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  1. On 14 June 1940, a few days after the Italian declaration of war after the German invasion of France, Spain seized the opportunity and, amid the collapse of the French Third Republic, a contingent of 4,000 Moorish soldiers based in the Spanish Morocco occupied the Tangier International Zone, meeting no resistance.

  2. Spanish troops provisionally occupied Tangier during World War II, on the pretext that an Italian invasion was imminent. Retrocession to Morocco 1920 map of the "Spanish zone in Morocco", with images of Santiago Tablas , Dámaso Berenguer and Manuel Fernández.

  3. Durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial, el 14 de junio de 1940, días después de la declaración de guerra italiana tras la invasión alemana de Francia, el mismo día de la entrada de las tropas alemanas en París, España inicia la ocupación de la Zona Internacional de Tánger, anexionándolo al Protectorado español de Marruecos, en ...

  4. Spain under the Franco dictatorship took advantage of the outbreak of World War II to occupy Tangier on June 14, 1940, thereby actualizing a longstanding Spanish imperialist aspiration to control the city.

    • Zeinab Hamouda
    • 2016
  5. The Tangier International Zone (Arabic: منطقة طنجة الدولية Minṭaqat Ṭanja ad-Dawliyya, French: Zone internationale de Tanger, Spanish: Zona Internacional de Tánger) was a 382 km 2 (147 sq mi) international zone centered on the city of Tangier, Morocco, which existed from 1925 until its reintegration into ...

  6. 15 de mai. de 2024 · The Spanish then invaded Morocco in 1860, thus challenging a British policy aimed at preventing any Continental power from securing control of the southern shore of the Strait of Gibraltar. This situation led the British to issue a warning that a permanent Spanish occupation of Tangier or of the nearby Moroccan coast would not be ...

  7. Spanish Government announced that Spanish Moroccan troops had occupied Tangier "to guarantee the neutrality of the international zone", and that the action had been taken with the agreement of Great Britain, France, and Italy. H.M. Consul at Tangier received on June 14 a note from the Spanish Consul-General stating that the occupation