Even as Rojo ordered the Republican concentration at
Caspe, the Italians were approaching
Alcañiz, and the Republican rout became absolute. Even where a Republican unit would fight effectively, it had to fall back because of the collapse of neighboring units. The Italian and German airplanes controlled the skies; their bombers attacked the fleeing Republican units with aerial protection from modern fighters.
Karol Świerczewski, known as General Walter, commander of the International Brigades, barely escaped capture at the fall of Alcañiz. Finally, after two days of heavy fighting, Caspe fell on March 17 to Varela's attacking army. The International Brigade performed valiantly in the defense, but was driven off. After eight days, the Nationalists were 70 miles (113 km) east of the positions they had held when the battle started. This first part of the offensive punched a huge hole in the front, created a salient from Belchite to Caspe to Alcañiz and back to
Montalbán. The Nationalist Army now paused before the Ebro and
Guadalupe Rivers to reorganize. But on March 22, the attack started again, this time in the area east of
Zaragoza and
Huesca. This part of the front that the Republic had held since August 1936, was lost in one day. The villages in eastern
Aragon that had experienced social revolution, either by their own actions or from the anarchist columns from Catalonia, were all taken by the Nationalists, with many of the inhabitants becoming refugees. In this part of the offensive,
Barbastro,
Bujaraloz and
Sariñena succumbed to the Nationalists. On March 25, Yagüe took
Fraga and entered Catalonia. He attacked the next town,
Lleida, but
El Campesino and his
46th Division (which was also supported by soldiers of the
16th and 27th Divisions)
held him off for a week. Despite the 46th Division suffering a 40% casualty rate at Lledia, the battle gave the Republicans a chance to withdraw with valuable equipment. The retreat of the Republican forces was covered by Colonel
Durán's Mountain Group in the
Maestrazgo, the rugged mountainous area of southern Aragon. In the north, Republican forces pinned Solchaga down in the
Pyrenees, but in the south, the Nationalists drove across the Maestrazgo. Almost everywhere, the Republicans started to fall apart. The various factions started to accuse each other of treachery. The Communists starved anarchist troops of needed munitions.
André Marty, the overall commander of the International Brigades, travelled around looking for traitors, but he could not prevent the virtual destruction of the International Brigades. Republican troops suffered arbitrary executions with officers sometimes being shot in front of their men. In general, the campaign seemed lost, and nobody knew where the rout would end. == End of the campaign ==