Spanish protectorate in Morocco
The Spanish Protectorate in Morocco was established on 27 November 1912 by a treaty between France and Spain that converted the Spanish sphere of influence in Morocco into a formal protectorate.
The Spanish protectorate consisted of a northern strip on the Mediterranean and the Strait of Gibraltar, and a southern part of the protectorate around Cape Juby, bordering the Spanish Sahara. The northern zone became part of independent Morocco on 7 April 1956, shortly after France relinquished its protectorate. Spain finally ceded its southern zone through the Treaty of Angra de Cintra on 1 April 1958, after the short Ifni War. The city of Tangier was excluded from the Spanish protectorate and received a special internationally controlled status as Tangier International Zone.
Since France already held a protectorate over most of the country and had controlled Morocco's foreign affairs since 30 March 1912, it also held the power to delegate a zone to Spanish protection.
The surface area of the Protectorate was about.
History
Background
At a time when other European nations were acquiring or expanding their colonial empires, Spain was losing the last remnants of hers following the disastrous war of 1898, which had forced Spaniards to acknowledge the second-rate status of their army. However, their government found it necessary to show an active interest in expansion in northern Morocco. That country, if only because of its geographical position and the presence of the presidios of Ceuta, and Melilla, could not be ignored by the Spaniards despite their lack of enthusiasm for new colonial enterprises, with the exception of the enthusiastic pro-colonial africanista party of which King Alfonso XIII was a proponent.During the last decades of the 19th century, Spain observed with apprehension the increasing interference of Britain and France in the region. The most coherently expressed reason for intervention was fear for the strategic security of Spain. Among others, the Liberal leader Montero Ríos stated that if northwestern Morocco were to come under the civil or military protectorate of France, Spain would see itself besieged perpetually in the north and south by the same power. Furthermore, recent finds of iron ore near Melilla convinced many that Morocco contained vast mineral wealth.
The key motivation for intervention, although less openly stated, was the belief that Morocco was Spain's last chance to maintain its position in the Concert of Europe, as it was the one area in which it could claim sufficient interest to generate some diplomatic strength with respect to the European powers. There was also the then-widespread belief in Europe that colonies increased a nation's prestige. Those beliefs encouraged Spanish politicians to adopt a forward policy in Morocco.
Formation
In a convention dated 27 June 1900, France and Spain agreed to recognize separate zones of influence in Morocco, but did not specify their boundaries. In 1902, France offered Spain all of Morocco north of the Sebou River and south of the Sous River, but Spain declined in the belief that such a division would offend Britain. The British and French, without any Spanish insistence, acknowledged Spain's right to a zone of influence in Morocco in Article 8 of the Entente cordiale of 8 April 1904:File:Spanish territorial boundary changes in Northwest Africa 1885-1912.png|thumb|Spanish territorial boundary changes in Northwest Africa per the treaties of 1885, 1900, 1902, 1904, and 1912.
What exactly "special consideration" meant was dealt with in the secret third and fourth articles, specifying that Spain would be required to recognize Articles 4 and 7 of the treaty but could decline the "special consideration" if it wished:
The British goal in these negotiations with France was to ensure that a weaker power held the strategic coast opposite Gibraltar in return for Britain ceding all their influence in Morocco. France began negotiating with Spain at once, but the offer of 1902 was no longer on the table. Since France had given up its ambitions in Ottoman Libya in a convention with Italy in 1903, it felt entitled to a greater share of Morocco. On 3 October 1904, France and Spain concluded a treaty that defined their precise zones. Spain received a zone of influence consisting of a northern strip of territory and a southern strip. The northern strip did not reach to the border of French Algeria, nor did it include Tangier, soon to be internationalized. The southern strip represented the southernmost part of Morocco as recognized by the European powers: the territory to its south, Saguia el-Hamra, was recognized by France as an exclusively Spanish zone. The treaty also recognized the Spanish exclave of Ifni and delimited its borders.
In March 1905, the German Kaiser, Wilhelm II, visited Tangier, a city of international character in northern Morocco. There he loudly touted Germany's economic interests in Morocco and assured the Sultan of financial assistance in the event of a threat to Moroccan independence. At Wilhelm's urging, Sultan Abd el Aziz called for an international conference. The final act of the Algeciras Conference created the State Bank of Morocco, guaranteed the attending powers equal commercial rights in Morocco and created a native Moroccan police force led by French and Spanish officers.However it ultimately saw the Powers call Germany’s bluff when all other involved powers than Austria-Hungary sided with France either overtly or otherwise having negotiated in the previous decades various alliances or informal agreements with the Quai d’Orsay.
The final Spanish zone of influence consisted of a northern strip and a southern strip centered on Cape Juby. The consideration of the southern strip as part of the protectorate back in 1912 eventually gave Morocco a solid legal claim to the territory in the 1950s. While the sparsely populated Cape Juby was administered as a single entity with Spanish Sahara, the northern territories were administered, separately, as a Spanish protectorate with its capital at Tetuán.
The Protectorate system was established in 1912 by the Treaty of Fes after a second Moroccan Crisis caused by the German gunboat Panther’s visit to Agadir in 1911 sparked a confrontation with France. The Islamic legal system of qadis was formally maintained.
Rif War
Since the beginning of the protectorates the French and Spanish had been in a tough struggle to maintain the fiction of colonial rule in the mountainous interior, and from the time of the First World War, the Republic of the Rif, led by the guerrilla leader Abd el-Krim, was a breakaway state that existed from 1921 to 1926 in the Rif region, when it was subdued and dissolved by a joint expedition of the Spanish Army of Africa and French forces during the Rif War.The Spanish lost more than 13,000 soldiers at Annual in July–August 1921. Controversy in Spain over the early conduct in the war was a driving factor behind the unpopularity of Alfonso XIII, who had urged the attack and had stayed golfing in France when news of the defeat reached him, seeming callous to the loss. It led to a politically unstable situation that led to the military coup by General Miguel Primo de Rivera in September of 1923 which despite Primo de Rivera’s abandonista position, ultimately defeated the Riffian revolt when Abd El-Krim’s attack on the French zone in 1925 allowed them to work with the Spanish to organise the decisive joint air and amphibious landings at Alhucemas.
After the successful 1925 Alhucemas landing, the French–Spanish alliance ended up achieving victory and putting an end to the war. The Spanish consolidated their zone, garrisoning it by recruiting Moroccan tribesmen as regulares in the Army of Africa, Spain’s professional standing army in Africa, and with the Foreign Legion. In 1925 the city of Tangier became an Tangier International Zone by agreement of the Powers, with an administrator appointed by the Sultan, usually a Frenchman.
Second Spanish Republic
Before 1934, the southern part of the protectorate had been governed from Cape Juby since 1912; Cape Juby was also the seat of Spanish West Africa. Then, in 1934, the southern part began to being managed directly from Tetuán and the seat of Spanish West Africa was moved from Cape Juby to the territory of Ifni, which had been occupied by the Spaniards that year only, but had been by treaty allocated to Spain since 1860.Spanish Civil War
The Spanish Civil War started in 1936 with the partially successful coup against the Republican Government, which began in Spanish Morocco by an uprising of the Spanish Army of Africa stationed there, although within a day uprisings in Spain itself broke out. This force, which included a considerable number of Moroccan troops, was under the command of Francisco Franco and became the core of the Spanish Nationalist Army. The Communist Party of Spain and Workers' Party of Marxist Unification, advocated anti-colonial policies, and pressured the Republican government to support the independence of Spanish Morocco, intending to create a rebellion at Franco's back and cause disaffection among his Moroccan troops. The government – then led by the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party — rejected that course of action as it would have likely resulted in conflict with France, the colonial ruler of the other portion of Morocco.Because the locally recruited Muslim regulares had been among Franco's most effective troops, the protectorate enjoyed more political freedom and autonomy than Francoist Spain-proper after Franco's victory. The area held competing political parties and a Moroccan nationalist press, which often criticized the Spanish government.