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Bolivia 1962, Remembering perhaps too fondly, the Bolivian cavalry

By 1962, Bolivia was a poor, landlocked country. It’s last chance to date of real wealth came in the 1930s when oil was expected to be found in the Chaco region. Bolivia spent heavily to improve it’s military to be able to hold on to the claim to the area in the face of  the rival claims of Paraguay, a weak country with it’s own history of shrinking wars. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

So if a country never wins a war why celebrate the military history? Instead why not  concentrate on those currently serving in the hopes of the current being proved more useful. Well that is not how Bolivia viewed it in 1962. So here we have a Calvary charge of the Bolivian Army. The only war that I can find with any meaningful deployment of Cavalry was the 1930s Chaco War, so that is the story I will tell below.

Todays stamp is issue A153, a 500 Boliviano stamp issued by Bolivia  on September 5th, 1962. It was a four stamp issue in various denominations displaying different one time sections of the army. there were also semi related air mail issues. By 1962, what had been Cavalry regiments were now mechanized divisions. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used.

The area of Chaco was recognized as an area of Paraguay although there had been some peaceful intrusion by Bolivian nationals. There was a hope on the part of foreign oil companies that the area might prove rich in oil. Royal Dutch Shell worked through Paraguay to search and Standard Oil worked through the Bolivian government. After having previously lost its outlet to the Pacific in an ill thought out war with Chile, Bolivia built up it’s Army to defend the hoped for big oil strike. An arms deal was struck with the British arms concern Vickers to heavily rearm including with airplanes and even three tanks. The arms package was not completely delivered as Bolivia did not make all the due payments.

When war broke out with Paraguay, Bolivia looked much more powerful on paper, including 7 Cavalry regiments. This was somewhat a paper tiger as over one third of army units were absent or on leave at any one time. Yet Bolivia was confident that under German general Kundt there would be success.

The expensive Vickers tank that Bolivia hoped would save them

The motorized equipment proved ineffective due to dust and inability to deal with breakdowns. The Cavalry on both sides ended up fighting on foot as the area was too barren for horses to forage or kept watered. Advanced countries cut off arms supplies to both sides. This proved very advantageous to Paraguay which had developed an effective locally made hand grenade called the small turtle. The Paraguayan forces proved faster moving and were kept slightly better supplied as the area was Paraguay. In 1935 Bolivia had lost the war  and the area was recognized as Paraguay, though not officially until 1997. 170,000 people died in the war.

Well what ever happened to the big oil strike that was just around the corner. The corner was further off than thought. In 2012 then Paraguay President Frederico Franco announced an oil strike in the area or the Periti River in Chaco  and that in the name of the 30,000 Paraguayans that died in the Chaco war,  will soon be the richest oil zone in South America. Don’t hold your breath would be my advice.

President Frederico Franco who announced the Chaco oil strike 80 years later.

 

Well my drink is empty. You think of the quite high losses in these stupid wars over nothing and it becomes difficult to recognize the bravery that this stamp wants you to remember. Come again soon for another story to be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2021.