Enrique Peñaranda

Enrique Peñaranda del Castillo (November 15, 1892 in La Paz, Bolivia – December 22, 1969 in Madrid, Spain) was a Bolivian general who served as commander of his country's forces during the second half of the Chaco War (1932–1935). He was later elected President of Bolivia in 1940, serving in that capacity until being overthrown in 1943.

Enrique Peñaranda
President of Bolivia
In office
15 April 1940  20 December 1943
Preceded byCarlos Quintanilla
Succeeded byGualberto Villarroel López
Personal details
Born
Enrique Peñaranda del Castillo

15 November 1892
La Paz, Bolivia
Died22 December 1969 (aged 77)
Madrid, Spain
NationalityBolivian
Political partyConcordance
Military service
Allegiance Bolivia
Branch/service Bolivian Army
RankGeneral
Battles/warsChaco War

Biography

Peñaranda was born into a politically influential family–to a family of Aymara heritage[1]–to an Indian father[2] and a Mestizo mother. Peñaranda's cousin, Nestor Peñaranda, was a well-known Methodist Evangalical missionary who worked among the Indians of La Paz.[3]

Peñaranda's performance in the Chaco War is debatable and controversial. Hailed as a hero for breaking the deadly Paraguayan siege in the Battle of Campo Via (a claim probably exaggerated by the government of Daniel Salamanca to distract attention from the devastating Bolivian loss in that battle), he took over as Bolivia's top general when the German General Hans Kundt was demoted in December 1933. As Commander of the Army, Peñaranda continuously clashed with the elderly and demanding Constitutional President Daniel Salamanca (1931–34), who understandably was not very happy with the military's performance in the war. Further disagreements ensued over the issue of appointments and promotions, Peñaranda believing that this was a purely internal military matter and the President insisting that it was part of his mandate as Commander in Chief. In November 1934, Salamanca decided to replace Peñaranda with a new military commander, sparking a coup d'état led by General Peñaranda, Colonel David Toro, and Major Germán Busch, all future presidents of Bolivia. Because the country was still at war, the military agreed to acquiesce to the swearing-in of Vice-President José Luis Tejada.

After the war, Peñaranda's star seemed to dim a bit, as his younger and more left-leaning fellow officers took over the government under Toro and Busch (1936–39) in the so-called Military-Socialist experiment. Peñaranda's experience dealing with Republican Party civilian politicians during his tenure as Commander of the Army seems to have made him more amenable to compromise with the old-style parties than the younger, more impetuous officers like Busch. Following Busch's suicide in 1939, conservative forces re-asserted themselves and, fearful of the growing power of new reformist parties committed to dismantle the existing order, decided to unite under one candidate in a pact called the Concordancia. The Concordancia proclaimed General Peñaranda (a war hero, after all) as its candidate, and he was elected.

The Peñaranda government was difficult and marred by repression. The President did not enjoy the benefit of a congressional majority, and was mistrusted by many in his own coalition, not to mention the gathering forces of the reformist left. Economic conditions continued to deteriorate, prompting a number of crippling strikes that, in turn, led to the proclamation of extra-constitutional means to restore order. The Catavi Massacre of discontented miners in December 1942 further tarnished the Peñaranda administration. On the international front, the general drew close to the American position in World War II, accepting military missions and aid in exchange for unconditional support for the Allied effort. But the spiraling domestic situation proved difficult to control, despite the government's popularity with Washington, and Peñaranda was overthrown in 1943 by a coup led by reformist, younger military officers under Major Gualberto Villarroel. It was, in essence, a movement of the pendulum back to the status quo of Toro and Busch, and a setback to conservative forces.

Enrique Peñaranda at that point headed for a long life in exile and never participated in Bolivian politics again. He died in Madrid, Spain, on December 22, 1969.

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gollark: And maybe "nasal demons will kill all my friends", but it works.
gollark: Sure, it might be "undefined behavior", but it works.
gollark: I can and I will.

References

Notes

  1. William Stanley Rycroft (1944). Indians of the High Andes: Report of the Commission Appointed by the Committee on Cooperation in Latin America to Study the Indians of the Andean Highland, with a View to Establishing a Cooperative Christian Enterprise. W. Stanley Rycroft, Chairman of the Commission and Editor of the Report. Committee on Cooperation in Latin America press. p. 330.
  2. George Parkinson Howard (1944). Religious Liberty in Latin America?. The Westminster press. p. 20.
  3. Making of America Project (1943). Harper's Magazine. Harper's Magazine Co. p. 214.

Sources

  • Querejazu Calvo, Roberto. "Masamaclay."
  • Farcau, Bruce W. "The Chaco War: Bolivia and Paraguay, 1932–1935."
  • Mesa José de; Gisbert, Teresa; and Carlos D. Mesa, "Historia De Bolivia," 5th edition., pp. 551–573.
Political offices
Preceded by
Carlos Quintanilla
President of Bolivia
1940–1943
Succeeded by
Gualberto Villarroel
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