España No Ha Muerto: If Franco brought Spain into the Second World War

The fact that UK declared war on Spain first may help Portugal out here as they aren't obliged to help defend them (UK declared war on Germany and did not ask Portugal to assist).

Probably works fot both Spain and UK in the short term for Portugal to be neutral. If Gibraltar falls or the Germans assist in Spain proper then Portugal won't have an option other than to shelter under UK. Although how much good that will do in 1941/42 is anyone's guess.


The intent of the Portuguese government was to move to the Azores with what military assents they could salvage. The majority and best formations were in the colonies anyway, and so was a signifcant part of Portugals economy. This plan goes back before 1941. Within Spain there had been a long running idea that Iberia should be united. the provinces in Portugal were no more separate from greater Spain than the Basque or Andalusians. While not a large or powerful political movement in Spain Salazars government took it seriously enough its defense plans recognized it. Later from 1941, when the Germans recognized the British blockade was having a serious long term effect on Germany, one of the proposed solutions was to get control of the Portuguese Wolfram (Tungsten Ore) mines & some inquiries were made about the Spanish assisting in that. While the idea had no legs the Portuguese did become aware and again recognized a invasion from Spainish territory as the worst case defense scenario.

The Brits had a contingency plan for a emergency occupation of the Azores and Maderia. As did the US. One such plan paralleled the US occupation of Iceland while still technically neutral in July 1941. One of the plans and several rational for standing up and expanding Amphibious Forces Atlantic Fleet.

Aggresion vs Portugal, or too much political.economic pressure, could lead to preemptive Brit or US moves into the Portuguese Atlantic Islands. That has long term effects on the Battle of the Atlantic, and the Axis strategy for defense of Western Europe.
 
Summer and Autumn of 1941: First Blood
"I will not be the Napoleon to his Joseph"
- Adolf Hitler, on Francisco Franco, autumn of 1941

Excerpt from A World at Arms, by Gerald Weinberg

...Immediately upon Franco’s declaration of war against the USSR, Churchill gave the go ahead for ‘Operation Puma,’ the occupation of the Spanish Canary Islands. The war ministry had long maintained plans for such an amphibious operation, fearful that otherwise the Canaries would serve as a base for the German interdiction of Transatlantic shipping.

Franco appears to have had great faith in the ability of the Canaries garrison to resist invasion at least long enough to bloody the British and establish the formidability of Spanish military. It was a faith that was not entirely unjustified, as over the course of the last year the islands’ paltry garrison had almost doubled in size to more than 20,000 men, and the shore batteries had been augmented with new 152.4mm guns.

Churchill and the war ministry, in particular First Sea Lord Dudley Pound, had been less than optimistic about Operation Puma. The Royal Navy insisted it could spare nothing for the invasion, engaged as it was against the German U-boat fleets and supplying British troops in North Africa.

But on 4 August, Puma commenced. A British strike force centered around the aircraft carrier Ark Royal, augmented by three cruisers and six destroyers, along with the minesweeper Marte, sailed for Gran Canaria. 8,000 men, a mixture of Royal Marines and regular troops, were detailed for the invasion, significantly fewer than the 10,000 men that the War Ministry had insisted were necessary for success, and barely a third the size of the Canaries garrison.

But both Franco and the British had severely overestimated the morale of the Canary troops. The British expedition came within sight of Santa Cruz de Tenerife on the night of 5 August, and a squadron of Hurricane fighters from the Royal Ark attacked Spanish positions on shore. After a bombardment by the HMS Dragon, the Royal Marines staged a landing.

The Spaniards put up a feeble resistance for only a few hours, and by dawn Captain General Ricardo Serrador Santés had surrendered his command. About 230 Spaniards died in the assault, mostly by bombing. The British lost eight, two to friendly fire, and one drowned.

The loss of the Canaries was a heavy blow, not only in material terms, for the British had now secured another Atlantic base for use in their naval war against the Germans, but also a psychological one. The Canaries held a special place in the mythology of Franco’s regime, for it had been from Tenerife that Franco had flown in the summer of 1936, to take command of the Moroccan colonial troops that had ultimately won him the civil war. Franco took the opportunity to sack Vigón from his position as Chief of Staff, though the Canaries disaster was hardly his fault. He was replaced with Major General Juan Yagüe, whose pro-Nazi views were well known, and who had made a name for himself as a bold and daring commander during the civil war. Yagüe and Franco had butted heads often in recent years, but now his politics had become convenient, and prior disagreements were forgotten.

In Berlin, Hitler was furious. He referred to Franco as an “idiot general,” and seethed that he had entered the war at just the wrong time, when the Wehrmacht was entirely engaged battling the Red Army in the east, and could hardly spare men or materiel for the capture of Gibraltar. Nevertheless, in early August, the Führer discussed Operation Felix with Jodl, who told him that if the Kiev-Leningrad line was reached by mid-September, some forces could be detached for action in Spain.

Franco, on the other hand, was not disposed to wait. The Caudillo was determined to demonstrate that, even if a junior partner, Spain could hold her own in battle. Gibraltar had to fall, but the glory had to go to Spanish arms, not German...

Excerpt from Spain in Flames: 1936 - 1944, by E.R Hooton

…Over the course of 1940 and the first months of 1941, the British had feverishly built up the Gibraltar garrison in anticipation of an attack, whether German, Spanish, Italian, Vichy, or any combination thereof. By 1939, the 2nd Kings and the 2nd Somerset Light Infantry had been posted to the ‘rock,’ and by the summer of 1941 alone these had been augmented by the 4th Devonshire and the 4th Black Watch, bringing the total strength to four infantry battalions, along with the 3rd Heavy Regiment, Royal Artillery, which disposed of the three Batteries with 8 x 9.2-inch guns, 7 x 6-inch guns, and 6 x twin 6-pounders. There were also two AA regiments, the HQ 10th and the 82nd Heavy. The garrison maintained 16 x 3.7 inch guns, 6 x 6-pounders, 7 x 6 inch guns, 8 x 9.2 inch guns, and 8 x 40mm Bofors guns. [1]

The Spanish 22nd Division, along with the 16th Mountain Regiment, were to spearhead the assault, under military governor of Algeciras Agustîn Muñoz Grandes, a decorated veteran of the civil war. Muñoz Grandes had reported to Franco and Yagüe that he expected he could take the rock within the space of an afternoon, and all of the men concerned were eager to wipe away the shame of the Canaries and restore a long-separated and ‘integral’ part of the Fatherland to Spain. Across the country, falangist radicals daubed walls with the slogan, ‘¡Gibraltar Español!’ and crowds in Madrid, Salamanca, Barcelona, Seville, and the other great cities of Spain were whipped into a nationalistic frenzy by regime agitators, chanting ‘¡Inglaterra, muérete!’

The Spanish plan was to begin with an artillery bombardment, to be immediately followed by an assault across the arfield by the II/3 Battalion, which would in fact be a diversion, fixing the British defenders to allow for an amphibious landing in Gibraltar Harbour by the I/3 battalion, and another at Europa Point by III/3. Finally, the 1st and 2nd battalions from the 16th Mountain Regiment were to scale the sheer rock cliffs on the western face of the peninsula. The British would be squeezed between these two pincers, and forced to surrender.

On 25 August, Muñoz Grandes issued his official demand for surrender to Mason-MacFarlane. The British commander icily declined, with the comment that “that is not what I was sent here to do.”

Before combat operations even began, the Battle of Gibraltar began to devolve into a fiasco for the Spaniards.

The evening of the 25th, Captain G.L Galloway of the Royal Engineers, stationed near the customs house at the northwestern corner of the peninsula, sighted a small fishing skiff approaching the island. It held a single occupant. When the skiff was not deterred by shouted warnings, the 4th Devons opened fire. Nevertheless, they missed their quarry, and the ‘captain’ of the little boat stumbled ashore with his hands in the air. Galloway later recalled, “he cried, ‘Comrades! Comrades! No shoot! No shoot! ¡Viva England! ¡Viva la República!’ He was summarily taken prisoner, and brought to Mason-Mac. It developed that the young sergeant hated Franco, because his brother had been arrested in 1939 and was still in prison.” The deserter told all that he knew of the Spanish plan, and Mason-MacFarlane ascertained that he could be trusted because “he seemed too simple a sort” to be lying.

The next evening, the attack commenced, and immediately things began to go wrong.

The artillery barrage, carried out mostly by old 75mm guns from the civil war, and one 88mm German piece, failed to smash the garrison as expected, thanks to the thorough tunneling operations of the previous months, the extent of which Muñoz Grandes had failed to appreciate.

Two of the boats meant to carry the assault forces to Gibraltar Harbor, crashed into each other upon launch. One was irreparably damaged, and sank within minutes, drowning nearly a hundred Spanish soldiers from the III/3 Battalion. The bulk of the men managed to reach the detached mole, where they were met by withering machine gun fire from A Company of the Black Watch. A Spanish veteran recalled playing dead in the ‘red water,’ while the corpses of his comrades bobbed around him. The south mole was stormed by soldiers from the I/3 Battalion, who engaged the Black Watch hand to hand.

Meanwhile, the 16th Regiment on the other side of the peninsula was doing little better. When the 1st Battalion landed at Sandy Bay, not only was it stymied by the moat network the Royal Engineers had dug there, but also by their own artillery, when misdirected fire from the mainland fell among the Spaniards, killing dozens.
The frontal assault over the North Front Airfield fared even worse, with the II/3 Battalion suffering nearly 70% casualties in the teeth of the British defenses, in particular the six-pounder guns sighted on the neutral zone.

By the morning of the 30th, Muñoz Grandes was forced to admit the operation had been a failure. He withdrew what men he could from the beaches, leaving almost 560 wounded and otherwise incapacitated to be taken prisoner.

He reluctantly reported the terrible news to Franco and Yagüe, and insisted that he needed more men.

In Germany, Hitler nearly went mad with rage. He had expressly asked Franco to await the arrival of German troops before any attempt was made against Gibraltar, and now, just as he had done with Mussolini, he was going to have to haul the Generalissimo’s chestnuts out of the fire.

With the Battle of Kiev still raging, and Army Group North advancing on Leningrad, ‘Operation Felix’ was dusted off and reworked for the present moment. Two regiments, the 13th and 94th from the 4th Mountain Division were pulled out of the line in Ukraine, to be rested and refitted for deployment to Spain. Also seconded for the operation was Infantry Regiment "Großdeutschland," as well as the "Der Führer" Regiment of the 2nd SS Panzer Division “Das Reich” under Otto Kumm, with one tank company attached, and a smattering of signals, sapper, and artillery battalions.

The whole Kampfgruppe was under the command of General Ludwig Kübler, and departed the Eastern Front on September 7th. Kampfgruppe Kübler reached the Pyrenees on the 12th, and crossed into Spain the same day.

Meanwhile, Muñoz Grandes made a second effort to smash Gibraltar. He did this against his better judgment, but at the insistence of Franco, who was desperate that Gibraltar be seen as a Spanish victory, and not a German one. Over the past week, the Spanish complement at Gibraltar had been strengthened by the arrival of the 21st Division from Seville and some Algeciras regiments, adding another 10,000-odd men to his forces. With this fresh infusion of troops Muñoz Grandes decided to dispense with complex maneuvering and amphibious landings, and decided instead on a full frontal push over the airfield, overwhelming the British by sheer weight of numbers. The second assault was preceded by an aerial bombardment, carried out by old German Junkers and Heinkels, which failed to penetrate the heavy shell of ‘the Rock.’ The attack over the airfield again fell short, despite the support of three old Soviet T-26 tanks and one German Panzer Mk.I. The men were cut apart by Vickers machine guns and the artillery of the ‘Princess Caroline’ battery. The Mk.I and one of the T-26 tanks were destroyed by shellfire. For three grueling days, the Spaniard struggled to advance through the ‘dragon’s teeth’ and barbed wire ahead of the airfield, all while British artillery and machine gun fire rained on their heads. A particularly terrible blow was suffered by the 7th Regiment from Algeciras, which suffered nearly 80% casualties. On the 2nd of September, Muñoz Grande went to the front line, hoping to inspire his men by personal example. He stood up in front of the stunned soldiers, waving his cap and crying “¡Arriba España!” He was prompt shot in the left arm, shattering his elbow and permanently crippling him.

By September 4th, the Spaniards had lost more than 4,000 killed and wounded, against 382 on the British side, bringing their total losses in two weeks of battle to nearly 8,000. From his hospital bed, Muñoz Grandes ordered another withdrawal.

Out of 10,000 men under Mason-Macfarlane, some 1,000 had become casualties by September 6th, but morale remained high. Mason-MacFarlane organized impromptu stage shows for the troops, with the aid of Lieutenant Anthony Quayle of the Second Artillery, an actor in civilian life. They ranged from apolitical slapstick comedy routines to numbers lampooning their enemies, including a skit wherein a nervous Franco fretted that Hitler was ‘stepping out on him’ with Mussolini.

In Britain, the newspapers thrilled to the ordeal of ‘brave little Gibraltar,’ stoutly resisting in the face of overwhelming odds. A Punch cartoon depicted a tiny, dwarfish General Fanco struggling to lift a massive rock labeled, ‘Gibraltar.’ A disgusted-looking Adolf Hitler observes from the other end of the panel. “Adolf!” Franco squeals. “Help!”

In the still-neutral United States, Louis B. Mayer of MGM was said to be shopping around for a screenplay based on the ‘Gibraltar epic.’

Even in Spain itself, people sniggered that it was taking Franco as long to capture Gibraltar as it took Hitler to capture France.

On the 9th of September, Muñoz Grandes, who refused to relinquish command despite having lost an arm, made one final effort to crack Gibraltar before the Germans arrived. Again, the ‘rock’ was deluged by artillery and warplanes. Massive coastal pieces were brought in from Málaga, Cadíz, and Algeciras to join in the barrage. It lasted nearly four hours, the British defenders ensconced in their dark network of tunnels and bunkers while the Spanish ordnance “hammered down on [their] heads like God’s right fist,” as Lt. Quayle later put it. By the time the storm of fire ended, most everything above ground on Gibraltar had been ruined. Major Robin-Thompson recalled that, “everything was reduced to cinders and ash. The governor’s house, the old ‘Moorish castle,’ the gardens. Everything.”

The onslaught was followed by yet another attack into the British defenses. This time, Muñoz Grandes’ men managed to break the British lines, and they surged past the airfield, reaching Forbes Quarry by the afternoon of the 10th. The British surged forward to repel them with desperate rifle volleys, bayonet thrusts, and even hand to hand combat.

The fighting lasted the better part of four days, until Muñoz Grandes was forced to order yet another retreat on the evening of the 13th. This time the losses on both sides were about equal, some 2,000 killed, wounded, or captured. But this number weighed far heavier on the British, reduced now to some 6,500 effectives, than for the Spaniards, whose numbers were augmented yet again by the arrivals of the 51st and 62nd Mountain Regiments, from Gerona and Tarragona.

With this fresh reinforcement of mountain troops, it appeared Muñoz Grandes was contemplating another attempt on the eastern cliff faces, even with the Germans only two days away.

As for the British, dwindling as their number was, they still found the time and good cheer to taunt their foe. Few if any of the men in the Gibraltar garrison were politically committed leftists, but the Spanish Civil War had occupied Britain’s newspapers for nearly three full years not so long ago. So the men of the Black Watch knew just how to push their foe’s buttons when they made up a massive banner and draped it over the northern face of the bomb-shattered Victoria Sports Center, directly facing the Spanish lines. The banner read “¡NO PASARÁN!”

Excerpt from A Nation Tormented: Terror, Famine, and Slaughter in Twentieth Century Spain by Paul Preston

….Conditions in many parts of the country, especially the rural and underdeveloped south, but including even the capital of Madrid, had verged on famine since the end of the civil war. The regime blamed this on the damage caused by the war, which in turn was of course blamed on the ‘reds.’ But in fact, the crisis was largely the fault of Franco’s policies. Arbitrary tariffs drove up prices far beyond what ordinary Spaniards could afford, while more than doubling the profits of industrial and agricultural magnates close to Franco, such as the Altos Hornos de Vizcaya steel company.

Housing was unaffordable, with tens of thousands of workers and their families crammed into filthy shantytowns around the outskirts of Madrid, Seville, and Barcelona. In these slums, where waste was disposed of in the streets, diseases like tuberculosis long in abeyance came roaring back, claiming tens of thousands per year.
The dictatorship’s clumsy efforts to increase wheat yield, including by the reduction of profitable cash crops which might have provided much-needed infusions of cash into Spain’s coffers, and the creation of a state monopoly (the ‘Servicio Nacional de Trigo) on wheat, had little impact and often had the opposite of the intended effect. Probably 200,000 people a year, perhaps more, died of starvation and preventable diseases brought on by malnutrition.

But with the end of British trade, and the implementation of the Royal Navy blockade, Spain spiraled into full blown economic catastrophe. In the summer of 1941 alone, Spain imported more than 70,000 metric tons of petroleum products, almost entirely from Britain and the increasingly Allied-friendly United States. As soon as Spain entered the war, this line of supply was shut off. Trucks, aircraft, and even private motorcars across the country ground to a halt. Rolling blackouts afflicted Madrid, Barcelona, and Seville. Franco’s ministers warned him that this year’s harvest might be affected by as much as 20%, and this without taking into account the shortfall of several hundred thousands’ worth of tons of wheat itself, of which Canada had been a major supplier.

Franco had gambled on a very near-term German victory over Soviet Russia and Great Britain, probably within weeks, upon which Spain would be amply supplied by the ‘new Europe’ under Nazi guidance. He remarked to Serrano Suñer that “we will get our wheat from the Ukraine.” As for liquid fuels, Spain asked Germany for an outrageous 500,000 tons, something which the Führer was in no position to grant, even if he had been disposed.

But as 1941 went on, and it became clear that the Wehrmacht had failed to defeat the Red Army, the regime realized it was entering a period of serious crisis. Bread was strictly rationed from August. In September, as the fight for Gibraltar thundered on, Minister of Agriculture Joaquín Benjumea warned the Generalissimo that more than 100,000 Spaniards might starve to death by the summer of 1942. For this observation, Benjumea was sacked and replaced with the more pliant, and utterly incompetent, Miguel Primo de Rivera, brother of the martyred Falangist chief.

In December of 1941, two days before the attack on Pearl Harbor and the United States entry into the war, Franco issued a decree establishing the death penalty for black marketeers and ‘hoarders of grain.’

In Andalusia and Estremadura, which had long been the poorest regions of Spain, conditions were not far removed from those which prevailed in the Soviet Ukraine in 1932 and ‘33. On New Year’s day, 1942, diarist Miguel Ramírez wrote of his ‘encounter’ with a derelict in an alley. “At first I think he is sleeping, and then I see he is dead. His shirt is torn. His ribs can be seen clearly through the rents, with the skin pulled tight over them. He is the fifth I have seen this week. I almost wanted to toss his pitiful corpse a few pesetas.” That January, a wag was shot in Badajoz for responding to a FET delegate’s cries of ‘Franco, Franco, Franco!’ with ‘Hambre, Hambre, Hambre!’ (‘Hunger, Hunger, Hunger!’)...

[1] taken mostly from here
 
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Churchill "Where is the navy?" :biggrin:

Seriously though I'd have thought the senior service would as a minimum be shelling Spanish positions at night. Plus the garrison in the Canaries can't spend all its manpower on PoW guards.
 
Seems unlikely at this point but I wonder if the Brits will pull a more orderly Dunkirk and attempt to get their garrison out by sea? They seem to still control the harbor from what I understand, but then again I imagine that Spanish bombardment has been targeting the docks to prevent such a thing. Still always fun to see some examples of fascist incompetence.
 
I imagine the Royal Navy could spare some forces to singe Francos beard. Plenty of places that would be vulnerable to a quick bombardment it wouldn't cause much damage but anything to divert attention and resources from the Gibraltar campaign. Also SOE would probably be in the country being annoying.
 
Now this looks very good - watching with interest…

In Britain, the newspapers thrilled to the ordeal of ‘brave little Gibraltar,’ stoutly resisting in the face of overwhelming odds. A Punch cartoon depicted a tiny, dwarfish General Fanco struggling to lift a massive rock labeled, ‘Gibraltar.’ A disgusted-looking Adolf Hitler observes from the other end of the panel. “Adolf!” Franco squeals. “Help!”
XD XD XD Brilliant.
In the still-neutral United States, Louis B. Mayer of MGM was said to be shopping around for a screenplay based on the ‘Gibraltar epic.’
One hopes with David Niven postwar - always had a soft spot for him given both that he was a great actor and that he actually came back and fought rather than staying in the US.
Churchill "Where is the navy?" :biggrin:

Seriously though I'd have thought the senior service would as a minimum be shelling Spanish positions at night. Plus the garrison in the Canaries can't spend all its manpower on PoW guards.
I imagine the Royal Navy could spare some forces to singe Francos beard. Plenty of places that would be vulnerable to a quick bombardment it wouldn't cause much damage but anything to divert attention and resources from the Gibraltar campaign.
Agreed. And I imagine they will be.
Also SOE would probably be in the country being annoying.
Well with such ideal conditions, absolutely.
 

Garrison

Donor
So basically Franco has chosen to let Spain starve by cutting off food imports, and closed the flow of raw materials to the Reich that flowed through it as a 'neutral'. Also taking Gibraltar means German troops, which means they are going to have a supply line through Vichy France, which will not go over well in various Vichy colonies especially Tunisia. It's also probably going to come at the expense of the Afrika Korps. The British will seek to eliminate the Italians in East Africa to clear the approaches to the Suez Canal to secure that as a supply route. I suspect the Allies will focus on a variant of Torch rather than an invasion of Spain, especially as once Barbarossa kicks off they won't have a lot of resources for a series of convoy battles in the straits. And speaking of Barbarossa it would have to be about the same as OTL or slightly weaker if they do try to reinforce the Afrika Korps, intervene in the Balkans and take Gibraltar, so it doesn't help the Ostheer one little bit. The OSS and SOE should have a field day in Spain, where guerilla warfare is long standing tradition and there will be plenty of people who openly oppose Franco after this.

TL;DR Spain is f***ed and Franco isn't dying quietly in bed of old age ITTL.
ETA: posted this before I read the second part, but it seems my view holds true so far. :)
 
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So basically Franco has chosen to let Spain starve by cutting off food imports, and closed the flow of raw materials to the Reich that flowed through it as a 'neutral'. Also taking Gibraltar means German troops, which means they are going to have a supply line through Vichy France, which will not go over well in various Vichy colonies especially Tunisia. It's also probably going to come at the expense of the Afrika Korps. The British will seek to eliminate the Italians in East Africa to clear the approaches to the Suez Canal to secure that as a supply route. I suspect the Allies will focus on a variant of Torch rather than an invasion of Spain, especially as once Barbarossa kicks off they won't have a lot of resources for a series of convoy battles in the straits. And speaking of Barbarossa it would have to be about the same as OTL or slightly weaker if they do try to reinforce the Afrika Korps, intervene in the Balkans and take Gibraltar, so it doesn't help the Ostheer one little bit. The OSS and SOE should have a field day in Spain, where guerilla warfare is long standing tradition and there will be plenty of people who openly oppose Franco after this.

TL;DR Spain is f***ed and Franco isn't dying quietly in bed of old age ITTL.
ETA: posted this before I read the second part, but it seems my view holds true so far. :)
I could see either honestly especially sense Spain is probably the weakest axis power right now and most certainly unstable enough that like Italy Franco’s government could fall apart entirely if that potentially succeeded
 
The Francoist regime is doomed, a simple as most as say. Between the famine, the economic dowturn, the military disaters and the maquis, Franco and is men will end out of the power the question is how? (and posible end worst ta Mussoline)

A popular uprinsing initiated for the famine? A coup of the monarchist? A allied invasion? O all three and sometine more? As a Spaniard, this timeline interests me a lot. I hope to read more, good work Iggies
 
We've talked about Spain not joining the Axis because it would have been a liability.

I guess someone finally realized that a Spanish Axis catastrophe would make an interesting timeline.
 
Thinking out loud....

I wonder what becomes of Spanish Morocco. Or of French Morocco, now that I think of it OTL it remained Vichy until 1942. But it would be intriguing to see if Franco could screw this up. Would the British try to control the African shore? Morocco might be a target. The African Vichy regimes might well rethink themselves.

I'm wondering about Portugal as well. Consider Franco is engaged in wall to wall screw ups, he's got a famine. Maybe he'll figure the thing to do is to unite the Peninsula, conquer Portugal. Just the sort of war grinding war he's used to.
 

thaddeus

Donor
After the stunning fall of France in a mere four weeks and the capture or destruction of a significant portion of the British Expeditionary Force [1], Franco became convinced that Germany had won. But his natural prudence asserted itself, and he refrained from declaring Spain’s belligerence at that moment.

Spain’s entry into the war was by degrees. The German victories in the west had deeply impressed Franco, and over the course of 1940 he had slowly shifted his country closer to the Axis. The personal meeting between Hitler and Franco at Hendaye that Autumn confirmed the informal agreement made with Himmler a month earlier, and Spain and Germany signed a secret protocol committing Spain to enter the war by the New Year.

Nevertheless in the winter of 1940 - ‘41, the ‘Caudillo’ got cold feet. The New Year’s deadline lapsed, without any Spanish declaration of war, much to Hitler’s outrage.

This brief reversal lasted until the spring, and Hitler’s conquest of the Balkans. The invincibility of German arms seemed again confirmed, and upon the fall of Athens Franco prepared to declare war immediately. But once again he backed out at the last moment.

It was not until the Summer of 1941, and the opening of the Soviet front, that the fate of not only Germany, but of Spain, was sealed.

[1] – the POD is that France falls even quicker, and a slightly smaller portion of the BEF is successfully evacuated from Dunkirk. The difference isn't big enough to significantly alter the trajectory of the war, but it's just enough to alter Franco's psychology to the point where he's willing to bring Spain into it.

it seems the time for a Spanish entry was just after the fall of France OR the spring of 1941 when it appeared the Vichy regime might sign some agreement, it would not be unknown to the Spanish that the Nazi regime had to import foodstuffs from the USSR.

(that is not to say the Nazi regime would not still invade East, after the unfortunate Spanish had signed on)
 
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Autumn of 1941: Plus Ultra
“¡Cálzame las alpargatas, dame la boina, dame el fusil,
Que voy a matar mas rusos que flores tienen mayo y abril!”


- Marching song of Spanish troops on the eastern front, adapted from a Carlist melody popular through the 19th century and the civil war

“¡Si mi hermano se levanta, estando yo en el cuartel
Cojo el fusil y la manta y me hecho al monte con el!”


- Popular song of the Spanish guerrillas during the Second World War

“Thank God, Gibraltar is Spanish again.”

- Francisco Franco, 24 September 1941

“If we are to set Europe ablaze, let Spain be the tinder.”

- Brigadier Colin Gubbins, SOE Director of Operations, autumn of 1941

Excerpt from Behind the Lines: An Oral History of Special Operations in World War II by Russell Miller

Lieutenant Oliver Howard Brown, East Kent Regiment
Just about as soon as I was done training at Beaulieu I was introduced to Juan. They just said to me “this is Juan Oyarzabál, and you’re going into Spain together.” Obviously I didn’t know a lick of Spanish, and I didn’t know anything about the country, so I was going to need a guide.

Juan had been in the Loyalist navy in the civil war. He’d crossed the border to France after the fascists took Catalonia, and he ended up in Mexico. But then he’d found his way to England, and since Franco came into the war he’d been milling around London hoping for some kind of assignment, and now he had it, just like I did.

At this point we were not supposed to shoot anybody or blow anything up. Our only goal was to make contact with the resistance in Spain, because the British government knew nothing at all about the anti-Franco networks in the country, or if they even existed. Juan was a good fellow, very educated and handsome-looking, and he spoke pretty good English. He told me his aunt was Scottish.

We crossed the Portuguese border at night in the middle of September, while the boys in Gibraltar were still holding out. They gave us false papers to get past the border guards, but when we reached Badajoz Juan said, “no, too dangerous. We won’t do it.”

So instead we slipped over the Guadiana River on a little raft, in the dead of night. It was utterly miserable and by the time we got to the other side we were pretty soaked. We spent about three hours lying in this little gulley by the riverbank because a patrol of Civil Guards went by. I thought they looked pretty goofy in their hats but Juan said, “they’ll shoot you for looking at them wrong.”

The next morning we dusted ourselves off and went into Badajoz, and I was shocked. I guess I always thought of Spain as a very pretty and romantic country and in a lot of ways it was, but my first sights were miserable. This was when the famine was just beginning. The streets were dirty, there was trash piled up on the alleys. The people were the hungriest people you ever saw. I don’t think I saw anybody with fat cheeks the whole time I was there. At every corner there was a line for rations, and everywhere you had the posters of Franco and the slogans on the walls, “ARRIBA ESPAÑA!”

I remember seeing one line of women waiting for milk rations, and right overhead there was a big poster of Franco, like he was looking down on them making sure nobody took more than they were supposed to.

I was supposed to just keep my mouth shut and let Juan do the talking, and if I absolutely had to open my mouth my cover was that I was an Irishman. My Irish accent was godawful but the hope was the Spaniards wouldn’t be able to tell the difference.

We stayed in this shabby little hotel. I didn’t leave much. Juan would go out every day and come back. He scared the Hell out of me, telling me how back when the civil war started, Colonel Yagüe who I think was the minister of war now*, rounded up all the loyalists in Badajoz and machine-gunned them in the bullring. He said the fascists made a party out of it, even had a band playing and refreshments.

Finally about a week after we showed up, Juan comes into this hotel room and he tells me, “let’s go.”

We walked the length of Badajoz which was alright because the city wasn’t very big, but every block it seemed like we’d pass some police or some soldiers or some falangists and I’d think we were going to be arrested.

But at the Triana Gate there was a truck waiting for us, and this old peasant was driving it, with a younger fellow in the passenger’s seat, I guess maybe his son. We got in, and Juan said something to him, and we were off. We ended up driving for almost three hours, across pretty much the whole of Estremadura. The countryside was even worse off than the towns. I saw dead people lying starved by the side of the road. People would just walk and drive around them.

We got to this little town called Villarta de los Montes. It was a tiny little town, couldn’t have been more than two-hundred, three-hundred people. It was picturesque. The roofs were all red and the walls were white.

But we stopped just outside the town, and it was about getting dark. The driver’s son told us to get out, and then he blindfolded us. We walked blindfolded for maybe twenty minutes, then we heard men chattering, and when they took off the blindfolds we were in this little hill gully, and there were about thirty men sitting around these little fires.

They were a rough-looking crew. Like bandidos in an American cowboy picture. They all had pistols in their belts or rifles leaned up against the rocks and some of them had bandoliers over their chests.

The driver started talking to them in this jabbering Spanish, even if I was fluent I doubt I would have gotten a word. I guess he was vouching for us.

Finally they sat me down with the leader, they called him ‘Chavito.’ He’d been a lieutenant in the Loyalist Army, and he still wore his old uniform, or what was left of it. It was really just the jacket and the ratty old cap, with the red star on it.

So with Juan interpreting I tried to tell him what they’d told me to tell him, that Great Britain was friend to anyone resisting the Axis tyranny, that we wanted to provide aid, all that. But Chavito just kept shaking his head and asking for guns and ammunition. “Armas, armas, fusiles, armas, pistolas, fusiles. balas, armas, fusiles, balas.”

I kept on trying to tell him we were just here to establish contact, that before anything else we wanted to set him and his men up with wireless so they could communicate with London, but he just kept on, “armas, balas, fusiles.”

At one point Chavito stuck his pistol – I’m quite sure it was loaded – into my chest. Juan said to me, “he says he does not like men who are not straightforward with him.”

I am sure I was doing my best to be straightforward, but that was that.

Finally I said, “yes, you’re going to have armas and balas and fusiles, as much as you want, a whole army’s worth.”

Of course I was in no position to make such a guarantee, and I very much doubted His Majesty’s government would be willing to spend too much on this uncouth bandit chief crouching up in the Spanish hill country, but it mollified him for the moment. Chavito smiled and clapped my shoulder and asked if we wanted a drink.

He told us that his numbers had already swollen by half since Spain had entered the war, and he expected even more in the coming weeks. Then it would be about time to “free Spain.”

Juan and I said perhaps he was getting ahead of himself, and he and his men just smiled and laughed.

As far as I’m aware, that was the first contact established between the Spanish guerrilla fighters and the SOE in the Second World War.

*Yagüe was chief of staff


Excerpt from Vernichtungskrieg: The Eastern Front, 1941 - 1945, by Stephen G. Fritz

…It would not have been a great exaggeration in the early 1940s to say that the Spanish state existed for the sake of the Spanish Army, rather than vice versa. Over 50% of government expenditures in 1939, went to the upkeep of the armed forces and the various police agencies of Spain.

The army itself numbered 350,000 on the eve of the war, easily the largest standing army in western Europe. Upon Franco’s adherence to the Tripartite Pact, the army was enlarged further still, with an immediate order issued by the Caudillo to raise a new army corps of four divisions for action in Soviet Russia.

Recruitment offices could hardly cope with the influx of enthusiastic volunteers in the first weeks, as committed falangists and other anti-communists flocked to the banner. In Pamplona, the Plaza de Castillo was filled by ‘red berets’ chanting “A Moscú!” In Madrid, ten-thousand volunteers in blue shirts promenaded down the ‘Gran Vía’ singing the “Cara al Sol.”

Already by mid-July, Franco had his new corps, appropriately titled “Cuerpo del Ejercito Ruso,” or else the “XI Corps.” Two of the four divisions were considered ‘falangist’ ones, commanded by General José Antonio Girón de Velasco, who had never held a military command before, and General Eugenio Espinosa de los Monteros, who spoke fluent German. A third was of more ‘traditional’ bent, commanded by General José Monasterio, a cavalry commander of some renown. The fourth was organized around a core of two ‘tercios’ of the Legion and two ‘tabores’ of Moors, and thus was generally referred to as the ‘African’ division.

In overall command of the Russian Corps, Franco placed General Gonzalo Queipo de Llano. It was an interesting decision. Queipo had won much fame for himself by his audacious capture of Seville in the early days of the civil war (though the capture grew more audacious each time he told the story), but he was getting on in years, 66 years old in 1941. Moreover, he and Franco had always despised each other, and lately he had been posted on mission to Rome, where he could not make trouble. It was whispered that the Caudillo hoped Queipo would catch a stray bullet in Russia. In any case, most of the heavy lifting was expected to fall onto the shoulders of the capable General Fernando Barrón, who would serve as Queipo’s chief of staff.

The first units of the XI Corps set out for Russia on July 10th, and by the middle of August nearly the entire force had reached the Ukrainian front.

The Spaniards first saw action in the Kiev encirclement on the 2nd of September, where Monasterio’s division stormed over the Dnieper River alongside the German Sixth Army. Monasterio’s cavalry in particular distinguished themselves for courage, with a force of 2,500 cutting off and capturing 18,000 men worth of Soviet prisoners in the woods south of Kremenchug, though Monasterio reported that “1 out of 3 of my men is dead or wounded.” Nevertheless, there was cheering in the streets of Madrid and Burgos, and General Franco publicly praised the gallantry of his troops in an address from the balcony of the National Palace. A Soviet banner was dispatched back to Spain as a trophy. With Gibraltar continuing its embarrassing resistance, the good news was very welcome.

Higher up the chain of command, things did not run so smoothly. Queipo clashed often with his ostensible superior Von Reichenau, routinely ignoring orders and suggestions, and on at least one occasion insulting the shocked field marshal to his face. By November, Von Reichenau was requesting Queipo’s removal and replacement, which Franco refused.

In the Soviet Union, the Spaniards also came face to face with the unfolding Final Solution. Queipo reported to Madrid in October, “the Germans shoot every single Jew they get their hands on, regardless of age or sex. The race is being completely exterminated here. I doubt whether a single Jew will remain in the whole Ukraine by the new year.”...

Excerpt from Spain in Flames: 1936 - 1944, by E.R Hooton

Kampfgruppe Kübler reached Gibraltar on the morning of the 15th, to find the place “in absolute chaos,” as he reported to Berlin. The water surrounding the peninsula was thick with bobbing corpses, and the ground ahead of the airfield directly in front of the Spanish lines was strewn with the same. The bodies, hundreds of them, had begun to bloat in the late summer heat, and the smell was unbearable, as were the swarming flies. Muñoz Grandes explained to Kübler that multiple attempts to make a truce in order to retrieve and bury the dead had come to nought (failures which he of course blamed on the British).

The Germans were disgusted by what they regarded as the indiscipline and incompetence of their new allies. Soldiers often abandoned their posts to get something to eat or speak to a friend, and returned at their leisure. Others brought girlfriends in from Algeciras, and allowed these women to handle firearms or even listen in on highly sensitive conversation.

The Landers and the SS men were, however, forced to respect the Spaniards’ bravery, even if it sometimes bordered on stupidity. Obersturmführer Heinz Werner, in command of the 10th Company of the “Der Führer” regiment, recalled, “Two Spaniards quarrel. The first accuses the second of cowardice. To preserve his reputation, the second gets up and strolls down the line with a cigarette in his mouth, in full view of the English. Unsurprisingly, he is shot and killed. Occurrences like this aren’t rare.”

The Spaniards in turn received the Germans with some ambivalence. It was impossible to avoid the feeling that they had failed in their task, and it was now being turned over to someone else. Muños Grandes organized a small parade to welcome the Germans, and noted the unenthusiastic demeanor of his men. When they were enjoined to cry, “¡Viva Hitler!” the men of the 7th Regiment complied, but pointedly amended the slogan to “¡Viva Hitler y España!”

For the British, the arrival of the Germans precipitated much gloom. While they might have held out against Franco’s underpaid, demoralized, poorly organized troops, few doubted they could resist Hitler’s legions for long. Nevertheless, when Kübler and Muñoz Grandes tendered another offer to surrender, acknowledging the ‘great gallantry’ of the defense, it was declined.

Besides his ground complement, Kübler had also brought with him Luftwaffe wing StG2, composed of Stuka dive-bombers. The German attack opened with yet another bombardment, and for nearly three hours the Stukas screamed down over Gibraltar, while Kübler’s nearly thirty artillery companies relentlessly pounded the ‘rock’ from ground.

The next attack commenced at dawn on the 17th. Even while the guns were still going, Kübler loaded the 94th Mountain Regiment and the 10th Company of the “Der Führer” SS Regiment onto boats and sent them towards the eastern shore of Gibraltar, just as Muñoz Grandes had done weeks before.

The Germans acquitted themselves rather better than the Spaniards. They fought their way past the trenches, and successfully scaled the sheer cliffs in the face of withering enemy fire, clambering over the Water Catchment to throw the exhausted British back and ultimately capture St. Michael’s cave, on the leeward side. After six hours of combat, the Germans were ultimately thrown back down, with a loss of nearly 200 men, though not before disabling a number of the batteries situated on the beach below. The British were unable to dislodge them from the beach itself, and this position was maintained.

As this battle raged, the rest of the “Der Führer” Regiment charged over the neutral ground, augmented by a few Spanish battalions. This force pushed all the way to Gibraltar Harbor, and even after losing this position held onto Gibraltar’s Main Street, and swept the harbor with artillery and machine guns.

As evening fell, the first real progress in almost a month had been made.

The evening of the 17th also played host to one of the more dramatic episodes of the siege. Since Franco’s declaration of war, the Spanish guns at Tarifa and Ceuta had made passage through the straits a dire prospect for the Royal Navy. Nevertheless, public opinion and a sense of obligation pressured Churchill’s War Council to make some show in support of the beleaguered Gibraltar garrison, even if the ultimate fall of the peninsula was a foregone conclusion. So on the 17th, the cruiser Sheffield and the carrier Hermes, escorted by two destroyers, steamed east in the darkness, running the gauntlet of the Spanish guns and reaching ‘the rock’ a few hours before dawn, just as Kübler and Muñoz Grandes ordered operations to commence again against the Gibraltar garrison.

The British expedition had slipped through unnoticed, and the Spaniards and Germans were caught totally by surprise when they came under attack by Hurricanes from the Hermes, and the big guns of the Sheffield. Four of Kübler’s Stukas were at that time in the air, and two of these were shot down by British fighters to the great delight of Mason-MacFarlane and his men. Another was downed by the Sheffield’s AA guns, while the 112 pounders on deck caused great havoc among the Axis forces on shore.

Muñoz Grandes and Kübler were forced to postpone their attack for almost five hours, as the coastal pieces and the Axis aircraft instead focused their fire on the ships. Before morning broke over the straits, the British force retired. Off the coast of Tarifa, a few miles to the south and west, the Sheffield was struck six times along its right flank by artillery fire. Though most of the men on board abandoned ship safely, the vessel was lost.

The stunt was not repeated.

Not until the morning of the 19th did the Axis assault again get underway. The “Der Führer” Regiment pushed further south, but was stymied by ferocious resistance. Indeed, it took three days of fighting to at last throw back the exhausted British defenders, and capt5ure the whole of Gibraltar Harbor. Kübler’s mountain troops again scaled the cliff faces on the eastern side of the island, once more taking heavy losses, but ultimately capturing the peaks on the 22nd. This time also securing the reverse slope, making contact with the SS men at Parson’s Lodge Battery, which was cleared of British defenders in close-quarters fighting over the course of four hours.

Now only the very southern tip of the peninsula – and the tunnel network beneath ‘the Rock’ – remained in British hands. Mason-MacFarlane and the bulk of the soldiers who were not yet corpses or prisoners were now holed up in the tunnels underneath the cliffs, and cut off from the 1,000 men, mostly of the Royal Highlanders, dug in around the lighthouse at Europa Point.

On the afternoon of the 23rd, “Der Führer,” augmented by three Spanish battalions, made one last advance southwards. 234 British were killed and nearly 400 wounded in the ensuing firefight, which ranged over the open beaches just below ‘Little Bay,’ but not before exacting a greater toll from their enemy of 201 dead Germans and 87 dead Spaniards.

At dawn on the 24th of September, the Swastika and the red-gold Spanish banner were raised over the lighthouse. There had still been no official surrender from Mason-MacFarlane and his men hunkered under the rock, but for the first time in two centuries, Gibraltar was in Spanish hands.
 
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I've been wanting to write something like this for a while, and finally decided to give it a go. I don't want this to be too ambitious. It will probably be fairly short, not going far past 1950, if that. Hope you enjoy.
This should weaken Vichy and help de gualle
 
Another was downed by the Sheffield’s AA guns, while the 82 pounders on deck caused great havoc among the Axis forces on shore.

Great work but one tiny nitpick that doesn't change the good work Sheffield had a 6 inch (152mm) main battery that fired 112 pound (51kg) shells.

The 5.25 inch dual purpose gun primary guns on the Dido class cruisers and as secondary guns on the KGV battleships fired an 82 pound shell possibly you got them mixed up.
 

Garrison

Donor
It is not going to end well for the Spanish troops in Russia obviously and the update cuts off before the Russian roads turn to mud. As for taking Gibraltar, well the Spanish better enjoy it because it won't last. :)
Overall an excellent update and very well written.
 
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