Siege of Igueriben explained

Conflict:Siege of Igueriben
Partof:the Rif War
Date:16 – 21 July 1921[1]
Place:Igueriben, three miles from Annual, Morocco
Result:Rifian victory
Combatant1:Riffian tribes
Combatant2: Spain
Commander1:Abd el-Krim
Strength1:Unknown
Strength2:300 men
Casualties1:Unknown
Casualties2:All but 25 killed

The siege of Igueriben was a clash between the Rif tribes of Abd el-Krim and the Spanish army, from 16 to July 21, 1921, in the Spanish base of Igueriben where they were besieged by forces of Abd el-Krim. The clash ended with the victory of Abd el-Krim's forces. wiping out the Spanish contingent.

Background

During the Rif war, the Spanish general, Manuel Fernández Silvestre, was operating on the eastern zone of the Spanish colony in Rif. The region was dominated by the Rif mountains and their tribes, proving a serious obstacle to Silvestre's forces. On January 21, 1921, the Spanish took Annual as their base. Not all Riffian tribes submitted to the Spanish rule. Abd el-Krim and his brother determined to stop the colonization process.[2]

In late May, the Riffian forces assaulted the base of Abarrán, which they captured. A minor defeats would soon follow up with the debacle at Annual.[3]

Siege

The next Spanish base was attacked at Igueriben on July 16. Located three miles from Annual where it was quickly surrounded and cut off from Annual.[4] The commander of the base was Major Julio Benitez. The defenses were weak and incomplete, but the Major refused to surrender, preferring to die instead. Messages were dispatched from General Navarro, second-in-command to Silvestre, encouraging the garrison fight. His men fought valiantly, but their water supplies were three miles away from Annual. As the battle raged on, and the heat striking the troops, they were forced to drink juice from used pimiento and tomato tins, then vinegar, cologne, and ink, and finally even urine with sugar in it. At Annual, they dispatched a relief column which they got close to the base where were seen by the garrison. However, the only access to the base was through a deep gorge heavily defended by the Riffians. They were repelled by machine guns and heavy artillery,[5] [6] and the relief column retreated after suffering 152 killed.[7] Igueriben was captured on the end, and Benitez was killed alongside the majority of his men.[8] Only 25 men out of 300 survived whom they later reached the base at Annual.[9] [10]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. James W. Cortada (1980), Spain in the Twentieth-Century World, Essays on Spanish Diplomacy, 1898-1978, p. 125.https://www.google.ae/books/edition/Spain_in_the_Twentieth_Century_World/StG1AAAAIAAJ?hl=ar&gbpv=1&bsq=igueriben+july+21&dq=igueriben+july+21&printsec=frontcover
  2. José E. Álvarez, p. 42
  3. José E. Álvarez, p. 42
  4. José E. Álvarez, p. 42
  5. David S. Woolman, p. 90
  6. José E. Álvarez, p. 44
  7. David S. Woolman, p. 90
  8. David S. Woolman, p. 90
  9. Juan Carlos Lopez Sanz, p. 62
  10. David S. Woolman, p. 90