology.

I do not intend to say that having an ideology is wrong; what I intend to say is that these two pieces of information conflict. Thus, the revolt should not be said to have had no ideology.

AEagleLionThing (talk) 04:05, 29 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

AEagleLionThing The statement "the revolt was said to have been devoid of ideology, the goal was to put an end to anarchical disorder" originates from Carlton Hayes, p103. Hayes aimed to convey that the initial motivation of the military coup was to restore order rather than to implement a specific ideological agenda. This perspective explains why various individuals, including intellectuals like Miguel de Unamuno, initially supported the coup, hoping it would end the prevailing anarchy. Even Franco, in his initial manifesto, emphasized the restoration of peace, fraternity, and justice, rather than outlining a specific ideological framework. Franco's manifesto does not present a clear ideology, supporting the view that the initial revolt was not ideologically driven. Although Emilio Mola had plans for a semi-pluralist authoritarian government, according to Stanley Payne, Mola's program was vague and only a rough sketch, and there were disagreements among coupists and his ideological vision was not universally shared among the rebels. Therefore, the statement from Hayes accurately reflects the initial stage of the revolt, where the focus was on restoring order rather than pursuing a specific ideological agenda. Franco himself is often regarded as a military leader without a clear ideological orientation at the outset and whose ideology was always flexible in order to keep himself in power. But I agree that the paragraph needs to be reworded. The sequence is not coherent. J Pratas (talk) 05:25, 29 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If it were intended to highlight the main focus of the revolt, then there might be no point in putting such a statement that is contradicted by the surrounding text; the following statement makes that perfectly clear.
One could maybe associate that statement with Hayes, which might allow for it to stay. And if he made it clear that it was to make a point, maybe one could add that? These are just suggestions; I don't have access to the source.
AEagleLionThing (talk) 08:03, 29 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
AEagleLionThing: to my taste, there is no contradicion between being “devoid of ideology” and being “political”. In various countries from time to time there are governments which pose as “technical”. I think the world record belongs to Belgium, where a caretaker prime minister was running the country for more than a year. In my country there was once a prime minister (leader of a large party) who upon taking office declared that his prority would be to ensure “there is hot water in the tap”.
As to this article, I would leave the pieces in question as they are. Yes, there are serious scholars who claim that the coup was “Fascist”, which perhaps merits some acknowledgement in a footnote. However, the opinion which – at least as I see it – prevails is that there was no “ideology” behind the coup. Yes, it was clearly intended against the radical Left (Anarchists, Communists, Socialists), thought to have been mounting a revolution, but I believe for most scholars this counter-revolutionary profile falls rather short of an “ideology”. Regards, --Hh1718 (talk) 09:46, 11 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Length

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The article is tagged as being {{too long}}, at 116 kB (18337 words) of readable prose. Further summarizing Spanish Civil War § Foreign involvement looks like the biggest opportunity to save on length. We already have a dedicated summary style split out on the topic (International response to the Spanish Civil War) but that split has some shorter country sections than the main article. A high-level overview here with specifics in the subarticle should suffice. czar 13:51, 11 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

British Intelligence role in moving Franco from Canary Islands

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Is the claim "With the help of the British intelligence agents" really substantiated? I've heard this referred to as a conspiracy theory, can't seem to find anything else about this. 24.6.106.163 (talk) 21:06, 11 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]