Dominican Civil War | |||||||
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Part of the Cold War | |||||||
US soldiers push a child underneath a Jeep to protect him during a firefight in Santo Domingo on May 5, 1965. |
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Belligerents | |||||||
Dominican Republic (Loyalist faction) United States Inter-American Peace Force * Brazil * Paraguay * Nicaragua * Costa Rica * El Salvador * Honduras |
Dominican Republic (Constitutionalist faction) | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Elías Wessin y Wessin Lyndon B. Johnson Bruce Palmer |
Francisco Caamaño | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Loyalists: 2,200 regulars 12 AMX-13 light tanks 24 L-60 light tanks 13 Lynx armored cars |
Constitutionalists: 1,500 regulars 5,000 armed civilians |
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
44 dead, 283 wounded 11 WIA |
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2,825 dead |
Loyalist victory
The Dominican Civil War (Spanish: Guerra Civil Dominicana) took place between April 24, 1965, and September 3, 1965, in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. It started when civilian and military supporters of constitutionally elected former President Juan Bosch overthrew acting President Donald Reid Cabral. The coup prompted General Elías Wessin y Wessin to organise elements of the military loyal to President Reid, known as loyalists, initiating an armed campaign against the so-called constitutionalist rebels. Allegations of foreign support for the rebels led to a US military intervention in the conflict, which later transformed into an Organization of American States occupation of the country. Elections were held in 1966, in the aftermath of which Joaquín Balaguer was elected into the presidential seat. Later in the same year international troops departed from the country.
On 19 November 1911, General Luis Tejera led a group of conspirators in an ambush on the horse-drawn carriage of Dominican President Ramón Cáceres. During the shootout, Cáceres was killed and Tejera wounded in the leg. In the ensuing power vacuum, General Alfredo Victoria, commander of the army, seized control and forced the Congress to elect his uncle, Eladio Victoria, as the new president. The general was widely suspected of bribing the Congress, and his uncle, who took office on 27 February 1912, lacked legitimacy. The former president Horacio Vásquez soon returned from exile to lead his followers, the horacistas, in a popular uprising against the new government.