Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Operation Felix
Episode Date: October 27, 2022Early in the second world war, the Germans found themselves with a metaphorical pebble in their shoe. The pebble was actually a rather large rock that happened to guard the entrance to the Mediterrane...an Sea. Unfortunately for them, it happened to be controlled by the British. If they could remove the British, they could solve their problem and maybe do something for Hitler’s friend, Francisco Franco. Learn more about Operation Felix, the planned German invasion of Gibraltar via Spain, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Everything Everywhere is an Airwave Media podcast. Please contact sales@advertisecast.com to advertise on Everything Everywhere. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Early in the Second World War, the Germans found themselves with a metaphorical pebble in their shoe.
The pebble was actually a rather large rock that happened to guard the entrance to the Mediterranean Sea.
And unfortunately, for them, it happened to be controlled by the British.
If they could remove the British, they could solve their problem and maybe do something for Hitler's friend, Francisco Franco.
Learn more about Operation Felix and the planned German invasion of Gibraltar via Spain on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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To understand what made the Germans so concerned about Gibraltar, we need to understand what was happening in Europe in the summer of 1940.
40. Germany had invaded France in May, and to their own surprise, they conquered all of France
before the end of June. The speed at which they were able to defeat the French army, an army that
many people considered to be on a par with Germany, astonished the entire world. The British
expeditionary force in continental Europe narrowly avoided a calamity when they were encircled in
Dunkirk, France. It was only through a remarkable evacuation of over 330,000 soldiers on civilian
boats, that disaster was averted. Early in July, Germany began the Battle of Britain, which was the
first major battle ever fought solely by aircraft. Basically, Germany was on a roll, and Britain was on the ropes.
In June, while the invasion of France was underway, Italy declared war in North Africa, which began
the Axis Mediterranean theater of the war. Germany had plans to control the entire Mediterranean,
as was evidenced by their invasion of the Greek mainland, Crete, and North Africa in 1941. However, if they were to
control the Mediterranean, they needed to keep the British out. The British held Malta,
which Churchill called an unsinkable aircraft carrier. The German field marshal Erwin Rommel
realized that they could never really hold on to North Africa so long as the British held Malta.
The British also controlled Cyprus in the eastern Mediterranean, which could also be used to
strike at German positions at some point in the future. To top it off, the British also controlled
the Suez Canal, which controlled Mediterranean shipping to Asia. However, for the British to retain
control of any of these vital choke points. They needed access to the Mediterranean. And likewise,
if the Germans were to control the Mediterranean, they needed to be able to sail their ships there.
The Germans couldn't sail into the Mediterranean, and the British couldn't be prevented from
sailing into the Mediterranean, so long as the British held Gibraltar. If you remember back to my
episode on Gibraltar, it's a very imposing large rock that's found in the Strait of Gibraltar.
The Strait of Gibraltar is the 13-kilometer or 8-mile gap, which says,
separates Africa from Europe, and through which all sea traffic must pass going from the
Mediterranean to the Atlantic. This point was hammered home on July 3rd, 1940, when the British
fleet operating out of Gibraltar, known as Force H, initiated Operation Caterpult. Operation
Catapult was a surprise attack on the Vichy French ships operating off the coast of Algeria.
The British sank five French ships, including a battleship, to prevent them from falling into
German hands. So if the Germans could remove the British from Gibraltar, it would radically change
the strategic landscape of the Mediterranean Theater of the War. And I should note that it wasn't
necessary for the Germans to control Gibraltar, although that might have been nice, the primary
concern was that the British didn't. If you also remember back to my episode on Gibraltar,
you will know that Spain has claimed Gibraltar ever since it was taken by the British in 1713.
Here I need to explain what was happening in Spain at this time.
Before the start of the Second World War, from July 1936 to April 1939, Spain had fought a bloody civil war between left-wing Republicans and right-wing nationalist forces.
The nationalist forces, under the leadership of Francisco Franco, came out on top.
Because Franco was a right-wing dictator, he was naturally inclined to be on friendly terms with Hitler and Mussolini.
When war broke out, however, Franco declared Spain.
Spain's neutrality in the conflict. In June of 1940, Franco actually sent a letter to Hitler
offering to join the Axis powers if, in return, Hitler would help Spain grow its overseas empire.
In particular, he wanted the Vichy French-controlled Morocco and Cameroon, as well as Gibraltar.
Hitler was kind of annoyed at Franco's request. He wanted Cameroon for Germany because it had once
been a German colony. And he also wanted to control Morocco for an eventual naval war he foresaw
with the United States. On October 23, 1940, Franco and Hitler met in person for the first and only
time in Ande, France, just across the border with Spain on the Atlantic coast. Franco again offered to
join with the Germans, but this time he had even more demands, including fortifying the Canary Islands,
as well as shipments of wheat, vehicles, arms, and aircraft. The demands were something the Germans
couldn't possibly meet, and to this day, historians debate over if Franco was just greedy, or if he
shrewdly made demands he knew couldn't be met so he could stay out of the war. Either way,
the talks went nowhere, and Spain remained neutral throughout the war, largely because they
depended upon oil shipments from the United States, the country was still recovering from
its civil war, and because it had become clear by this time that Germany had lost the Battle of
Britain. But regardless if Spain had become a full-blown ally of Germany, there was still the
issue of Gibraltar. Even before the Ondai summit, the Germans had started putting together a plan
for Gibraltar that they called Operation Felix.
Operation Felix was initially just part of Operation C-Lion, which was the plan for the invasion
of Britain, on which I have previously done an episode.
By November 1940, Operation Felix had become its own plan and became part of the
Fure Directive No. 18, which stated, quote, political measures to induce the prompt entry of
Spain into the war have been initiated. The aim of German intervention in the Iberian
peninsula, codename Felix, will be to drive the English out of
the Western Mediterranean." End quote. So what exactly was the plan for Operation Felix?
For starters, the plan assumed that they would have the support and cooperation of the Spanish.
The idea was to send two German army corps into Spain from France, where they met on the Atlantic
coast. There's a narrow gap here where the land is flat, and it wouldn't require going over the
Pyrenees. The total number of troops would have been in the many tens of thousands.
The Germans would basically make a B-line down to the south of Spain, where it had had to
its border with Gibraltar. However, various German units would split off and set up defensive
positions along the coast to prepare for a British invasion of the Iberian Peninsula.
Once there, the Germans would then besieged Gibraltar from land, attacking the British fleet
from the air. Fear Directive No. 18 also specified a possible invasion of Portugal in the event
that the British should land there, with the additional possibility of annexing the Azores and Madeira.
Historians have debated how willing Hitler might have been to just ignore Spanish neutrality and occupy the country.
Given the state of the Spanish army following the Spanish Civil War, it's something that the Germans probably could have done quite easily.
The British, meanwhile, were preparing for an attack on Gibraltar.
Gibraltar was turned into a fortress. Miles of tunnel were carved in the limestone, which made up the rock of Gibraltar, creating an underground city, complete with a hospital, movie theater, and barracks.
There were anti-aircraft guns installed, and they would have also gotten support.
from the British Navy. British intelligence was also on high alert for any attack. A British intelligence
officer by the name of Ian Fleming was sent to Gibraltar to help set up Operation Golden Eye.
Golden Eye was to monitor Spanish activity, and in the event of Spanish-German collusion, they would
undertake sabotage operations in Spain. And just in case you don't know, Ian Fleming was the author
of the James Bond books, and GoldenEye was later used as the name of a James Bond film.
The area around Gibraltar became a hotbed of spying activity by both the Allies and the Axis powers.
Because Spain was neutral, both sides could observe each other actively and freely.
The Hotel Raina Christina in the nearby Spanish city of Algasiras was a hotbed of Spanish activity for both sides.
And the area, just over the border of Gibraltar became known as Spy Row by the British.
On December 7th, German Admiral Wilhelm Canaris met with Franco and asked him for permission for German troops to enter Spain
to take Gibraltar.
Franco refused saying that the food and transportation situation in the country couldn't support
so many German troops.
Also, if Spain supported the invasion of Gibraltar, he feared that the British would take
the Canary Islands in retaliation.
With this final refusal by Franco, Hitler gave up on Operation Felix.
He was now planning Operation Barbarossa the invasion of the Soviet Union, which would be launched
in 1941, and he felt that he could no longer dedicate troops to Gibraltar as they would
be needed in the east.
A modified version of Operation Felix Felix Heinrich.
Felix Heinrich would take troops from the Eastern Front once certain objectives were achieved
and send them to Spain to take Gibraltar.
However, those objectives were never achieved and the invasion of Gibraltar never happened.
We know how the story turned out.
Instead of taking Gibraltar, Germany invaded the Soviet Union, a move that turned out to be disastrous and cost them the war.
But what might have happened if Germany had taken Gibraltar?
If Germany had taken Gibraltar, it would have cut the British off from the Suez Canal.
To reach Australia or India, or even sending supplies and reinforcements to the Mediterranean,
would have meant sailing around Africa.
The British might have been unable to support their forces in North Africa,
which would have prevented the Allied invasion of Sicily.
Malta, Cyprus, and potentially much of the Middle East,
would have wound up in German hands, along with their oil resources.
It would have been a completely different war.
The question of what might have happened had Germany,
invaded Gibraltar wasn't just a question for historians. It was a question that the German
High Command was asking themselves at the end of the war. Supposedly, towards the end of the war,
Hitler himself was reported to have said, quote, we should have gone for Gibraltar. After the war,
Field Marshal Wilhelm Kytle told Allied interrogators, quote, instead of attacking Russia,
we should have strangled the British Empire by closing the Mediterranean. The first step in the
operation would have been the conquest of Gibraltar. That was another great opportunity,
we missed." End quote. And likewise, Hermann Gering said while he was imprisoned that if they had taken
Gibraltar, Germany would have been able to, quote, offer the British the right to resume peaceful
traffic through the Mediterranean if she came to terms with Germany and joined us in a war against Russia,
end quote. Franco's decision not to enter the war, in hindsight, proved to be correct. Had he done so,
he could have wound up with a fate like Hitler or Mussolini. As it was, he survived in power for another
30 years. We can never know the second or third order things which might have happened if
Gibraltar had been prioritized over the Soviet Union. However, given the actual outcome of
the war, Operation Felix may have been one of the most important, non-events of the Second World
War. Everything Everywhere Daily is an Airwave Media podcast. The executive producer is Darcy Adams.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett. Today's review comes from listener
Luis Lopes over at Apple Podcasts in Brazil.
They write, Amazing Podcast.
I've just listened to the episode on vitamins and really liked it.
It's informative, objective, and easy to understand.
I'm going to keep listening every day, improving my knowledge little by little, keep up the great work.
Obrugado, Luis.
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