I don't want to stop posting about those curiously destructive moments in human ingenuity (or perhaps they should be classed as creative episodes of destruction?); there will still be monthly posts on engagements that were in themselves critical to human conflicts, or in changing human societies, or the relations between and histories of those societies.
But there were also times when humans in arms against each other managed to create a sort of butterfly effect even though the outcome of the day of battle was not in itself decisive. Those battles, although themselves minor or perhaps even trivial in nature, had an impact on human lives well out of proportion to their scope.
When I started the "decisive battles" posts I commented that part of the reason I wanted to talk about the bloody history of human violence was because many of those of my fellow travelers on the Left liked to sport the slogan "Violence Never Solved Anything", as though the Carthaginians or Britons had simply made a wrong turn and disappeared down history's dead-end street, and seemed to believe that if we in the U.S. simply concluded our aggressive warmaking that the rest of the world would smile and pass on by peaceably.
I'm afraid that I didn't and don't believe that. We're a number of things, we homo sapiens, although sapient might not be the most consistent. But one thing we are not is peaceable. No member of the anthropoid family is as irascible, hasty to violence, and slow to reconcile as we are, and throughout our recorded history we never seem to lack the excuse to find some sharp or heavy object with which to do our opposable-thumbed best to kill each other.
So here is the first in the expansion of the "decisive battles" series, a battle that, while as a battle has to fall somewhere between "desultory" and "risible" was the catalyst of one of 20th Century North America's lingering and troublesome issues.
Columbus Date: 9 MAR 1916
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NOTE: A U.S. cavalry regiment of 1916 (led by a full colonel [what the modern U.S. army calls pay grade O-6]) was notionally organized into three battalions (each led by a lieutenant colonel [grade O-5]). Each battalion contained four troops, each led by a captain, [Grade O-3]. The authorized strength of a full regiment was roughly 1,500 troopers, a troop about 100, but prior to WW1 the U.S. Army was almost never fully manned. Most of the 13th Cavalry troops at Columbus probably averaged about 40 to 60 soldiers, the Headquarters troop probably somewhat larger since it included the regimental commander and his entire staff.There seems to be some confusion over exactly how many elements of the 13th Cavalry were engaged at Columbus. Most of the sources claim that about 300 U.S. soldiers fought that night; this would roughly fit the number of cavalry troops posted at Camp Furlong, the Army post close to Columbus. However, several sources state that "three troops" were engaged, including the Wiki entry, which puts the number of U.S. soldiers engaged at 330.
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The little town of Columbus was very much a frontier town in 1916. For all that the official end to the Indian Wars had been declared in 1890, the restless activity in Mexico to the south meant that almost everyone in the town - and the 1910 census records a total of 268 souls living in the town, about a tenth of the entire population of Luna County and the second largest town in the county - was, if not armed, capable of figuring out which end of the rifle or pistol the bullet came out.
Assuming that the population of Columbus was similar to that of Luna County as a whole about a little less than half of the people living there were women, and excluding adolescent children and senescent elders the male population of Columbus capable of fighting probably numbered somewhere about 80 to 100 or so.
So; roughly 400 soldiers under COL Slocum, and about 60 to 100 armed civilians, for a total of about 500 American citizens of one form or another.
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Today we tend to think of Pancho Villa as a "Mexican bandit" and his troops as "Villistas", cartoon banditos complete with the gold tooth, bandoleros, and the floppy sombrero.
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But Villa was actually one of the most competent irregular troop commanders of history, and his "Northern Division" was certainly the largest, and probably the most effective, revolutionary army in North America after the Continental Line.
We'll get to the sad tale of the Fall of the División del Norte in a bit, but suffice to say that by the spring of 1916 the once-mighty military power of the State of Chihuahua had come down pretty far in the world.
Estimates of the Villista forces that crossed into the United States in the early morning hours of 9 MAR aren't exact; probably Villa himself wasn't sure exactly how many troops he brought with him that day. But the best modern guess seems to be that about 480 to 500 horsemen took part in the Columbus Raid.
So; approximately 500 rifle-armed mounted infantry/cavalry under GEN José Doroteo Arango Arámbula, better known as Francisco "Pancho" Villa.
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Finding an English-language source for the Columbus Raid is also not difficult. Several works have been written about the engagement itself, probably the most seminal being the 1965 monograph "Pancho Villa at Columbus" written by Haldeen Braddy. This work is out of print but can be found summarized in several places, including this interesting document, a 1974 National Park Service form nominating Columbus and Camp Furlong for the "National Register of Historic Places".
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Spanish-language sources are difficult to track down without a better knowledge of the language than I possess, but a serious military historian needs to consider both sides of the hill. Among the most probable sources of useful information would seem to be Francisco Alamada's 1964 "Historia de la revolucion en el estado de Chihuahua", and Ulloa's 1968 "La revolucion intervenida: Relaciones diplomaticas entre Mexico y Estados Unidos". Alberto Carranza's "La expedicion punitiva" from 1957 is primarily concerned with the subsequent Pershing Expedition but probably offers some insight into the origins of the American irruption. Mexican newspaper stories of the time, if findable, are often little better than speculation; what news organizations there were in Mexico at the time were typically located in the capital and had few sources along the frontera, and fewer of those were reliable or timely.
It is worth noting that both sides in this conflict had difficulties with the facts. The Mexican sources are often missing altogether, or oral histories taken from the largely-illiterate soldiers of the Northern Division. The United States was not that much better off in 1916; the 1910 census notes that almost one-quarter of the citizens of New Mexico were themselves illiterate. Even among the better-educated Americans sensation and drama tended to interfere with the truth. As you can see below, on the official report of the 9 MAR action - signed by the commander of the 13th Cavalry - the estimated number of attackers overstates the actual number by between 200 and 400 percent.
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First of all, Mexico has been a dictatorship for nearly forty years; from 1877 to 1911 a former Juarista general, Porfirio Diaz, had been the caudillo in Mexico City. His rule brought "stability", for the wealthy, and for the foreign investors looking for a piece of Mexico's mineral and petroleum production. But the average Mexican remained very poor and without much hope of changing that fact.
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Meanwhile, things between Mexico and the U.S., never particularly chummy, began to go pear-shaped again. One of history's truly bizarre moments, the "Tampico Incident" started farcically in April, 1914 with a gringo motor launch on a fuel run, American sailors, Mexican soldiers, and the eventual Mexican refusal to raise the United States flag on its soil and provide it some 21-gun salute love...but the ending was anything but comical - the Yanquis invaded and occupyed the Mexican port of Veracruz for six months.
The confused mess that was the 1913 Revolution eventually tossed Carranza on the throne in July of 1914. Villa had been a pain in Carranza's ass during the anti-Huerta war (Villa had confiscated the property of Spanish expats living in Chihuahua - he'd done the same thing to Chinese but nobody in the Districto Federal cared about some cattle rustled from some damn Chinks - and had either murdered or killed an Englishman named Benton, and his forces had executed this man:
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Go figure.
The Villista rebellion was a genuine threat to the Carranza regime, which hastened to try and make peace with the Colossus of the North. President Wilson's State Department recognized the Carranza government in October, 1915, taking away some oil leases and mining concessions as a reward. Villa, meanwhile, had shattered his old-school mounted force against Carranza's commander Obregón at the Battle of Celaya in April, where the Carranzista troops were dug in behind wire and supported with machineguns and modern artillery. In other words, a 1915 defense. Villa mounted his boys up, told them (when they complained that the Class V resupply was late) that their courage would be their ammunition, and pointed in the general direction of Celaya.
It was a slaughter.
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That same month the División del Norte moved to attack against what Villa thought was an isolated Carranzista garrison in the town of Agua Prieta in Sonora, across from Douglas, Arizona. According to one of Villa's confidantes the hard-riding general thought the garrison amounted to about 1,200. But U.S. President Wilson had allowed 3,500 Carranzista reinforcements to transit New Mexico and Arizona, bringing the force to over 6,000.
The garrison commander, GEN Plutarco Calles, had learned from Celaya and constructed real WW1-style trenches around the town, complete with mines, wire and interlocking machinegun fields of fire.
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On All Souls Day, preceded only by a brief artillery prep and some demonstrations to hide the direction of his main attack, the main attack went in after midnight on the east and south defenses of Agua Prieta.
Two large searchlights flickered on as the Villista cavalry was charging and the horsemen were butchered by machinegun fire and land mines. The wretched survivors died on the electrified barbed wire. The result was another Celaya; a bloody wreck.
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Villa was convinced that the deadly searchlights had been located north of the Border. Although he had sent his troopers across the border to raid for supplies now and then, Villa had generally considered the Americans at least friendly neutrals. Now he was pissed, and wanted as much revenge as he could get.
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So on the evening of 8 MAR 1916 as the tired riders pulled up to a halt along the border three miles south of Columbus, it's difficult to say exactly what was in Villa's mind.
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The Engagement: In "Villa Raids Columbus" Bill Rakocy writes;
"Jack Thomas, deputy sheriff, and other officials sensed something in the air. They had noticed strange Mexicans in town. Many "friendly Mexicans" became silent and some left town. Juan Favela, a local ranch foreman, complained that “the air was bad.”The town of Columbus is located in a shallow basin in part of the high plateau known as the Chihuahuan Desert. The place had only sprung up in the last decade or so, a watering stop for the El Paso & Southwest Railroad and a border crossing point. Deming, 35 miles north, was the Big Town.
“The straggling town consisted of a cluster of adobe houses, some frame buildings, a railroad station, two hotels, a few other business establishments, and an army camp.” (Braddy)The "commercial district" was to the north of the railroad station, which included a drug, grocery, and a hardware store, a bank, the post office, a movie theater, what we would call today a "funeral home" and was then the undertaker, and two hotels, the adobe Hoover and the wood-frame Commercial Hotel. A small eminence named Cootes Hill rose from the desert about a half-mile or so to the west of town.
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Villa is supposed to have remained on the Mexican side of the border early in the evening, dispatching an unknown but probably small number of recon troopers to scout the town and the military camp. It is difficult at this remove to say anything more than whoever these oxygen-thieves were and whatever else they did, they helped hose their commander as thoroughly as any soldiers in history. Reportedly they informed Villa that less than a company of U.S. troops was posted in Columbus, one tenth of the actual number of U.S. soldiers stationed there. As scouts, these Villistas were about as failed as a trooper could be.
The actual plan of attack is unclear. Braddy says that the Mexican force crossed the border fence at about one o’clock in the morning about two and a half miles west of the main crossing between Columbus and the Mexican border town of Palomas and rode slowly and quietly to a position about a mile south of town.
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All the sources seem to agree that the first shots were fired by Private Fred Griffin of K Troop who was at his guard post at the Regimental HQ. He is said to have issued a challenge - probably something similar to the "Halt! Who's there?" that U.S. Army soldiers are still taught to challenge approaching strangers - and was hit by fire in the gut, chest, and arm. He is reported to have killed three of his attackers before dying of his wounds.
The night raiders did what raiders are supposed to do - sew confusion. They fired as anything moving, shouted, and almost immediately started fires, including at the large Commercial Hotel. The initial resistance was chaotic, as some people immediately fought back, others tried to get to safety, while others, probably, were too dazed to do either.
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Pregnant Mary James was killed trying to run to the fire-resistant Hoover Hotel. Her husband Milton made it, but Mary and the baby died in the street.
Mrs. Parks the switchboard operator got a call out that the town was attacked, cut up on her hands and face by bullet-shattered window glass. The Frosts had a Model T and tried to escape north to Deming with their little three-month-old; he was wounded, and she pushed him out from behind the wheel and sped out of town to safety. Mrs. Lieutenant Smyser and her two kids tumbled out a window as the Mexican troops hammered on the front door. They hid in an outhouse and then ran out into the open desert to hide until morning. Mrs. Riggs was frantic to keep her baby quiet. She held a pillowcase over his face as the Villistas searched the porch and yard; the little boy was nearly suffocated before the raiders moved on and she could let him cry again.
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Arthur Ravel, son of the supposed Villa target Sam, was captured and dragged off to the Commercial but escaped when two of the Mexican troops were shot down. The fourteen-year-old ran three miles in his underwear into the desert.
The 13th Cavalry started from complete surprise and disorganization. The Staff Duty Officer, Lieutenant James P. Castleman was in his quarters when the attack started and was nearly killed running to the formation area near the barracks. Once there, he took command of his Troop F, which had been formed and issued rifles by his First Sergeant. The weapons had been locked in the regimental arms room in the guardhouse, and the quartermaster sergeant had not been located, so the first troopers to reach the guardhouse hammered the locks off the rifle racks.
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Meanwhile the MG Troop, under LT John Lucas - who had reported for duty barefoot because he had dropped his boots somewhere under the bed and couldn't find them - pushed their guns out to the west. The U.S. Army's standard machinegun in 1916 was a finicky atrocity called the Benet-Mercier that fired a fixed strip of 30 rounds and was referred to as the "daylight gun" because of its frequent jams, misfires, and broken firing pins and extractors.
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The casualties for the two sides were painfully lopsided. The official 13th Cavalry report lists seven men killed; two sergeants, two corporals, a farrier, and two privates. Seven soldiers are reported wounded, three seriously including a corporal hit in the neck, and two privates shot through both thighs, one with a head wound as well. It is very possible that one of these men died later, resulting in the 8 U.S. soldiers usually reported killed in action. About 10 American civilians were killed, 2 wounded, which argues that most of the dead were shot while held at close range - murdered while prisoners or shot down at close enough range to be distinct as women or unarmed men.
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The troopers of the 13th Cavalry were somewhat surprised to find that instead of hard-bitten throat-slitters the bodies they inspected and the prisoners they took were largely farm boys; 14- and 15-year-olds taken off the haciendas in northern Mexico to fight for a cause they may not even have understood and die in the cold desert of a strange country.
The Outcome: Minor tactical U.S. victory, but with significant geopolitical consequences.
The Impact: Well, the immediate impact was an outburst of rage inside the United States. On 15 MAR GEN John "Black Jack" Pershing led six cavalry (including the 13th) and four infantry regiments over the border into Mexico with the President's order to capture or kill Villa and the raiders of Columbus.
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On order of the War Department Pershing and his troops spent the next seven months bivouacked in Colonia Dublan, about 85 miles south of Columbus. In early February, 1917, the Expeditionary Force recrossed the border and the Punitive Expedition was over. It had killed 135 Mexicans of various flavors, mostly but not entirely Villa's troops, wounded 85, and captured 19.
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Both sides claimed victory.
Villa continued his rebellion until mid-1919, when yet another botched headlong attack, this time on Ciudad Juarez, and another U.S. punitive force, this one led by BG Erwin, the post commander of nearby Ft. Bliss, smashed his remaining forces and knocked the old caudillo out of the war business. He "retired" in 1920 and was gunned down, probably by gunsels hired by his old enemy Obregón (who was by that time the President of Mexico) in July, 1923.
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The 20,000 troops made Columbus was the largest urban area in New Mexico for almost two years. But after 1917 the effect of isolation, poverty, and in particular the Depression, reduced the town to several hundred.
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What I find particularly interesting is that, long after being chased across the border well whipped, the old caudillo of Chihuahua seems to have won in the end.
The now-mostly-Mexican-American town of Columbus celebrates something called the Cabalgata Binacional Villista every 9th of March. This involves about 100 Mexican riders led by a Pancho look-a-like who follow Villa's invasion route across the border and parade into Columbus.
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Thousands of people are said to come from around the region. "This was our big historical moment. What better opportunity for a party?" asks one of the organizers, Linda Juarez.
Some of the older Columbus residents aren't as excited about all this Villaosity.
One man who says his great-grandfather was killed on 9 MAR, compares the party to feasting with bin Laden on September 11;
"I thought, "That's what happened here!" says Richard Dean, president of the Columbus Historical Society. Except for the scale of destruction, he says, the parallels "are mind-boggling": a sneak attack by a foreign insurgent who sought revenge for perceived injustices, and then vanished into forbidding terrain.Dean is frustrated that he can't get the State of Arizona to change the name of the park in Columbus. "Why name a park after a man who sacked the town and killed people?".
But the loud mariachis of the Cabalgata continue to drown out the attempts of the former town worthies, men like Dean, to turn thoughts to the Anglo dead and retake what was once fiercely theirs.
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It seems time, poverty, and lack of care will succeed where the guns of the División del Norte failed.
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Is seems that early this March the mayor of Columbus, its police chief, and a town councilman were among 11 Columbus residents indicted for purchasing and selling as many as 200 automatic and semiauto weapons. These included AKM machinepistols and (I'm guessing) 9mm Beretta service pistols, modern military arms for the wannabe Villista...because these munitions were being sold to the Mexican narcotraficantes; the soldiers of the drug cartels.
So after almost 100 years the guns go south again, to those who see themselves as modern rebels and latter-day Pancho Villas, whose bullets once again shake loose La Frontera, the unquiet border between the worlds.
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"We left the border for Parral
In search of Villa and Lopez, his old pal.
Our horses, they were hungry,
And we ate parched corn.
It was damn hard living
In the state of Chihuahua
Where Pancho Villa was born."
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12 comments:
Another great article chief!
This post was extremely interesting, Chief. When are you going to publish all of your previously posted battles on hardcopy a la Sir Edward Creasey??
My bookcase is bare on Mexico, unless you count a few chapters out of John Eisenhower's biography of Winfield Scott. And I recall reading in the past a historical fiction novel by Zollinger(sp?) on a New Mexican muchacho who rode with Villa at Celaya and Columbus. Not a good source of course, but fascinating reading. I need to do some serious reading on that period of time in Mexican history. They are our neighbors.
Amazing that many of our military leaders - Scott, Taylor, Lee, Butler, Lejeune, Pershing, Patton, Macarthur - made their bones in Mexico. Well maybe not Scott and Taylor as their reputations were established in an earlier time. Who have I forgotten?
Agua Prieta used to be a big after hours hotspot for Camp Huachuca GIs back in the 60s and 70s. Maybe not so much anymore. Naco just south of Bisbee AZ was also a place to drink rotgut Tequila and dance with teenage senoritas. Bisbee, I think, was Pershing's HQ at one point.
PS - I applaud your movement towards battles that perhaps are less 'decisive' in a particular war but still critical in historical value. Viva la transformacion!
PPS - What happened to the battle of Osan you mentioned awhile back? Did I miss it when visiting my grandkids? I looked for a bio of Ridgway when I visited Powell's in your fair city after your last post on Korea. I struck out on Ridgway, but fortunately I came home with bios of Farragut and Foch, Hornfischer's 'Ship of Ghosts' on the USS Houston, and several of Alan Furst's spy novels. A good trip since I also stopped downtown at 'Hillbilly Bento' and got some unbeatable takeout box dinners.
Another great article chief, interesting change in direction of your articles (battles that didn't change history?).
My impression given your piece is that from Villa's point of view it was worth the risk, and wasn't deterred by the thought of the US coming after him, or by his forces tactical inferiority. Was it reckless? Perhaps he thought he could avoid US retribution and let the focus fall on the rest of Mexico, or maybe he was simply prepared to take a chance and lose.
Certainly makes me reflect on your liberal friends point, though we might consider certain behaviour senseless or irrational, doesn't mean to say that everyone does, conflict is not rational.
Leon: Thanks!
mike: And a hell of a lot that's going on today in Mexico began during the 1910-1920 Revolution. If you want to understand Mexico (and I don't pretend to have a truly good understanding of that complex land) the Revolution is a good place to start.
Grant and Lee, too; most of the commanders of our Civil War were junior officers in Mexico back in the Forties.
Osan is this year's Battle That Changed History (that's a really unwieldy term - I need to find something slicker) for July. I'm going to try and get that written up ASAP so jim from Ranger Against War can work with me on it.
Ridgway has been badly neglected by literature. He has an autobiography that appears to be out of print, and there's a recent (2002) biography that seems to be mediocre. Of the two I might try the bio first; Ridgway notoriously shut down after the death of his son early in his life, and the autobio was written in '57, before his role in Vietnam.
Don Francisco: Villa was a cavalryman of the old school; all nerve and aggression. He probably didn't really think much about the consequences of raiding the U.S. in force and, if he did, he probably figured he would deal with the gringos like he did the Carranzistas; evade them when they were strong, kill them when they were weak. His men needed the food, clothing, weapons, ammo, and money there in Columbus. My guess is that he figured he would throw the dice and trust to his luck; so, I think it was pretty much chance, and aggression.
His failure was a combination of his inability to think outside the cavalry raid box combined with atrocious reconnaissance. The man was a hell of a combat leader but utterly lacking in the military skills he needed for 1916. He'd have been a worldbeater in 1816, but his failure to understand logistics, supply, and the technical details of his trade doomed his men to the slaughters of Celaya and Agua Prieta...
Chief -
Yes - I did see Ridgway's memoirs at Powell's, but turned it down as I tend to stay away from autobiographical works unless there is nothing else available. I will have to bite the bullet and go to the internet to order his bio.
Also, I wonder what influence that Germany had with the Carranzistas? There are some websites I found this AM that suggested an Austrian military advisor working with Obregon at Celaya. No mention of something similar at Agua Prieta. Hmmmm, prelude to Zimmerman cable??? But of course, Carranza turned down Zimmerman's offer. There may have been some suspicion at the time that Villa had German advice prior to Columbus, although that seems farfetched.
mike
The Mexican army did have some German advisers, and they are recorded as having taken part in the "Battle of Ambos Nogales in 1918 (when they were actively at war with the U.S., obviously). The Germans wanted to bring the U.S. in against the Entente, and failing that, to keep them neutral. I've always thought that the Zimmermann Note was a case of the hawks reading into it what they wanted. It isn't a plan for an attack on the U.S.; it says that Germany is going to resume submarine attacks and assumes this will probably mean the U.S. will respond by siding with the Entente, in which case the German intelligence and diplomatic people in the Americas need to try and bring Mexico in against the U.S. to reduce its impact in Europe.
That seems like a sensible and prudent course for a belligerent, and if I had been the Kaiser I would have wanted my diplomats to be doing just that. That the interventionists in the U.S. read it as a hostile act says more about the war-fever in the U.S. than the activity of German actors in the western hemisphere.
Anyway, everything I've read suggests that Obregon was a hell of a good officer and his defensive tactics at Celaya and elsewhere were the result of his own study of the fighting on the Western Front and not something he was handed by some German advisor. Dude was a vicious SOB but a hell of a cool, cunning SOB...very un-Mexican in that respect.
And Villa did not have any Germans with him - and probably wouldn't have heeded them if he had. He was a swashbuckler through-and-through.
It's worth noting that a letter warning about the German assistance to the Mexican Army and a supposed attack helped fuel the tensions that resulted in Ambos Nogales...and was supposedly from a Villaista source. Ol' Pancho playing the enemy-of-my-enemy game, eh?
Wow Chief, you have really piqued my interest. I need to put a biography of Obregon on my reading list. Norman Zollinger's book had cast Obregon in an unflattering light who betrayed land reform as an ally of the huge landowners. But that was fictional and he being an American was probably swept up with fever for the assassinated ones, Villa and Zapata.
I hope also to pick up a copy John Eisenhower's book "Intervention" on the Mexican Revolution. But he seems to cover only the period of 1913 to 1917 so probably does not report anything on Amblos Nogales. He did do a good job though on his bio of Winfield Scott, I thought.
It is amazing to me that wiki lists 13 different factions during that Revolution. Like most gringos I knew of the Villistas, Zapatistas, and Carranzistas. But the other ten make it sound pretty Byzantine. No wonder that Revolution lasted so many years. I hope the Libyan revolutionaries are not as factionalized, but have my doubts.
And perhaps I will try to find an English language copy of a bio of Lazaro Cardenas, the former Mexican prez, who according to wiki fought in the trenches at Agua Prieta against Villa. He was apparently also the guy who founded PEMEX by nationalizing Shell and Standard Oil assets back in the thirties, long before it was done in the middle east.
So much history, so little time to read it all. I should stop interspersing trash novels in between my reads of non-fiction. Or maybe not.
I'm going to echo Mike's last comment, you've really got me interested in this period and conflict, one I've never paid much attention to before. Good work!
I like the battle this month. Wasn't sure what to think about it first. But the more I think about it, the more I realize how important it is to the US-Mexican relationship; which is constantly getting more and more important to us.
DF, Pluto; What has always interested me is the asymmetry involved. About 99% of U.S. citizens neither know nor care much about Mexico other than as an excuse to get bombed on margaritas on Cinco de Mayo. The immense effects of the U.S. incursions into Mexico beginning with 1845 but including the events of the Teens (Tampico and the Punitive Expedition) on the Mexican collective memory are as invisible as plastic wrap and just as effective at separating the U.S. public from any understanding of why Mexico and Mexicans are so touchy about the Colossus of the North.
I've believed for some time now that one of the worst effects of our current entertainments in central Asia is the diversion of public time, interest, and involvement in the business going on to our hemispheric South. There's a lot of potential for instability there, and a failed state or two in Latin or South America has the potential to make Al Qaeda look like a playful imaginary friend by comparison.
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