Everything about Battle Of The Ebro totally explained
Spanish Republic
|combatant2=
Nationalist Spain
|commander1=
Juan ModestoEnrique Líster
|commander2=
Fidel DavilaFrancisco Franco
|strength1=100,000
|strength2=90,000
|casualties1=30,000 dead
20,000 wounded
19,563 captured
200 aircraft
|casualties2=6,500 dead
30,000 wounded
5,000 captured
|}}
The
Battle of the Ebro (
Spanish:
Batalla del Ebro,
Catalan:
Batalla de l'Ebre) was the last great
Republican offensive in the
Spanish Civil War.
Background
By 1938, the
Second Spanish Republic was in dire straits. The
Basque Country had fallen, the
Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM) had been destroyed by intra-Republican fighting, and many foreign governments felt it was only a matter of time before the question of who would rule Spain would be settled in favour of the Nationalists.
In response to the situation, Spanish premier
Juan Negrín approved a plan by
Vicente Rojo Lluch to launch attacks against the main Nationalist forces advancing through
Valencia. The purpose of the attacks was to relieve the pressure on Valencia and
Catalonia. Another purpose of these actions was to show European governments that the Republican government was still a viable alternative.
Critics (such as
Antony Beevor) have argued that Negrín's "active war policy" – attacking rather than adopting strong defences and hoping for a wider European conflict or harrying the nationalist forces – was primarily driven by the
PCE's desire for
propaganda victories, and, as at the Ebro, destroyed the Republican army for no great purpose.
Battle
The Battle of the Ebro opened on
July 25,
1938. Republican forces under Colonel
Juan Modesto launched attacks across the Ebro river. The Republican forces were initially successful, but the Nationalist forces, who had superior air cover, eventually beat them back. The battle lasted until
November 16, 1938.
The Nationalist army had, by this point, greater numbers and near total air superiority. As the republicans were attacking over open ground the role of air support as mobile artillery was decisive. In addition the republicans had no great strategic objective and, according to Beevor, were unwilling to apply the theory of the
deep operation to their attacks - meaning their forces spent a long time clearing nationalist secondary defensive positions, allowing the highly mechanised nationalist forces to quickly deploy in strong defensive positions.
The battle was fought by both sides as a
World War I Western Front battle, with each side launching bloody frontal assaults on enemy positions. The attacks by both sides tended to fail, but not without inflicting severe losses on each of them.
But nationalist superiority in numbers and armaments meant they were better able to withstand the losses. Essentially the Ebro saw the republican forces destroyed as a capable force as republican commanders were unable or unwilling to withdraw even after it was obvious that the battle was lost, so leading to massive losses.
The Battle was also the last action of the
International Brigades, who were withdrawn midway through it.
Aftermath
This defeat destroyed the
Republican Army as a fighting force. After this battle, the Republicans would continue to lose ground until
April 1,
1939 when
Franco declared the war over.
A well-known
Republican song,
El Paso de Ebro, commemorates the battle.
Sources
- Spartacus Schoolnet- Battle of the Ebro -- http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/SPebro.htm
- The Spanish Civil War by Gabriele Ranzato
Further Information
Get more info on 'Battle Of The Ebro'.
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