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| General Forum for general World War 2 talk. Anything about WW2 that doesn't fit in any other category |
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| I Like Tanks ![]() Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Perfidious Albion.
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Origin of The 5th Column? I felt sure there was a thread a long while back asking about this, but as I can't find it - this is from Beevor's Spanish Civil war book: "The 'fifth column' was a phrase attributed to General Mola, who apparently claimed to a journalist that he had four columns attacking the capital [Madrid] and a 'fifth column' of sympathisers within the city ready to revolt". Has anybody come across a different etymology for the term? Cheers, Adam.
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| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: May 2007 Location: Directly above the centre of the earth...
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![]() ![]() | Casual searching of the interweb hasn't found a a different etymology but it seems to have 'evolved' quite rapidly. Wingate appears to have used the term in about 1943 to refer to disruptive activites behind enemy lines: a significant difference to the context of the Spanish Civil War: Fire in the night, Colin Smith, war correspondent, expert on military history |
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| Member ![]() Join Date: Sep 2008 Location: feels like Brigadoon!
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![]() | Also definitely used post-Dunkirk in British broadcasting, and commonly by Churchill in parliament and speeches. See Peter Fleming's "Operation Sealion" for details of the "Fifth Column Scare" of the summer of 1940 |
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