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Major Conflicts Prior to World War II Discuss any and all conflicts prior to World War II, from ancient times through the 1930's.

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Old October 5th, 2006, 01:39 PM
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Spanish Civil War: Abe Lincoln Brigade

This was a group of 2800 Americans who took up on the side of the Spanish Republic against the forces of Franco. The words are not mine. Please feel free to comment on the author's conclusions.
During the Spanish Civil War (1936-39), 2,800 American volunteers took up arms to defend the Spanish Republic against a military rebellion led by General Franco and aided by Hitler and Mussolini. To the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, which fought from 1937 through 1938, the defense of the Republic represented the last hope of stopping the spread of international fascism. (For a general overview of the Spanish revolution, click here.) The Lincolns fought alongside approximately 35,000 anti-fascists from fifty-two countries who, like themselves, were organized under the aegis of the Comintern, and who also sought to "make Madrid the tomb of fascism." In keeping with Popular Front culture, the Americans named their units the Abraham Lincoln Battalion, the George Washington Battalion, and the John Brown Battery. Together with the British, Irish, Canadian, and other nationals they formed the Fifteenth In- ternational Brigade. ("Lincoln Brigade" is a misnomer originating with an American support organization, Friends of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade.) One hundred twenty-five American men and women also served with the American Medical Bureau as nurses, doctors, technicians, and ambulance drivers.

The conviction that made volunteering for a war against fascism possible was born from the economic calamity and political turmoil of the 1930s. Like many during the Great Depression, the young volunteers had an experience of deprivation and injustice that led them to join the burgeoning student, unemployed, union, and cultural movements that were influenced by the Communist Party (CP) and other Left organizations. Involvement in these groups exposed them to a Marxist and internationalist perspective and, with their successes in galvanizing people to conscious, political action, gave rise to a revolutionary elan.

American radicalism was spurred by the appearance of profascist groups like the Liberty League, and the expansion of fascism abroad. With Japan's invasion of Manchuria in 1931, Hitler's ascendance in 1933, and Italy's assault on Ethiopia in 1934--all accomplished without hindrance from the governments of the West--the CP responded with the coalition-building strategy of the Popular Front, attracting thousands of aroused citizens directly into its ranks or into "front" organiza- tions. When four right-wing Spanish generals, with German and Italian support, attacked the legally elected government on July 19, 1936, a desire to confront fascism in Spain swept through the progressive communities in Europe and the Americas. Within weeks, militant German, French, and Italian anti-fascists were fighting in Madrid. By January 1937, despite a State Department prohibition against travel to Spain, Americans were crossing the Pyrenees.

The Lincolns came from all walks of life, all regions of the country, and included seamen, students, the unemployed, miners, fur workers, lumberjacks, teachers, salesmen, athletes, dancers, and artists. They established the first racially integrated military unit in U.S. history and were the first to be led by a black commander. At least 60 percent were members of the Young Communist League or CP. "Wobblies" (members of the Industrial Workers of the World or "IWW"), socialists, and the unaffiliated also joined. The Socialists formed their own [Eugene] Debs Column for Spain, but open recruitment brought on government suppression.

The reaction of Western governments to the war was ambivalent and duplicitous. They agreed to a nonintervention pact and the United States embargoed aid to the Spanish belligerents, policies intended to de-escalate the war but whose selective enforcement undermined the Republic. While Germany and Italy supplied Franco with troops, tanks, submarines, and a modernized air force (the first to bomb open cities, most notably Guernica), the nonintervention policy only prevented arms from reaching the Republic. General Motors, Texaco, and other American corporations further assisted Franco with trucks and fuel. The Soviet Union and Mexico were the only governments to sell armaments to the Republic, although much of them were impounded at the French border. Throughout the war, a vociferous political and cultural movement in America rallied to the Republic by raising money for medical aid and demanding an end to the embargo. Such participants as Albert Einstein, Dorothy Parker, Gene Kelly, Paul Robeson, Helen Keller, A. Philip Randolph, and Gypsy Rose Lee reflected the wide base of support for the Republican cause.

Self-motivated and ideological, the Lincolns attempted to create an egalitarian "people's army"; officers were distinguished only by small bars on their berets and in some cases rank-and-file soldiers elected their own officers. Traditional military protocol was shunned, although not always successfully. A political commissar explained the politics of the war to the volunteers and tended to their needs and morale. The Lincoln Brigade helped ease the pressure on Madrid, giving the Republic time to train and organize its own popular army. The subject of respectful news reports by such writers as Ernest Hemingway, Herbert Matthews, Martha Gellhorn, and Lillian Hellman, the brigade helped strengthen anti-fascist opinion in the United States. Yet the Lincolns and the Republican military, fighting with inadequate weaponry, could not withstand the forces allied against them. By the end, the Lincolns had lost nearly 750 men and sustained a casualty rate higher than that suffered by Americans in World War II. Few escaped injury. In November 1938, as a last attempt to pressure Hitler and Mussolini into repatriating their troops, Spanish prime minister Juan Negrin ordered the withdrawal of the International Brigades. The Axis coalition refused to follow suit and Madrid fell in March 1939.

The Lincolns returned home as heroes of the anti-fascist cause but enjoyed no official recognition of their deed. Many Lincolns soon aroused bitterness within sectors of the Left when, with the signing of the Hitler-Stalin nonaggression pact in 1939, they supported the CP's call for the United States to stay out of WWII. Once the United States and the Soviet Union entered the war, however, many of the veterans enlisted in the armed forces or served with the merchant marine. In a foreshadowing of the McCarthy period, the armed forces designated the Lincolns "premature antifascists" and confined them to their bases. Many successfully protested and were allowed to see action. Among the core agents of the Office of Strategic Services were Lincoln veterans whose contacts with the European partisans, forged in Spain, were key to OSS missions.

In the 1950s most veterans, whether Communist or not, were harassed or forced out of their jobs by the FBI. Communist Lincolns in particular were hit hard by the repressive Subversive Activities Control Board, the Smith Act, and state sedition laws, although over time all but a few convictions were overturned. In the 1950s and 1960s the majority of Lincoln veterans quit the CP but continued to be active on the Left. Notwithstanding its exclusion from American textbooks, the Abraham Lincoln Brigade commands attention as a unique example of prescient, radical, and selfless action in the cause of international freedom.

--written by Sam Sills

REFERENCES
  • Books
    • Bessie, Alvah. Men in Battle. San Francisco: Chandler and Sharp, 1975.
    • Guttman, Alan. The Wound in the Heart: America and the Spanish Civil War. New York: Free Press, 1962.
    • Jackson, Gabriel. The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931-1939. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1965.
    • Landis, Arthur, H. The Abraham Lincoln Brigade. New York: Citadel Press, 1967.
    • Rolfe, Edwin. The Lincoln Battalion. New York: Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, 1974.
    • Rosenstone, Robert. Crusade of the Left: The Lincoln Battalion in the Spanish Civil War. New York:Pegasus, 1969.
  • Film
    • Buckner, Noel, Mary Dore, and Sam Sills. The Good Fight: The Abraham Lincoln Brigade in the Spanish Civil War. New York: 1984. Distributed by First Run Features and Kino International, New York.

Soucre: Abe Lincoln Brigade
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Old October 9th, 2006, 07:05 AM
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Thumbs down Re: Spanish Civil War: Abe Lincoln Brigade

so called 'Defense of Freedom'?

No way. Communism dosen't mean freedom. After all, didn't the Republicans in Spain kill thousands of priests and nuns?

At that time, so called 'international fascism'... until 1939, Communism represented a much greater threat, considering it's attempted revolutions all across Europe during the 1920s, ther rising growth of left wing parties, the mass murders in Gulags, the Eastern European land conquered through the Ribbentrop Molotov pact, and it's invasion of Finland. The USSR was as aggresive as Germany, Italy or Japan.

I'm surpirsed that George Orwell, a former volunteer who was later anti communist and wrote the famous book about the creation of communism in a society of pigs, with one named 'Napoleon', isn't mentioned. Perhaps a bit too contradictary for the author...

Tired of the 'Fascism' thing all the time. If Fascism ever comes back to the West, it will be in the disguise of anti-Fascism. The people and self declared 'lef wingers' who rant about Fascists are much like the Fascists that they despise ,through their attempted silence of everything and anything that contradicts their view. After all, didn't George Orwell say something along the lines of 'When one calls Smith a Fascist, what he basically means is I hate Smith'. In fact though, Fascism is already taking hold in the West, through Political correctness and constant stirred up things, as shown in the wartime service of Guenther Grass, President's Reagan's visit to Bitburg cemetry, and accusations of one being a Nazi wheeover one speaks objectively and unbiased about Nazi related subjects.

Synically,

~K, the EviL
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Old October 9th, 2006, 12:34 PM
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Re: Spanish Civil War: Abe Lincoln Brigade

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Originally Posted by Helmut Von Moltke View Post
Tired of the 'Fascism' thing all the time. If Fascism ever comes back to the West, it will be in the disguise of anti-Fascism.
Perhaps it already has. There are many similarities between the use of "religion" and the "dumbing down" of the electorate in the US and what happened in Germany in the 1920's-1930's.

I don't mean to tweak you too much but the "Republican Revolution" in the US has been based on "family values" and such issues. George W Bush came into office promising to restore decency and dignity to the office of the presidency. He promptly lied to his public to get the US into a war of acquisition (which we are clearly losing despite the bravery and incredible sacrifice of our soldiers). Does this sound familiar? Now they are all "shocked" that a not so closeted homosexual congressman who was co-chair of a congressional missing and exploited children organization was soliciting sex from underage House of Representatives male employees.

My point is that the "disease" is not unique to left wingers. It is unique to anyone with power. As Lord Acton said perhaps 100 years ago, "Power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely". And the only thing that perhaps corrupts more than power itself is the desire for power.

Back to the topic at hand. You criticize the "freedom fighters" but they were fighting for a cause in which they believed, whether right or wrong in your view. And this is what they got for their trouble:
Quote:
In the 1950s most veterans, whether Communist or not, were harassed or forced out of their jobs by the FBI. Communist Lincolns in particular were hit hard by the repressive Subversive Activities Control Board, the Smith Act, and state sedition laws...
Joe McCarthy, conservative Republican US Senator was responsible for the suffereing of many loyal Americans. Eisenhower, another Republican, stood right next to him while campaiging. Richard Nixon, Alger Hiss. Read some history. Look at both sides of the equation and you'll see that it is, well, it is an equation.
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Old October 13th, 2006, 08:38 AM
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Re: Spanish Civil War: Abe Lincoln Brigade

Back to the point, I critizice the Communist cause which these men fought for, but not the men themselves, unless they commited war crimes. At least these men had an ideal and fought and sarcrificed for it, unlike the modern MTV drunken punks on the streets who have none at all.

It is funny though, a Communsit volunteer brigade is named after the Republican Preisdent Abraham Lincon. But after all, there are many contradictions in all political idologies, both left and right wing.

K
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Old October 13th, 2006, 03:02 PM
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Re: Spanish Civil War: Abe Lincoln Brigade

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Originally Posted by Helmut Von Moltke View Post
No way. Communism dosen't mean freedom
I absoulutly agree with you, however the republican side was very far from being Communist, it inclided anti-monarchist republicans, socialists, anarchists, democrats and etc. infact the Stalinist Communist was sometime more busy purging of their republican compatriotes than fighting Franco forces.
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Old June 14th, 2007, 09:56 PM
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Re: Spanish Civil War: Abe Lincoln Brigade

They were very brave people to fight for a good cause. That it was, Marxism has never been practised any where on this planet. The popular fronts of Europe were as has been stated were made up of Liberals Socialists Republicans and so on. For some reason socialism has always attracted bullies amongst other descent people. Marx never argued for the deaths of priests but he did say that religion was the opiate of poor people. They might have used this as a justification, they were still wrong. Marx did not like religion because it kept the poor in their place "your reward will be heaven not on this earth." Work hard for the few and shut up and die making me a profit. Society was invented by the rich and powerful only for their aims. Marx never argues for the deaths of working class people. Stalin, Mao, Castro were, are dictators Marx wanted the dictatorship of the working class. That direct democracy would prevail in a true communist state. Where the people decided social policy. The only countries to have come near it were Britain and France. Although the bullies messed it up again peoples egos get in the way. They want to tell other people what to do that is not direct democracy.
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Old December 6th, 2007, 06:16 PM
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Re: Spanish Civil War: Abe Lincoln Brigade

Commies,for sure. They picked the right name for themselves though.
Old Abe was the start of the end.
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Old December 8th, 2007, 01:36 PM
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Re: Spanish Civil War: Abe Lincoln Brigade

Abraham Lincoln was a Kommunist? Ein Roter?
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Old December 8th, 2007, 05:55 PM
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Re: Spanish Civil War: Abe Lincoln Brigade

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Abraham Lincoln was a Kommunist? Ein Roter?
Ironically he was a Republican. He was actually the first Republican US President, first elected in 1860 and then re-elected in 1864 during the American Civil War. He was assassinated in 1865 at the end of the war.
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Old December 9th, 2007, 10:54 AM
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Re: Spanish Civil War: Abe Lincoln Brigade

I know that he was asassinated. By John Wilkes Booth if I rememer correctly. But getting killed in a theatre doesn't make you a communist, does it? Or am I missing the point here?
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