fbpx
Wikipedia

Joaquín Amaro

Joaquín Amaro Domínguez (August 16, 1889 – March 15, 1952) was a Mexican revolutionary general and military reformer. He served as Secretary of War in the cabinets of Presidents Plutarco Elías Calles, Emilio Portes Gil, and Pascual Ortiz Rubio, making him one of the longest-serving cabinet-level officials in Mexican history. His ambitious reforms of the fractious Mexican military transformed the armed forces from a political partisan to an armed force loyal to the president and government. He accomplished this "through a process of cultural reeducation that replaced an entrenched tradition of militarism with one emphasizing such values as discipline, duty, honor, and loyalty to the civilian government."[1]

Joaquín Amaro Domínguez
Nickname(s)El Indio
BornAugust 16, 1889
Corrales de Abrego, Sombrerete, Zacatecas, Mexico
DiedMarch 15, 1952 (aged 62)
Allegiance Mexico
Service/branch Mexican Army
Years of service1911–1936
RankGeneral de división
Battles/wars
AwardsCruz de Segunda Clase
Other workSecretary of War, Military reformer, Military educational reformer, Publisher

Early life edit

Amaro was born in Corrales de Abrego in the municipality of Sombrerete, Zacatecas, the first of Antonio Amaro and Angela Domínguez's ten children. His family was of Indigenous ancestry, although they were probably not Yaqui, as was widely assumed. While Amaro was still a child, the family moved to the nearby state of Durango, where his father worked on an hacienda. He learned to read and write, although probably without the benefit of formal schooling. Beginning in 1908, he worked in the office of the Saucillo hacienda where his father was employed, assisting with bookkeeping. With two incomes, the family was able to enjoy a comfortable existence. In 1910, his father sold his possessions and gave the money to his eldest son, advising him, "go to Durango with your mother and siblings, work for Mr. Calderón [a local store-owner], learn the business, get to know the town, and when you feel able, open your own store."[2] His father left for Torreón in November of that year, and although Amaro never saw him again, he read about his exploits with the revolutionary army of Colonel Luis Moya.

Military career edit

Early Revolution edit

On February 28, 1911, Amaro enlisted in the Maderist army of General Domingo Arrieta. Shortly after Amaro enlisted, his father was killed in battle. After five months as a private, he was promoted every subsequent month, attaining the rank of lieutenant by December.

As part of the army of Colonel Gertrudis G. Sánchez, whose forces Arrieta's had joined, Amaro fought against the Zapatistas in Morelos, engaging them at least nineteen times. In one of these engagements, the battle of Jojutla de Juárez, he earned the "Cruz de Segunda Clase," a heroism medal. From 1913 to 1914, he fought the federal troops under the command of Victoriano Huerta, continuing all the while to rise in rank. By 1914 he had risen to the rank of general.

It was under the command of General Sánchez that Amaro developed the reputation of a fierce warrior. It was rumored that he wore an earring and used the battlecry "Here is the man of the pendant earring! Here is the Indian!" He also supposedly emulated the fighting style of the Yaqui people. He also developed the reputation of a harsh disciplinarian who occasionally used his riding crop to mete out corporal punishments to his subordinates. He may have even shot men in his charge or employ for disobeying orders.[citation needed]

Conventionalists v. Constitutionalists edit

After the fall of Huerta, while still under the command of Sánchez, he briefly supported the conventionalist government of Eulalio Gutiérrez, before breaking with Sánchez to ally with the constitutionalist army of Venustiano Carranza. Shortly after Sánchez and Amaro joined the Constitutionalists, Sánchez ordered Amaro to attack a column of troops commanded by General Francisco Murguía, who, while also a Constitutionalists, was a rival of Sánchez. While initially successful, Murguía's troops eventually prevailed, and Murguía sought to have Amaro executed for treason, a charge he narrowly escaped. Rather than damaging the reputation of Amaro, however, the incident did more to isolate Sánchez, who Amaro abandoned. The split finally came in 1915, when Amaro advanced the troops under his command on the Villista División del Norte, leaving Sánchez in Michoacán. By this time, he had already professed allegiance to General Álvaro Obregón and the carrancista government.

In April 1915, he led his troops, known as the "Rayados" ("striped ones"—so-called because the only uniforms Obregón could provide were prison uniforms) to support Obregón's defeat of the villistas in the second Battle of Celaya. Following the battle, Obregón named him Comandante militar ("military commander") of the 5th Division of the Army of the Northwest, and he was charged of ridding Michoacán of villista influence. At the end of 1915, the area under his command was expanded to include Guanajuato and Querétaro.

In 1916, he again fought the zapatistas in Morelos and Guerrero. In 1917, he was placed under the command of Murguía, and led expeditions against the remaining villistas of Durango and Chihuahua.

Rebellion against Carranza edit

When Obregón proclaimed the Plan of Agua Prieta against Carranza in 1920, Amaro remained loyal to Obregón, and was rewarded with the rank of General de división, the highest military rank. He became chief military officer of the third military zone, which included the states of Coahuila, Nuevo León and San Luis Potosí. In this capacity, he undertook to professionalize the unorganized ranks under him, gaining experience that would later benefit his reorganization of the entire military.

On September 3, 1921, while chief of operations of the third military zone, Amaro wed Elisa Izaguirre, originally of Morelia, Michoacán. There the couple had two children, Joaquín and Leonor.

He later became commander of the seventh military zone, which comprised Nuevo León. There he put down the July rebellion of Pablo González. When in 1922 political unrest threatened to destabilize Coahuila, Amaro positioned his troops to block the occupation of the state legislature and to protect the governor's palace. In 1923, he was sent to maintain order during Nuevo León's gubernatorial elections. Following a series of violent incidents, Amaro disarmed groups of rural fighters.

After the assassination of Pancho Villa in July 1923, Amaro was widely suspected as one of the planners of the operation. Today, most historians attribute Villa's death to a well planned conspiracy, most likely initiated by then Minister of War Plutarco Elías Calles, who ordered Amaro to give support to the assassins.[3] Amaro was later instrumental in freeing Jesús Salas Barraza, the leader of the group of assassins, from jail.

Amaro never wavered from his support for Calles and Obregón, and he fully shared Calles' hatred of the clergy. Calles gave Amaro full support in continuing the latter's plan to reform the Mexican armed forces along anti-clerical and populist lines:

I have fought without rest [...] against clericalism, large landowners, the militarism of the ex-Federals, the Spanish, and in general all those that do not contribute to the

enrichment of our beloved homeland and the betterment of the working

class.[4]

Despite these sentiments, neither Calles nor Amaro hesitated in taking action against the extreme left-wing. When José Guadalupe Rodríguez tried to organise "soldier soviets" on the Bolshevist pattern, he was promptly arrested and shot along with some of his soldiers.[5] Moreover, when a peasant and labor bloc of the Communist International was formed under the artist Diego Rivera, it was forcibly disbanded.[5] Many on the extreme left were sent to the Marias Islands penal colony.[5]

Delahuertist rebellion edit

In 1923, Amaro's chief of staff José Álvarez learned of the plot between generals Enrique Estrada, Guadalupe Sánchez, and Fortunato Maycotte to overthrow Obregón. Álvarez immediately returned to Nuevo León and informed Amaro of the plot, who promptly related the information to Obregón. The conspirators drafted Adolfo de la Huerta, then-Minister of Finance, to run for president against Plutarco Elias Calles, Obregón's chosen successor. Facing a rebellion with armies in the North, South, and East, Obregón relied on loyal generals such as Amaro to block rebel access to resources and the northern border and to put down the insurrection. Amaro, aided by General Lázaro Cárdenas, battled Estrada's forces, defeating them in the decisive battle of Ocotlán. Three days after the battle, Amaro's troops occupied Guadalajara, where Estrada's operation had been based. The rebellion crushed, the 1924 Mexican election was carried out peacefully.

Post-war career edit

Following the election of Calles, Amaro was appointed Undersecretary of War. Francisco Serrano having been sent to Europe on a diplomatic mission late in Obregón's presidency, the Secretariat was unfilled. Calles may have been waiting to secure the support of generals Eugenio Martínez and Arnulfo Gómez, who were also potential candidates for the post. While undersecretary, Amaro initiated a series of legal reforms to purge the armed forces of "the germ of immorality and corruption."[6] After an initial convention of important military figures, the Commission for Studies and Reforms of Military Laws and Regulations was formed. Ten months later, four new laws were promulgated.

Amaro's four laws edit

The first, the Law of Discipline, was divided into three sections: General Duties, Corrective Discipline, and Court of Honor. The first three articles of the General Duties defined military duty in terms of "self-sacrifice, loyalty, guardianship, and adherence to the law."[7] The subsequent articles dealt with specific issues. One clarified the officer's duty to maintain order within his ranks; another prohibited soldiers from complaining about orders. One article prohibited servicemembers from interfering in politics. The final articles concerned decorum, and required subordinates to salute and give up their seats to superiors.

The Corrective Discipline section described the circumstances in which soldiers could be arrested for breaking the law, and required that such arrests be recorded in the offender's file.

The Court of Honor section was written for people who committed offenses that threatened the reputation of a unit or of the "dignity of the military." It established a system of courts martial to punish drunkenness, gambling, mismanagement of funds, and negligence. Punishments for those found guilty ranged from transfer to demotion to imprisonment.

The second law, the Law of Retirements and Pensions, allowed servicemembers who had given twenty to thirty-five years of service to retire at will. It also required retirement at a certain age that was dependent on rank. Finally, it provided for pensions for disabled servicemen and their families.

The third law, the Law of Promotions and Rewards, set up two distinct rubrics for promotion: one for peacetime and one for wartime. Peacetime promotions were tied directly to military education. Wartime promotions could be granted for heroic actions such as preventing enemy capture of artillery pieces, and could only be given by high-ranking officers. These promotions had to be approved by higher bodies. These reforms were an effort to end the practice of opportunistic and haphazard promotions which had inflated the number of generals in Mexico's officer corps during the Revolution.

The purpose of the fourth law, the Organic Law, was to organize the armed services. The first section sought to redefine the relationship between generals and the soldiers under them, demanding that all personnel be loyal to the nation and the constitution and take their orders from the President or his designees.

It further delineated the five military branches: high command, combat arms, auxiliary services, special corps, and for the first time, military education establishments, and specified the structures of each. It stratified servicemembers into three classifications: active, reserve, and retired. Another section of the law structured the navy.

Amaro as Secretary of War edit

Amaro was appointed Secretary of War by President Calles on July 27, 1925. Upon his appointment to the Secretariat, Amaro moved to Rancho de la Hormiga, a 40,468 square meter (ten acre) ranch that later became the presidential palace Los Pinos. There his children Guillermo, Manuel, and Elisa were born. He installed recreational facilities such as stables, polo fields, and tennis courts, as well as a military school at the ranch.

Prior to his appointment as Undersecretary of War, Amaro had laid plans for a Grand Military Academy of the Army. He made arrangements for the government to purchase to tracts of land, but the school never materialized. Rather, he focused his efforts on the Heroic Military Academy. Despite its excellent reputation, by the end of the Revolution, the College was in a state of disrepair. On September 30, 1925, Amaro shut it down for a major overhaul that took ten months. In addition to new facilities, it also boasted a new curriculum that emphasized civic and moral virtues. Admission requirements were put into place, and included letters of recommendation that could vouch for an applicant's moral character.

Amaro's efforts to reform the Mexican military and society extended beyond the realm of military education: he also founded publications that combatted the influence of the Catholic Church and of large landowners in the public consciousness. He had already founded two publications, Acción and El Agrarista, as well as publishing a tract entitled El Gato in the early 1920s. However, 1925 saw a large increase in the number of military journals published in Mexico. Those already in existence, such as the Revista del Ejército y de la Marina (Magazine of the Army and the Navy), took a new editorial stance under the direction of Professor Ignacio Richkarday, who Amaro had appointed editor, to moralize the army. While Revista was aimed at the officer corps, Amaro founded El Soldado, which emphasized the same themes, as a supplement for enlisted men. 1926 saw the founding of two more publications, Revista del Heróico Colegio Militar and Gladiador.

In 1927, Generals Francisco Serrano and Arnulfo Gómez conspired with General Eugenio Martínez to seize Calles, Obregón, and Amaro in hopes of igniting a rebellion against the reelection of Obregón. Martínez informed Calles of the plot before it could be enacted, and Serrano and Gómez were caught and executed.

Although Amaro sought to reform all branches of the Mexican military, he remained a political revolutionary general of the old school. As an army general, he understood little or nothing about aviation. He was slow to advance the progress of the Mexican Air Force, which had only three squadrons of obsolete aircraft during Amaro's tenure as Minister of War.

When President Obregón was assassinated by pro-clergy forces sixteen days after his 1928 re-election, many generals and other important figures in Mexican politics urged Amaro to run for the office. He always politely declined, stating that he had "never thought to dedicate [his] activities to politics."[8] In February 1929, Amaro was injured during a game of fronton. He took a leave of absence from the Secretariat to seek medical attention at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. During his three-month convalescence, which left him with a glass eye, Calles assumed the Secretariat, in which capacity he put down the Escobar rebellion against Emilio Portes Gil, who had been appointed interim president in the wake of Obregon's assassination.

Upon his return to Mexico and the Secretariat in May, he found a situation in which Calles was still attempting to control national politics from behind the scenes. Pascual Ortiz Rubio, Portes Gil's successor, was suspicious of Amaro, as was Calles. Calles, purporting to have received information that Amaro was planning on assassinating him or overthrowing Ortiz Rubio, informed the President of the alleged plot. Ortiz Rubio deferred to Calles to take care of the situation, and the Jefe Máximo met with three other cabinet officials, convincing them to resign so as to make it appear that the "cabinet crisis" did not center around Amaro. They agreed, and the following day, Calles, Amaro, and the other three secretarys met at Amaro's estate. There, all four cabinet ministers agreed to resign.

Amaro was succeeded by Calles, who appointed him director of the Heroic Military Academy.

Target of Rumors edit

Amaro's military reforms cut the Mexican military budget from one-third to one-quarter of the total Mexican government budget, and they resulted in the dismissal of numerous junior officers. The reforms, his involvement in suppressing leftists and the now-confirmed suspicion of his role in Pancho Villa's assassination, made Amaro very unpopular in some circles and a target of vicious, false rumors. One example is the tale that Amaro sent Captain Emilio Carranza a telegram ordering Carranza on July 13, 1928 to begin immediately a non-stop flight from New York City to Mexico City, which ended with the captain's fatal crash in the New Jersey Pine Barrens. However, contemporary news reports in the Evening Courier, Camden, NJ and New York Times show the story of the "fateful telegram" to be a fabrication.[9] [10]

Another example is the story that Amaro shot and killed a groom whom disobeyed his order to walk his polo pony and instead rode it to the stables, which the U.S. Ambassador to Mexico and his military attache passed to the Department of State.[11] However, there is good reason to believe that Ambassabor James R. Sheffield loathed the Mexican Revolutionary leaders and would have passed on any rumor to discredit them regardless of its veracity. He used racial stereotypes to describe them, calling Calles "an Armenian and Indian" and "Amaro, Secretary of War, a pure blooded Indian and very cruel."[12]

Later career edit

Amaro sought to create a Superior War College along the lines of France's École Supérieure de Guerre to train an elite group of officers. To this end he sent a number of generals to study the militaries and military academies of European and South American states. Amaro led the Heroic Military Academy from 1931 until 1935, and directed military education for the Secretariat of War from 1931 to 1936.

During World War II, he was responsible for defending the region of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec from Axis aggressions.

Legacy edit

Amaro died in 1952 and was buried in the Panteón Francés de la Piedad. In 1966, his body was exhumed and reburied in Panteón Francés de San Joaquín. In the 1960s, a statue of Amaro on horseback was erected in Mexico City's Chapultepec Park.

References edit

  1. ^ Carriedo, Robert (2005-05-01). (PDF) (PhD). University of New Mexico. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 8, 2012. Retrieved 2007-07-05.
  2. ^ Carriedo 2005, p. 26.
  3. ^ McLynn, Frank, Villa and Zapata, Basic Books (2000), pg. 393
  4. ^ Carriedo 2005, p. 46.
  5. ^ a b c Fehrenbach, T.R., Fire and Blood: A History of Mexico, Da Capo Press (1995), pp. 572-572
  6. ^ Carriedo 2005, p. 115.
  7. ^ Carriedo 2005, p. 120.
  8. ^ Carriedo 2005, p. 176.
  9. ^ "Mexican Lindy Killed As Plane Falls in South Jersey Pines During Storm, " Evening Courier, July 14, 1928 (Camden, NJ)
  10. ^ "Carranza Killed In Crash As He Flies Into Storm In Mexico Hop," The New York Times, July 14, 1928
  11. ^ Carriedo 2005, p. 33 & 36.
  12. ^ Jurgen Buchenau, Plutarco Elias Calles and the Mexican Revolution 117-18 (2007).

External links edit

  • (in Spanish) General de División Joaquín Amaro Domínguez from the Secretariat of National Defense

Offices edit

Government offices
Preceded by
Francisco R. Serrano
Secretary of National Defense
1924—1931
Succeeded by
Military offices
Preceded by
Gilberto R. Limón
Director of the Heroic Military Academy
1931–1935
Succeeded by
Rafael Cházaro Pérez

joaquín, amaro, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, march, 2015. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Joaquin Amaro news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Amaro and the second or maternal family name is Dominguez Joaquin Amaro Dominguez August 16 1889 March 15 1952 was a Mexican revolutionary general and military reformer He served as Secretary of War in the cabinets of Presidents Plutarco Elias Calles Emilio Portes Gil and Pascual Ortiz Rubio making him one of the longest serving cabinet level officials in Mexican history His ambitious reforms of the fractious Mexican military transformed the armed forces from a political partisan to an armed force loyal to the president and government He accomplished this through a process of cultural reeducation that replaced an entrenched tradition of militarism with one emphasizing such values as discipline duty honor and loyalty to the civilian government 1 Joaquin Amaro DominguezNickname s El IndioBornAugust 16 1889Corrales de Abrego Sombrerete Zacatecas MexicoDiedMarch 15 1952 aged 62 Allegiance MexicoService wbr branch Mexican ArmyYears of service1911 1936RankGeneral de divisionBattles warsMexican Revolution Battle of Celaya Battle of Ocotlan Cristero WarAwardsCruz de Segunda ClaseOther workSecretary of War Military reformer Military educational reformer Publisher Contents 1 Early life 2 Military career 2 1 Early Revolution 2 2 Conventionalists v Constitutionalists 2 3 Rebellion against Carranza 2 4 Delahuertist rebellion 3 Post war career 3 1 Amaro s four laws 3 2 Amaro as Secretary of War 3 3 Target of Rumors 3 4 Later career 4 Legacy 5 References 6 External links 7 OfficesEarly life editAmaro was born in Corrales de Abrego in the municipality of Sombrerete Zacatecas the first of Antonio Amaro and Angela Dominguez s ten children His family was of Indigenous ancestry although they were probably not Yaqui as was widely assumed While Amaro was still a child the family moved to the nearby state of Durango where his father worked on an hacienda He learned to read and write although probably without the benefit of formal schooling Beginning in 1908 he worked in the office of the Saucillo hacienda where his father was employed assisting with bookkeeping With two incomes the family was able to enjoy a comfortable existence In 1910 his father sold his possessions and gave the money to his eldest son advising him go to Durango with your mother and siblings work for Mr Calderon a local store owner learn the business get to know the town and when you feel able open your own store 2 His father left for Torreon in November of that year and although Amaro never saw him again he read about his exploits with the revolutionary army of Colonel Luis Moya Military career editEarly Revolution edit On February 28 1911 Amaro enlisted in the Maderist army of General Domingo Arrieta Shortly after Amaro enlisted his father was killed in battle After five months as a private he was promoted every subsequent month attaining the rank of lieutenant by December As part of the army of Colonel Gertrudis G Sanchez whose forces Arrieta s had joined Amaro fought against the Zapatistas in Morelos engaging them at least nineteen times In one of these engagements the battle of Jojutla de Juarez he earned the Cruz de Segunda Clase a heroism medal From 1913 to 1914 he fought the federal troops under the command of Victoriano Huerta continuing all the while to rise in rank By 1914 he had risen to the rank of general It was under the command of General Sanchez that Amaro developed the reputation of a fierce warrior It was rumored that he wore an earring and used the battlecry Here is the man of the pendant earring Here is the Indian He also supposedly emulated the fighting style of the Yaqui people He also developed the reputation of a harsh disciplinarian who occasionally used his riding crop to mete out corporal punishments to his subordinates He may have even shot men in his charge or employ for disobeying orders citation needed Conventionalists v Constitutionalists edit After the fall of Huerta while still under the command of Sanchez he briefly supported the conventionalist government of Eulalio Gutierrez before breaking with Sanchez to ally with the constitutionalist army of Venustiano Carranza Shortly after Sanchez and Amaro joined the Constitutionalists Sanchez ordered Amaro to attack a column of troops commanded by General Francisco Murguia who while also a Constitutionalists was a rival of Sanchez While initially successful Murguia s troops eventually prevailed and Murguia sought to have Amaro executed for treason a charge he narrowly escaped Rather than damaging the reputation of Amaro however the incident did more to isolate Sanchez who Amaro abandoned The split finally came in 1915 when Amaro advanced the troops under his command on the Villista Division del Norte leaving Sanchez in Michoacan By this time he had already professed allegiance to General Alvaro Obregon and the carrancista government In April 1915 he led his troops known as the Rayados striped ones so called because the only uniforms Obregon could provide were prison uniforms to support Obregon s defeat of the villistas in the second Battle of Celaya Following the battle Obregon named him Comandante militar military commander of the 5th Division of the Army of the Northwest and he was charged of ridding Michoacan of villista influence At the end of 1915 the area under his command was expanded to include Guanajuato and Queretaro In 1916 he again fought the zapatistas in Morelos and Guerrero In 1917 he was placed under the command of Murguia and led expeditions against the remaining villistas of Durango and Chihuahua Rebellion against Carranza edit When Obregon proclaimed the Plan of Agua Prieta against Carranza in 1920 Amaro remained loyal to Obregon and was rewarded with the rank of General de division the highest military rank He became chief military officer of the third military zone which included the states of Coahuila Nuevo Leon and San Luis Potosi In this capacity he undertook to professionalize the unorganized ranks under him gaining experience that would later benefit his reorganization of the entire military On September 3 1921 while chief of operations of the third military zone Amaro wed Elisa Izaguirre originally of Morelia Michoacan There the couple had two children Joaquin and Leonor He later became commander of the seventh military zone which comprised Nuevo Leon There he put down the July rebellion of Pablo Gonzalez When in 1922 political unrest threatened to destabilize Coahuila Amaro positioned his troops to block the occupation of the state legislature and to protect the governor s palace In 1923 he was sent to maintain order during Nuevo Leon s gubernatorial elections Following a series of violent incidents Amaro disarmed groups of rural fighters After the assassination of Pancho Villa in July 1923 Amaro was widely suspected as one of the planners of the operation Today most historians attribute Villa s death to a well planned conspiracy most likely initiated by then Minister of War Plutarco Elias Calles who ordered Amaro to give support to the assassins 3 Amaro was later instrumental in freeing Jesus Salas Barraza the leader of the group of assassins from jail Amaro never wavered from his support for Calles and Obregon and he fully shared Calles hatred of the clergy Calles gave Amaro full support in continuing the latter s plan to reform the Mexican armed forces along anti clerical and populist lines I have fought without rest against clericalism large landowners the militarism of the ex Federals the Spanish and in general all those that do not contribute to theenrichment of our beloved homeland and the betterment of the workingclass 4 Despite these sentiments neither Calles nor Amaro hesitated in taking action against the extreme left wing When Jose Guadalupe Rodriguez tried to organise soldier soviets on the Bolshevist pattern he was promptly arrested and shot along with some of his soldiers 5 Moreover when a peasant and labor bloc of the Communist International was formed under the artist Diego Rivera it was forcibly disbanded 5 Many on the extreme left were sent to the Marias Islands penal colony 5 Delahuertist rebellion edit In 1923 Amaro s chief of staff Jose Alvarez learned of the plot between generals Enrique Estrada Guadalupe Sanchez and Fortunato Maycotte to overthrow Obregon Alvarez immediately returned to Nuevo Leon and informed Amaro of the plot who promptly related the information to Obregon The conspirators drafted Adolfo de la Huerta then Minister of Finance to run for president against Plutarco Elias Calles Obregon s chosen successor Facing a rebellion with armies in the North South and East Obregon relied on loyal generals such as Amaro to block rebel access to resources and the northern border and to put down the insurrection Amaro aided by General Lazaro Cardenas battled Estrada s forces defeating them in the decisive battle of Ocotlan Three days after the battle Amaro s troops occupied Guadalajara where Estrada s operation had been based The rebellion crushed the 1924 Mexican election was carried out peacefully Post war career editFollowing the election of Calles Amaro was appointed Undersecretary of War Francisco Serrano having been sent to Europe on a diplomatic mission late in Obregon s presidency the Secretariat was unfilled Calles may have been waiting to secure the support of generals Eugenio Martinez and Arnulfo Gomez who were also potential candidates for the post While undersecretary Amaro initiated a series of legal reforms to purge the armed forces of the germ of immorality and corruption 6 After an initial convention of important military figures the Commission for Studies and Reforms of Military Laws and Regulations was formed Ten months later four new laws were promulgated Amaro s four laws edit The first the Law of Discipline was divided into three sections General Duties Corrective Discipline and Court of Honor The first three articles of the General Duties defined military duty in terms of self sacrifice loyalty guardianship and adherence to the law 7 The subsequent articles dealt with specific issues One clarified the officer s duty to maintain order within his ranks another prohibited soldiers from complaining about orders One article prohibited servicemembers from interfering in politics The final articles concerned decorum and required subordinates to salute and give up their seats to superiors The Corrective Discipline section described the circumstances in which soldiers could be arrested for breaking the law and required that such arrests be recorded in the offender s file The Court of Honor section was written for people who committed offenses that threatened the reputation of a unit or of the dignity of the military It established a system of courts martial to punish drunkenness gambling mismanagement of funds and negligence Punishments for those found guilty ranged from transfer to demotion to imprisonment The second law the Law of Retirements and Pensions allowed servicemembers who had given twenty to thirty five years of service to retire at will It also required retirement at a certain age that was dependent on rank Finally it provided for pensions for disabled servicemen and their families The third law the Law of Promotions and Rewards set up two distinct rubrics for promotion one for peacetime and one for wartime Peacetime promotions were tied directly to military education Wartime promotions could be granted for heroic actions such as preventing enemy capture of artillery pieces and could only be given by high ranking officers These promotions had to be approved by higher bodies These reforms were an effort to end the practice of opportunistic and haphazard promotions which had inflated the number of generals in Mexico s officer corps during the Revolution The purpose of the fourth law the Organic Law was to organize the armed services The first section sought to redefine the relationship between generals and the soldiers under them demanding that all personnel be loyal to the nation and the constitution and take their orders from the President or his designees It further delineated the five military branches high command combat arms auxiliary services special corps and for the first time military education establishments and specified the structures of each It stratified servicemembers into three classifications active reserve and retired Another section of the law structured the navy Amaro as Secretary of War edit Amaro was appointed Secretary of War by President Calles on July 27 1925 Upon his appointment to the Secretariat Amaro moved to Rancho de la Hormiga a 40 468 square meter ten acre ranch that later became the presidential palace Los Pinos There his children Guillermo Manuel and Elisa were born He installed recreational facilities such as stables polo fields and tennis courts as well as a military school at the ranch Prior to his appointment as Undersecretary of War Amaro had laid plans for a Grand Military Academy of the Army He made arrangements for the government to purchase to tracts of land but the school never materialized Rather he focused his efforts on the Heroic Military Academy Despite its excellent reputation by the end of the Revolution the College was in a state of disrepair On September 30 1925 Amaro shut it down for a major overhaul that took ten months In addition to new facilities it also boasted a new curriculum that emphasized civic and moral virtues Admission requirements were put into place and included letters of recommendation that could vouch for an applicant s moral character Amaro s efforts to reform the Mexican military and society extended beyond the realm of military education he also founded publications that combatted the influence of the Catholic Church and of large landowners in the public consciousness He had already founded two publications Accion and El Agrarista as well as publishing a tract entitled El Gato in the early 1920s However 1925 saw a large increase in the number of military journals published in Mexico Those already in existence such as the Revista del Ejercito y de la Marina Magazine of the Army and the Navy took a new editorial stance under the direction of Professor Ignacio Richkarday who Amaro had appointed editor to moralize the army While Revista was aimed at the officer corps Amaro founded El Soldado which emphasized the same themes as a supplement for enlisted men 1926 saw the founding of two more publications Revista del Heroico Colegio Militar and Gladiador In 1927 Generals Francisco Serrano and Arnulfo Gomez conspired with General Eugenio Martinez to seize Calles Obregon and Amaro in hopes of igniting a rebellion against the reelection of Obregon Martinez informed Calles of the plot before it could be enacted and Serrano and Gomez were caught and executed Although Amaro sought to reform all branches of the Mexican military he remained a political revolutionary general of the old school As an army general he understood little or nothing about aviation He was slow to advance the progress of the Mexican Air Force which had only three squadrons of obsolete aircraft during Amaro s tenure as Minister of War When President Obregon was assassinated by pro clergy forces sixteen days after his 1928 re election many generals and other important figures in Mexican politics urged Amaro to run for the office He always politely declined stating that he had never thought to dedicate his activities to politics 8 In February 1929 Amaro was injured during a game of fronton He took a leave of absence from the Secretariat to seek medical attention at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester Minnesota During his three month convalescence which left him with a glass eye Calles assumed the Secretariat in which capacity he put down the Escobar rebellion against Emilio Portes Gil who had been appointed interim president in the wake of Obregon s assassination Upon his return to Mexico and the Secretariat in May he found a situation in which Calles was still attempting to control national politics from behind the scenes Pascual Ortiz Rubio Portes Gil s successor was suspicious of Amaro as was Calles Calles purporting to have received information that Amaro was planning on assassinating him or overthrowing Ortiz Rubio informed the President of the alleged plot Ortiz Rubio deferred to Calles to take care of the situation and the Jefe Maximo met with three other cabinet officials convincing them to resign so as to make it appear that the cabinet crisis did not center around Amaro They agreed and the following day Calles Amaro and the other three secretarys met at Amaro s estate There all four cabinet ministers agreed to resign Amaro was succeeded by Calles who appointed him director of the Heroic Military Academy Target of Rumors edit Amaro s military reforms cut the Mexican military budget from one third to one quarter of the total Mexican government budget and they resulted in the dismissal of numerous junior officers The reforms his involvement in suppressing leftists and the now confirmed suspicion of his role in Pancho Villa s assassination made Amaro very unpopular in some circles and a target of vicious false rumors One example is the tale that Amaro sent Captain Emilio Carranza a telegram ordering Carranza on July 13 1928 to begin immediately a non stop flight from New York City to Mexico City which ended with the captain s fatal crash in the New Jersey Pine Barrens However contemporary news reports in the Evening Courier Camden NJ and New York Times show the story of the fateful telegram to be a fabrication 9 10 Another example is the story that Amaro shot and killed a groom whom disobeyed his order to walk his polo pony and instead rode it to the stables which the U S Ambassador to Mexico and his military attache passed to the Department of State 11 However there is good reason to believe that Ambassabor James R Sheffield loathed the Mexican Revolutionary leaders and would have passed on any rumor to discredit them regardless of its veracity He used racial stereotypes to describe them calling Calles an Armenian and Indian and Amaro Secretary of War a pure blooded Indian and very cruel 12 Later career edit Amaro sought to create a Superior War College along the lines of France s Ecole Superieure de Guerre to train an elite group of officers To this end he sent a number of generals to study the militaries and military academies of European and South American states Amaro led the Heroic Military Academy from 1931 until 1935 and directed military education for the Secretariat of War from 1931 to 1936 During World War II he was responsible for defending the region of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec from Axis aggressions Legacy editAmaro died in 1952 and was buried in the Panteon Frances de la Piedad In 1966 his body was exhumed and reburied in Panteon Frances de San Joaquin In the 1960s a statue of Amaro on horseback was erected in Mexico City s Chapultepec Park References edit Carriedo Robert 2005 05 01 The Man Who Tamed Mexico s Tiger General Joaquin Amaro And The Professionalization Of Mexico s Revolutionary Army PDF PhD University of New Mexico Archived from the original PDF on February 8 2012 Retrieved 2007 07 05 Carriedo 2005 p 26 McLynn Frank Villa and Zapata Basic Books 2000 pg 393 Carriedo 2005 p 46 a b c Fehrenbach T R Fire and Blood A History of Mexico Da Capo Press 1995 pp 572 572 Carriedo 2005 p 115 Carriedo 2005 p 120 Carriedo 2005 p 176 Mexican Lindy Killed As Plane Falls in South Jersey Pines During Storm Evening Courier July 14 1928 Camden NJ Carranza Killed In Crash As He Flies Into Storm In Mexico Hop The New York Times July 14 1928 Carriedo 2005 p 33 amp 36 Jurgen Buchenau Plutarco Elias Calles and the Mexican Revolution 117 18 2007 External links edit in Spanish General de Division Joaquin Amaro Dominguez from the Secretariat of National DefenseOffices editGovernment offices Preceded byFrancisco R Serrano Secretary of National Defense1924 1931 Succeeded byPlutarco Elias Calles Military offices Preceded byGilberto R Limon Director of the Heroic Military Academy1931 1935 Succeeded byRafael Chazaro Perez Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joaquin Amaro amp oldid 1223339448, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.