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Non-intervention in the Spanish Civil War

During the Spanish Civil War, several countries followed a principle of non-intervention to avoid any potential escalation or possible expansion of the war to other states. That would result in the signing of the Non-Intervention Agreement in August 1936 and the setting up of the Non-Intervention Committee, which first met in September. Primarily arranged by the French and the British governments, the Committee also included the Soviet Union, Fascist Italy, and Nazi Germany. Ultimately, the committee had the support of 27 states.[1]

Two influential figures in non-intervention: British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain (left) and French Prime Minister Léon Blum (right).

A plan to control materials coming into the country was put forward in early 1937, effectively subjecting the Spanish Republic to severe international isolation and a de facto economic embargo.[2] The plan was mocked by German and Italian observers as amounting to decisive and immediate support for the Spanish Nationalist faction.[3] The subject of foreign volunteers was also much discussed, with little result. Although agreements were signed late in the war, they were made outside the Committee. Efforts to stem the flow of war materials to Spain were largely unsuccessful, with foreign involvement in the Spanish Civil War proving instrumental to its outcome. Germany, Italy and the Soviet Union consistently broke the Non-Intervention Agreement, and France occasionally did so. Britain remained largely faithful to the agreement.[4]

Non-Intervention Agreement

Italy and Germany supported the Spanish Nationalists from the outset of the Spanish Civil War. The Soviet Union began supporting the Spanish Republicans four months later. Non-intervention and the Non-Intervention Agreement were proposed in a joint diplomatic initiative by the governments of France and the United Kingdom.[5] Part of the policy of appeasement, it was aimed at preventing a proxy war from escalating into a European-wide conflict.[6]

On 3 August 1936, Charles de Chambrun, the French ambassador to Italy, presented the French government's non-intervention plan, and Galeazzo Ciano promised to study it. The British, however, immediately accepted the plan in principle.[7] The following day, the plan was put to Konstantin von Neurath, the foreign minister of Germany, by André François-Poncet. The German position was that such a declaration was not needed, but discussions could be held on preventing the spread of the war to the rest of Europe if the Soviet Union was present.[7] It was mentioned at the meeting of the French with Neurath that both countries were already supplying the parties in the war, France the Republicans and Germany the Nationalists. A similar approach was made by the French to the Soviet Union.[7] On 6 August, Ciano confirmed Italian support in principle. Despite a Pravda claim that 12,145,000 Rbls had already been sent by Soviet workers to Spain, the Soviet government similarly agreed in principle if Portugal was included and Germany and Italy stopped aid immediately.[8]

On 7 August 1936, France unilaterally declared non-intervention.[9] Draft declarations had been put to the German and Italian governments. Such a declaration had already been accepted by the United Kingdom, Belgium, the Netherlands, Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union, which renounced all traffic in war material, direct or indirect.[10] The Portuguese foreign minister, Armindo Monteiro, was also asked to accept but held his hand. An ultimatum was put to Yvon Delbos by the British to halt French exports to Spain, or Britain would not be obliged to act under the Treaty of Locarno if Germany invaded. On 9 August, exports were duly suspended.[10][11] However, collections for food, clothing and medical supplies to the Spanish Republicans continued.[12] On 9 August, the Germans falsely informed the British that 'no war materials had been sent from Germany and none will'.[12][nb 1] During the blockade of the Strait of Gibraltar by the Spanish Republican Navy, one German Junkers was captured when it came down in Republican territory, which was explained as 'merely a transport aircraft'. Its release would be required before Germany signed the Non-Intervention Pact.[13] Portugal accepted the pact on 13 August unless its border was threatened by the war.[12]

There was popular support in both countries for the plan, but in the United Kingdom, the socialist Labour Party was strongly for it,[nb 2] the left in France wanted direct aid to the Republicans.[14][15] The Labour Party would reject non-intervention in October 1937.[16] The British Trades Union Congress (TUC) was split,[17] but the leaders Walter Citrine and Ernest Bevin used their block votes to pass motions supporting non-intervention at the TUC Congress in September 1936,[18] making non-intervention a TUC policy.[19] Like Labour, between October 1936 and June 1937 and under pressure from the LSI and the International Federation of Trade Unions, Citrine, Bevin and the TUC repudiated non-intervention.[18]

A report, Commission of Inquiry into Alleged Breaches of the Non-Intervention Agreement in Spain, was drawn up in London, sponsored by the Comintern and headed by respectable figures.[14] Both the British and the French governments were aware of the second World War.[16] France was reliant on British support in general. Léon Blum, the French prime minister, feared that openly supporting for the Republic would lead to civil war and a fascist takeover in France and ultimately to no change in Spain.[20]

On 5 August 1936, the United States made it known that it would follow a policy of non-intervention but did not announce it officially.[21] Its isolationism on the Spanish war would later be identified as disastrous by Under-Secretary of State Sumner Welles.[22] Five days later, the Glenn L. Martin Company enquired whether the government would allow the sale of eight bombers to the Spanish Republican Air Force; the response was negative. The United States also confirmed it would not take part in several mediation attempts, including one by the Organization of American States.[21] Mexico soon became the first state to support the Republicans openly. On 15 August, the United Kingdom banned exports of war material to Spain.[21] Neurath also agreed to the pact and suggested for volunteers, many of whom would eventually form the International Brigades, to be included. Italy similarly agreed[21] and signed on 21 August after a determined diplomatic offensive by Britain and France.[9] The surprising reversal of views has been put down to the growing belief that countries could not abide by the agreement anyway.[21] Admiral Erich Raeder urged the German government to back the Nationalists more completely and then bring Europe to the brink of war or to abandon the Nationalists. On the 24th, Germany signed.[13][23]

The Soviet Union was keen not to be left out. On 23 August 1936, it agreed to the Non-Intervention Agreement,[24] which was followed by a decree from Stalin banning exports of war material to Spain, thereby bringing the Soviets into line with the Western powers.[23] Soviet foreign policy considered Collective security against German fascism a priority,[25] and the Comintern had agreed a similar approach in 1934.[26] It walked a thin line between pleasing France and not being seen to hinder the world revolution and communist ideals. It was also the time of the first significant trials of the Old Bolsheviks during the Great Purge.[23] Soviet press and opposition groups were entirely against non-intervention,[24] and Soviet actions could hardly have been further from the goal of spreading the revolution.[26]

It was then that the Non-Intervention Committee was created to uphold the agreement, but the double-dealing of the Soviets and the Germans had already become apparent.[27] The agreement also removed the need for a declaration of neutrality, which would have granted the Nationalists and Republicans control over neutrals in the areas they controlled, and had little legal standing.[28] In the United Kingdom, part of the reasoning was based on an exaggerated belief in German and Italian preparedness for war.[28]

Many historians argue that the British policy of non-intervention was a product of the Establishment's anticommunism. Scott Ramsay instead argues that Britain demonstrated a "benevolent neutrality" and was simply hedging its bets, avoiding favouring one side or the other. Its goal was that in a future European war, Britain would enjoy the 'benevolent neutrality' of whichever side won in Spain.[29] The British government was also concerned about the far right and ultimately concluded that no desirable basis of government was possible in Spain because of the present situation.[30]

Non-Intervention Committee

It is not so much a case of taking actual steps immediately, as of pacifying the aroused feelings of the Leftist parties... by the very establishment of such a Committee.

The ostensible purpose of the Non-Intervention Committee (1936–1939) was to prevent personnel and matériel reaching the warring parties of the Spanish Civil War, as with the Non-Intervention Agreement.[5]

The Committee first met in London on 9 September 1936 and was attended by representatives of solely European countries and did not include Switzerland, whose policy of neutrality prohibited even intergovernmental action.[32][nb 3] It was chaired by William Morrison, Britain's Financial Secretary to the Treasury. The meeting was concerned mostly with procedure.[33] Charles Corbin represented the French, Dino Grandi represented the Italians and Ivan Maisky represented the Soviets. Germany was represented by Ribbentrop (with Otto Christian Archibald von Bismarck as deputy) but left the running to Grandi[34] although they found working with him difficult. Portugal, whose presence had been a Soviet requirement, was not represented.[31] There was little hope in the Committee since the British and French would have been aware of the continued shipment of arms to the Nationalists from Italy and Germany.[35] Britain protested twice to the Italians, once in response to Italian aircraft landing in Majorca, the other pre-emptively over any significant change in the Mediterranean.[14] Stanley Baldwin, the British prime minister, and Blum both attempted to halt global exports to Spain and believed it in Europe's best interests. Soviet aid to the Republic was threatened in the Committee. It began once it was clear the Non-Intervention Agreement was not preventing Italian and German aid to the Nationalists.[36]

It would have been better to call this the Intervention Committee, for the whole activity of its members consisted in explaining or concealing the participation of their countries in Spain

— Joachim von Ribbentrop in his memoirs.[37]

The second meeting took place on 14 September 1936.[38] It established a subcommittee to be attended by representatives of Belgium, Britain, Czechoslovakia, France, Germany, Italy, the Soviet Union and Sweden to deal with the day-to-day running of non-intervention. Among them, however, the United Kingdom, France, Germany and Italy dominated, perhaps worryingly so. Soviet non-military aid was revived but not military aid.[39] Meanwhile, the 1936 meeting of the League of Nations began, beset with not only the Spanish problem but also the review of the Abyssinia Crisis.[40] It was much weakened but still spoke out in favour of worldwide peace. There, Anthony Eden convinced Monteiro to have Portugal join the Non-Intervention Committee.[40] Álvarez del Vayo spoke out against the Non-Intervention Agreement and claimed that it put the rebel Nationalists on the same footing as the Republican government and that as the official government, the Republic had the right to buy arms.[41] On 28 September, Portugal was represented on the Committee for the first time, and the Earl of Plymouth replaced Morrison as British representative.[42][43] A member of the Conservative Party, he often adjourned meetings to the benefit of the Italians and Germans, and the Committee was accused of an anti-Soviet bias.[43] In Geneva, Maxim Litvinov once again confirmed Soviet support, based on the suggestion it would avoid war. However, the Soviet government remained hostile to the idea and supported Álvarez's view that non-intervention was illegal.[44]

On 12 November 1936, significant changes were put in place to the functioning of the Committee with the ratification of plans to post observers to Spanish frontiers and ports to prevent breaches of the agreement. That had been delayed by Italian and German demands for air transport to be included, which was perhaps a delaying tactic because of the impossibility to doing so effectively.[45] Russian military aid now being transported to Spain were noticed. France and Britain split on whether to recognise Franco's forces as a belligerent, as the British wanted, or to fail to do, as the French wanted.[46] On 18 November, that was subsumed by the news that the Italian and the German governments had recognised the Nationalists as the true government of Spain.[46] A British bill preventing exports of arms to Spain by British ships from anywhere was signed.[47] Yvon Delbos requested mediation; at the same time, the Republic appealed to the Council of the League of Nations for assistance. US President Franklin Roosevelt, who was also approached, ruled out US interference with the words '[there should be] no expectation that the United States would ever again send troops or warships or floods of munitions and money to Europe'.[48] On 4 December, France and Britain approached Italy, Germany, Russia and Portugal to request mediation.[nb 4] An armistice would be called, a commission sent to Spain and, after a plebiscite, a government featuring those uninvolved in the war (such as Salvador de Madariaga) would be established.[48] The considerable number of German soldiers in Spain, at least 5,000, was now clear, but Italy and Germany were opposed to isolated discussion of the matter.[49]

The outcome of the Spanish war was settled in London, Paris, Rome, Berlin – at any rate not in Spain.

— George Orwell, in "Looking Back on the Spanish War".[50]

On 10 December 1936, Álvarez put the Republic's case to the League of Nations, further demanding that the League condemn the Italian and German decision to recognise the Nationalists.[51] He pointed to the risk of the Spanish war spreading and suggested that the Non-Intervention Committee was ineffective.[52] That charge was denied by Lord Cranborne and Édouard Viénot, the British and French representatives respectively, who appealed to the League to endorse the mediation plan.[52] The League condemned intervention, urged its council's members to support non-intervention and commended mediation.[52] It then closed discussion on Spain, leaving it to the Committee.[53] The mediation plan, however, was soon dropped.[52] Britain and France continued to consider and to put forward plans to prevent foreign volunteers outside the Committee.[52]

On 6 January 1937, the first opportunity after the winter break, both houses of the US Congress passed a resolution banning the export of arms to Spain[54][nb 5] Those opposed the bill, including American socialists, communists and many liberals, suggested that the export of arms to Germany and Italy should be halted also under the Neutrality Act of 1935 since foreign intervention constituted a state of war in Spain. Cordell Hull continued to doubt the extent of German and Italian operations, despite evidence to the contrary.[55] The Soviets met the request to ban volunteers on 27 December, Portugal on 5 January, and Germany and Italy on 7 January. Adolf Hitler authored the German declaration.[56] On 10 January, a further request that volunteering be made a crime was made by Britain and France to Germany. There continued to be uneasiness about the scale, limitations and outcomes of German intervention in Spain.[56] On 20 January, Italy put a moratorium on volunteers, and on 25 January Germany and Italy agreed to support limitations to prevent volunteers,[57] believing that supplies to the Nationalists were now sufficient. In that meeting, both the Germans and Italian spoke as if their men in Spain were genuine volunteers.[58] The Spanish Civil War (Non-Intervention) Act, 1937 was signed into law on 24 February by the Irish and provided penalties for exporters of war material and for service in the military forces of a belligerent, and it restricted travel to Spain.[59] Soviet war aid continued to reach Spain through the Mediterranean.[60] However, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Russia continued to believe a European war was not in their best interests; non-intervention, however, would have left both sides with the possibility of defeat, which Germany, Italy and the Soviet Union, in particular, were keen to avoid.[61]

Control plan

 
Map showing the control zones of the four countries (red – the United Kingdom; blue – France; green – Italy; grey – Germany) on establishment.[62]

Observers were posted to Spanish ports and borders, and both Ribbentrop and Grandi were told to agree to the plan, significant shipments already having taken place.[63] Portugal would not accept observers although it agreed to personnel attached to the British embassy in Lisbon. The cost of the scheme was put at £898,000; Britain, France, Germany, Italy and the Soviet Union would each pay 16%; the other 20% would be met by the other 22 countries.[63] Zones of patrol were assigned to each of the four states; an International Board was set up to administer the scheme. The setting up of the scheme took until April. For the Republicans, that seemed like adding insult to injury since the wholesale transfer of arms to the Nationalists would now be policed by the very countries supplying them.[62] Despite accusations that 60,000 Italians were now in Spain[64] and Grandi's announcement that he hoped that no Italian volunteer would leave until the war was over,[64] the German delegation appears to have hoped the control plan was effective.[65] There were Italian assurances that Italy would not break up non-intervention.[66]

In May 1937, the Committee noted two attacks on the patrol's ships in the Balearic islands by Spanish Republican Air Force aircraft, the first on the Italian cruiser Barletta and the second on the German cruiser Deutschland.[67] The latter resulting in German retaliation against the city of Almeria. It iterated calls for the withdrawal of volunteers from Spain, condemned the bombing of open towns and showed approval of humanitarian work.[68] Germany and Italy said that they would withdraw from the Committee, and the patrols unless it could be guaranteed that there would be no further attacks.[67][69] Early June saw the return of Germany and Italy to the committee and patrols.[70] Italian reticence of operations in Spain, however, was dropped. By contrast, it continued to be a crime in Germany to mention German operations.[70] Following attacks, attributed to Republicans by Germany but denied, on the German cruiser Leipzig on 15 and 18 June, Germany and Italy once again withdrew from patrols but not the Committee.[71][72] That prompted the Portuguese government to remove British observers on the Spanish-Portuguese border.[73]

Discussions on patrols remained complicated. Britain and France offered to replace Germany and Italy in patrols of their sections, but the last two believed that the patrols would be too partial.[74] Germany and Italy requested land controls to be kept and belligerent rights to be given to the Nationalists, so that rights of search could be used by both the Republicans and Nationalists to replace naval patrols.[71][74] The French considered abandoning border controls[75] or perhaps leaving non-intervention. However, the French were reliant on the British, who wished to continue with patrols.[71] Britain and France thus continued to labour over non-intervention; although they judged it effective, some 42 ships were estimated to have escaped inspection between April and the end of July. The air route had not been covered.[76] The Nationalists' debt to Germany reached 150 million Reichsmark.[77] On 9 July, the Dutch ambassador suggested for Britain to draft a compromise.[78] Lord Plymouth called the 'compromise plan for the control of non-intervention'. Naval patrols would be replaced by observers in ports and ships, and land control measures would be resumed.[79][80] Belligerent rights would not be granted until substantial progress was made on volunteer withdrawal.[80] The French were furious and considered that Britain was moving towards Germany and Italy.[79] Grandi demanded the discussion of belligerent rights before volunteer rights; Maisky insisted for volunteers to be discussed first.[81][82]

Conference of Nyon and onwards

In 1937, all powers were prepared to give up on non-intervention. Ciano complained to his government that Italian forces in Italy were ready but not being used; the Soviet Union was not prepared to discuss belligerent rights;[83] Delbos was considering proposing mediation by Roosevelt and the Pope and simultaneously preparing French war plans; and Britain's new prime minister, Neville Chamberlain, saw securing a friendship with the Italian Benito Mussolini as a top priority.[84] Eden confided he wished Franco to win and so Italian and Germany involvement would be scaled back; Chamberlain considered Spain a troublesome complication to be forgotten.[84] By the end of July 1937, the Committee was in deadlock, and the aims of a successful outcome to the Spanish Civil War was looking unlikely for the Republic.[85] Unrestricted Italian submarine warfare began on 12 August.[85] The British Admiralty believed that a significant control effort was the best solution of four that were put forward in response to attacks on British shipping.[86] On 27 August, the Committee decided that naval patrols did not justify their expense and would be replaced, as planned, with observers at ports.[84]

A leaky dam, better than no dam at all.

— Anthony Eden on non-intervention.[87]

The Conference of Nyon was arranged in September 1937 for all parties with a Mediterranean coastline by the British despite appeals by Italy and Germany for the Committee to handle the piracy and other issues the conference was to discuss.[88] It decided that French Navy and the British Royal Navy fleets would patrol the areas of sea west of Malta and attack any suspicious submarines.[89] Warships that attacked neutral shipping would be attacked.[90] On 18 September, Juan Negrín requested for the League of Nations' Political Committee to examine Spain and demanded an end to non-intervention. Eden claimed that non-intervention had stopped a European war. The League reported on the Spanish situation by noting the 'failure of non-intervention'.[90] On 6 November, the Committee met once again with a plan to recognise the Nationalists as belligerents once significant progress had been made was finally accepted, which was caused partly by Eden's patience.[91] The Nationalists accepted on 20 November and the Republicans on 1 December. The former suggested 3,000 would be a reasonable number, which was really the number of sick and unreliable Italians whom Franco wished to withdraw.[92] That was countered by British suggestions that 15,000 or 20,000 might be enough.[93] The talks were subsumed by bilateral Anglo-Italian discussions. In trying to protect non-intervention in the Anglo-Italian meetings, which he grudgingly did, Eden would end up resigning from his post in the Foreign Office.[93] On 17 March 1938, France reopened the border to arms traffic to the now-weakened Republic.[94] Between mid-April and mid-June, 21 British seamen were killed by attacks on British shipping in Spanish waters as well as several Non-Intervention Committee observers.[95]

On 27 June 1938, Maisky agreed to send of two commissions to Spain, enumerate foreign volunteer forces and bring about their withdrawal. That was estimated to cost £1,750,000 to £2,250,000, which was borne by member countries of the Committee.[96] The Nationalists wished to prevent the fall of the favourable Chamberlain government in the United Kingdom and so were seen to accept the plan.[97] With much bemoaning, the Republicans also accepted the plan. The Nationalists demanded belligerent rights and then withdrawals of 10,000 from each side, which amounted to a rejection of the plan.[98] Following the Munich Agreement, which was judged by Chamberlain to have been a success, Britain would host similar mediation in Spain.[99] Negrín would propose the removal of the International Brigades, most of whom were now Spaniards, at the last meeting of the League of Nations, thereby showing his contempt for the Committee.[100] Similarly, Italians would leave Spain under the Anglo-Italian agreement, not through the Committee.[101]

Britain and France recognised the Nationalist government on 27 February 1939.[102] Clement Attlee criticised the way it had been agreed, calling it 'a gross betrayal... two and a half years of hypocritical pretence of non-intervention'.[103]

References

Notes

  1. ^ See also German involvement in the Spanish Civil War
  2. ^ Alpert (1998) p. 65 notes that rank-and-file members of the Labour Party may have opposed it.
  3. ^ Involved were Albania, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Norway, Poland, Romania, Turkey, the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia. (Thomas (1961). p. 277.)
  4. ^ The Abdication Crisis broke in the United Kingdom on 3 December and occupied the minds of the British public. (Thomas (1961). p. 335.)
  5. ^ by 81 to 0 in the US Senate and 406 to 1 in the US House of Representatives. (Thomas (1961). p. 338.)

Citations

  1. ^ Thomas, Hugh (2001). The Spanish Civil War. Modern Library. ISBN 9780375755156.
  2. ^ Helen Graham (2003). The Spanish Republic at War 1936-1939. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521459327.
  3. ^ Ángel Viñas, La Soledad de la República 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Stone (1997). p. 133.
  5. ^ a b Beevor (2006). p. 374.
  6. ^ Stone (1997). p. 134.
  7. ^ a b c Thomas (1961). p. 257.
  8. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 257–258.
  9. ^ a b Alpert (1998). p. 45.
  10. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 258.
  11. ^ Alpert (1998). pp. 45–46.
  12. ^ a b c Thomas (1961). p. 259.
  13. ^ a b Alpert (1998). p. 44.
  14. ^ a b c Thomas (1961). p. 279.
  15. ^ Alpert (1998). p. 46.
  16. ^ a b Preston (2006). p. 143.
  17. ^ Alpert (1998). p. 65.
  18. ^ a b Tom Buchanan. "The Trades Union Congress and the Spanish Civil War". Warwick University. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  19. ^ Rodney Mace (1999). British Trade Union Posters: An Illustrated History. Sutton Publishing. p. 78. ISBN 0750921587.
  20. ^ Preston (2006). p. 144.
  21. ^ a b c d e Thomas (1961). p. 260.
  22. ^ Preston (2004) p. 145.
  23. ^ a b c Thomas (1961). p. 261.
  24. ^ a b Alpert (1998). p. 51.
  25. ^ Stone (1997). p. 137.
  26. ^ a b Preston (2006). p. 136.
  27. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 263–4.
  28. ^ a b Alpert (1998). p. 59.
  29. ^ Scott Ramsay. "Ensuring Benevolent Neutrality: The British Government's Appeasement of General Franco during the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939". International History Review 41:3 (2019): 604–623. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2018.1428211.
  30. ^ Ramsay, Scott. "Ideological Foundations of British Non-Intervention in the Spanish Civil War: Foreign Office Perceptions of Political Polarisation in Spain, 1931-1936." Diplomacy & Statecraft 31, no. 1 (2020): 44–64.
  31. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 278.
  32. ^ Beevor (2006). p. 378.
  33. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 277.
  34. ^ Alpert (1998). p. 61.
  35. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 278–9.
  36. ^ Preston (2006). p. 150.
  37. ^ Heydecker, Leeb (1975). p. 174.
  38. ^ Beevor (2006). p. 385.
  39. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 281.
  40. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 283.
  41. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 283–4.
  42. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 284.
  43. ^ a b Preston (2006). p. 159.
  44. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 285.
  45. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 331.
  46. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 332.
  47. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 333.
  48. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 334.
  49. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 334–5.
  50. ^ Orwell (1953). p. 169.
  51. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 335–5.
  52. ^ a b c d e Thomas (1961). p. 336.
  53. ^ Alpert (1998). p. 105.
  54. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 338.
  55. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 339.
  56. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 340.
  57. ^ Alpert (1998). p. 104.
  58. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 341.
  59. ^ Irish Statute Book: Spanish Civil War (Non-Intervention) Act, 1937
  60. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 341–2.
  61. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 342–3.
  62. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 395.
  63. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 394.
  64. ^ a b Alpert (1998). p. 115.
  65. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 395–6.
  66. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 396.
  67. ^ a b Bulletin of International News (1937). p. 3.
  68. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 439–440.
  69. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 441.
  70. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 456.
  71. ^ a b c Thomas (1961). p. 457.
  72. ^ Bulletin of International News (1937). pp. 4–5.
  73. ^ Bulletin of International News (1937). p. 6.
  74. ^ a b Bulletin of International News (1937). p. 7.
  75. ^ Bulletin of International News (1937). p. 8.
  76. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 458.
  77. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 459.
  78. ^ Bulletin of International News (1937). p. 9.
  79. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 463.
  80. ^ a b Bulletin of International News (1937). pp. 9–10.
  81. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 464.
  82. ^ Bulletin of International News (1937). p. 11.
  83. ^ Bulletin of International News (1937). pp. 11–12.
  84. ^ a b c Thomas (1961). p. 467.
  85. ^ a b The English Historical Review (1975). p. 104.
  86. ^ The English Historical Review (1975). p. 105.
  87. ^ Blinkhorn (1988). p. 48.
  88. ^ Thomas (1961). pp. 475–6.
  89. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 476.
  90. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 477.
  91. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 502.
  92. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 503.
  93. ^ a b Thomas (1961). p. 514.
  94. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 523.
  95. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 538.
  96. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 541.
  97. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 542.
  98. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 552.
  99. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 555.
  100. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 557.
  101. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 561.
  102. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 583.
  103. ^ Thomas (1961). p. 584.

Sources

Books
  • Alpert, Michael (29 March 1998). A New International History of the Spanish Civil War. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-21043-4.
  • Beevor, Antony (2006). The Battle for Spain (1 ed.). Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-84832-5.
  • Blinkhorn, Martin (1988). Democracy and Civil War in Spain 1931–1939. ISBN 0-415-00699-6.
  • Heydecker, Joe Julius; Leeb, Johannes (1975). The Nuremberg Trial: A History of Nazi Germany as Revealed Through the Testimony at Nuremberg. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-8371-8131-8.
  • Orwell, George (1953). "Looking Back on the Spanish War". England, Your England and Other Essays. London: Secker and Warburg.
  • Preston, Paul (2006). The Spanish Civil War: Reaction, revolution and revenge (3 ed.). HarperCollins.
  • Stone, Glyn (1997). "Sir Robert Vansittart and Spain, 1931–1941". In Otte, Thomas G.; Pagedas, Constantine A. (eds.). Personalities, war and diplomacy: essays in international history. Routledge.
  • Thomas, Hugh (1961). The Spanish Civil War (1 ed.). London: Eyre and Spottiswoode.
Journals
  • S. A. H (7 August 1937). "Spain: the British Compromise Plan". Bulletin of International News. London: Royal Institute of International Affairs. 14 (3): 3–13. ISSN 2044-3986. JSTOR 25639692.
  • Peter Gretton (January 1975). "The Nyon Conference - The Naval Aspect". The English Historical Review. London: Oxford University Press. 90 (354). ISSN 0013-8266. JSTOR 567512.

External links

  • Jennifer L. Foray, Dutch Involvement in the Spanish Civil War, Columbia Historical Review (Spring 2001)
  • Spartacus Educational summary
  • "Trabajadores: The Spanish Civil War through the eyes of organised labour", a digitised collection of more than 13,000 pages of documents from the archives of the British Trades Union Congress held in the Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick

intervention, spanish, civil, during, spanish, civil, several, countries, followed, principle, intervention, avoid, potential, escalation, possible, expansion, other, states, that, would, result, signing, intervention, agreement, august, 1936, setting, interve. During the Spanish Civil War several countries followed a principle of non intervention to avoid any potential escalation or possible expansion of the war to other states That would result in the signing of the Non Intervention Agreement in August 1936 and the setting up of the Non Intervention Committee which first met in September Primarily arranged by the French and the British governments the Committee also included the Soviet Union Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany Ultimately the committee had the support of 27 states 1 Two influential figures in non intervention British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain left and French Prime Minister Leon Blum right A plan to control materials coming into the country was put forward in early 1937 effectively subjecting the Spanish Republic to severe international isolation and a de facto economic embargo 2 The plan was mocked by German and Italian observers as amounting to decisive and immediate support for the Spanish Nationalist faction 3 The subject of foreign volunteers was also much discussed with little result Although agreements were signed late in the war they were made outside the Committee Efforts to stem the flow of war materials to Spain were largely unsuccessful with foreign involvement in the Spanish Civil War proving instrumental to its outcome Germany Italy and the Soviet Union consistently broke the Non Intervention Agreement and France occasionally did so Britain remained largely faithful to the agreement 4 Contents 1 Non Intervention Agreement 2 Non Intervention Committee 2 1 Control plan 2 2 Conference of Nyon and onwards 3 References 3 1 Notes 3 2 Citations 3 3 Sources 4 External linksNon Intervention Agreement EditItaly and Germany supported the Spanish Nationalists from the outset of the Spanish Civil War The Soviet Union began supporting the Spanish Republicans four months later Non intervention and the Non Intervention Agreement were proposed in a joint diplomatic initiative by the governments of France and the United Kingdom 5 Part of the policy of appeasement it was aimed at preventing a proxy war from escalating into a European wide conflict 6 On 3 August 1936 Charles de Chambrun the French ambassador to Italy presented the French government s non intervention plan and Galeazzo Ciano promised to study it The British however immediately accepted the plan in principle 7 The following day the plan was put to Konstantin von Neurath the foreign minister of Germany by Andre Francois Poncet The German position was that such a declaration was not needed but discussions could be held on preventing the spread of the war to the rest of Europe if the Soviet Union was present 7 It was mentioned at the meeting of the French with Neurath that both countries were already supplying the parties in the war France the Republicans and Germany the Nationalists A similar approach was made by the French to the Soviet Union 7 On 6 August Ciano confirmed Italian support in principle Despite a Pravda claim that 12 145 000 Rbls had already been sent by Soviet workers to Spain the Soviet government similarly agreed in principle if Portugal was included and Germany and Italy stopped aid immediately 8 On 7 August 1936 France unilaterally declared non intervention 9 Draft declarations had been put to the German and Italian governments Such a declaration had already been accepted by the United Kingdom Belgium the Netherlands Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union which renounced all traffic in war material direct or indirect 10 The Portuguese foreign minister Armindo Monteiro was also asked to accept but held his hand An ultimatum was put to Yvon Delbos by the British to halt French exports to Spain or Britain would not be obliged to act under the Treaty of Locarno if Germany invaded On 9 August exports were duly suspended 10 11 However collections for food clothing and medical supplies to the Spanish Republicans continued 12 On 9 August the Germans falsely informed the British that no war materials had been sent from Germany and none will 12 nb 1 During the blockade of the Strait of Gibraltar by the Spanish Republican Navy one German Junkers was captured when it came down in Republican territory which was explained as merely a transport aircraft Its release would be required before Germany signed the Non Intervention Pact 13 Portugal accepted the pact on 13 August unless its border was threatened by the war 12 There was popular support in both countries for the plan but in the United Kingdom the socialist Labour Party was strongly for it nb 2 the left in France wanted direct aid to the Republicans 14 15 The Labour Party would reject non intervention in October 1937 16 The British Trades Union Congress TUC was split 17 but the leaders Walter Citrine and Ernest Bevin used their block votes to pass motions supporting non intervention at the TUC Congress in September 1936 18 making non intervention a TUC policy 19 Like Labour between October 1936 and June 1937 and under pressure from the LSI and the International Federation of Trade Unions Citrine Bevin and the TUC repudiated non intervention 18 A report Commission of Inquiry into Alleged Breaches of the Non Intervention Agreement in Spain was drawn up in London sponsored by the Comintern and headed by respectable figures 14 Both the British and the French governments were aware of the second World War 16 France was reliant on British support in general Leon Blum the French prime minister feared that openly supporting for the Republic would lead to civil war and a fascist takeover in France and ultimately to no change in Spain 20 On 5 August 1936 the United States made it known that it would follow a policy of non intervention but did not announce it officially 21 Its isolationism on the Spanish war would later be identified as disastrous by Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles 22 Five days later the Glenn L Martin Company enquired whether the government would allow the sale of eight bombers to the Spanish Republican Air Force the response was negative The United States also confirmed it would not take part in several mediation attempts including one by the Organization of American States 21 Mexico soon became the first state to support the Republicans openly On 15 August the United Kingdom banned exports of war material to Spain 21 Neurath also agreed to the pact and suggested for volunteers many of whom would eventually form the International Brigades to be included Italy similarly agreed 21 and signed on 21 August after a determined diplomatic offensive by Britain and France 9 The surprising reversal of views has been put down to the growing belief that countries could not abide by the agreement anyway 21 Admiral Erich Raeder urged the German government to back the Nationalists more completely and then bring Europe to the brink of war or to abandon the Nationalists On the 24th Germany signed 13 23 The Soviet Union was keen not to be left out On 23 August 1936 it agreed to the Non Intervention Agreement 24 which was followed by a decree from Stalin banning exports of war material to Spain thereby bringing the Soviets into line with the Western powers 23 Soviet foreign policy considered Collective security against German fascism a priority 25 and the Comintern had agreed a similar approach in 1934 26 It walked a thin line between pleasing France and not being seen to hinder the world revolution and communist ideals It was also the time of the first significant trials of the Old Bolsheviks during the Great Purge 23 Soviet press and opposition groups were entirely against non intervention 24 and Soviet actions could hardly have been further from the goal of spreading the revolution 26 It was then that the Non Intervention Committee was created to uphold the agreement but the double dealing of the Soviets and the Germans had already become apparent 27 The agreement also removed the need for a declaration of neutrality which would have granted the Nationalists and Republicans control over neutrals in the areas they controlled and had little legal standing 28 In the United Kingdom part of the reasoning was based on an exaggerated belief in German and Italian preparedness for war 28 Many historians argue that the British policy of non intervention was a product of the Establishment s anticommunism Scott Ramsay instead argues that Britain demonstrated a benevolent neutrality and was simply hedging its bets avoiding favouring one side or the other Its goal was that in a future European war Britain would enjoy the benevolent neutrality of whichever side won in Spain 29 The British government was also concerned about the far right and ultimately concluded that no desirable basis of government was possible in Spain because of the present situation 30 Non Intervention Committee EditIt is not so much a case of taking actual steps immediately as of pacifying the aroused feelings of the Leftist parties by the very establishment of such a Committee Otto Christian Archibald von Bismarck 31 The ostensible purpose of the Non Intervention Committee 1936 1939 was to prevent personnel and materiel reaching the warring parties of the Spanish Civil War as with the Non Intervention Agreement 5 The Committee first met in London on 9 September 1936 and was attended by representatives of solely European countries and did not include Switzerland whose policy of neutrality prohibited even intergovernmental action 32 nb 3 It was chaired by William Morrison Britain s Financial Secretary to the Treasury The meeting was concerned mostly with procedure 33 Charles Corbin represented the French Dino Grandi represented the Italians and Ivan Maisky represented the Soviets Germany was represented by Ribbentrop with Otto Christian Archibald von Bismarck as deputy but left the running to Grandi 34 although they found working with him difficult Portugal whose presence had been a Soviet requirement was not represented 31 There was little hope in the Committee since the British and French would have been aware of the continued shipment of arms to the Nationalists from Italy and Germany 35 Britain protested twice to the Italians once in response to Italian aircraft landing in Majorca the other pre emptively over any significant change in the Mediterranean 14 Stanley Baldwin the British prime minister and Blum both attempted to halt global exports to Spain and believed it in Europe s best interests Soviet aid to the Republic was threatened in the Committee It began once it was clear the Non Intervention Agreement was not preventing Italian and German aid to the Nationalists 36 It would have been better to call this the Intervention Committee for the whole activity of its members consisted in explaining or concealing the participation of their countries in Spain Joachim von Ribbentrop in his memoirs 37 The second meeting took place on 14 September 1936 38 It established a subcommittee to be attended by representatives of Belgium Britain Czechoslovakia France Germany Italy the Soviet Union and Sweden to deal with the day to day running of non intervention Among them however the United Kingdom France Germany and Italy dominated perhaps worryingly so Soviet non military aid was revived but not military aid 39 Meanwhile the 1936 meeting of the League of Nations began beset with not only the Spanish problem but also the review of the Abyssinia Crisis 40 It was much weakened but still spoke out in favour of worldwide peace There Anthony Eden convinced Monteiro to have Portugal join the Non Intervention Committee 40 Alvarez del Vayo spoke out against the Non Intervention Agreement and claimed that it put the rebel Nationalists on the same footing as the Republican government and that as the official government the Republic had the right to buy arms 41 On 28 September Portugal was represented on the Committee for the first time and the Earl of Plymouth replaced Morrison as British representative 42 43 A member of the Conservative Party he often adjourned meetings to the benefit of the Italians and Germans and the Committee was accused of an anti Soviet bias 43 In Geneva Maxim Litvinov once again confirmed Soviet support based on the suggestion it would avoid war However the Soviet government remained hostile to the idea and supported Alvarez s view that non intervention was illegal 44 On 12 November 1936 significant changes were put in place to the functioning of the Committee with the ratification of plans to post observers to Spanish frontiers and ports to prevent breaches of the agreement That had been delayed by Italian and German demands for air transport to be included which was perhaps a delaying tactic because of the impossibility to doing so effectively 45 Russian military aid now being transported to Spain were noticed France and Britain split on whether to recognise Franco s forces as a belligerent as the British wanted or to fail to do as the French wanted 46 On 18 November that was subsumed by the news that the Italian and the German governments had recognised the Nationalists as the true government of Spain 46 A British bill preventing exports of arms to Spain by British ships from anywhere was signed 47 Yvon Delbos requested mediation at the same time the Republic appealed to the Council of the League of Nations for assistance US President Franklin Roosevelt who was also approached ruled out US interference with the words there should be no expectation that the United States would ever again send troops or warships or floods of munitions and money to Europe 48 On 4 December France and Britain approached Italy Germany Russia and Portugal to request mediation nb 4 An armistice would be called a commission sent to Spain and after a plebiscite a government featuring those uninvolved in the war such as Salvador de Madariaga would be established 48 The considerable number of German soldiers in Spain at least 5 000 was now clear but Italy and Germany were opposed to isolated discussion of the matter 49 The outcome of the Spanish war was settled in London Paris Rome Berlin at any rate not in Spain George Orwell in Looking Back on the Spanish War 50 On 10 December 1936 Alvarez put the Republic s case to the League of Nations further demanding that the League condemn the Italian and German decision to recognise the Nationalists 51 He pointed to the risk of the Spanish war spreading and suggested that the Non Intervention Committee was ineffective 52 That charge was denied by Lord Cranborne and Edouard Vienot the British and French representatives respectively who appealed to the League to endorse the mediation plan 52 The League condemned intervention urged its council s members to support non intervention and commended mediation 52 It then closed discussion on Spain leaving it to the Committee 53 The mediation plan however was soon dropped 52 Britain and France continued to consider and to put forward plans to prevent foreign volunteers outside the Committee 52 On 6 January 1937 the first opportunity after the winter break both houses of the US Congress passed a resolution banning the export of arms to Spain 54 nb 5 Those opposed the bill including American socialists communists and many liberals suggested that the export of arms to Germany and Italy should be halted also under the Neutrality Act of 1935 since foreign intervention constituted a state of war in Spain Cordell Hull continued to doubt the extent of German and Italian operations despite evidence to the contrary 55 The Soviets met the request to ban volunteers on 27 December Portugal on 5 January and Germany and Italy on 7 January Adolf Hitler authored the German declaration 56 On 10 January a further request that volunteering be made a crime was made by Britain and France to Germany There continued to be uneasiness about the scale limitations and outcomes of German intervention in Spain 56 On 20 January Italy put a moratorium on volunteers and on 25 January Germany and Italy agreed to support limitations to prevent volunteers 57 believing that supplies to the Nationalists were now sufficient In that meeting both the Germans and Italian spoke as if their men in Spain were genuine volunteers 58 The Spanish Civil War Non Intervention Act 1937 was signed into law on 24 February by the Irish and provided penalties for exporters of war material and for service in the military forces of a belligerent and it restricted travel to Spain 59 Soviet war aid continued to reach Spain through the Mediterranean 60 However Britain France Germany Italy and Russia continued to believe a European war was not in their best interests non intervention however would have left both sides with the possibility of defeat which Germany Italy and the Soviet Union in particular were keen to avoid 61 Control plan Edit Map showing the control zones of the four countries red the United Kingdom blue France green Italy grey Germany on establishment 62 Observers were posted to Spanish ports and borders and both Ribbentrop and Grandi were told to agree to the plan significant shipments already having taken place 63 Portugal would not accept observers although it agreed to personnel attached to the British embassy in Lisbon The cost of the scheme was put at 898 000 Britain France Germany Italy and the Soviet Union would each pay 16 the other 20 would be met by the other 22 countries 63 Zones of patrol were assigned to each of the four states an International Board was set up to administer the scheme The setting up of the scheme took until April For the Republicans that seemed like adding insult to injury since the wholesale transfer of arms to the Nationalists would now be policed by the very countries supplying them 62 Despite accusations that 60 000 Italians were now in Spain 64 and Grandi s announcement that he hoped that no Italian volunteer would leave until the war was over 64 the German delegation appears to have hoped the control plan was effective 65 There were Italian assurances that Italy would not break up non intervention 66 In May 1937 the Committee noted two attacks on the patrol s ships in the Balearic islands by Spanish Republican Air Force aircraft the first on the Italian cruiser Barletta and the second on the German cruiser Deutschland 67 The latter resulting in German retaliation against the city of Almeria It iterated calls for the withdrawal of volunteers from Spain condemned the bombing of open towns and showed approval of humanitarian work 68 Germany and Italy said that they would withdraw from the Committee and the patrols unless it could be guaranteed that there would be no further attacks 67 69 Early June saw the return of Germany and Italy to the committee and patrols 70 Italian reticence of operations in Spain however was dropped By contrast it continued to be a crime in Germany to mention German operations 70 Following attacks attributed to Republicans by Germany but denied on the German cruiser Leipzig on 15 and 18 June Germany and Italy once again withdrew from patrols but not the Committee 71 72 That prompted the Portuguese government to remove British observers on the Spanish Portuguese border 73 Discussions on patrols remained complicated Britain and France offered to replace Germany and Italy in patrols of their sections but the last two believed that the patrols would be too partial 74 Germany and Italy requested land controls to be kept and belligerent rights to be given to the Nationalists so that rights of search could be used by both the Republicans and Nationalists to replace naval patrols 71 74 The French considered abandoning border controls 75 or perhaps leaving non intervention However the French were reliant on the British who wished to continue with patrols 71 Britain and France thus continued to labour over non intervention although they judged it effective some 42 ships were estimated to have escaped inspection between April and the end of July The air route had not been covered 76 The Nationalists debt to Germany reached 150 million Reichsmark 77 On 9 July the Dutch ambassador suggested for Britain to draft a compromise 78 Lord Plymouth called the compromise plan for the control of non intervention Naval patrols would be replaced by observers in ports and ships and land control measures would be resumed 79 80 Belligerent rights would not be granted until substantial progress was made on volunteer withdrawal 80 The French were furious and considered that Britain was moving towards Germany and Italy 79 Grandi demanded the discussion of belligerent rights before volunteer rights Maisky insisted for volunteers to be discussed first 81 82 Conference of Nyon and onwards Edit In 1937 all powers were prepared to give up on non intervention Ciano complained to his government that Italian forces in Italy were ready but not being used the Soviet Union was not prepared to discuss belligerent rights 83 Delbos was considering proposing mediation by Roosevelt and the Pope and simultaneously preparing French war plans and Britain s new prime minister Neville Chamberlain saw securing a friendship with the Italian Benito Mussolini as a top priority 84 Eden confided he wished Franco to win and so Italian and Germany involvement would be scaled back Chamberlain considered Spain a troublesome complication to be forgotten 84 By the end of July 1937 the Committee was in deadlock and the aims of a successful outcome to the Spanish Civil War was looking unlikely for the Republic 85 Unrestricted Italian submarine warfare began on 12 August 85 The British Admiralty believed that a significant control effort was the best solution of four that were put forward in response to attacks on British shipping 86 On 27 August the Committee decided that naval patrols did not justify their expense and would be replaced as planned with observers at ports 84 A leaky dam better than no dam at all Anthony Eden on non intervention 87 The Conference of Nyon was arranged in September 1937 for all parties with a Mediterranean coastline by the British despite appeals by Italy and Germany for the Committee to handle the piracy and other issues the conference was to discuss 88 It decided that French Navy and the British Royal Navy fleets would patrol the areas of sea west of Malta and attack any suspicious submarines 89 Warships that attacked neutral shipping would be attacked 90 On 18 September Juan Negrin requested for the League of Nations Political Committee to examine Spain and demanded an end to non intervention Eden claimed that non intervention had stopped a European war The League reported on the Spanish situation by noting the failure of non intervention 90 On 6 November the Committee met once again with a plan to recognise the Nationalists as belligerents once significant progress had been made was finally accepted which was caused partly by Eden s patience 91 The Nationalists accepted on 20 November and the Republicans on 1 December The former suggested 3 000 would be a reasonable number which was really the number of sick and unreliable Italians whom Franco wished to withdraw 92 That was countered by British suggestions that 15 000 or 20 000 might be enough 93 The talks were subsumed by bilateral Anglo Italian discussions In trying to protect non intervention in the Anglo Italian meetings which he grudgingly did Eden would end up resigning from his post in the Foreign Office 93 On 17 March 1938 France reopened the border to arms traffic to the now weakened Republic 94 Between mid April and mid June 21 British seamen were killed by attacks on British shipping in Spanish waters as well as several Non Intervention Committee observers 95 On 27 June 1938 Maisky agreed to send of two commissions to Spain enumerate foreign volunteer forces and bring about their withdrawal That was estimated to cost 1 750 000 to 2 250 000 which was borne by member countries of the Committee 96 The Nationalists wished to prevent the fall of the favourable Chamberlain government in the United Kingdom and so were seen to accept the plan 97 With much bemoaning the Republicans also accepted the plan The Nationalists demanded belligerent rights and then withdrawals of 10 000 from each side which amounted to a rejection of the plan 98 Following the Munich Agreement which was judged by Chamberlain to have been a success Britain would host similar mediation in Spain 99 Negrin would propose the removal of the International Brigades most of whom were now Spaniards at the last meeting of the League of Nations thereby showing his contempt for the Committee 100 Similarly Italians would leave Spain under the Anglo Italian agreement not through the Committee 101 Britain and France recognised the Nationalist government on 27 February 1939 102 Clement Attlee criticised the way it had been agreed calling it a gross betrayal two and a half years of hypocritical pretence of non intervention 103 References EditNotes Edit See also German involvement in the Spanish Civil War Alpert 1998 p 65 notes that rank and file members of the Labour Party may have opposed it Involved were Albania Austria Belgium Bulgaria Czechoslovakia Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Ireland Italy Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Norway Poland Romania Turkey the United Kingdom the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia Thomas 1961 p 277 The Abdication Crisis broke in the United Kingdom on 3 December and occupied the minds of the British public Thomas 1961 p 335 by 81 to 0 in the US Senate and 406 to 1 in the US House of Representatives Thomas 1961 p 338 Citations Edit Thomas Hugh 2001 The Spanish Civil War Modern Library ISBN 9780375755156 Helen Graham 2003 The Spanish Republic at War 1936 1939 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521459327 Angel Vinas La Soledad de la Republica Archived 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Stone 1997 p 133 a b Beevor 2006 p 374 Stone 1997 p 134 a b c Thomas 1961 p 257 Thomas 1961 pp 257 258 a b Alpert 1998 p 45 a b Thomas 1961 p 258 Alpert 1998 pp 45 46 a b c Thomas 1961 p 259 a b Alpert 1998 p 44 a b c Thomas 1961 p 279 Alpert 1998 p 46 a b Preston 2006 p 143 Alpert 1998 p 65 a b Tom Buchanan The Trades Union Congress and the Spanish Civil War Warwick University Retrieved 21 July 2021 Rodney Mace 1999 British Trade Union Posters An Illustrated History Sutton Publishing p 78 ISBN 0750921587 Preston 2006 p 144 a b c d e Thomas 1961 p 260 Preston 2004 p 145 a b c Thomas 1961 p 261 a b Alpert 1998 p 51 Stone 1997 p 137 a b Preston 2006 p 136 Thomas 1961 pp 263 4 a b Alpert 1998 p 59 Scott Ramsay Ensuring Benevolent Neutrality The British Government s Appeasement of General Franco during the Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 International History Review 41 3 2019 604 623 DOI https doi org 10 1080 07075332 2018 1428211 Ramsay Scott Ideological Foundations of British Non Intervention in the Spanish Civil War Foreign Office Perceptions of Political Polarisation in Spain 1931 1936 Diplomacy amp Statecraft 31 no 1 2020 44 64 a b Thomas 1961 p 278 Beevor 2006 p 378 Thomas 1961 p 277 Alpert 1998 p 61 Thomas 1961 pp 278 9 Preston 2006 p 150 Heydecker Leeb 1975 p 174 Beevor 2006 p 385 Thomas 1961 p 281 a b Thomas 1961 p 283 Thomas 1961 pp 283 4 Thomas 1961 p 284 a b Preston 2006 p 159 Thomas 1961 p 285 Thomas 1961 p 331 a b Thomas 1961 p 332 Thomas 1961 p 333 a b Thomas 1961 p 334 Thomas 1961 pp 334 5 Orwell 1953 p 169 Thomas 1961 pp 335 5 a b c d e Thomas 1961 p 336 Alpert 1998 p 105 Thomas 1961 p 338 Thomas 1961 p 339 a b Thomas 1961 p 340 Alpert 1998 p 104 Thomas 1961 p 341 Irish Statute Book Spanish Civil War Non Intervention Act 1937 Thomas 1961 pp 341 2 Thomas 1961 pp 342 3 a b Thomas 1961 p 395 a b Thomas 1961 p 394 a b Alpert 1998 p 115 Thomas 1961 pp 395 6 Thomas 1961 p 396 a b Bulletin of International News 1937 p 3 Thomas 1961 pp 439 440 Thomas 1961 p 441 a b Thomas 1961 p 456 a b c Thomas 1961 p 457 Bulletin of International News 1937 pp 4 5 Bulletin of International News 1937 p 6 a b Bulletin of International News 1937 p 7 Bulletin of International News 1937 p 8 Thomas 1961 p 458 Thomas 1961 p 459 Bulletin of International News 1937 p 9 a b Thomas 1961 p 463 a b Bulletin of International News 1937 pp 9 10 Thomas 1961 p 464 Bulletin of International News 1937 p 11 Bulletin of International News 1937 pp 11 12 a b c Thomas 1961 p 467 a b The English Historical Review 1975 p 104 The English Historical Review 1975 p 105 Blinkhorn 1988 p 48 Thomas 1961 pp 475 6 Thomas 1961 p 476 a b Thomas 1961 p 477 Thomas 1961 p 502 Thomas 1961 p 503 a b Thomas 1961 p 514 Thomas 1961 p 523 Thomas 1961 p 538 Thomas 1961 p 541 Thomas 1961 p 542 Thomas 1961 p 552 Thomas 1961 p 555 Thomas 1961 p 557 Thomas 1961 p 561 Thomas 1961 p 583 Thomas 1961 p 584 Sources Edit BooksAlpert Michael 29 March 1998 A New International History of the Spanish Civil War Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 21043 4 Beevor Antony 2006 The Battle for Spain 1 ed Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 84832 5 Blinkhorn Martin 1988 Democracy and Civil War in Spain 1931 1939 ISBN 0 415 00699 6 Heydecker Joe Julius Leeb Johannes 1975 The Nuremberg Trial A History of Nazi Germany as Revealed Through the Testimony at Nuremberg Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 8371 8131 8 Orwell George 1953 Looking Back on the Spanish War England Your England and Other Essays London Secker and Warburg Preston Paul 2006 The Spanish Civil War Reaction revolution and revenge 3 ed HarperCollins Stone Glyn 1997 Sir Robert Vansittart and Spain 1931 1941 In Otte Thomas G Pagedas Constantine A eds Personalities war and diplomacy essays in international history Routledge Thomas Hugh 1961 The Spanish Civil War 1 ed London Eyre and Spottiswoode JournalsS A H 7 August 1937 Spain the British Compromise Plan Bulletin of International News London Royal Institute of International Affairs 14 3 3 13 ISSN 2044 3986 JSTOR 25639692 Peter Gretton January 1975 The Nyon Conference The Naval Aspect The English Historical Review London Oxford University Press 90 354 ISSN 0013 8266 JSTOR 567512 External links EditJennifer L Foray Dutch Involvement in the Spanish Civil War Columbia Historical Review Spring 2001 Spartacus Educational summary Trabajadores The Spanish Civil War through the eyes of organised labour a digitised collection of more than 13 000 pages of documents from the archives of the British Trades Union Congress held in the Modern Records Centre University of Warwick Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Non intervention in the Spanish Civil War amp oldid 1100270410, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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