Battle of the Mérida pocket
Part of The Spanish Civil War
Date20 - 25 July 1938
Location
Result Nationalist victory
Belligerents
 Spanish Republic  Nationalist Spain
Commanders and leaders
Second Spanish RepublicRicardo Burillo SpainAndrés Saliquet
SpainGonzalo Queipo de Llano
Strength
45,000 men 65,000 men
Casualties and losses
6,000 (KIA, MIA, WIA) 550 (KIA, WIA)

The battle of the Mérida pocket, also known as the closing of the Mérida pocket (Spanish: Cierre de la bolsa de Mérida),[1] was a military engagement which took place during the Spanish Civil War in July 1938 in La Serena zone of Badajoz Province, Extremadura.

The Nationalist command engineered an offensive which aimed at wiping out a large Republican salient, potentially threatening the only railway line connecting rebel-held León and Andalusia. The Nationalists planned a pincer movement from the north and from the south of the salient. They grouped 7 infantry divisions against 4 divisions of the Republicans. The campaign was carried out successfully during 5 days and with no major battle having been fought. It left one Republican division trapped in the pocket and few others suffering significant losses.

The engagement was neither among the largest battles of the Spanish Civil War nor the one which became a milestone in its history.[2] The Nationalists removed a threat to their logistics and seized some 5,000 square km, though the battle did not turn into a major breakthrough which decided the fate of the conflict. Its relevance was soon eclipsed by the onset of the Battle of the Ebro, which started when the Merida pocket was being closed and which turned into the largest battle of the war.[3] However, the Battle of the Mérida pocket merits attention as a unique example of pincer strategy employed during the war, since most offensives of the conflict were carried out by means of a frontal assault.

Background

Mérida, railway station

Since the summer of 1936 the Republicans controlled a large salient, located in north-eastern part of the Badajoz province, in the region of Extremadura; it covered the comarcas of La Serena, Don Benito and partially La Siberia and Campiña Sur. On the width of some 70 km it projected into the Nationalist-held territory by some 60 km. Total length of the frontlines around the salient was some 200 km and its size was some 5,000 square km.[4] The salient was of little value itself. It was sparsely populated; the largest urban centres were Don Benito (20,000 inhabitants), Villanueva de la Serena (15,000), Campanario (10,000) and Castuera (9,000). The area was of certain importance mostly as an agricultural region of significant grain production.[5] However, it mattered very much from the strategic point of view. It was the westernmost territory, held by the Republic. The frontline was located some 80 km from the Portuguese frontier and some 30 km from Mérida, an important junction with the only railway line connecting the Nationalist-held regions of León and Andalusia.[6] The salient was a constant threat to Nationalist commanders. In case of a successful Republican offensive, the railway connection between Salamanca and Seville would have been broken; in case of an even more successful action, the Nationalist-held territory would have been cut in two.[7] The chief Republican planner, general Rojo, already in May 1937 engineered a scheme, named "Plan P"; it envisioned a massive breakthrough offensive from the salient towards Portugal, but was abandoned due to political, not military reasons.[8]

In June 1938 the Nationalists seemed fully in control of the war. In no section of the frontline they appeared endangered or challenged. Having reached the Mediterranean in April in mid-June they have seized Castellón and kept pursuing an offensive along the coast with the objective of taking Valencia. On 17 June lieutenant colonel Antonio Barroso, a high planning officer in Nationalist General Staff, came out with an idea of mounting an offensive which would wipe out the Merida Salient.[9] He devised a plan based on pincer strategy, which would involve parallel attack from the north and the south of the salient, possibly trapping most of the enemy forces in a cauldron.[10] The plan got approved and on 2 July it was incorporated into Instrucción General número 5, issued by the Nationalist high command and signed by Franco. The document acknowledged concentration of Republican troops in Maestrazgo and Levante, which presumably was carried out at the expense of other sections of the front, including Extremadura. It ordered a concentric offensive from the north and from the south; its objectives were doing away with the Merida salient, seizing the Merida-Almorchón railway line (which would provide the Nationalists with the second rail connection to Andalusia), and gaining position for a future offensive towards the province of Ciudad Real.[11] The Nationalist command was not aware that in early July Ejército Popular was gearing up for the largest so far offensive of the war, to be commenced 600 km away; in late July it would begin as the Battle of the Ebro.

Ordre de Bataille

Nationalists

The Nationalist units marked for taking part in the offensive formed part of two armies:[12]

Both groups were to be assisted by some 17 artillery batteries, two squadrons of bomber aircraft (Ju-52 and He-70) and wings of fighter aircraft (CR-32) stationed in Mérida, Badajoz and Trujillo. In total, the Nationalists have grouped troops equivalent to some 25 regiments (some 65,000 people). The soldiers were generally in good spirits and well equipped, though some sub-units have been brought from various frontlines and were new to this combat zone.[13] It is not clear who directed the entire operation; it had no specific code name.

Republicans

On the Republican side the salient was garrisoned by Ejército de Extremadura, the army commanded by colonel Ricardo Burillo.[14]

In total the Republicans manned the salient with 15 mixed brigades, roughly equivalent to Nationalist regiments (some 45,000 people). Headquarters of Ejército de Extremadura was in Almadén, of the VII. Corps in Cabeza del Buey and of the VIII. Corps in Pozoblanco. There was no direct air support available. Republican soldiers have not seen much combat during 1937 and 1938 and suffered few casualties.[15] However, they spent most of the time in trenches on stationary positions, without much rotation and with almost no leaves; their morale was not high, especially that various units were extracted from the sector and moved elsewhere.

Battle

Intelligence services of the Republican Ejército de Extremadura have correctly identified enemy gear-up north of the salient, in Trujillo and Zorita, though they failed to note similar preparations south. Since 16 July the army Boletín de Información was warning about Nationalist preparations, and on 17 July it predicted almost precisely "ofensiva del enemigo en las 48 horas próximas". The anticipated enemy assault was to stretch along a 40-km section from Navalvillar de Pela in the east to Don Benito in the west. In response Burillo ordered state of alert and regrouping of own reserves. On 19 July 1938 the Nationalists opened artillery barrage and mounted an infantry assault on the Republican bridgehead on the Tagus at Puente del Arzobispo, some 100 km from the Merida Pocket and at the extreme right flank of the Ejército de Extremadura.[16] It was engineered as a diversionary attack and it worked; Burillo despatched a brigade from the army reserve to support the defenders.[17] The weather was typical for Extremadura in the summer: extreme heat made daytime operations very difficult, though low waters rendered most rivers relatively easy to cross.

20 July

The actual offensive against the salient began on 20 July with simultaneous actions from the north and from the south. In the north the Nationalist units advanced along the VivaresPalazueloMadrigalejo line. During the day at some points they crossed a minor river Rio Gargáligas, though at some they had to withdraw, the result of the Republicans setting fire to vegetation. On average they advanced some 6-7 km, and seized the villages of Rena, Acedera and Obando; the cavalry performed a 10-km raid on the left flank and seized the place known as Case del Fraile. In the south the Nationalists advanced from Peraleda del Zaucejo, Los Blazquez and Valsequillo, on both banks of the Zujar river. They crossed some minor hilly ranges – culminations of Sijuela and Pícuda - and overran few small settlements, but did not reach any significant town. However, by the end of the day the gap between two pincer groups was reduced to some 60 km. Burillo was primarily concerned about would-be Nationalist takeover of the Almorchón railway junction, gradually within reach of right-wing unit advancing from the south; he assembled some troops to form a makeshift División Zújar.[18]

21 July

On 21 July northern divisions of the Nationalists made further moderate progress of some 5-7 km along the 25-km-long breakthrough section, defended by the Republican 29. Division; they advanced well south of Rio Gargáligas. On their left flank they seized Navalvillar de Pela; in the centre they crossed hills known as Sierra de Pela, including the Repica summit, and started to approach Orellana la Vieja and Orellana de la Sierra; on the right flank some units reached northern banks of the Guadiana river. In the south all units cross the upper Zujar, which at that time of the year was no major obstacle either for men or for equipment; in the central part of the breakthrough section they crossed a low range of Sierra del Oro and reached the outskirts of Monterrubio de la Serena. By the end of the day the Nationalist pincers were gradually building a potential cauldron for Republican troops, with the exit gap of some 50 km. However, Burillo contacted commanders of both army corps and demanded that positions be maintained and retreat is performed only on clear orders from the army command; he also contacted general Miaja and asked for 2 brigades of reinforcements.[19]

22 July

The day of 22 July was the most challenging one for the northern units of the Nationalists: they had to cross the Guadiana, the only major natural obstacle. The entire advance had been planned few days earlier mostly around possible Guadiana crossings; it turned out that the points chosen, either bridges or fords, were usable, both Orellanas were seized with almost no combat, Republican troops did not offer major resistance, and the Nationalists advanced a few kilometres south of the river. In the south the 112. Division was engaged in first major combat against sub-units of the Republican 38. Division on approaches to Monterrubio; having seized the town, later they had to withstand repeated though somewhat disorganised Republican counter-attacks. The cavalry on the right flank reached the village of Helechal, just 7 km from the Almorchón railway junction. At that point possible encirclement of the Republican 37. Division was already becoming a reality. Both commander and head of staff of the VII. Corps suggested withdrawal, but Burillo did not agree. He trusted in his new División Zújar and in possible reinforcements, even though the exit gap from the pocket was merely some 30 km wide.[20]

23 July

On 23 July the Nationalist northern units focused on their western flank and broadened the breakthrough sector; having changed their axis of advance from south-east to south-west, they seized Castillo de la Encomienda, Entrerríos (between Guadiana and Zújar) and started to approach La Coronada. In the south the 112. Division first resisted renewed night Republican counter-attacks, then crossed a low range of Sierra de Benquerencia and the town of the same name, and during the afternoon hours approached and seized Castuera, reaching the railway line Merida - Almorchón. Instructions from Miaja, despatched late in the day, already reveal that he had little hope of blocking the enemy advance: at the time he was busy tying last knots of the Ebro offensive, which would begin the following day. With the fall of Castuera the exit gap from the Merida Pocket was reduced to some 20 km and it was clear that División Zújar would never become an operational unit, as its points of concentration were getting overran by the enemy. Commander of the VII. Corps, colonel Rubert, has already given his approval (unknown to Burillo) that brigades from the 37. Division might try an orderly withdrawal eastwards.[21]

24 July

On 24 July the 74. Division, operating east of Villanueva de la Serena, proceeded south-east and seized the towns of Magacela and La Coronada. From then on it was replaced as the sparheading unit by the 11. Division, which proceeded south-east; following few hours, some 7 km march, waddling at numerous points across lower Zújar and with some sporadic combat, it reached Campanario. It is there where it joined the 112. Division advancing from the south, which made some 14 km across fairly easy and undefended area from Castuera on that day. With this encounter the Merida Pocket was closed; during 4 days the northern divisions made some 30 km, the southern ones made some 40 km. Units of the Republican 37. Division which did not manage to withdraw east were now trapped in a kessel. Already in the afternoon local Nationalist commanders wired that "dos batallones rojos" intended to break through, though eventually most of the troops surrendered and there were 1.070 POWs and 2 artillery pieces taken over reported this day. Cavalry units started to patrol the corridor which blocked the pocket from the east, while other Nationalist sub-units were gradually reinforcing the barrier as they were arriving. Burillo – still with his HQ in Almadén - wired Rubert and consented to withdrawal, but at that point the only option east was by means of a breakthrough.[22]

25 July

On 25 July the Republican pocket was now fully encircled; estimates as to its size differ, some authors claim 3,000 square km, and some 500 square km. Its centres were the towns of Don Benito and Villanueva de le Serena, though there were also numerous towns (Quintana de la Serena, Higuera de la Serena, Zalamea de la Serena and others) in the encircled area. Two brigades from the encircled 37. Division, the 20. and 91. ones, attempted a breakthrough south of Campanario and suffered heavy casualties. Eventually all surviving soldiers of Ejército Popular trapped in the pocket surrendered. It is not clear how many of them were taken POWs; official report from Ejército de Extremadura listed 6,100 troops lost, though this probably includes both KIA, MIA and POW. Total casualties (KIA, WIA, MIA) of the Nationalists were at least 550 men;[23] most were suffered by the 102. Division in combat for Sierra de Monterrubio on 22 July. The Nationalists claimed also having seized some 170 machine-guns, 10 tanks, 18 artillery pieces and 19 railway carriages, which served as part of the armoured train, apart from numerous rifles, supplies, munition and other vehicles.[24]

Aftermath

battle day by day[25]

The 5-day Nationalist campaign was highly successful. Its major result was pushing the frontline from 30 to some 80 km away from Mérida and broadening the Badajóz-Mérida corridor (between the Portuguese frontier and Republican-held territory) from 80 km to some 130 km. The offensive seized some 5,000 square km of agriculturally productive territory, wiped out 1 Republican division and significantly reduced the strength of other 3 divisions. However, the operation failed to achieve one of its targets, namely control of the Mérida – Almorchón – Peñarroya railway line; the reason was that the Almorchón junction remained controlled by the Republicans. In August 1938 another Nationalist offensive followed, executed along some 60 km frontline from Casas de Don Pedro in the north to Belalcázar in the south. The fighting was surprisingly heavy and the Republican units mounted resolute and well-organized resistance. It was only following 2 weeks of combat that in mid-August the Nationalists seized Almorchón and Cabeza del Buey; however, they failed to make incursions into the Ciudad Real province. In January 1939 some areas on the southern flank of the former salient, like Peraleda del Zaucejo, will be briefly taken by the last Republican offensive, known as Battle of Peñarroya-Valsequillo.

stone wall, La Serena
stone wall, La Serena

Following collapse of the Mérida pocket a wave of personal changes in command of Ejército de Extremadura occurred; most of them took place before August 1938. Commander of the VII. Corps coronel Rúbert was dismissed by Burillo; he would not be assigned any major command post, to leave Spain and die in unknown circumstances on exile.[26] Commander of the VIII. Corps coronel Márquez was appointed as his replacement, but later he took command of corps fighting at the Ebro bend and still later in Catalonia; on exile in the USSR, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia, in the early 1960s he transferred to revolutionary Cuba, the year of his passing away is unclear.[27] Coronel Burillo was dismissed from command of Army of Extremadura (and expulsed from the PCE) and performed minor roles, including leading the Madrid police. He joined the Casado Coup but was apprehended ny the Nationalists at the quays of Alicante in late March 1939; sentenced to death by military tribunal, he was executed in July 1939.[28] Nationalist commanders proceeded on their career path also after the war, most rising to high positions; some like coronel Baturone have outlived Francoism and died in the late 1970s.

See also

Footnotes

  1. José Manuel Martínez Bande, La batalla de Pozoblanco y el cierre de la bolsa de Mérida, Madrid 1981, ISBN 9788471401953
  2. even fairly detailed monographs, dedicated to the Spanish Civil War, might not contain a single reference to the battle, compare e.g. Antony Beevor, The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War 1936-1939, London/New York 2012, ISBN 9781780224534
  3. Francisco Alía Miranda, Angel Ramón del Valle Calzado & Olga M. Morales Encinas, La guerra civil en Castilla-La Mancha, 70 años después. p. 515
  4. or 2,000 square miles, Hugh Thomas, Eduardo Barreiros and the Recovery of Spain, Yale 2009, ISBN 9780300142464, p. 65
  5. Michael Seidman, Republic of Egos. A Social History of the Spanish Civil War, New York 2002, ISBN 9780299178635, p. 200
  6. Ramón Salas Larrazábal, Historia del Ejército Popular de la República, Madrid 1973, ISBN 9788427611078, p. 2063
  7. Martínez Bande 1981, pp. 221-222
  8. José Vicente Herrero Pérez, The Spanish Military and Warfare from 1899 to the Civil War. The Uncertain Path to Victory, Zaragoza 2017, ISBN 9783319547473, p. 322
  9. some scholars point to Queipo de Llano as the author of the concept; reportedly, already in the spring of 1938 he suggested to "estangular la bolsa de Merida" of some 3,000 square km, Javier Tusel, Vivir en guerra, Madrid 2013, ISBN 9788415930051, p. 244
  10. Salas Larrazábal 1973, p. 2064
  11. Martínez Bande 1981, p. 223
  12. Martínez Bande 1981, pp. 223-224, Salas Larrazábal 1973, p. 2064
  13. e.g. the requeté Tercio de Montserrat battalion, which formed part of 74. Division, until mid-July operated as component of another unit in the Avila area. Immediately after closing the Mérida pocket it was shuttled by train to the Ebro bend and in late July it aleady operated in the Vilalba dels Arcs sector, Julio Aróstegui, Combatientes Requetés en la Guerra Civil española, 1936-1939, Madrid 2013, ISBN 9788499709970, pp. 694-696
  14. Martínez Bande 1981, pp. 225, Salas Larrazábal 1973, pp. 2064-2065
  15. 29. Division arrived in Extremadura in February 1938 (from Aragón), while divisions 36-38 were raised in Extremadura in the spring of 1937, compare Martínez Bande 1981, p. 85
  16. Salas Larrazábal 1973, p. 2064
  17. Martínez Bande 1981, pp. 226-227
  18. Salas Larrazábal 1973, p. 2065
  19. Salas Larrazábal 1973, p. 2065
  20. Martínez Bande 1981, pp. 232-235
  21. Martínez Bande 1981, pp. 235-237, Salas Larrazábal 1973, p. 2066
  22. Martínez Bande 1981, pp. 238-241, Salas Larrazábal 1973, p. 2066-2067
  23. number for divisions attacking from the south; no systematic data for divisions advancing from the north. It is known that a single battalion, Tercio de Montserrat (74. Division) suffered 20 KIA, see requetes service
  24. Martínez Bande 1981, pp. 241-246, Salas Larrazábal 1973, pp. 2067-2068
  25. please note that reservoirs on the Zujar and the Guadiana, visible on the map, were constructed after the war
  26. Michael Alpert, The Republican Army in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939, Cambridge 2013, ISBN 9781107028739, p 349
  27. Eduardo Yasells Ferrer, Sencillamente anónimos, Madrid 2008, ISBN 9789592242449, pp. 18, 252
  28. Ángel Bahamonde Magro, Javier Cervera Gil, Así terminó la guerra de España, Madrid 2000, ISBN 9788495379092, p. 341, Hugh Thomas, Historia de la Guerra Civil Española, Barcelona 1976, ISBN 842260874X, p 992

Further reading

  • José Manuel Martínez Bande, La batalla de Pozoblanco y el cierre de la bolsa de Mérida, Madrid 1981, ISBN 9788471401953
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