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The 'Spanish Legion' (
Spanish: ''Legión Española'' or simply ''La Legión''), formerly 'Spanish Foreign Legion', is an elite unit of the
Spanish Army. Founded as the ''
Tercio de Extranjeros'' ("Foreigners Regiment"), it was originally intended as a Spanish equivalent of the
French Foreign Legion, but in practice it recruited almost exclusively Spaniards.
History
The Spanish Foreign Legion was formed by royal decree of King
Alfonso XIII on
January 28,
1920 with the Minister of War
José Villalba stating, ''"With the designation of Foreigners Regiment there will be created an armed military unit, whose recruits, uniform and regulations by which they should be governed will be set by the minister of war."'' In the 1920's the Spanish Foreign Legion's five battalions were filled primarily by native Spaniards (since foreigners were not easy to recruit) with most of its foreign members coming from the now independent
Republic of Cuba.
Historically there had been a Spanish Foreign Legion which preceded the modern Legion's formation in 1920. On 28 June 1835, the French government had decided to hand over to the Spanish government, lock, stock, and barrel, the
French Foreign Legion in support of Queen Isabella's claim to the Spanish throne during the
First Carlist War with around 4,000 men landed at Tarragona on 17 August. This being the First Spanish Legion until The Legion was dissolved on 8 December 1838, when it had dropped to only 500 men. The British Legion (
La Legión Británica) of the Spanish Legion also fought during the First Carlist War. This Legion fought for the fortified bridge of Arrigorriaga on September 11,1835
The Spanish Foreign Legion was created along the lines of the
French Foreign Legion as a corps of professional troops that could replace conscripts in colonial campaigns. In 1920 Spain was facing a major rebellion in the Protectorate of
Spanish Morocco, led by the able Rif leader
Abdel Krim.

The Spanish Legion of the 1920s in a recruiting poster by Mariano Bertuchi.
On
September 2 of that same year, King Alfonso XIII conferred command of the new regiment on Lieutenant Colonel of Infantry
José Millán Astray, chief proponent of its establishment. Millán Astray was an able soldier but an eccentric and extreme personality. His style and attitude would become part of the mystique of the Legion.
On
September 20 the first recruit joined the new Legion; this date is celebrated yearly. The initial make-up of the regiment was that of a headquarters unit and three battalions (known as ''
Banderas'', or "flags"). Each battalion was in turn made up of a headquarters company, two rifle companies and a machine gun company. The regiment's initial location was at the Cuartel del Rey en
Ceuta on the Plaza de Colón. At its height, during the Spanish Civil War, the legion consisted of 18 ''banderas'', plus a tank ''bandera'', an assault engineer ''bandera'' and a Special Operations Group. ''Banderas'' 12 through 18 were considered independent units and never served as part of the ''tercios''.
Francisco Franco was one of the founding members of the Legion and the unit's second-in-command. The Legion fought in
Morocco in the
War of the Rif (to 1926). Together with the
Regulares (Moorish colonial troops), the Legion made up the
Spanish Army of Africa. In 1934 both units of the Legion and the Regulares were brought to Spain by the new Republican Government to help put down
a workers revolt in
Asturias.

Flags of the Spanish Legion.
Under the leadership of Lieutenant Colonel
Juan Yagüe the Army of Africa played an important part in the
Spanish Civil War on the Nationalist side. The professionalism of both the Legion and the Regulares gave Franco's Nationalists a significant initial advantage over the less well trained Republican forces. The Army of Africa remained the elite spearhead of the Nationalist armies throughout the Civil War. Following the Nationalist victory in 1939, the Legion was reduced in size and returned to its bases in Spanish Morocco. When
Morocco gained its independence in 1956 the Legion continued in existence as part of the garrison of the remaining Spanish enclaves and territories in North Africa. The Legion fought Arab irregulars in the
Ifni War in 1957-58.
On
June 17,
1970, legion units opened fire and killed eleven pro-independence demonstrators at the Zemla quarters of
El-Aaiun in the
Western Sahara, (then still the
Spanish Sahara). The incident, which came to be called the
Zemla Intifada, had a significant influence on pushing the
Sahrawi anticolonial movement into embarking on an armed struggle which still goes on up to the present, though Spain has long since abandoned the territory and handed it over to
Morocco.
Through the course of the Legion's history Spaniards (including natives of the colony of
Spanish Guinea) have made up the majority of its members, with foreigners accounting for 25 percent or less. During the Riff War of the early 1920s most of the Foreigners serving with the Legion were Spanish speaking Latin Americans. After 1987 it stopped accepting foreigners altogether and changed its name to the Spanish Legion.

Legionnaires with Christ.
In the 2000s, after the abandonment of
conscription, the
Spanish Army is again accepting foreigners from select nationalities. The Legion today accepts native Spanish speakers (mostly from
Central and
South America, but even from countries like
Germany) between ages of 18 and 28, be they male or female.
In recent years the Spanish Legion was involved in
Bosnia as part of the
SFOR. It also took part in the
Iraq War, deploying in
Najaf alongside
El Salvadorean troops, until the new Spanish government of
José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero fulfilled its electoral promises by withdrawing Spanish troops from Iraq. The Legion units deployed in Iraq were involved in several combats against the insurgency. In 2005 the Legion was deployed in
Afghanistan as part of the
NATO-led International Stabilisation Force (
ISAF). In 2006 the 10th Bandera was sent to Southern Lebanon as part of United Nations'
Operation FINUL[1].
Esprit de corps
Millán Astray provided the Legion with a distinctive spirit and symbolism intended to evoke Spain's
Imperial and
Christian traditions. For instance, the Legion adopted a regimental unit called the ''
tercio'' in memory of the sixteenth century Spanish infantry formations that had toppled nations and terrorized the battlefields of
Europe in the days of
Charles V. Millán-Astray also revived the
Spaniard's ancient feud with the
Moors and portrayed his men first as
crusaders on an extended ''
Reconquista'' against the
Islamic civilization; and later as the
saviours of Spain warding off the twin evils of
Communism and
democratic liberalism.
The Legion's customs and traditions include:

Legionnaires on parade.
★ Its members, regardless of rank, are titled ''Caballero Legionario'' ("Knight Legionnaire"). When women became admitted, they were titled ''Dama Legionaria'' ("Lady Legionnaire").
★ Legionnaires consider themselves ''novios de la muerte'' ("bridegrooms of death").
★ When in trouble, a legionnaire shouts ''¡A mí la Legión!'' ("To me the Legion!"). Those within earshot are bound to help him regardless of the circumstances. In practice, Legionnaires are never supposed to abandon a comrade on the battlefield; they must try to help him until all have perished, if necessary.
★ Contrary to usual military practice, Legionnaires are allowed to sport
beards and can wear their shirts open on the chest. They are also allowed
tattoos, especially the Legion Shield, or typically depicting scenes of war.
★ Before the arrival of
counterculture, smoking marijuana in Spain was mainly associated with legionnaires.
★ From its establishment the Legion was noted for its plain and simple uniforms, in contrast to the colourful dress uniforms still worn by the Peninsular regiments of the Spanish Army until the overthrow of the Monarchy in 1932. This was part of the cult of austerity favoured by a unit that considered itself on more or less continual active service.
★ The Legion's
march step is faster than the Spanish military standard, 160-190 in contrast to the Army's 90 steps per minute.
★ During the
Holy Week processions, the ''
paso'' carried by legionnaires is held not on the shoulders but on their extended arms to show their faith, toughness, strength, and endurance.
★ The legion's motto was ''¡
Viva la muerte!'' ("Long live death!")
[2] It fell into disuse after the death of
Francisco Franco.
★ The legion's mascot is a
goat. It's a very important symbol to legionnaires, and they show it proudly on military parades.
Famous ex-Legionnaires
★
Francisco Franco
★
Sixto Enrique de Borbón, as ''Enrique Aranjuez'' in 1965.
Carlist pretender to the Spanish throne.
★ José
Millán-Astray
★
Nacho Vidal (Melilla, until 1994).
Pornographic actor.
Present day
The Spanish Legion nowadays is mostly used in
NATO peacekeeping missions. It currently numbers 5,000 in a Brigade of two
tercios (regiments). It is directly controlled by the Spanish
General Staff.
The Spanish Legion is currently deployed mainly in the Spanish African enclaves, namely
Ceuta,
Melilla but also in
Ronda and Almería in
Andalusia.
Although the detachment at
Málaga was transferred away, every Holy Week a platoon of legionnaires disembarks to procession the ''Christ of the Good Death'', a figure of a cruficied Jesus, venerated by the Legion.
The Legion remains a harshly disciplined elite unit. Training is still brutal with punishments often involving severe beatings by NCOs.
The Legion has a special operations unit known as the ''
Grupo de Operaciones Especiales "Maderal Oleaga" XIX'' (Special Operations Group "Maderal Oleaga" XIX) which consists of about 500 men trained in various different areas:
★
SCUBA/Maritime Warfare
★ Arctic and Mountain Warfare
★ Sabotage and Demolitions (BOEL Demo experts are very highly regarded)
★ Parachute and
HALO techniques
★
Long Range Reconnaissance
★
Counter-terrorism and
CQB
★ Vehicle insertion
★
Sniping
★
SERE (''Survival, Escape, Resistance and Evasion'' - the training was received in
Fort Bragg)
Notes
1. ''La Legión asume el mando en Líbano tras culminar Infantería de Marina su misión'', 31 October 2006, 20 Minutos.
2. Special Units For the Spanish Civil War
See also
★
Regulares
★
Army of Africa
★
Foreign Legion
★
French Foreign Legion
★ Israeli
Machal program
External links
★
Official website
★
Friends of the Spanish Legion
★
Unofficial website
★
Specwarnet report - dated information
★
Music by ''la legión''
★
La Bandera - 1935 film on the Spanish Foreign Legion