Vicente Rojo Lluch

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Vicente Rojo
Birth name Vicente Rojo Lluch
Born 8 October 1894
La Font de la Figuera, Valencia, Spain
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Madrid, Spain
Buried
San Justo cemetery, Madrid
Allegiance Spanish Republican Armed Forces
Service/branch Escudo de España (República).PNGSpanish Republican Army
Rank General
Battles/wars Rif War
Spanish Civil War
Awards 30pxLaureate Plate of Madrid

Vicente Rojo Lluch (8 October 1894 – June 15, 1966) was Chief of the General Staff of the Spanish Armed Forces during the Spanish Civil War.[1]

Early life

He was the posthumous son of a military man who fought against the Carlists and in the campaigns of Cuba, from where he returned ill.

In 1911 Rojo entered the Infantry Academy at the Alcazar of Toledo, receiving his commission in 1914 with the rank of second lieutenant, fourth in a class of 390 cadets. After having been assigned to Barcelona he went on to the Group of Regulars from Ceuta (the Regulares were Moroccan colonial troops with Spanish officers). He was later posted back to Barcelona and to La Seu d'Urgell.

In 1922, having risen to the rank of captain, he returned to the Infantry Academy in Toledo, where he occupied diverse educational and administrative positions.[2] He was one of the editors of the curricula on the subjects of "Tactics", "Weaponry" and "Firepower" for the new section of the Military Academy of Zaragoza. In this period at the Academy he collaborated on the foundation and direction of the Military Bibliographical Collection, along with captain Emilio Alamán.

In August 1932, he left the Academy to enter the Superior War School with the objective to make the course of the General Staff. During his time at the academy, a peculiar event took place in which he proposed to the cadets a tactical assumption that consisted of passing through the river Ebro to establish a route in the Reus-Granadella, an operation very similar to one a few years later, during the civil war, he would later put into practice in the famous Battle of the Ebro in the area between Mequinenza and Amposta. He was promoted to major on February 25, 1936.

Spanish Civil War

When the Civil War started (July 1936), Rojo - a devout Catholic,[3] and linked to the conservative Unión Militar Española[4] - stayed loyal to the Republican Government[5] and was one of the military professionals who participated in the reorganization of the Spanish Republican Army.

In October 1936 he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and was designated head of the General Staff of the Forces of Defense commanded by General Jose Miaja,[6] head of the Junta de Defensa de Madrid created to defend the capital at all costs after the transfer of the Republican government from Madrid to Valencia. In this capacity he prepared an effective defense plan for the city that prevented its fall.[7] Afterwards, his fame as an organizer increased. As head of the Central Army HQ, he demonstrated outstanding performance in the planning of the main operations developed by the mentioned Army, in the battles of Jarama, Guadalajara,[8] Brunete[9] and Belchite.[10]

On March 24, 1937 he was promoted to colonel,[11] and after the formation of the Negrín government in May, was made Head of the General Command Staff of the Armed Forces and head of the General Staff of the Ground forces. From this new position he was in charge of directing the expansion of the People's Army, and created the denominated Mobile Army, that served as the offensive advance force of the Republican Army.

On September 22, 1937 he was promoted to the rank of general.[12] Throughout that year he planned the offensives of Huesca, Brunete, Belchite, Zaragoza and Teruel.[13] He was awarded the highest Republican decoration, the "Placa Laureada de Madrid" on January 11, 1938 for his planning of the last mentioned operation.

The most ambitious operation he carried out throughout 1938 was the offensive of the Ebro,[14] a plan that grew from the previously mentioned tactical assumption developed in the Superior War School, that gave rise to the long running battles of the Ebro that developed from July 25 to November 16, 1938. In these battles the Republic gambled its international prestige, its endurance and the possibility of being able to give a favorable turn to the course of the war. In December 1938 he planned an offensive in Andalusia and Extremadura in order to halt the Nationalist offensive against Catalonia, but the generals Matallana and Miaja rejected the plan and the offensive didn't start until January 1939 and failed.

Exile

After the fall of Catalonia, in February 1939, he moved with the government to France, where on February 12, 1939 he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General, the second only of the Republican army.

After a brief stay in that country, the Service of Emigration of Spanish Republicans (SERE) paid his passage to Buenos Aires. Between 1943 and 1956 he taught as a professor at the military school of Bolivia.

Rojo has been considered one of the most prestigious military officers of the Republic, and of the war as a whole. His figure was respected even by his nationalist opponents. The most surprising homage is Franco's portrayal of him in the film Raza.

Return to Spain and death

In February 1957 he returned to Spain, where most of his family already lived. This return was made possible through a series of negotiations which involved several Nationalist military officers in Madrid, F. José Luís Almenar Betancourt S.J., a Jesuit who was in contact him during his stay in Bolivia, and the Bishop of Cochabamba, a former military chaplain who had served under Rojo.

Although he was not bothered in the beginning by the Francoist authorities,[citation needed] on July 16, 1957 the Special Court for the Repression of Masonry and Communism informed him that he would be prosecuted for the crime of military rebellion, in his position as ex-commander of the Army. This was the customary charge for professional military officers who had not joined the rebels in 1936. He was sentenced to 30 years, but did not serve a single day as the sentence was suspended, and he was soon pardoned.

Vicente Rojo died at his home in Madrid on June 15, 1966. Of the obituaries appearing in the Spanish press, only the one in El Alcázar, -mouthpiece of the Francoist ex-combatants- and the one by noted Falangist writer Rafael Garcia Serrano in the party press, amply eulogized his military achievements.[citation needed]

He wrote several books detailing his military experiences in the civil war, which were published in the following order: ¡Alerta a los pueblos! (1939), ¡España heroica! (1961) and Así fue la defensa de Madrid (1967).

Notes

  1. Obituary in El País (Spanish)
  2. Preston, Paul. The Spanish Civil War. Reaction, revolution & revenge. Harper Perennial. London. 2006. p.179
  3. Graham, Helen. The Spanish Civil War. Oxford University Press. 2005. p.91
  4. Jackson, Gabriel. The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931-1939. Princeton. Princeton University Press. 1967. p.223
  5. Thomas, Hugh. The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. 2001. p.307
  6. Preston, Paul. The Spanish Civil War. Reaction, revolution & revenge. Harper Perennial. London. 2006. p.178
  7. Jackson, Gabriel. The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931-1939. Princeton. Princeton University Press. 1967. pp.323-327
  8. Thomas, Hugh. The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. 2001. p.580
  9. Thomas, Hugh. The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. 2001. pp.689-690
  10. Beevor, Antony. The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War 1936-1939. Penguin Books. 2006. London. pp.296-297
  11. Preston, Paul. The Spanish Civil War. Reaction, revolution & revenge. Harper Perennial. London. 2006. p.198
  12. Preston, Paul. The Spanish Civil War. Reaction, revolution & revenge. Harper Perennial. London. 2006. p.279
  13. Graham, Helen. The Spanish Civil War. Oxford University Press. 2005. pp.93-94
  14. Preston, Paul. The Spanish Civil War. Reaction, revolution & revenge. Harper Perennial. London. 2006. p.288

References