Huesca Offensive Explained

Conflict:Huesca Offensive
Partof:the Spanish Civil War
Date:12 June–19 June 1937
Place:Near Huesca, Huesca province, Spain
Result:Nationalist victory[1]
Combatant1:
International Brigades
Commander1: Sebastián Pozas
Máté Zalka
Commander2: 
Units1:Army of the East
Units2: 
Strength1: 
Strength2: 
Casualties1:9,000 casualties
Casualties2: 

The Huesca Offensive was an operation carried out during the Spanish Civil War by the Republican Army in June 1937 in order to take the Aragonese city of Huesca, which since the start of the war in July 1936 had been under the control of the Nationalist forces.

Background

In April 1937, the Nationalists started an offensive against the Republican-held Biscay Province, and by the end of May, the Navarrese troops had reached the eastern side of Bilbao's defenses. The Republican government then decided to launch two diversionary offensives on the Aragon and Madrid fronts in order to divert Nationalist troops.[2]

The Offensive

The Republican government decided to launch an attack against the Nationalist held city of Huesca. After the May Days, the Republican forces in the Aragon front had been reorganized and the Republican government established a new Army of the East. This force, under the command of General Pozas, was reinforced with the XII International Brigade, led by General Lukacs, and four brigades from the central front. The Republican forces outnumbered the Nationalist forces besieged in Huesca,[3] but the Nationalist troops were well entrenched and the Republican troops had little artillery and armoured support.

The attack against Huesca started on 12 June, led by Lukács. The Republican troops attacking across open ground were decimated by the machine-gun and artillery fire of the Nationalists. Furthermore, the same day, Lukács was hit by a Nationalist shell and died. The offensive saw the Rakosi Battalion's first action (with 288 men). The battalion became trapped by machine-gun fire and lost a quarter of its men. Their commander, Ákos Hevesi, and political commissar, Imre Tarr, were both killed as they led from the front.[4] On 16 June the Republican troops attacked the villages of Alerre and Chimillas but the assault was repelled by the Nationalist troops. On 19 June, the Nationalists entered Bilbao and the offensive was called off, after other two days of failed Republican assaults.[5]

Aftermath

The Republican troops had heavy casualties (according to Beevor, 9,000), mainly anarchist and POUM members.[6] The failed offensive after the recent May Days in Barcelona, increased the defeatism and the suspicions among the Republican troops in Aragon.[7]

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Beevor, Antony. The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. 2006. pages 347 and 429
  2. Thomas, Hugh. The Spanish Civil War. (2001). Penguin Books. London. p.667
  3. Thomas, Hugh. The Spanish Civil War. (2001). Penguin Books. London. p.668
  4. Book: Tremlett . Giles . The International Brigades . 2020 . Bloomsbury Publishing . London . 978-1-4088-5398-6 . 321.
  5. Beevor, Antony. (2006). The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939. Penguin Books. p.277
  6. Thomas, Hugh. The Spanish Civil War. (2001). Penguin Books. London. p.668
  7. Beevor, Antony. (2006). The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939. Penguin Books. p.277