Déjà Vu
The
Spanish civil war opposed the Popular Front, who had won the 1936
elections, and the Spanish Phalanx, who had lost them. The Phalanx
was supported by most of the officer class and their leaders,
generals Mola, Sanjurjo and Franco, who brought over well armed
experienced combat troops from occupied Morocco. The Popular Front
government had few constituted army units on its side, but it had the
backing of the major labour unions, the Stalinist UGT, anarchist CNT
and Trotskyist POUM. When both sides solicited outside help, Mussolini
and Hitler sent munitions, and troops to the Phalanx, while French
and British governments hummed and hawed, maintained an arms embargo
and tried to stop people crossing the border to join the
International Brigades. The Spanish Phalanx was in line with Italian
Fascism and German National Socialism, whereas the parliamentary
monarchy and republic were repulsed by communism and anarchy. And so
the Phalanx won the war – provoking a mass exodus – and installed
Franco as dictator for the next 35 years. Not to mention the
encouragement this gave the Axis Powers in the lead up to WW2.
The
civil war in Syria presents a similar dilemma. Assad has most of the
military elite on his side (dominated by Alawites since the French
protectorate, 1920-1946), arms and support from Russia and China,
plus units of Lebanese Hezbollah and probable volunteers from Iraq
and Iran. Opposing him are popular organisations and army deserters –
mostly Sunni with some salafi and a few international units not
necessarily affiliated to al Q – with some material help from Qatar
and Saudi Arabia. But the springtime social agitation of 2011 led
directly to fighting, without an intermediary electoral process and
short-lived government, which meant the opposition had to structure
itself from a ground-swell of popular revolt, as well as fight a
civil war. Meanwhile, Europe and America were humming and hawing over
aid to the opposition forces, idly wondering if they were legitimate,
and wishing they would just go away so as to avoid deciding anything.
Unfortunately, the clear division between autocracy and people power
is blurred by religious affiliations, as it was by political ones
eighty years ago. The gas attack on a Damascus suburb may be a
Guernica moment, when the crocodile world stood by and said, “How
terribly sad!”. If Assad’s military regime wins out, it could be
a nasty foretaste of things to come, as was Franco’s victory in
1939.
This is a modified version of a previous post, May 26th, 2013
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