1921–1926 war between Spain and Berber tribes of Morocco
"War of Melilla" redirects here. For other wars fought in the Rif and around Ceuta and Melilla, see List of Spanish colonial wars in Morocco.
Rif War
Part of the interwar period
(clockwise from top left)
Spanish Renault FT-17 stuck in a shellhole
Alfonso XIII reviewing troops destined in the Rif
Charge of the legionarios
Spanish generals overlooking combat from Mount Gurugú
Soldiers of the San Fernando Regiment climbing a defense wall
Class B submarines of the Spanish Armada
Date
1921–1926
Location
Rif region, Morocco
Result
Spanish-French victory
Dissolution of the Republic of the Rif
Belligerents
Spain France (1925–1926)
Republic of the Rif
Commanders and leaders
Manuel Silvestre † Francisco Franco Dámaso Berenguer José Millán-Astray (WIA) Miguel Primo de Rivera Alfredo Kindelán José Sanjurjo Juan Yagüe Leopoldo Saro Emilio Mola Philippe Pétain Hubert Lyautey M. Ahmed er Raisuni (POW)
Abd el-Krim A.S. M. Abdel-Karim Bu Lahya M.B.M. les Aït Ghannou Ahmed Heriro Jebli † H. Mouh-Ameziane Mohamed Cheddi Caid Bohout C.M. Na'ma Tanout
Spanish estimate: 80,000 irregulars[1][5](never more than 20,000 with firearms) including less than 7,000 "elites" Other sources: Autumn 1925: 35,000–50,000[6] March 1926: less than 20,000[6]
Casualties and losses
53,500 casualties[7][8] 20,000 casualties[7][8]
30,000 casualties[8](including 10,000 dead)[7][9]
v
t
e
Rif War
Larache
Alcazarquivir
1st Xauen
El Biutz
Alfrau
Sidi Dris [es]
Abarrán [es]
Igueriben [fr]
Annual
Dar Drius
Monte Arruit
Nador
Zeluán
Melilla
Sanjurjo's counter-offensive
Estella line
2nd Xauen [fr]
Uarga [es]
Fez
Alhucemas
Capaz
v
t
e
Spanish–Moroccan conflicts
Imperialism
Conquest of Mehdya (1614)
Siege of Mamora (1681)
Siege of Larache (1689)
Siege of Melilla (1694–1696)
Sieges of Ceuta (1694–1727)
Siege of Melilla (1774–1775)
Tetuan War (1859–1860)
Rif conflicts
First Melillan campaign (1893–1894)
Second Melillan campaign (1909)
Battle of Wolf Ravine
Kert campaign (1911–1912)
Rif War (1920–1926)
Post-colonial conflicts
Ifni War (1957–1958)
Green March (1975)
Perejil Island (2002)
Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera (2012)
v
t
e
Franco–Moroccan conflicts
First French colonial empire era
Larache expedition (1765)
Second French colonial empire era
Franco-Moroccan War (1844)
Bombardment of Salé (1851)
South-Oranese Campaign (1897–1903)
Conquest of Morocco (1907–34)
Zaian War (1914–21)
Rif War (1921–26)
Post-colonial conflicts
Ifni War (1957–58)
v
t
e
Spanish colonial campaigns
15th century
Canary Islands (1402–96)
Santa Cruz de la Mar Pequeña (1478)
Guinea (1478)
Algeria (1497)
Melilla (1497)
16th century
Algeria (1505)
Algeria (1507)
Morocco (1508)
Algeria (1509)
Algeria (1510)
Tripoli (1510)
Tunisia (1510)
Puerto Rico (1511–29)
Algeria (1516)
Algeria (1517–18)
Mexico (1519–1821)
Mexico (1519–21)
Algeria (1519)
Tunisia (1520)
Chiapas (1523–1695)
Guatemala (1524–1697)
El Salvador (1524–39)
Honduras (1524–39)
Morocco (1525)
Yucatán (1527–1697)
Algeria (1529)
Algeria (1531)
Peru (1532–72)
Tunisia (1534)
Algeria (1535)
Tunisia (1535)
Colombia (1537–40)
Algeria (1541)
Algeria (1543)
Halmahera (1545)
Chile (1546–1662)
Algeria (1547)
Tunisia (1550)
Libya (1551)
Algeria (1555)
Algeria (1556)
Algeria (1558)
Tunisia (1560)
Argentine Northwest (1560–1667)
Algeria (1563)
Morocco (1563)
Philippines (1565–1898)
Florida (1565)
Philippines (1567–72)
Tunisia (1574)
Brunei (1578)
Cambodia (1593–97)
Puerto Rico (1595)
Philippines (1596)
Cuba (1596)
Puerto Rico (1598)
Philippines (1599-1600)
17th century
Philippines (1602)
Tunisia (1605)
Morocco (1614)
Petén (1618–97)
Brazil (1625)
Taiwan (1626)
St. Kitts · Nevis (1629)
Philippines (1630)
Brazil (1631)
Brazil (1638)
Philippines (1638-46)
Brazil (1640)
Taiwan (1641)
Taiwan (1642)
Chiloé · Valdivia (1643)
Philippines (1646)
Tortuga (1654)
Hispaniola (1655)
Jamaica (1655)
Jamaica (1657)
Jamaica (1658)
Panama (1671)
New Mexico (1680–92)
Morocco (1689)
18th century
North America (1702–13)
Chiloé (1712)
Bahamas (1720)
Chile (1723–1726)
Oran (1732)
Banda Oriental (1735–37)
Caribbean and North America (1739–48)
Iberian Peninsula and South America (1762–63)
Portugal (1762)
Banda Oriental and Rio Grande do Sul (1762–63)
Cuba (1762)
Nicaragua (1762)
Philippines (1762)
Chile (1766–1767)
Algiers (1775)
Banda Oriental (1776–1777)
North America (1779–83)
Peru (1780–82)
New Granada (1781)
Algiers (1783)
Algiers (1784)
Chile (1792)
Caribbean (1796–1802)
19th century
Río de la Plata (1806–07)
Spanish America (1808–33)
Bolivia (1809–25)
Argentina (1810–18)
Florida (1810)
Paraguay (1810–11)
Mexico (1810–21)
Peru (1811–24)
El Salvador (1811)
Uruguay (1811)
Venezuela (1811–23)
Chile (1812–27)
Colombia (1815–16)
Colombia (1819–20)
Ecuador (1820–22)
Mexico (1821–29)
Balanguingui (1848)
Cochinchina (1858–62)
Morocco (1859–1860)
Dominican Republic (1863–65)
Peru and Chile (1864–66)
Puerto Rico (1868)
Cuba (1868–78)
Cuba (1879–80)
Morocco (1893–94)
Cuba (1895–98)
Philippines (1896–98)
Puerto Rico (1898)
Guam (1898)
20th century
Morocco (1909)
Morocco (1911–12)
Morocco (1920–26)
Morocco (1957–58)
Western Sahara (1973–76)
Western Sahara (1975)
The Rif War (Spanish: Guerra del Rif) was an armed conflict fought from 1921 to 1926 between the occupying colonialists of Spain (joined by France in 1924) and the Berber tribes of the mountainous Rif region of northern Morocco. The Rif Republic alone was able to keep a European middle power and great power in check for a time.
Led by Abd el-Krim, the Riffians at first inflicted several defeats on the Spanish forces by using guerrilla tactics and with the help of captured European weapons. After France's military intervention against Abd el-Krim's forces and the major landing of Spanish troops at Al Hoceima, considered the first amphibious landing in history to involve the use of tanks and aircraft, Abd el-Krim surrendered to the French and was taken into exile.[10]
In July 1909, Spanish workers constructing a rail-bridge providing access to iron mines near Melilla were attacked by Rifian tribesmen.[11] This incident led to the summoning of reinforcements from Spain itself. A series of skirmishes over the following weeks cost the Spanish over a thousand casualties. By September, the Spanish Army had 40,000 troops in northern Morocco and had occupied the mountainous tribal regions to the south and southeast of Melilla.[12] The military operations in Jebala, in the Moroccan west, began in 1911 with the Larache landing. Spain worked to pacify a large part of the most violent areas until 1914, a slow process of consolidation of frontiers that lasted until 1919. The following year, after the signing of the Treaty of Fez, the northern Moroccan area was adjudicated to Spain as a protectorate. The Riffian populations strongly resisted the Spanish, unleashing a conflict that would last for several years.
In 1921, in an attempt to consolidate control of the region, the Spanish troops suffered the catastrophic Disaster of Annual in addition to a rebellion led by Rifian leader Abd el-Krim. As a result, the Spanish retreated to a few fortified positions while Abd el-Krim ultimately created an entire independent state: the Republic of the Rif. The development of the conflict and its end coincided with the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera, who took on command of the campaign from 1924 to 1927. In addition, and after the Battle of Uarga in 1925, the French intervened in the conflict and established a joint collaboration with Spain that culminated in the Alhucemas landing, which proved a turning point. The Spanish also used chemical weapons during the conflict. By 1926, the area had been pacified; Abd-el-Krim surrendered to the French that year, and Spain gained effective control of the protectorate's territory at last.
The Rif War still causes much disagreement among historians. Some see in it a harbinger of the decolonization process in North Africa. Others consider it one of the last colonial wars, as it was the decision of the Spanish to conquer the Rif – nominally part of their Moroccan protectorate but de facto independent – that catalyzed the entry of France in 1924.[13] The Rif War left a deep memory both in Spain and in Morocco. The Riffian insurgency of the 1920s can be interpreted as a precursor to the Algerian War of Independence, which took place three decades later.[14]
^ abcTimeline for the Third Rif War (1920–25) Archived 2011-12-20 at the Wayback Machine Steven Thomas
^David S. Woolman, p. 186 "Rebels in the Rif", Stanford University Press
^David H. Slavin, The French Left and the Rif War, 1924–25: Racism and the Limits of Internationalism, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 26, No. 1, January 1991, pp. 5–32
^Cite error: The named reference pennell1 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^David S. Woolman, pp. 149–151 "Rebels in the Rif", Stanford University Press
^ abDavid E. Omissi: Air Power and Colonial Control: The Royal Air Force, 1919–1939, Manchester University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-7190-2960-0, p. 188.
^ abcMicheal Clodfelter: Warfare and armed conflicts: a statistical reference to casualty and other figures, 1500–2000, McFarland, 2002, ISBN 0-7864-1204-6, p. 398.
^Meredith Reid Sarkees, Frank Whelon Wayman: Resort to war: a data guide to inter-state, extra-state, intra-state, and non-state wars, 1816–2007, CQ Press, 2010, ISBN 0-87289-434-7, p. 303.
^Douglas Porch, "Spain's African Nightmare," MHQ: Quarterly Journal of Military History (2006) 18#2 pp 28–37.
^David S. Woolman, page 42 "Rebels in the Rif", Stanford University Press 1968
^David S. Woolman, pp. 42–43 "Rebels in the Rif", Stanford University Press 1968
^Jan Pascal, L’Armée française face à Abdelkrim ou la tentation de mener une guerre conventionnelle dans une guerre irrégulière 1924–1927, Cairn.Info, 2009, p. 732.
^Entelis, John P. (9 March 2017). "La Guerre du Rif: Maroc (1925–1926)". The Journal of North African Studies. 22 (3): 500–503. doi:10.1080/13629387.2017.1300383. S2CID 151998348.
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