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2000 - 250 Seiten Using recently declassified documents from Spain and the United States, personal interviews, and unpublished and published Spanish, German, British, and U.S. records, Spaniards and Nazi Germany makes a significant contribution to the understanding of Hispano-German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. |
Inhalt
13 | |
FromPeacetoWar | 56 |
The Axis Temptation | 77 |
Enlisting in the New Order | 103 |
Spanish Disengagementfrom the New Order | 157 |
The LastDefenders of the New Order | 196 |
Bibliography | 231 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adolf Hitler Africa Allies AMAE ambassador Antonio army Arriba August Axis began Berlin Blue Division British chief CIPETA collaboration Communism continued December delegate Despite diplomatic direction DNSE early economic efforts Embassy Europe European expected Exterior Falange Falangist February first forces Foreign Ministry Franco French Front García German groups Hitler hoped hundred ideological important institutions interest issue Italy January Jordana José July June labor late leaders Letter Madrid March meeting military minister months movement NARA Nationalist Nazi Germany Naziphiles neutral November October official Order organization party Pérez plans political position possible Primo de Rivera propaganda Pueblo radical recruiting regime relations remained Report representatives Salvador Merino secretary sent September Serrano Suñer served Servicio social soldiers Soviet Spain Spaniards Spanish Foreign Spanish government Spanish workers syndicates telegram Third Reich thousand unit victory World
Beliebte Passagen
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 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.