*** Welcome to piglix ***

Aragon Offensive

Aragon Offensive
Part of the Spanish Civil War
Date March 7, 1938 – April 19, 1938
Location Northeastern Spain
Result Decisive Nationalist victory
Belligerents
 Spanish Republic
International Brigades
 Nationalist Spain
Kingdom of Italy Corpo Truppe Volontarie
Nazi Germany Condor Legion
Commanders and leaders
Second Spanish RepublicVicente Rojo Lluch
Second Spanish RepublicEnrique Líster
Karol Świerczewski
Second Spanish RepublicValentín González
Francoist SpainFidel Dávila Arrondo
Francoist SpainJuan Vigón Suerodíaz
Francoist SpainJosé Solchaga
Francoist SpainJosé Moscardó
Francoist SpainJosé Enrique Varela
Francoist SpainAntonio Aranda
Francoist SpainJuan Yagüe
Kingdom of ItalyMario Berti
Strength
100,000 Beevor: 150,000
Jackson: over 100,000
Preston: 100,000
Preston: 1,000 airplanes
Jackson: 700 italian and 250 german airplanes
Beevor: 600 airplanes
700 guns
150-200 tanks
thousands of trucks
Casualties and losses
Very heavy including many captured Nationalist: moderate;
Italian: 731 dead
2,481 wounded
13 missing

The Aragon Offensive was a Nationalist campaign during the Spanish Civil War, which began after the Battle of Teruel. The offensive, which ran from March 7, 1938, to April 19, 1938, smashed the Republican forces, overran Aragon, and conquered parts of Catalonia and the Levante.

The Battle of Teruel exhausted the material resources of the Republican Army, and wore out the veteran Republican troops. A slowdown of supplies from the Soviet Union exacerbated the difficulties of the Republican government, whose armament industry in Catalonia was already beleaguered. At the same time, however, Francisco Franco had concentrated the bulk of the Nationalist forces in the east and was preparing to drive through Aragon and into Catalonia and the Levante. The Nationalists were able to concentrate 100,000 men between Zaragoza and Teruel with the best troops in the lead. Even though the Nationalist army was numerically inferior to the Republican forces, the Nationalists were better equipped and had almost 950 airplanes, 200 tanks and thousands of trucks. In addition to his foreign aid from Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, Franco by this stage had the advantage of controlling the efficiently-run industries in the Basque Country.

The attacking army was commanded by Fidel Dávila Arrondo, with Juan Vigón Suerodíaz as his second in command. José Solchaga, José Moscardó, Antonio Aranda, and Juan Yagüe would command army corps alongside the Italian General Berti. A reserve commanded by García Escámez and García Valiño constituted the main force. José Enrique Varela with the army of Castile was to stand by, on the wings of the attack, at Teruel. The Condor Legion was also on standby. Colonel Ritter Von Thoma, its commander, convinced Franco to concentrate his tanks rather than spread them out.


...
Wikipedia

...