On 18 July 1936 the Moroccan city of Tetouan was the target of an aerial bombardment, carried out by Spanish aircraft loyal to the Second Spanish Republic, barely hours after the beginning of the rebellion that triggered the Spanish Civil War.

Bombing of Tetouan
Part of the Spanish Civil War

Former Spanish military headquarters at Tetouan, the main target of the airstrike
Date18 July 1936
Location
Result Indecisive
Belligerents
Spain Spanish Republic Ejercito de Africa
Commanders and leaders
Santiago Casares Quiroga Eduardo Sáenz de Buruaga
Strength
1 Fokker VII Rebel garrison at town
Casualties and losses
None 15-20 civilians dead

Background

edit

During the evening of 17 July 1936, the local garrison of the Spanish Army of Africa at Tetouan announced its support to the uprising and by sunset had taken control of the city, then capital of the Spanish protectorate in Morocco.[1] Arturo Álvarez-Buylla Godino, the High Commissioner of Spain in Morocco, had refused to join the rebellion but was eventually captured and replaced by Colonel Eduardo Sáenz de Buruaga.[2] By then, the rebels had seized control of the Protectorate.[3] Spanish prime minister Santiago Casares Quiroga, who received reports of the events in Morocco in the evening of 17 July, ordered the Spanish Navy and the Air Force to strike the main rebel strongholds. The loyal military improvised Douglas DC-2 and Fokker F VII transport planes to bomb headquarters and airfields at Melilla, Ceuta, Larache and Tetouan.[4]

Airstrike

edit

A Fokker F VII and a Douglas DC-2 took off from the airfield of La Tablada, Seville, at 4:00 p.m., carrying eight bombs each one.[5] The airbase commander had foresee a four-plane package strike, but a lieutenant committed with the uprising sabotaged two aircraft by shooting at their engines.[6] One of the planes dropped three 10 kg (22 lb) bombs on the Spanish Legion barracks at Melilla, killing two Legionnaires. The DC-2, loaded with eight 8 kg (18 lb) bombs, headed for Tetouan, where it main target would be the High Commissariat headquarters.[5]

The DC-2 bombs landed around the Great Mosque in the city's Medina, killing 15 people and injuring 40.[7] The airstrike prompted the reaction of the local population, and a hostile crowd, rallied by the Moroccan nationalist leader Abdejalak Torres, gathered in front of the High Comissariat building. Ahmed Ganmia, the 76 year-old Great Vizier, who had been briefed about the uprising the day before by Juan Beigdeber, head of the Commission of Indigenous Affairs, managed to appease the multitude, riding his horse through Tetouan streets.[5][6] At least one source claim that the damage was actually caused by ground fire aimed at the aircraft by a group of Regulares indigenous troops.[5]

Aftermath

edit

Shortly after the round bombing trip between La Tablada and Tetouan, Seville would be taken over by rebel forces led by General Queipo de Llano. The pilots took off for Madrid just in time before being arrested. Two other pilots flying two Fokker F VII from the Spanish Sahara who made an stopover at La Tablada were instead captured and executed by firing squad.[5]

Besides the containment of the demonstrators at Tetouan, Ganmia is also credited for the massive enlistment of Morocco men into the rebel army that followed.[8] He was awarded for this action by Francisco Franco with the Laureada de San Fernando, the highest military decoration of Spain.[5][6]

The Republican Air Force carried out sporadic air raids on Morocco during the remainder of the war, especially targeting facilities at Melilla, which housed military barracks and a mineral export terminal that shipped iron ore and other minerals overseas.[6][9] 35°34′15″N 5°22′00″W / 35.57083°N 5.36667°W / 35.57083; -5.36667

References

edit
  1. ^ Hugh Thomas (1976), ‘’The Spanish Civil War’’, p. 240
  2. ^ Thomas (1976), p. 240
  3. ^ Thomas (1976), p. 248
  4. ^ Solé i Sabaté, Josep María; Villarroya, Joan (2003). España en llamas. La guerra civil desde el aire. p. 25 (in Spanish)
  5. ^ a b c d e f Alcaraz Cánovas, Ignacio (2016). Una Jornada Histórica Memorable. Cuadernos Republicanos, N° 90, pp. 137-44 (In Spanish)
  6. ^ a b c d Toribio (2024-01-27). "El bombardeo del zoco de Tetuán: El primer crimen fretepopulista de lesa humanidad". El Español Digital "La verdad sin complejos" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-12-08.
  7. ^ Thomas (1976), p. 251
  8. ^ Pflüger, Juan E. (2016-07-19). "18 de julio de 1936, cuando los republicanos inventaron el bombardeo sobre población civil". LA GACETA (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-12-08.
  9. ^ Narvaez Lopez, Francisco; Roldan Guijarro, Miguel Angel (2019). "Ataques Aereos al Puerto de Melilla" (PDF). Memoria Anual del Puerto de Melilla (in Spanish).