Deutschland incident (1937)

Deutschland incident
Part of the Spanish Civil War

The German heavy cruiser Deutschland, of which the incident is named after
Date29 May 1937
Location
Result Germany and Italy leave the Non-Intervention Committee
Belligerents
Spain Spanish Republic
 Soviet Union
 Nazi Germany
Commanders and leaders
Spain Hidalgo de Cisneros[1]
Soviet Union Anton Progrorin
Nazi Germany Paul Wenneker[2]
Strength
2 Tupolev SB bombers
4 destroyers
1 heavy cruiser
Casualties and losses
None 31 killed
74 wounded
1 heavy cruiser severely damaged

The Deutschland incident of 1937 occurred in May of that year, during the Spanish Civil War.

On 29 May 1937, a pair of Tupolev SB Soviet bombers attached to the Spanish Republican Air Force raided Nationalist air bases and the port of Ibiza, in the Mediterranean Sea. The aircraft departed from the airbase of Los Alcázares, near Cartagena.[3] The German heavy cruiser Deutschland, which was part of the International Non-Intervention Committee patrol, was anchored off Ibiza and was allegedly misidentified by the bombers' crew as the Nationalist heavy cruiser Canarias. Two Soviet pilots, Captain Anton Progrorin and Lieutenant Vassily Schmidt, dropped their bombs on Deutschland, causing large fires on the ship and killing 31 sailors and wounding 74. Two bombs struck the Deutschland. The first bomb penetrated the upper deck near the bridge and exploded above the main armored deck while the second hit near the third starboard 15 cm gun. Splinters from this hit perforated the seaplane fuel tanks and set it on fire, the burning fuel igniting the munitions for the starboard 15 cm guns and caused serious fires below decks.[4][5] At the same time, four Republican destroyers shelled Ibiza's port with inaccurate fire.

  1. ^ https://www.ibiza-hotels.com/history/
  2. ^ https://www.ibiza-hotels.com/history/
  3. ^ Martinez, Luis Garcia (1986). Los Katiuskas. Air Enthusiast, December 1986-April 1987. Bromley, UK: Pilot Press, p. 49. ISSN 0143-5450
  4. ^ Prager, p. 111-120.
  5. ^ Williamson, p. 14.

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