Spaniards and Nazi Germany: Collaboration in the New OrderUniversity of Missouri Press, 2000 - 250 Seiten Using recently declassified documents from Spain and the United States, personal interviews, and unpublished and published Spanish, German, British, and U.S. records, Spaniards and Nazi Germany makes a significant contribution to the understanding of Hispano-German relations during the 1930s and 1940s. This study shows that Naziphiles within the Spanish Falange, Spain's Fascist party, made a concerted effort to bring Spain into World War II, and that only the indecisiveness of dictator Francisco Franco and diplomatic mistakes by the Nazis prevented them from succeeding. |
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Inhalt
13 | |
From Peace to | 56 |
The Axis Temptation | 77 |
Enlisting in the New Order | 103 |
Spanish Disengagement from the New Order | 157 |
The Last Defenders of the New Order | 196 |
Bibliography | 231 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Allies AMAE April army Arrese Arriba attaché August Axis Barcelona Berlin Falange Blue Division BMFET CIPETA collaboration December Despite DGFP diplomatic División Azul DNSE economic Ernesto Giménez Caballero España Española Europe Falangist Falangist leaders Fascism Faupel February FNFF Francisco Franco Franco regime Franquismo Garriga Alemany German German Embassy Hedilla Hispano-German Hitler ideological Italy January Jordana July June labor Lequerica Letter Madrid Manuel March military minister Muñoz Grandes NARA national delegate Nationalist Nazi Germany Naziphiles neutral November October officers Order organization Oyarzábal Pardo party Pilar Primo political Primo de Rivera propaganda Pueblo Ramón Serrano Suñer recruiting Report Ribbentrop Ridruejo Rodríguez Salvador Merino Sección Femenina September Serrano Suñer Servicio Exterior social soldiers Spain Spaniards Spanish Civil Spanish Civil War Spanish Embassy Spanish Foreign Ministry Spanish government Spanish Legion Spanish workers Special Delegation Stohrer syndicates telegram Third Reich Vadillo Valdés victory Vidal Waffen-SS Wehrmacht
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 38 - At the moment one has the impression that the members of the Falangist militia themselves have no real aims and ideas; rather, they seem to be young people for whom mainly it is good sport to play with firearms and to round up Communists and Socialists.
Seite 42 - Hassell, their ambassador in Rome, urged: Anyone who knows the Spaniards and Spanish conditions will regard with a good deal of skepticism and also concern for future German-Spanish relations (perhaps even for German-Italian cooperation) any attempt to transplant National Socialism to Spain with German methods and German personnel.
Seite 9 - In many respects the period between the end of World War I and the end of World War II was one of sharp discontinuities.
Seite 40 - In the Spanish conflict Germany has predominantly the negative goal of not permitting the Iberian Peninsula to come under Bolshevist domination, which would involve the danger of its spreading to the rest of Western...
Seite 211 - In other areas, Spain demonstrated its opposition to Nazi racial policies. Throughout the fall of 1944, Spain's diplomats used what little influence they had left in the Third Reich to continue rescuing Jews. With the strong efforts of Jordana and then Lequerica in Madrid, Spain's ambassadors in Berlin, Bucharest, Budapest, and other capitals managed to save thousands of Jews by the end of the war.
Seite 45 - Serrano Suner, Entre el Silencio y la Propaganda: La Historia como fue Memorias, 191.
Seite 83 - BETWEEN the fall of France and the German invasion of the Soviet Union, Spaniards watched the European conflict with active interest.
Seite 26 - Ellwood, Spanish Fascism in the Franco Era: Falange Espanola de las Jons...
Seite 59 - Wilhelm Keitel, Chief of the High Command of the Armed Forces, on 2 March 1944.
Seite 233 - I was a student in Berlin. Those were the initial years of the National Socialist regime, when here [in Spain] and in France the Popular Front was incubating. A great sensation of purity, novelty, revolution, and the disappearance of filth was felt in the Berlin of those times! I had taken casual notice in Paris of the lives of some Marxist and Radical deputies and personalities, and consoled myself that I was far from this 4.