I appreciate your point. I'd prefer to address this argument in private, hwoever. - I actually own the book in question and after i finish this Alexander biography i will begin it.Guttersnipe said:Maguire,
you make a lot of interesting points, however, there are some facts I would like to point out, that you may not be aware of.
Post Franco, an attitude of "agree to disagree" was adopted that took a revisionist view on history. The idea was to make the transition from a TOTALITARIAN POLICE STATE to a DEMOCRACY easier to accept for Franco loyalists.
The fact of the matter is, there are disparate difference between the scale of atrocities committed by the two sides during the war.
For fair comparison between the factions I'd like to point out some statistical data:
From 1936-1939 55,000 people were executed by various Loyalist faction (primarily in 1936, and the majority of whom were active insurgents, members of previous dictatorships, or members of political parties that supported the Rebellion after the fact, I.E. Jose Antonio).
From 1936-1939 close to 200,000 non-combatants or surrendered soldiers were executed at the hands of the Insurgents. These figures do not include civilians who died from air raids. Mass political executions continued after the civil war ended in 1939, not ceasing until about 1945.
These number come from Antony Beevor's history of the conflict The Spanish Civil War.
They are figures confirmed by the Franco regime (so, it's safe to assume they try to make themselves look good and the Republicans bad!)