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Spain: Socialist Party government moves to rehabilitate Francoite
fascists
By Paul Stuart and Vicky Short
20 October 2004
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Former members of the Francoite fascist Blue Division were
invited to this years National Day military parade by Spains
recently elected Socialist Party (PSOE) government. This is an
unprecedented political act since Spain became a parliamentary
monarchy at the death of the dictator General Franco in 1975.
The fascist veterans were given a place of pride as they solemnly
followed King Juan Carlos to lay a wreath for all those who died
for Spain.
PSOE Prime Minister Jose Zapatero also tried to organise a
fly-past of single-engine military planes from the fascist era,
but was prevented by the civil aviation authority on safety grounds.
Government ministers described the proposal as a tribute
to Spains military past.
The military parade marks the anniversary of Christopher Columbus
reaching the New World. For the Spanish ruling classes,
the day has historically symbolised the rise of Spain as a colonial
power.
This year, the PSOE government dedicated the parade to a public
display of national reconciliation. As a counterweight
to the representatives of the fascist Blue Division, republicans
who had fought with the French Leclerc Division, which liberated
Paris from the Nazis, were invited to march alongside them.
In addition to the fascist veterans, the PSOE invited disparate
political organisations to the military parade, including victims
of the Basque separatist ETAs bombing campaigns, relatives
of victims of the March 11, 2004 bombings in Madrid, and relatives
of soldiers killed in the Yak 42 plane crash. The Socialist Party
involved itself in each campaign to ensure that its political
implications did not lead to a confrontation between the working
class and the former government of Jose Maria Aznar, whose Popular
Party has its origins in the Francoite forces.
Troops from several Latin American countries, where the Socialist
Party is working to rekindle its colonial ambitions, were also
invited. The Socialist Party decided to strike off the guest list
a contingent of United States Marines that had participated in
the annual parade since the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In their stead
a group of French soldiers were invited to mark the 60th anniversary
of the liberation of Paris from the Nazis.
The decision not to invite US troops was a calculated snub.
At last years parade, Zapatero refused to stand when the
US contingent passed the dignitaries box. He campaigned
during the elections for the withdrawal of Spanish troops from
Iraq and did so once he took office, urging other countries to
follow his example.
The attempt to rehabilitate the fasciststhe very forces
who murdered the cream of the Spanish working class in the civil
war of 1936-1939 that followed Francos coupdemonstrates
that the political perspective underlying Zapateros posture
of anti-Americanism and his withdrawal of troops from Iraq in
no way constitutes a principled opposition to imperialism or militarism.
What is involved is a reorientation of Spanish nationalist foreign
policy.
Zapateros first major act as prime minister was to fly
to Germany and France to forge a new axis for Spanish foreign
policy, centred on efforts to mobilise an alliance of European
imperialist powers as a counterweight to US imperialism. In line
with this, his invitation to ex-members of the Blue Division is
an appeal to the most reactionary sections of the national bourgeoisie,
combined with an attempt to demobilise the working class, using
saccharine appeals for national unity and forgiveness.
The Blue Division was no ordinary force. It was formed secretly
by Franco during the first period of the Nazis invasion
of the Soviet Union in 1941. Franco wanted to create a small force
to join Hitlers victorious march on Moscow,
from which he hoped to profit.
Volunteers were sought and tens of thousands from Francos
Falange signed up. The Falange was a fascist political organisation,
founded in 1933 by Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera, which constituted
the sole legal party in Spain between 1939 and 1975. It spearheaded
the mass murder of Spanish Socialist Party members, as well as
members of the Communist Party, Anarchists, members of the centrist
Workers Party of Marxist Unification (POUM), Trotskyists and others
affiliated with workers organisations.
At the end of the civil war in 1939, when Francos army
defeated the Popular Front government dominated by the Socialist
Party and the Communist Party, these organisations were banned
and its members rounded up. Close to 200,000 were murdered and
500,000 imprisoned in concentration camps and used as slave labour.
One of the most prominent veterans of the Blue Division, Angel
Salamanca, 84, attended the National Day march wearing a tie clasp
insignia that includes the Nazi Iron Cross. He described the Nazi
Holocaust as mere atrocities, and declared he had
gone to the USSR not to fight for Hitler but to fight communism.
Francos programme, he said, was for national reconciliationa
reconciliation that was to be achieved by liquidating the mass
workers parties and trade unions. The people of Spain
are worth far more together ... It happened a long time ago, and
those resentments have to be eradicated, he declared.
The Blue Division participated in some of the worst acts of
barbarism committed by the German army in the Soviet Union. Soon
after Hitler launched Operation Barbarossa, the 1941 invasion
of the Soviet Union, Franco offered Spanish help in return for
first claims on former Spanish colonial possessions. After Hitler
accepted, Franco sent 19,000 volunteers to the Eastern Front,
joining the Wehrmachts 250th Infantry division. They participated
in the horrific siege of Leningrad and, according to Nazis
officers, served with distinction.
Contrary to Salamancas attempts to distance the Blue
Division from Nazi Germany, on August 20, 1941 they swore an oath
of allegiance to Adolf Hitler. After suffering heavy casualties
and the near-collapse of Spains military presence, Franco
recalled the force in 1943. But 3,000 disobeyed his orders and
remained in the German army, attached to the Waffen SS. They were
renamed the Blue Legion. Approximately 140 of this legion were
attached to the 11th SS Division Nordland, and fought to the bitter
end to defend Berlin from the Soviet Red Army offensive.
This years military parade was a glorification of all
that is nationalistic and reactionary in Spanish society, past
and present. Salamanca and other fascist veterans felt sufficiently
emboldened not only to proudly display their medals for service
on the Eastern Front, replete with swastikas, but also to demand
that their members be given free access into the event. Although
they were turned down, the Socialist Party extended these forces
and their modern heirs a free pass back into the mainstream of
political life.
The PSOE government defended Salamanca. Interior Minister Bono
declared that he had invited him in order to honour all those
Spaniards who fought for what they believed in. Asked to comment
on this unprecedented decision, Bono declared, Look, Im
a socialist. I fought against Franco. I dont support the
Blue Division, but I do support Spain and this is part of Spanish
history. On National Day one should be generous. And think about
itif you left out all Spaniards you may not agree withthe
Conquistadors, the Carlists and the fascistsyou wouldnt
have many people left. Its all Spain.
The PSOEs rehabilitation of Francos thugs flows
from its entire history of betrayals and its defence of the capitalist
order. During the civil war of 1936-1939, the Socialist Party
virulently opposed the revolutionary struggles of the working
class. When in positions of power in the 1930s, it unhesitatingly
used troops to crush workers and peasants struggles.
After the Socialist Party was illegalised under Francos
dictatorship, it spent its exile in a state of crisis, hoping
for a democratisation of Francos rule and actively
working towards it.
Between the fall of Francos rule in 1975 and the PSOE
taking power in 1982, the party signed a pact with Francos
state representatives known as Forgive and Forget.
Backed by the Stalinist Communist Party, this was a power sharing
agreement with the representatives of Francos state. The
government of Socialist Party Prime Minister Felipe Gonzales,
1982-1996, was marked by an abandonment of even a formal commitment
to socialism and a systematic attack on the living standards of
the working class.
On taking office in 1982, the Socialist Party worked closely
with Francoite fascists in the military to form death squads to
crush the Basque separatist group ETA. The death squads were responsible
for a series of assassinations and a reign of terror throughout
the Basque region.
In Paddy Woodworths critical study of the first post-Franco
government of the Socialist Party, Dirty War, Clean Hands,
ETA, the GAL and Spanish Democracy, Woodworth explains that
Spains transition to democracy was regarded
as an exemplary model. In its attempts to destroy the ETA, Gonzales
administration adopted terror tactics similar to those utilized
by the Franco dictatorship. To this day, the Socialist Party denies
any knowledge of these death squads, despite ample evidence to
the contrary.
Inviting Francos Blue Division to participate in the
National Day parade sends a clear political message. Zapateros
gesture of friendship to Francos most ideologically committed
supporters is a sign that the Socialist Party is seeking to mobilise
extreme right-wing layers against the working class.
See Also:
More terror arrests in Spain, but still
no evidence presented
[18 October 2004]
Spain: controversy surrounds
opening of Garcia Lorcas grave
[28 August 2004]
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