OnWar.com

Armed Conflict Events Data

"Pancho" Villa's Raids in the US 1916-1917

Francisco "Pancho" Villa (1877-1923) is famed in Mexico as a revolutionary and in the United States as a violent bandit. The 1911 overthrow of Mexico's haded dictatorial president Porfirio Diaz (1830-1915) set off a struggle for power that Villa, who had American support, was winning until 1915, when the troops of Alvaro Obregon (1880-1928) defeated him and elevated as acting chief of Mexico Villa's enemy Venustiano Carranza (1859-1920). the United States recognized Carranza and repudiated Villa, who responded by attacking Americans' in Mexico. Villa's men raided across the border into Columbus, New Mexico (March 9, 1916), killing about a dozen Americans before being driven off. US president Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) order General John J. Pershing (1860-1948) to lead a punitive expedition into Mexico in pursuit of Villa, whose forces skirmished several times with the invaders. This American invasion, which was labeled a failure after 11 months (Pershing withdrew in February 1917) because Villa, whose raids continued, could not be captured, so angered his countrymen that Villa was regarded as a national hero, despite the fact that he led rebels in northern Mexico until 1920, the year of Carranza's death.

References

Dictionary of Wars, 530.

Category

TBD

Region

TBD

State(s)

TBD

map

Belligerents

TBD

Dispute

TBD

Initiation Date

TBD

Termination Date

TBD

Duration

TBD

Outcome

TBD

Fatalities

TBD

Magnitude

TBD

Copyright © 2019 Ralph Zuljan