Attack on El Uvero

The Attack on El Uvero, developed on May 28 of 1957, was an armed confrontation corresponding to the Cuban Revolution. It was the first major confrontation between the July 26th Movement guerrilla commanded by Fidel Castro and the dictator's army Fulgencio Batista, since the latter settled in Sierra Maestra.

Attack on El Uvero
Part of the Cuban Revolution
Date28 May, 1957
Location
El Uvero, Cuba
Result

Rebel victory

  • The rebels launch a counter-offensive
Belligerents
Republic of Cuba 26th of July Movement
Commanders and leaders
General Eulogio Cantillo
General Alberto del Rio Chaviano
Fidel Castro
Che Guevara
Juan Almeida
Strength
140 men 127 men
Casualties and losses
14 killed
19 wounded
7 killed
8 wounded

Development

On May 28 of 1957 Fidel Castro made the decision to attack a military garrison that was located in the coastal town of El Uvero, in Sierra Maestra . The Castro guerrillas then had 127 well-armed and trained combatants who had not yet openly engaged in combat.

The combat was particularly bloody because the rebels did not have frank positions of attack and had to openly expose themselves. After two hours and forty-five minutes of intense shooting the garrison surrendered. The guerrillas lost 7 men and had 8 wounded, among them Juan Almeida, while the government had 14 dead and 19 wounded.

After the combat, Fidel Castro ordered Che Guevara, then a rebel guerrilla doctor, to remain with the wounded. Guevara treated the wounded on both sides and made a "gentlemen's agreement" with the barracks doctor to leave the most seriously wounded on condition that they were respected when they were detained, a pact that the Cuban army respected.[1]

gollark: Because your "StupidVM" must include all possible features simultaneously.
gollark: If you don't consider my ideas you may be converted into AV1 at any time.
gollark: It is inevitable.
gollark: Hi! I thought about it, and you should also have hardware primality checkers.
gollark: ↑ many GTech™ data centres

References

  1. Anderson, Jon Lee (1997), Che Guevara. A revolutionary life. Barcelona: Anagrama, pag. 252

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.