Revolution and the Civil War in Spain by Pierre Broué, Emile Teminé lacks the depth and scope of Broué’s indispensable book on the German Revolution and you really can feel the join between Broué’s section and Teminé’s. The most stimulating part of the narrative is Broué’s account of the short period when the revolution ended and it became a civil war. What follow is a very condensed version of a much richer description.

Broué is well disposed towards the Anarchists, who he implies, were the most consistently revolutionary of the big workers’ organisations. In Aragon they collectivized three quarters of the farming land, cutting the Gordian knot of the land issue for the peasantry. In Barcelona they took much of the service and industrial sectors under forms of workers’ control.

Revolutionary power was administered though a range of councils which had some similarities to soviets or the German Rate. It was the differences that were their undoing. They were composed of leaders of political parties and trade unions and, in the early period of the revolution could be described as the expression of the revolutionary will of the thousands of militants who took part in them. A major positive feature was the willingness of these militants to disregard the instructions of their own party. In the light of the bloodbath that the Communist Party and the NKVD inflicted on Anarchists, the POUM and Trotskyists the imposition of this form of discipline was a major tool in suppressing the revolution. However nowhere in Spain did the parties raise the demand that power be transferred to the councils. They were not subject to election and recall and the parties did not yield power to them.

By the autumn of 1936 the issue of power was posed between the two main currents in the revolutionary process. The Popular Front wanted to reestablish a police force, courts and old style forms of local government – in effect a modernised bourgeois state. The revolutionary wing of the movement wanted a revolutionary government of councils, justice administered through revolutionary tribunals and militias of armed workers. This was articulated by the POUM and the anarchists who were developing similar conceptions of a workers’ power.

The international situation in 1936 was much less favourable than it had been for the wave of revolutions which broke out after World War One. Fascism had come to power in Italy and Germany and Stalin was murdering the last of the surviving Bolsheviks. Supporters of the Popular Front used the fear of the revolution’s isolation to argue for limits which would keep Britain and France well disposed to the Republican government. In calling for a functioning state that respected private property they were strongly supported by the Communist Party. Its General Secretary Jose Diaz explicitly ruled out the prospect of a revolution and insisted that the struggle had to be restricted to that against Fascism. In this he was strongly supported by the Soviet ambassador who directly intervened in cabinet discussions to argue for a halt to the revolutionary transformation of areas under Republican control.

What quickly followed was the destruction of almost all the organs of mass power and their replacement by the institutions of a bourgeois state. The last word belongs to the anarchist Santillan who summed up how by ending the revolutionary process the Republican government abandoned its only chance of carrying the war through to victory. He commented after Franco’s had taken power “we sacrificed the revolution itself without understanding that this sacrifice also implied sacrificing the aims of the war”

17 responses to “Spain – from revolution to civil war”

  1. Great book. I wish the far left would stop being members of the loathsome “La Pasionaria” fan club. She was still telling lies well into her dotage. The Winnie Mandela of Spain.

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  2. decent interval Avatar
    decent interval

    I am unfamiliar with La Pasonaria’s far left fan club. All the far leftists I have ever encountered base their knowledge of the Spanish Civil War entirely on Homage to Catalonia and Land and Freedom and have decided that the PCE was to blame for everything. So who are these fans? And what in sense precisely is the Winnie Mandela analogy appopriate?

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  3. Outside of Trotskyist and Anarchist circles there is a cult to her. If you look at the circles in and around both the CPB and the CPI here in Ireland you will find constant mentions of her especially in the context of the International Brigades.
    On a footnote one Irishman a Comintern agent was kidnapped in barcelona because he expressed disagreements about the supression of the POUM and died in the Galag.
    Barry McLoughlins “Thrown to the wolves”.
    McLoughlin has written( saw the article and failed to get the reference) recently on British victims of Stalinism including Rosa Cohen who died in the Gulag or in Rosa’s case shot. Rosa was a former partner of Pollitt.
    My reason for raising this is that I feel that the lessons of Spain are being forgotten.

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  4. decent interval Avatar
    decent interval

    Well yes, obviously there is a cult of La Pasionaria in the Communist Parties. That is not what I understand by the term “far left” however, and it is doubtful that people in that tradition will be convinced by a book by a long-time Lambertiste. And I don’t know in what sense the “lessons of Spain” are being forgotten, although there certainly is a recognition amongst some on the far left that the situation was a lot more complex than is represented by the traditional Trotskyist/anarchist verities – a representative of that is indeed the SWPer who acted as historical advisor to Land and Freedom, Andy Durgan, whose recent book on the conflict was denounced by some as a shameful capitulation to Stalinism and Popular Frontism.

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  5. I think there is a lot of truth in decent interval’s first comment. The PCE – or more usually Stalin personally – is given the blame for everything. Fascism, the Nazis, the ban on the import of arms by the western powers etc are rarely if ever mentioned.

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  6. Contrast what the Cubans put into fighting the South Africans with the degree of support Stalin gave to Republican Spain. Broue makes a convincing case that the Soviet aid was just enough to allow the Republicans to fight but never came close to matching what the Germans and Italians provided Franco.

    But revolutions are rarely won by outside aid. The Republican programme put a stop to the revolutionary process inside the Civil War and the CP supported this as it was an element of Soviet foreign policy.

    As for the executions of leftists no one can seriously deny those.

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  7. Liam,

    I don’t think anyone is trying to deny the execution of leftists. Although we less often hear about the fact that the violence was a two-way process. All of it was deeply wrong.

    I think that it’s clear from the experience of WWII that the only way to defeat fascism was to throw everything you have at it in a properly organised and disciplined army. I think that without that, and without the Soviet aid, the war would have been over much sooner. Plus it was easier for the Italians and Germans to get aid to Spain, not least because of France and Britain’s benevolent neturality when it came to the fascists at this time.

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  8. decent interval Avatar
    decent interval

    I think the Soviet Union delivered as much aid as possible given its primary goal of securing an alliance with Britain and France against Germany, not in itself an irrational goal. And it was indeed the policy of non-intervention imposed by Britain and France which sealed the fate of the Republic. And in both countries Communists did a lot more for Spain than social democrats did. But even this is not without nuance – Leon Blum was all too aware of the dangers of a rightist coup in France, and I think there is some merit in his view that had France intervened “we would have lost France and would not have saved Spain”. So in all circumstances defeat was very likely for the Republic, given the extremley unfavourable balance of forces in Europe at the time.

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  9. Of course the Spanish Republic’s gold supply was shipped to Russia to pay for that aid. “Not in itself an irrational goal” -whose interests did it serve?

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  10. decent interval Avatar
    decent interval

    “whose interests did it serve?”
    The perceived national interests of the Soviet Union, although I think a tripartite alliance against Nazi Germany in the mid 1930s would have very much served the interests of humanity and saved millions of lives.

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  11. “I think there is some merit in his view that had France intervened ‘we would have lost France and would not have saved Spain’.”

    But France was lost, within a year of Spain falling to Franco.

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  12. decent interval Avatar
    decent interval

    “But France was lost, within a year of Spain falling to Franco”
    Yes. You would prefer it to have been lost earlier?

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  13. …And the Spanish Civil War continues to play itself out amongst the left.

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  14. ASs for Spain still playing itself out. The methods of Stalinism still come into play in disputes. It provided an ideological gloss for attacks on opponents in Ireland for a start.
    An example would be of the demoralising effect In Aragon the anarchists had won. Lister’s regiment crushed the Council. This was presumably to please moderate bourgeois elements in Spain and abroad. Funny how voluntary collectives/cooperatives were destroyed in Spain and were forced on the same type of people in the USSR. It leaders being arrested. La Pasionaria slandered its leader in 1968, alleging he was a millionaire in South America. In fact he was a waiter.
    The Stalinists won. They destroyed the gains of the Spanish Revolution. The élan and bravery that had beaten back the fascists in Barcelona was gone. The army obeyed orders so much so that in the last dispute they all followed their respective officers.
    To win a revolutionary war revolutionaries need incredible amounts of élan and enthusiasm. This is how professional armies are beaten from the French Revolution on. Stalinism sapped this in Spain. The anarchist had not got a clue what was happening.
    One POUM and Trotskyist idea was to give independence to Morocco weakening Franco in the rear and also because it was the right thing to do. This was rejected.
    http://www.marxists.org/archive/morrow-felix/
    The above contains the orthodox Trotskyist account.
    http://www.whatnextjournal.co.uk/Pages/History/Araquist.html
    Interesting take as well
    Exhaustive discussion on Spain and the visit of the last POUM veteran to Dublin
    On Durgan being denounced as a Popular Frontist. Trotskyism is divided in many ways. One main divide is between those who try and do something and sometimes make mistakes (I suspect Durgan has not made any) and those who with Talmudic rigour find fault in everyone and everything.

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  15. My apologies.
    I should mention Beevors book.My source for the La Pasionaria slander.
    “The Battle for Spain”
    Good and a good read..
    I regard it as better than Thomas.

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  16. http://cedarlounge.wordpress.com/?s=Spanish+Civil+War

    This is an exhaustive discussion onthe occassion of the visit to Dublin of a POUM veteran
    I meant it to be in a previous post
    Regards
    Jim

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  17. Comrade Andrew tells me that on Monday Cerys Matthews is presenting a show themed on music about the Spanish Civil War.

    She is still taking suggestions.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/6music/shows/cerys/

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