Battle of Duarte Bridge explained

Conflict:Battle of Duarte Bridge
Partof:the Dominican Civil War
Date:27 April 1965
Place:Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Result:Constitutionalist victory
Combatant1: Dominican Republic (Loyalist faction)
Combatant2: Dominican Republic (Constitutionalist faction)
Commander1: Elías Wessin y Wessin
Commander2: Francisco Caamaño
Strength1:4,000 regulars
16 tanks
Strength2:Unknown
Casualties1:Unknown number of killed
14 tanks lost
Casualties2:Unknown

The Battle of Duarte Bridge took place on 27 April 1965, during the Dominican Civil War. The battle resulted in a victory for the Constitutionalists.[1]

Battle

On 27 April 1965, a sizeable Loyalist force of tanks, armored cars, artillery, and infantry began to rumble across Duarte Bridge under covering fire from 12.7 mm machine guns on the eastern bank. When the armored column passed José Martí Street one block from Duarte Avenue, armed civilians attacked the Loyalist infantry and unleashed a hail of fire from machine guns and mortars; most of the troops either fled or were killed. Without infantry support, the unescorted tanks, already in the narrow streets of the neighborhood, were easy targets for the Molotov cocktails soon being tossed from the surrounding buildings. The Loyalists were routed and several tanks were abandoned and put into use by the rebels.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2010-04-20 . "OPERATION POWER PACK - U.S. Military Intervention in the Dominican Republic" Article The United States Army . 2024-06-18 . www.army.mil . en.