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8 - Spanish Naval Leadership during the Second Republic: José Giral Pereira

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 May 2024

Richard Harding
Affiliation:
University of Westminster
Agustín Guimerá
Affiliation:
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, Madrid
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Summary

An examination of strategic leadership in the navy during the Second Republic is of great interest for multiple reasons. These include our current lack of knowledge about the naval sphere and the actions aimed at steering naval policy during those years, the fact that this period coincided with a great upheaval in international politics, and that it was also a period of transformation at home.

Taking only a brief look at the several figures between 1931 and 1936 who were responsible for setting naval policy, we can conclude that, with few exceptions, the continuity, knowledge, and time necessary to develop a policy with any kind of long-range perspective by the Republican government were missing. As a consequence, there was a lack of strategic leadership at a time when the most serious threat to Spain's national security lay in the naval situation.

Going back to the beginning of the century, the Spanish navy had endured incomplete and ill-considered plans, multifarious and discontinued shipbuilding projects, and, in general, the lack of a balanced, viable agenda that was consistent with the country's economic reality. A profound change was therefore needed for the navy to become an efficient tool. The first requirement was to understand its structural problems, the second was to define exactly what was expected of it, and the third was to formulate a plan to invest resources, realistically, in a way that was consistent with the navy's needs and its mission.

One of the Second Republic's naval leaders stands out from the rest, José Giral Pereira (1879–1962), who served two separate terms as minister of the navy (10 October 1931–11 June 1933, and 19 February–18 July 1936). Giral, who was a pharmacist by profession, was the only navy minister to push for a plan aimed at dealing with the main challenges mentioned in the previous paragraph. His plans were ready to be approved in July 1936, but the process was interrupted by the war, and since then they have languished in the navy's archives.

However, because of their quality and sense of direction, they are among some of the best plans formulated in the first third of the twentieth century.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2024

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