Francoist Dictatorship and the Country's Isolation By The
International Community.
From the end of the Civil War up to the recovery of democracy,
Spanish foreign policy was characterized by contradictions, divergences
and deficiences which were a consequence of the ideological
and political peculiarities of the Franco dictatorship.
Foreign policy in this period can be divided into four different
stages, distinct in their style and objectives, but which all share
the same essential trait of the subjugation of foreign policy to
the maintenance of the regime.
- The first stage spans the end of the Civil War to the last
months of 1942. Most notable in this period is the work of Ramon
Serrano Suner, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, which assured the
coherence between the ideology of the regime and its foreign policy.
- The second stage of Francoist foreign policy begins at the
end of 1942 and runs to 1957. The international isolation to which Spain
was subjected up to 1951 had a profound effect and the regime was
forced to use all its energies to obtain worldwide recognition and to
instigate a more flexible approach towards Spain. Alberto Martin Artajo, the
Foreign Minister from 1945 to the beginning of 1957, played a decisive
role in this plan of action.
- The third stage of the dictatorship's foreign policy runs from
1957 to 1969 and corresponds to the mandate of Fernando Maria Castiella
as Foreign Minister. The recent incorporation of Spain into the
international community (1951: WHO; 1952: UNESCO; 1953 International
Labour Organization; 1955: United Nations) served as a basis for a
foreign policy strategy that was more active and more in accordance
with the new realities and changing international dynamics. Nevertheless.
the policies of this stage won limited results, due to the contradictions
between external action and the internal dynamic. This failure was
evident in the relations with the European Community and with the
United States as well as in the decolonization movement.
- The final stage of Francoist foreign policy extends from 1969 to the
death of Francisco Franco himself in November 1975. Lopez
Rodo and Cortina Mauri successively occupied the post of Foreign
Minister during the years which coincided with the physical decline
of the dictator and the final phase of his regime. Their mandates had a
distinct continuist character and were determined by the objective to
avoid the possible international isolation of a dictatorship already in its
deatch throes. In spite of this goal a series of events, both internal
and external, and closely interwined, contributed to the
weakening of the regime's diplomatic positions. In the first place, relations
with the Catholic Church and the Holy See deteriorated greatly which
resulted in the freezing of the negotiations for the preparation
of a new Concordat (the first one was signed in 1953) and in the loss
of one of the most tratidional and solid bulwarks of the regime. At the
same time, the Revolution of the Carnations was taking place in Portugal,
in April 1974, which put an end to a dictatorship that had lasted even
longer that the Spanish one. This denoted the loss of a traditional and
unconditional ally in the Iberian Peninsula and constituted another
factor in the internal political instability.
Franco's death in November 1975 led to a process of political
change which, in addition to giving rise to democracy, meant the
redefinition of all the provisions of Spain's foreing policy.
On 15 December 1975, the Prime Minister, Carlos Arias Navarro,
designated Jose Maria de Areilza as Minister of Foreign Affairs. The new
Minister dedicated his efforts to winning the West's acceptance of the
dictatorship's timid reforms. His attempts were succesful only in the
negotiation of an Agreement of Friendship and Cooperation with the
United States accompanied by several complementary agreements, which
nevertheless constituted an undoubtable improvement regarding Spanish
interests.
The failure of Arias Navarro's timid reformist attempts was soon
evident; he was replaced as President of the Government by Adolfo Suarez
who named Marcelino Oreja to the post of Foreign Minister. The new
reforming impulse initiated by Suarez was successful and culminated
in the recuperation of democratic freedom with the holding of general
elections in June 1977, in which the Prime Minister's own party, the
Democratic Centre Union, won hands down. The essential characteristic of
foreign policy during this period of the democratic transition was the
practice of consensus in important international policy matters, which
demanded the consideration of only those issues which would not give
rise to confrontation; those which could disrupt the unity necessary
for the consolidation of the democratic system were put on hold.

Acknowledgments