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Recycling Stalinist lies about the Spanish Civil War
By Ann Talbot
6 October 2007
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El Escudo de la Republica by Angel Viñas
(Barcelona: Critica, 2007)
History books are seldom just about the past. They inevitably
reflect, for better or worse, something of the consciousness of
the time in which they are written. This is certainly true of
Professor Angel Viñass latest book about the Spanish
Civil War. The character of the times in which it has been written
indelibly colours the book.
What that character is was indicated by an August 24 article
in the Financial Times in which journalist David Gardner
drew attention to a small incident that recently took place in
Madrid. Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero
and Mariano Rajoy, leader of the opposition Popular Party, met
for a summit at which they intended to formulate a cross-party
policy on the Basque question now that ETA has ended its ceasefire.
Zapatero extended his hand to Rajoy as they met on the steps of
the Moncloa Palace and Rajoy, whose party is the lineal descendant
of Francos party, hesitated to take it.
It was, said Gardner, a lamentably accurate snapshot
of the descent into incivility of Spanish public life. So
sharply polarised has Spanish public life become that the visceral
idiom of the two Spains of the 1936-9 civil war
had been revived.
Gardner was quick to point out that eventually the two men
did shake hands for the cameras and that Spain was not on the
brink of armed conflict, but his instinct was correct in identifying
the mounting political tension in Spain. The cartoon that accompanied
the article showed Zapatero and Rajoy standing on either side
of a chasm filled with the dead. The relatives of those killed
by the fascists are demanding the bodies be identified and exonerated.
As many as 500 mass graves have been opened in Andalusia alone.
Under these circumstances the superficial courtesies that normally
smooth social and political life tend to be suppressed as an apparently
simple gesture is burdened with the weight of history. The same
re-emergence of the visceral antagonisms of the Spanish Civil
War are evident in Angel Viñass new book and, it
must be said, the same descent into incivility is evident in the
professors behaviour toward his colleagues.
His manner has gone beyond the cut and thrust of academic debate
and has descended on the Internet, in print and in person into
what can only be described as bullying. At a conference to commemorate
the 70th anniversary of the Spanish Civil War in Madrid last year
he harangued the Italian historian Gabriele Ranzato in public
because he had dared to suggest that a revolution had taken place
in Spain during the 1930s.
After delivering a paper at the same conference on the joint
effort by the Moscow Stalinist bureaucracy and the Spanish Republican
government to strangle the revolutionary movement of the working
class, I was on the receiving end of a similar ear-bashing from
Viñas.
With the air of one who is in possession of a great secret,
he declared that he had evidence that the May Days, the workers
uprising in Barcelona in 1937, was a provocation organized by
the Italian fascists. There was an almost audible intake of breath,
as the audience waited to hear what this evidence might be. No
serious historian would make such an assertion without evidence,
ergo Viñas must have evidence. The conference book
stall sold out of Viñass latest book as his fellow
historians rushed to buy it. But Viñas did not deal with
the May Days in that volume, [1] the first in what is to be a
trilogy covering the history of the Spanish Civil War. We had
to wait for this, his second volume, El Escudo de la Republica,
before we became privy to this recondite and much heralded new
material. I leafed through the book in expectation of some
startling revelation, as many others must have done.
Unlike Keats, no new planet swam into my ken on first looking
into El Escudo although I must confess that I may have
looked around with wild surmise because the promised
new documents simply were not there.
Professor Viñas is a distinguished historian who occupies
a chair at the ancient Complutensian University of Madrid. He
advises the Ministry of Economics. He has served as a diplomat
to the European Union and the United Nations. Such distinctions
impose an obligation of veracity. A man of his distinction not
only should not, but could not be doing what Viñas evidently
was doing. Viñas was simply recycling the old Stalinist
lie that the May Days insurrection was a fascist provocation.
He had no new evidence, no new documents, no new archival material,
and no new revelations. He was blatantly reasserting the propaganda
that had been put out by the Stalinists in defence of the Popular
Front Republican government of Spain and asking his readers to
accept it as historical analysis.
His account of the May Days could have been read in the pages
of the Daily Worker or any other Stalinist newspaper at
the time. The closest precedent is to be found in the articles
of the Stalinist hack Claud Cockburn who loyally followed the
Moscow line that the POUM (Party of Marxist Unity) were Trotskyists
and Trotskyists were fascist agents. Cockburn claimed that German
and Italian agents poured into Barcelona where in co-operation
with the local Trotskyists they were to prepare a
situation of disorder and bloodshed in which it would be
possible for the Germans and Italians to land forces on the Catalan
coast. The POUM, acting in co-operation with well known
criminal elements, and with certain other deluded persons in the
anarchist organisations, planned organised and led the attack
in the rearguard. [2]
The May Days
What in fact happened in the May Days?
Street fighting broke out in Barcelona when Republican government
forces tried to seize the telephone exchange from the workers
who were occupying it. The telephone exchange had been under the
control of the workers since July 1936 when they defeated Francos
attempted coup. The Republican government had collapsed, and power
fell into the hands of the workers who set about creating committees
to organise production and distribution collectively and militias
to defend their revolution.
A situation of dual power had been created comparable to that
in Russia between the February and October 1917 revolutions. But
in Spain instead of the workers taking state power as they did
in Russia, the leaders of the Anarchists and the POUM entered
the Republican government. In so doing they rejected the lessons
of a century of socialist experience and gave the Republic a political
authority that it could not have won in any other way. Consequently
the political conquests that the workers had made in July 1936
were whittled away over the ensuing months.
The process of counter-revolution was slowest in Catalonia,
the industrial region of which Barcelona was the capital, and
which was a centre of proletarian power. The telephone exchange
remained a powerful symbol of the revolution and a strategic objective
in the counter-revolution. On Monday May 3, 1937, Chief of Police
Rodriguez Salas ordered Republican forces to seize it. The workers
occupying the telephone exchange resisted. Within minutes truckloads
of workers and youth arrived to help in the defence of the building.
A general strike began as thousands of armed workers came out
onto the streets where they threw up barricades.
The Assault Guards and the National Guards of the Republic
were powerless and surrendered. By the night of May 3 Barcelona
was effectively under the control of the workers. They could have
taken power, but instead their leaders ordered them to cease fire.
The Republican government on the other hand was making ready to
bomb the working class districts of Barcelona and despatched warships
to the port.
As the fighting continued throughout Tuesday and Wednesday,
the workers militias discussed returning from the front
to defend the revolution, but their leaders dissuaded them. The
news that 1,500 more Assault Guards were on their way, reached
Barcelona the next day.
Their passage through Catalonia was made possible by the leaders
of the Anarchists who worked feverishly through Thursday night
to arrange a ceasefire. By Friday morning, as government forces
marched into the city, the fighting was dying down. Within the
next few days, an estimated 12,000 troops, armed with the latest
weapons, arrived in Barcelona to take control of the city and
suppress any opposition. Workers were disarmed and mass arrests
began.
In the wake of the May Days, the Stalinists were able to engineer
the appointment of the right-wing socialist Juan Negrín
as prime minister. [3] On his first day in office he banned La
Batalla, the newspaper of the POUM [4], and the party was
outlawed. The leaders of the POUM were arrested and taken to secret
prisons run by the Stalinist secret police, the GPU. The partys
most prominent leader, Andres Nin, was separated from the others
and was interrogated for three days. When he refused to confess
to being a fascist agent, he was tortured to death and his body
buried secretly. The GPU then ordered German International Brigade
volunteers to storm the prison where Nin had been held. To give
the impression that the Gestapo had come to release him, they
left Nationalist bank notes, Falangist badges and false documents
behind them.
Viñass argument
Viñas claims that the prime beneficiaries of the May
Days were Mussolini and Franco. He offers no evidence to substantiate
this claim. The fascist forces made no military advance in the
following days. Franco did not capture Barcelona until January
1939. He resisted repeated urging from his Nazi backers to attempt
to take it earlier. His reluctance to venture into this stronghold
of the proletariat is incomprehensible if his agents had been
strong enough to manufacture the May Days. When we consider that
the end result of the suppression of the May Days was to place
Negrín in power and to end the situation of dual power,
both objectives long sought by Moscow, the idea that a fascist
provocation was involved is ludicrous.
For decades Viñas has asserted that Negrín was
the great statesman of the Spanish Republic and, had he only come
to power sooner, might have saved the Republic. He rejects his
predecessor Largo Caballeros account of the struggle between
the two men as hopelessly biased against Negrín. Viñas
maintains that as finance minister Negrín was correct to
send the gold reserves to the Soviet Union, and as premier he
was ignorant of the bloody character of the regime he led. While
Stalinist agents rounded up, imprisoned, tortured and killed those
they regarded as Trotskyists and Anarchist uncontrollables,
Negrín, according to Viñas, remained oblivious to
the slaughter and unsullied in his democratic credentials.
In El Escudo Viñas goes beyond even this tendentious
defence of his hero.
In my opinion, Viñas writes, ignoring the
well-established evidence to the contrary, the idea cannot
be ruled out that Fascists and pro-Franco agents were at work
in the Barcelona powder-keg.
He then proceeds to make the most outrageous statement. The
Libertarian movement had seen itself infiltrated by agents and
spies, which he writes was easier to do than in other
organisations with a better sense of discipline. Something similar
had happened, although perhaps to a greater extent, with the POUM,
internationalist and very open to the recruitment of foreign volunteers.
How many base insults and slanders can one level at the Spanish
mass movement in one sentence? The Libertarian movement in Spain
was a massive organisation of workers and peasants affiliated
to the CNT. [5] As for them being undisciplined, that is a slander
against the anarchist workers and peasants who strove to organise
production and distribution, welfare and the war effort through
their committees. Their sense of discipline was of the highest
order.
When we come to the POUM, one can make many criticisms of its
political perspective and actions, but Viñass jibe
at the party of Andres Nin, a heroic leader of the Spanish working
class who died at the hand of Stalinists, leaves a nasty taste
in the mouth. The POUM are being condemned, not for their real
faults, but for not being Spanish enough. For Viñas this
party is tainted by its association with the workers and intellectuals
who came to Spain from all over the world to risk their lives
in opposing fascism and fighting for socialism. His accusation
that the POUM was open to infiltration by fascist agents because
it drew foreigners to its banner smacks of the very worst traditions
of Spanish chauvinism.
Viñas then begins to construct his case that the May
Days were a fascist provocation. There emerged from the
fertile imagination of Mussolini, nothing less than the idea of
deforming and bloating the May events presenting them
as a revealing example of a bloody chapter in the struggle between
the Communists and the Libertarians, he tells us melodramatically.
But what does Viñass melodrama really amount to?
Mussolinis secret police were certainly interested in what
was going on in Spain. This has been well known for some time.
Viñas is not telling us anything new here. A letter from
Trotsky to Catalan-French Trotskyist Jean Rous was discovered
in the archives of the Italian secret police by the historian
Paulo Spriano and published in 1971. Rous was in Barcelona negotiating
with the POUM on Trotskys behalf about the possibility of
him being granted asylum in Catalonia.
Viñas does not appear to be aware of the Rous letter,
nor does he offer us any original material. Instead he relies
entirely on secondary sources. In itself there is nothing wrong
with this. All historians rely to some extent on secondary sources
since no one can be an expert in every area. But what he does
with these secondary sources is not within the bounds of acceptable
professional behaviour. Viñas uses them to create the impression
that the latest research backs up his assertion that the May Days
were the result of a fascist provocation when in fact it does
not.
The evidence
We have only to read the historians he cites to realise that
he is misusing them. Viñas takes his account of Italian
covert activities from Mauro Canali, who has written a study of
Mussolinis security services. [6] The fertile imagination
of Mussolini is Canalis phrase, but he is referring
to a document dated June 11 1937, that is a month after the May
Days. Canali is not attempting to show that Mussolini was responsible
for provoking the May Days but that he hoped to capitalise on
the conflict. Indeed, if we are to draw any conclusion from the
evidence that Canali presents it would be that, far from seeing
the resurgence of revolutionary activity in Barcelona as an opportunity,
it was the counter-revolutionary repression that followed it,
as the Stalinists took control of the city, to which Mussolini
responded.
Viñas then turns to a book by Morten Heiberg and Manuel
Ros Agudo [7] that appears to be more promising for his case.
Heiberg and Ros Agudo claim that The contacts across the
enemy lines that maintained members of the Catalan Fifth Column,
seem to have played a not inconsiderable part in the disturbances.
The authors offer three pieces of evidence to substantiate
this allegation. They cite firstly a report from Nazi General
Wilhelm Faupel of conversations he had with Franco and his brother
Nicolas. Secondly, they refer to a conversation between Italian
foreign minister Count Galeazzo Ciano and Francos ambassador
in Rome Garcia Conde. Thirdly, they refer to a telegram from Nicolas
Franco to Commander Julian Troncoso ordering him to tell the supporters
of Estat Catala (a Catalan separatist party) to begin the
action on the frontiers and Barcelona.
Faupels memo on the May Days was sent on May 11 1937.
That is to say it was sent after the May Days. It therefore cannot
demonstrate that Franco had prior knowledge of the uprising. The
document is well known. It was published in 1946. Faupel reported
that Franco claimed the street fighting had been started
by his agents and that they had in all some thirteen
agents in Barcelona.
The Stalinists have used this document for the last 60 years
to prove that the May Days were a fascist provocation.
It does nothing of the kind. As every serious historian has always
recognized, it was an empty boast, and one that did not impress
Faupel at the time.
We know that there were Francoites in Barcelona because they
emerged to loot and murder the inhabitants after Franco captured
the city, but Viñas simply does not present us with any
compelling evidence that they were a significant factor before
that. The evidence for the work of Stalinists agents in that city
is much stronger. We can name them; we can trace their previous
and subsequent careers and identify their activities in Barcelona.
Nothing comparable exists for fascist agents.
The discussion between Ciano and Garcia Conde is of a similar
order to the Faupel report. Ciano claimed the May Days as the
work of Italian agents: the important thing now was to intensify
and accelerate our offensive, he told Garcia Conde, taking
advantage of the situation of revolt in Catalonia. Like
the Faupel report, it post-dates the May Days and, also like the
Faupel report, it fails to provide any concrete evidence to back
up the claims it contains. This is another example of fascist
boasting.
The order to Troncoso is potentially more promising. But it
cannot possibly be the signal for the May Days. Even if the Francoists
had operational agents in the Estat Catala, this middle class
separatist party did not have a following in the working class
and could not have brought thousands of them out on the streets
of Barcelona. Viñas is asking us to believe that a handful
of fascists could have mobilized the workers of all Barcelonas
proletarian districts and the militias. The sheer logistics of
such a scenario are beyond belief, even before we begin to think
about the politics of it. When their own leaders could not stop
them fighting for a week, how did fascist agents based in a different
party unconnected with the working class persuade the workers
of Barcelona to begin fighting?
Heiberg and Ros Aguda themselves deliver the coup de grace
to Viñass theory. They have to admit that their evidence
does not provide incontrovertible proof of a fascist provocation.
They write, the fact that the enemy could benefit from a
bloody uprising in Barcelona does not suffice to attribute the
responsibility for what happened to General Franco and his allies.
It most certainly does not. Needless to say, Viñas does
not reproduce their cautionary remark. His readers will only discover
it if they read his source for themselves.
The murder of Nin
What then of Nin? The Stalinists claimed that Nin was an agent
of the Gestapo. Viñas does not follow them in this. On
the contrary he condemns Alexander Orlov, whom the Kremlin sent
to Spain as head the Soviet secret police, for killing Nin. He
speaks of Orlov as a compulsive liar, bent on immortalizing
an image that does not resemble reality at all. He then
adds that Orlov must not have thought that some of his secrets,
jealously guarded in the KGB archives, would end up coming to
light, or that there might be documents in the Spanish archives
to go with them.
Having raised these archives, however, Viñas offers
no new insights or revelations and appears to be using another
secondary sourcea book by John Costello and Oleg Tsarev,
which draws on material in the KGB archives. Costello and Tsarev
have demonstrated as conclusively as is possible on the basis
of the available evidence that Orlov was responsible for the murder
of Nin and may even have been present when his body was buried.
[8]
Viñas does not deny the murder of Nin, or that the GPU
was responsible for it. But he seeks nevertheless to absolve his
hero Negrín of blame. Since Negrín was head of the
Spanish government at the time, this is a tall order. Certainly
Negrín was embarrassed by the death of Nin. It hampered
his attempts to develop closer relations with the Western democratic
powers. Nin was an internationally known figure. A stack of telegrams
on Negríns desk testified to the extent of the diplomatic
problem. But as the historian Burnett Bolloten has written, Negríns
indignation over the disappearance of Nin was fleeting.
[9]
Whatever inconvenience Nins death may have occasioned,
the benefits that Negríns government accrued from
it were far more substantial. The proletarian stronghold of Barcelona
was firmly under the control of the Republic, the working class
had been suppressed and the POUM liquidated. Nins murder
served as a warning to any emerging leaders of the working class.
Nor was Negrín an unwitting beneficiary Orlovs action.
It was Negríns government that issued a decree authorizing
secret tribunals modelled on those of fascist Italy, and it was
Negríns government that outlawed any criticism of
the Soviet Union after Nins death.
Conclusion
I have dwelt at length on the threadbare case Viñas
presents because he makes such bold claims about his own unimpeachable
use of sources. He boasted in El Pais, the Spanish daily,
that he had spent a great deal of money to gain access to difficult
archives. Unlike other historians, he claimed he never manipulates
the data. Yet when we examine his use of the evidence closely
we can see that all this bravado and self-promotion are an attempt
to cover up a piece of thoroughly unscholarly behaviour.
Why should a distinguished historian risk his reputation in
this reckless way? Viñass behaviour only becomes
comprehensible when we consider the social and political tensions
to which Gardners article in the Financial Times
alludes. In this public climate Viñas feels confident that
he will not be called to account for breaching the conventions
of scholarly debate. He is gambling that enough historians, journalists
and public figures will realise that his thesis reflects their
interests for his misuse of historical evidence not to matter.
Gardner writes of the two Spains. There is a certain
truth in this conventional view of the division between the Francoists
and the Republican forces who made up the two sides in the Civil
War. But there is another, and more profound, divide. The divisions
within the Republican forces were, in the last analysis, even
more significant in the final defeat of the Republic at the hands
of Franco than that between the Republicans and the fascists.
The revolution that Viñas wants so vigorously to deny
was a reality in Spain. But without a revolutionary leadership
that was conscious of its tasks, the working class was unable
to consolidate its power. In the course of the winter of 1936-7,
the power of the workers was eroded and the embryonic state institutions
that had been created in the form of workers committees
supplanted once more by the Republican state. In that task the
Republicans had the assistance of the Stalinists, who transplanted
the repressive machinery of the Moscow Trials to Spain.
The May Days marked the culmination of the process by which
a bourgeois state reasserted itself in Spain and crushed a proletarian
revolution. The defeat of the revolution ensured defeat at the
hands of Franco because it disillusioned, demoralised and disorganised
the working class and peasants whose desire for social equality
had been the source of resistance to fascism.
When Viñas claims that the workers uprising in Barcelona
was the result of a fascist provocation, he is instinctively returning
to the lies that the Stalinists fabricated to justify their actions
in defence of the Popular Front because the same contradictions
that gave rise to a revolution in Spain in the 1930s are emerging
again.
More than a generation of fascist repression, followed by a
pact of silence about the events of the Civil War has done nothing
to remove the contradictions within Spanish society. The relative
prosperity that Spain has enjoyed since it joined the EU has only
translated those social contradictions to a higher level. A young
and restive working class dismissed the Popular Party government
in 2004, it demanded that Spanish troops be withdrawn from Iraq
and it is unwilling to countenance the demands of the Catholic
Church for control over education and family life, or the glorification
of dead fascists.
If the Socialist Party was the initial beneficiary of the electorates
turn to the left, the Socialist government now finds itself in
the uncomfortable position of having to control that leftward
movement or face the wrath of the right. Viñass book
is an indication that there are those within the Socialist Party
who would like to make it clear that they have the stomach for
action of the kind that Viñass hero Negrín
presided over in Barcelona.
Notes:
1. Angel Viñas, La Soledad de la República,
(Barcelona: Critica, 2006).
2. Daily Worker 11 May 1937
3. Juan Negrín was Finance Minister under Francisco Largo
Caballero and then replaced him as prime minister in May 1937,
a post which he held until the defeat of the Republic.
4. Workers Party of Marxist Unification, Partido Obrera de Unificacion
Marxista
5. National Confederation of Workers, Confederacion National del
Trabajo
6. Mauro Canali, Le spie del regime, (Bologna: Società
editrice il Mulino, 2004).
7. Morten Heiberg and Manuel Ros Agudo, La Trama Oculta de
la Guerra Civil: Los servicios secreto de Franco, 1936-1945,
(Barcelona: Critica, 2006).
8. John Costello and Oleg Tsarev, Deadly Illusions, (London:
Century, 1993).
9. Burnett Bollotten, The Spanish Civil War: Revolution and
Counterrevolution, Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina
Press, 1991), p. 531.
See Also:
An exchange on the Spanish
Civil War: Socialism or a bourgeois republic?
[11 April 2007]
Eric Hobsbawm on the Spanish
Civil War: an anti-historical tirade
[16 March 2007]
Introductory remarks
by World Socialist Web Site correspondent at Madrid congress
on Spanish Civil War
[11 December 2006]
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