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Talk:1924 retreat from Chefchaoun

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Feedback from New Page Review process

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I left the following feedback for the creator/future reviewers while reviewing this article: Thank you for creating the article.

Netherzone (talk) 00:55, 28 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Casualties in the infobox

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How many casualties? "Unknown" seems to lack a source, so I have removed it for now. Is there sourced information available we could use? With an inline citation. ~ ToBeFree (talk) 03:41, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

@ToBeFree The aftermath section of this article states that the Spanish "lost 800 officers and 17,000 men," with another source estimating casualties at 20,000. The infobox of this article has been sourced by the body, and this is how the page existed since its creation by @عبدالرحمن4132, but it was only until recently that Aihotz decided to remove the sourced content, replace it with WP:OR and accuse me of "vandalism or anti-encyclopedic attitudes" after I contested their unwarranted blanking. Skitash (talk) 13:14, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I don't understand why the sourced content is removed and seems impossible to the user, @Aihotz. They could've provided another source without removing the other one. This seems like Wikipedia:I just don't like it.
The Spanish did suffer heavy losses in this war; what's so surprising about it? عبدالرحمن4132 (talk) 13:29, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Which statement should be added to the infobox exactly, with which citation? ~ ToBeFree (talk) 14:58, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Oh well, it was already added. Special:Diff/1259312082: "17,000 killed (including 800 officers) or 20,000 casualties" with the sources "David S. Woolman, p. 140-141" and "Tony Jaques, p. 226".
Aihotz, do you have access to these two sources, have you looked at the cited pages? ~ ToBeFree (talk) 15:11, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
(and عبدالرحمن4132, have you seen the cited pages?) ~ ToBeFree (talk) 15:13, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hello @ToBeFree
Quoting David S. Woolsman from the book Rebels in the Rif, Abd El Krim and the Rif Rebellion, page 140, it states the following:
Desperately fighting their way forward, and aided toward the last by bombing planes and relief columns from Tetuan, the Span�ish finally stumbled into Tetuan on December 13, almost a month after they began their forty-mile retreat. The victorious Rifians pursued them to the outskirts of the city, and on the last day alone shot down more than 500 of Franco's rearguard Legionarios. It is doubtful that the extent of the Rifian casualties will ever be known, but according to Walter Harris, the withdrawal from Chaouen cost the Spanish the lives of 800 officers, including the popular General Serrano, and 17,000 men. Arturo Barea put the Spanish casualties at 20,000, plus an immense amount of matériel, including a small hospital left intact at Chaouen.
@Aihotz If you have another source for another number of casualties, you can add it, but don't remove the other source. This helps maintain neutrality. عبدالرحمن4132 (talk) 18:58, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Traduced from Spanish and referring to losses of this battle and the entire month that it occurred : “Our statement is corroborated by the number of casualties during the month of September, which, apart from those mentioned above, reached a figure of 2,806 (28 officers and 751 troops killed; 10 chiefs, 127 officers and 1,890 soldiers wounded)
https://epistemai.es/archivos/7875
And it is only an example of many. Aihotz (talk) 19:08, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
“The withdrawal of Xauen alone cost two thousand casualtieshttps://guerracolonial.oa.urjc.es/index.php/gc/article/view/17/77 There is disparity in the data, right? Aihotz (talk) 19:22, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
So? None of these two sources you provided refute anything. I can provide a lot of sources that state otherwise. Whatever you think of that number, it doesn't matter. You can't just remove it because you feel it doesn't make sense (which in my opinion does not correspond to reality). This is clearly Wikipedia:I just don't like it.
I don't have any issues with that number so long as you don't remove other sources stating otherwise. Keep in mind during the Rif War, Spain suffered massive losses; I don't see any reason to try to minimize them. عبدالرحمن4132 (talk) 19:49, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
None of these two sources you provided refute anything Are you sure of what you say? I can refute again and again the data you entered. I have collected dozens of references that disassemble the data you are struggling to keep. It would be a zero-sum game. Don’t you think?
Apart from that, you continue to engage in false and insidious personal accusations (I might suggest the same of you). But I will overlook your attacks (although I shouldn’t) and I will stick to the issue and try to reach a reasoned and reasonable consensus
I sincerely believe that we will be very difficult to find out the number of deaths. Not even approximate. In this particular case, these are not the typical discrepancies between "opposing sides" in a conflict, and moreover there is such a disparity between some sources and others that it seems most reasonable not to reflect any in the infobox and if in the article’s “aftermath” section. Aihotz (talk) 20:07, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You still removed sourced content just because it seemed unlikely to you. That's clearly Wikipedia:No original research from the reason you provided in the history section, although you could've avoided that by providing it alongside the number. This is Wikipedia, where you maintain neutrality, where we show both claims (whether you find it ridiculous, that doesn't matter). I don't care the number of sources you provide or whatever you think of the number of casualties; removing sourced content is not a solution here in Wikipedia.
moreover there is such a disparity between some sources and others that it seems most reasonable not to reflect any in the infobox and if in the article’s “aftermath” section. Okay so? That's pretty normal when it comes to historical battles; of course there's going to be disparity.
I don't need to argue over this anymore. Once again, I don't mind your numbers, but I'll still add mine to ensure neutrality. Removing one and keeping the other will not solve this issue. عبدالرحمن4132 (talk) 20:36, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
:@ToBeFree Thank you for the invitation to participate. So far, I have tried to debate with someone who is obtuse in this discussion, closed in band and not willing to dialogue in a constructive and purposeful debate. Only to attempt, for whatever reason, to reflect possible incorrect data. I have no particular interest in discussing an a priori minor issue (especially when the outcome of the battle is clear): the number of casualties or losses in a battle. But I have a commitment to the seriousness and rigour that in my opinion should govern this encyclopedia. A seriousness and rigour that must be far from a partisan vision. I wish to leave the matter at home, but only if the data appearing in the article is clear and contrasted. Right now it is the opposite. As I have said elsewhere, the user who repeatedly tries to reflect figures of deaths that did may not occur has misinterpreted and confused the concepts "casualties" and "losses" with "killed in action". Anyone can have a misunderstanding, but not in an encyclopedia. I have corrected that error of interpretation. I think it’s up to him or them to find accurate sources that support their clearly insane death toll. I think until he/they can prove it, the most appropriate thing to do is to introduce only the concept of "casualties" (which is what is used in the infobox of this war, Rif War) and try to break down into KIA, MIA, WIA and prisoners of war. Therefore, I am in favour of looking for more accurate sources. In Spain there are sources that speak of 2,000 casualties, of which 1,700 would be dead. Just search on Google and even better on Google Scholar. But I repeat that for now, the most correct thing in is to eliminate the number of deaths which in my opinion does not correspond to reality. A death toll that the sources on which they rely do not support. Aihotz (talk) 16:25, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Better said, I do not have access to the book of David S. Woolman (does the initiator of this article have access to the book?), so I can’t know if it gives that number of killed in action. The death toll given by Tony Jaques (book I/We all have access to) is in contradiction with other texts I have accessed on Google. Not to mention that it is merely an entry from a dictionary, not a detailed study of the Rif War or this battle in particular. And above all, a single source is insufficient, especially when according to the data provided by Jacques, Spain lost more soldiers in this battle than in the entire Rif War. As I read, Spain has never given the number of official deaths in the 1924 retreat from Chefchaoun. As if it had happened in the case of the “Disaster of Annual” (Battle of Annual), named that way for the battle in which more Spanish conscripts died during the Rif War. Aihotz (talk) 17:16, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It is worth making it clear that I have no special interest in this subject, political or otherwise. Nor, as another user maliciously infers, has anything to do with "I don’t like Wikipedia". Quite the opposite @عبدالرحمن4132. I simply reiterate that in Wikipedia all statement, in this case the number of deaths, must be supported by a number of reliable sources free from error or misinterpretation and not in open contradiction with others. Aihotz (talk) 17:56, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I suggest that one or both of you take steps to bring other users into this discussion, especially since, as I have now posted formal notice on this page, this dispute comes under a contentious topic area (I wish, as I have many times, that the entire Maghreb (or at least Algeria and Morocco) were designated a CTOP, but that's not the present reality). You don't need to open an RfC, at least not yet; I think posting a notice at, say, WT:MILHIST, now that I've added project banners, should be enough to attract some editors with experience in discussing this sort of thing and reach a consensus. Happy editing! Daniel Case (talk) 20:29, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]