R
Richardols
Guest
Keep in mind that the leftist government had been legitimately elected - they were not the communists, who took advantage.Originally Posted by RomanCrusader
"The depraved communistic “Popular Front” had utterly destroyed Spain as a nation.
An exaggeration."
No but they were well in their way to doing it. Remember the burning of churches and killings of priest and nun began before Franco’s uprising. Spain as a nation was well on the way towards disintegration.
So, it’s okay to become Hitler’s and Mussolini’s buddy because the communists sent their own volunteers. Two wrongs make a right?:
Francisco Franco and the brave falange
Ever so brave - aided by his buddies Hitler and Mussolini and their “volunteers” and the Nazi Condor Legions.
Well, the Republic had volunteers from all the communist globe including Stalin’s NKVD, how often people forgot that.
Sure, and getting punched around every day is a lot better than being burned with hot pokers every day. What sort of a comparison are you making? The fact remains that he was a dictator and squelched anyone who opposed him.After the war Franco took the necessary steps to ensure that the communists could never hurt Spain again.
Not just communists - with his dictatorship, he suppressed everyone who opposed him in any way.
Well, yes he was a dictator and he suppresed socialists, communists, and ethnic nationalist but in his group were facist, monarquists and free market conservatives. If you compare the books printed in Spain during Franco regime there was far more freedom than under a comunist dictatorship.
You are doing no more than making excuses under the rubric that “the other guy is bad too.” Bad is bad. Ruthlessness is not excused by the ruthlessness of another.It is true that some falangist militia did very bad things post-war, but Franco intended only to execute militant communists. The fact that his falangists got out of line should not be held against him.
He was in charge, he’s responsible.
Agreed, but the Republicans were as rutless executing Franco’s sympatizers in the parts of Spain they controlled. It was a no quarter given, no quarter asked war.
Err… his government definitely favored the Nazis, his “humanitarian” gestures notwithstanding. And, the Soviet Union was our ally. His fighting them sapped some of the Soviet strength we needed to fight the Nazis, and those Spaniards who went east and died there were our enemies as well as of the Russians.Quote:
During WWII, Franco was very neutral.
He was a belligerent neutral who favored the Nazis.
Not so according to moder research. He send people to fight the commies in Rusia but never tried to fight the western allies and even refused to handle over the germans allied airmen who escaped to Spain.
Which isn’t saying much.Such a humanitarian!
Yes he was! Remember in those times, even the US refused to admit jewish refugees. And he did. He even tried to save the Sephardic jews of Salonica and Yugoslavia. As the current great Rabbi of Madrid said, he did a lot for the Jews, even more that some allied countries.
Was Ronnie a fascist follower of Franco? I think not. So why bring him into this topic?Quote:
Following the war, the Soviets villified Franco.
And rightly so.
Agreed, the communists will always vilify an enemy with courage, like Ronald Reagan for example.
He had to curry favor because the US and British governments loathed him, and allowing the use of bases was his peace offering.However, Franco became a member of NATO and a strong ally against the communists.
Spain didn’t join NATO until 1982, and Franco was under sod by 1975. He was no ally.
Spain joined NATO in 1982 because many eurosocialdemocrats did not wanted Franco in. He allowed the US to use military bases in Spain since the early 1960s including nuclear armed planes. Remember the incident in Torrejón when a H bomb was lost after a B-52 crash.
You are quite correct. The Spanish Church has only itself to blame for why its population rejected it. Why was the Polish church not rejected? Because it stood by the people, not by the governments that suppressed the people.The Church was a symbol of wealth, repression, and inequality, and by allying itself with the dictator instead of with the common people, it reaped what it had sown. The Church there has no one to blame but itself.
The problem of the Spanish Church can not only be blamed on Franco