Battle of Boquerón (1932)

This article is about the battle of the Chaco War. For the battle of the Paraguayan War, see Battle of Boquerón (1866).
Battle of Boquerón
Part of the Chaco War
DateSeptember 7–29, 1932
LocationGran Chaco
Result Decisive Paraguayan victory[1][2]
Belligerents
Bolivia Republic of Bolivia Paraguay Republic of Paraguay
Commanders and leaders
Filiberto Osorio
Quintanilla
F.Peña
Manuel Marzana
José F. Estigarribia
Carlos Fernandez
Luis Ayala
Strength
448 besieged and 3,500 attempting relief 7,500
Casualties and losses
2,200 killed, wounded, sick or captured 500 dead
1,500 wounded
1,000 sick
Location within Paraguay

The Battle of Boquerón was a battle fought from September 7 to September 29, 1932, between the Bolivian and Paraguayan armies in and around the stronghold of Boquerón. It was the first major battle of the Chaco War. The outpost (fortín) of Boquerón, among others, had been occupied by Bolivian troops since late July 1932 following instructions of president Daniel Salamanca leading to the escalation of the border conflict into a full-scale war.

The assault on Boquerón was the first move of the first Paraguayan offensive that was aimed to pound the Bolivian Army and capture territory before Bolivia had fully mobilized its army and resources. Paraguayan lieutenant colonel José Félix Estigarribia led the attack. The first Paraguayan assault on Boquerón was repulsed. Both sides suffered from the lack of potable water, the Paraguayans had to get it from Isla Poí (30 miles to the east) and the Bolivians inside the compound had their wells under heavy Paraguayan fire and contaminated by the bodies of dead soldiers. The Bolivian aviation tried with little success to drop ammunition, food and medicine. Bolivian troops were able to get 916 cartridges, a sack of bread and 110 pounds of dried meat from the air drops. On September 12 a 3,500 men-strong Bolivian relief column coming from the southwest was driven back near the outpost of Yucra. As the siege progressed there was a shortage of water supply from Isla Poí due to over extraction from the wells. In the face of these problems Estigarribia ordered an all-or-nothing attack on the outpost on September 26. Three days later on September 29 the last 240 Bolivian defenders, most of them wounded, surrendered.

Notes

  1. Kallsen, Osvaldo (1983). Historia del Paraguay contemporáneo, 1869-1983. Imprenta Modelo, p. 153 (Spanish)
  2. Bejarano, Ramón César (1967). Boquerón, la batalla decisiva. Editorial Toledo, p. 34 (Spanish)

Sources

Coordinates: 22°46′25.10″S 59°56′27.10″W / 22.7736389°S 59.9408611°W / -22.7736389; -59.9408611

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.