Now THAT'S Interesting
Winston Churchill 'bribed Franco's generals to stay out of the war'
Winston Churchill authorised millions of dollars in bribes to stop General Franco from entering the Second World War on the side of
The British wartime leader persuaded Juan March, a Spanish banker, to act as a secret agent, organising payments of millions of dollars to the generals. In return the generals persuaded Franco not to side with Hitler.
The plot was revealed by the historian Pere Ferrer in Juan March: The Most Mysterious Man in the World, after researching papers in British and US archives.
In the summer of 1940 Churchill was convinced that
A letter from Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Solborg, a US agent in Portugal, to J. Donovan, the head of strategic services, read: “The Spaniard selected to be the main internal instrument to acquire the political favours of these generals was the rich financier Juan March.”
March, who earned a fortune during the First World War dealing in contraband tobacco, seemed an unlikely ally because during the Spanish Civil War he sided with Franco.
Ferrer said that questions remained as to whether March was a double agent. He claimed that documents suggested March may have stayed in the pay of the Germans while working for the British.When he was approached by the British in 1940, however, March accepted the role. He approached 30 generals who had fought in the Spanish Civil War. Though their sympathies had been with the Nazis they switched sides.
The $10 million bribe money was deposited in a bank account in
The British Ambassador in
The book said that some generals were not simply bought off by bribes - many loathed Franco. In a reference to Franco, General Alfredo Kindelan wrote in his memoirs: “You could sense vertigo in him above all else because, like climbers who go higher than they are able, he felt dizzy from having reached such heights with limited abilities.”
After the Second World War March returned to the sedate life of finance, dying in 1962 aged 82.
Franco and Hitler
— General Franco’s rise to power, leading the Nationalist armies to victory against the Loyalists in the Spanish Civil War, was supported by Hitler’s
— Franco’s only meeting with Hitler took place in October 1940. Hitler refused to offer Franco French colonial possessions in return for
— Franco did allow Hitler to use Spanish naval bases during the Second World War. German U-boats were resupplied at its ports and Italian bombers refuelled at its airfields, while
—
h/t to the good folks at The Times Online
4 Comments:
At 19/11/08 15:22 , KAISER ANDY I said...
Neat. Not that it would've mattered much in the full scheme of things.
At 20/11/08 01:38 , Yankee John said...
Spanish AND Italian assistance? Germany would have lost the war by '43.
That is a giant, swarthy bouillabaisse of martial ineptitude. The Italians haven't had a major victory since Milvian Bridge and the only reason Franco won the Spanish Civil War is because he was fighting Spaniards. Although it would have been fun to see joint Spanish-Italian naval operations.
At 20/11/08 15:38 , KAISER ANDY I said...
Yeah, that's why spain only got an I in the boardgame Risk.
At 22/11/08 12:17 , Ted said...
Imagine a Spanish fleet, loaded with troops emboldened by an Italian philosophy, crossing the Channel to invade England and replace the government there.
Oh wait, you don't have to imagine. Just google "Spanish Armada"
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