<blockquote id="quote"><font size="3" face="book antiqua" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by Mike Ellwood</i>
The English and Portuegese, with the contributions of the Spanish armies, irregular and guerilla warfare (conducted by the nation as a whole) succeeded in defeating the French. <hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
Mssr. Ellwood,
You have put the cart before the horse. To quote from but one recent work on the Peninsular War: "Thus, the Spanish 'nation in arms' presented the French with a host of virtually insuperable, political and military problems. They may have lacked the polished professionalism of the British Light Division but, in the long run, they probably inflicted considerably more damage on the French forces than all of Wellington's pitched battles combined. The sieges of Gerona alone cost the Imperial armies over 20,000 casualties and, exclusively from sickness and guerilla raids, the French forces in the Peninsula lost approximately 100 men per day for over four years: a total of some 164,000 casualties. It is, therefore, easy to see how the war in Spain bled the French army white and, whilst the Anglo-Portuguese forces delivered the hammer blows, it was the civilian populations, particularly the Spanish, that bore the brunt of the suffering." Gates, David, <u>The Spanish Ulcer</u>, p. 36 (W.W.Norton 1986)
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="3" face="book antiqua" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"> All nations and even Wellington himself were appalled at the nature of Spanish "guerra a la muerte" resistance. <font color="red">However the manner in which the Spanish conducted "guerra a la muerte" as a people and as an army, I stand by my statment, was not Valorous. </font id="red"> <hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
Napoleon seized control of Spain by blatantly betraying an allied nation and then enforced that control with a barbarity that would have made Hitler's Gestapo blanch. En route to their eventual demise at Bailen, Dupont's troops first sacked Cordova after rejecting the town's capitulation. "What followed was a disgrace and such scenes were to be repeated many times in the coming years. The French looted Cordova with little regard for life or property: the town was sacked, women were raped and dozens of civilians were killed." Gates, <i>supra</i>, p. 51. None of the various sources at my disposal speak of a "massacre" of French soldiers after Bailen, but I will shed no tears if a few met their just rewards for the sack of Cordova.
Finally, untold thousands of Spaniards took up arms against the French forces in both the regular and irregular forces. With litle training, equipment or supporting arms such as cavalry and artillery, they nonetheless took the field against the most powerful army of that era. As could be expected, they lost most of the field battles, but again and again they rallied and reformed their forces going back into the fray until victory was achieved. If that's not valor, then I don't know what is.
Paco
<i>Maréchal</i> M. Francisco Palomo
<i>Prince d'Essling, Grande Duc d'Abrantes et
Comte de Marseille
Commandant - Division de Cavalerie de la Vieille Garde </i>
