15. Invasion
While the US Atlantic Fleet assembled at Key West and struggled to get operational, the opening shots of the American-Mexican war of 1916 were fired by the respective armies. Pershing's troops crossed the border simultaneously in Texas and California on July 2nd. Mexicali and Tijuana were captured within two days, and Monterrey within two weeks. The Mexican Army offered no resistance at all in the west and traded space for time in the east; only the small garrison of Ciudad Maximilian stayed put to divert US forces into a siege, which was however quickly over when the Americans managed to torch the garrison’s food supply. Huerta and his corps commanders Blanquet and Mondragon concentrated their forces in Tamaulipas and San Luis Potosi and all but evacuated Coahuila and Chihuahua, which fell to various rebel groups in their entirety. As Huerta had predicted, they immediately started fighting each other. Within a week, Villa's men raided across the American border in retaliation of an incident where Pershing's forces caused a dozen collateral civilian deaths while bombarding a Mexican railway station with artillery. They took advantage of the assignment of all mobile US forces to Pershing's army and killed over 100 inhabitants of Columbus/New Mexico while pillaging the town. This made Villa popular, but of course helped Huerta by forcing Pershing to detach many of his best cavalry units to hunt him down, slowing his pace of advance. While Communists and Anarchists proved more of a hindrance to the Americans than to Carlos Augusto's regime by attacking Americans at the most inopportune moments, Venustiano Carranza , striving to reinforce his status as President Wilson's favorite rebel, met with Pershing on July 14th and proposed an invasion at the other end of Mexico, in Chiapas and Yucatan, to divert imperial attention and forces south. This would give his own southern rebel forces respite and opportunities to expand their territory, and hopefully result in the destruction Zapata’s main power base in the south (the local Native American warlord Genovevo de la O was an ally of Zapata). To the Americans, the proposal appeared attractive. Mexico's south was suffering worst from the oppressive policies towards Native Americans since 1910, and with any luck, a successful local invasion and neutralization of the imperial stronghold at Chetumal would lead to a major rebellion or even secession of large parts of Southern Mexico, which could then be turned into US satellites. Pershing was all in favor of a plan that got as much as possible of the useless navy out of his way and endorsed Carranza's proposal to Wilson. The president wanted to deliver a knockout strike before the elections, and hitting the Mexicans at both ends of their country seemed a good recipe to collapse their war effort with a single bold strike. Always the diplomat, he first made a final attempt to obtain a negotiated settlement. In a speech held on July 17th, a day after the conquest of Ciudad Maximilian, Wilson encouraged all Mexican democrats to join him on his crusade to end Habsburg Tyranny; as soon as the Empress and Carlos Augusto were in exile (Wilson did not say dead, but would not have cared), the USA was open for a generous negotiated settlement. This was half of what the moderate Monarchists wanted to hear. They would have loved to get rid of the Americans and Carlos Augusto in a single stroke, but of course Monarchy would have to endure, although stripped of the Monarch's executive powers. The Empress herself was so stressed of her reign that becoming a mere figurehead was a perfectly attractive option for her, and Admiral Beltran was keen to replace Carlos Antonio not only in the imperial boudoir, but also as de-facto head of state. He secretly drafted a proposal for a settlement on the basis of turning Mexico into a parliamentary Monarchy, to be delivered at an opportune moment. He was realistic enough that the Americans would not acquiesce for anything less than abolition of Monarchy if they believed they could enforce this goal themselves. Beltran could only approach the Americans if Mexico's armed forces delayed the US onslaught in a way that made Wilson fear he could not finish the war before the elections. Meanwhile Carlos Augusto's official response to Wilson's offer was a stream of furious insults. Two days after his speech, Wilson ordered Admiral Benson to include the conquest of Chetumal and the raising of a southern rebellion into his plan of operations. Benson had no objections; he had enough ships for a multi-axis attack, but needed to assemble suitable transports for the necessary Marine expeditionary force, which created delays. Like Pershing, Benson did not consider saving Wilson's job his prime objective (with Wilson out of office, he would be rid of SecNav Daniels, and what a great day that would be), so a little delay was perfectly acceptable for him.
16. Plans and Counter-plans
During the second half of July, US Army units bypassed the Baja California and advanced southward into Sonora. The Mexican Pacific fleet – such as it was – gave Huerta’s outnumbered Army units fire support wherever possible; there were no US naval forces available to seriously contest Rear Admiral Blanco’s control of the Gulf of California. Constant bombardments and commando raids harassed the Americans and slowed them down, but their numerical superiority was such that they could not be stopped cold. As the US Army’s main body struggled to prevent their supposed Mexican Rebel Allies from plundering their supply camps, the Mexican main fleet at Veracruz started to make a nuisance of itself. The superdreadnought Imperio was hastily commissioned on June 28th without any serious trials; over 300 yard personnel remained aboard on its first operational cruise, in case of trouble with the ship’s untried equipment. Half of them were German and Austrian citizens. The fleet was commanded by Vice Admiral Adrian Vasco Maximiliano Sarasarte y Boldiszar, son of a Hungarian noblewoman who had come to Mexico with Emperor Maximilian’s retinue in 1862, and a low-born Mexican army officer. Like all Mexican Admirals, Sarasarte was hand-picked by Beltran, and not only cunning and courageous, but also loyal to a fault. To Beltran. On July 12th, the superdreadnought Imperio, flying Sarasarte’s flag, covered two armored cruisers bombarding Corpus Christi. They did little material damage, but created much outrage and calls for immediate action of the USN. On July 20th, three Mexican pre-dreadnoughts and two older cruisers bombarded US positions around Brownsville and Matamoros, then landed a force of 1.000 Marines, put large quantities of US supplies to the torch and evacuated without significant losses, thereby completely knocking over Pershing's timetable for the conquest of Ciudad Victoria. On August 7th, two Mexican armored cruisers and a pre-dreadnought bombarded Galveston, this time causing significant losses among the civilian population. At the same time, two false-flagged transports carrying the breechblocks of the mothballed Spanish fortress guns and ammunition for them, plus two minelayers and a freighter with 600 mines, were dispatched to Guantanamo, where they arrived on August 5th. Two colliers and three oilers were already there, and an ammunition transport with three thousand 305mm shells followed on August 9th. Almost 2.000 Mexican army personnel under Colonel Trevino augmented a thousand Marines to garrison Guantanamo. Within a week, the mothballed fortress guns of Guantanamo were made ready, and the minelayers went to work every night from August 9th. Additional Mexican personnel arrived on August 11th to man the fortress batteries. The Cuban authorities turned a blind eye. They considered Mexican presence in Guantanamo, which did not involve any political or economic tampering with Cuban affairs, preferable to liberation by the USA, which certainly would involve both. Apart from political considerations, they had been bribed. Meanwhile, the USN was completing their preparations. To attain full combat-readiness, all fittings which could impair their armament were removed; unfortunately, this included aircraft launch platforms, which had been mounted on several cruisers. On July 28th, Admiral Benson officially issued his operations plan, with President Wilson's stamp of approval on it. Admiral Fletcher asked for another delay of two more weeks, as several of his ships still did not have their full complements on board. The scope of Benson's plan was grandiose. The dreadnoughts Michigan and South Carolina, three Maine-class pre-dreadnoughts and three armored cruisers under Admiral Knight were dispatched to Tampico, covering a fleet of transports carrying 4.000 Marines and three Monitors for close fire support. They were to invade Tampico in a pincer movement with Pershing’s army units. As Tampico was home to Mexico’s largest naval shipyard, the only Mexican steel plant, significant oil fields and the Naval Academy, this attack would draw out the Mexican main fleet from Veracruz, which would then be intercepted by the battle squadron of VAdm Mayo: five dreadnoughts headed by the huge, brand-new USS Pennsylvania, largest warship afloat worldwide at that time, supported by four armored cruisers and two scout cruisers under RAdm Rodgers. Meanwhile, the super-dreadnought USS Oklahoma and three Virginia-class pre-dreadnoughts under RAdm Grant would proceed to Yucatan, covering four small cruisers, four gunboats and several transports with another 3.000 Marines, to disembark at Chetumal and spark a general rebellion against the Empire in all its southern provinces. It was a bold attempt to achieve everything at the same time and knock the Mexicans out by mid-September. Unfortunately, the plan squandered a potentially overwhelming superiority by dispersing it all over the Gulf of Mexico. While the Atlantic fleet was waiting for the go, the Mexican Pacific Fleet paid a surprise visit to Panama on August 1st. They bombarded US fortifications at the channel locks, sank five merchant ships and a submarine, landed a team of Marines who blew up one of the lock gates, then retreated unmolested. Although the damage was repairable, the attack prompted the Americans to deploy their powerful submarine squadron at Panama to the Pacific, in an effort to prevent a repetition, removing it from the equation in the Caribbean. Meanwhile at the land front, General Pershing launched the attack against Ciudad Victoria on August 10th, for the first time against determined Mexican resistance. The Mexican army units were steady enough, and the battle raged for a full week. Then a regiment of Colorados came under heavy attack, broke and ran in the most dishonorable way, demoralizing the neighboring army units and drawing them into the flight. On August 17th, Ciudad Victoria fell to Pershing, who completely routed the retreating Mexicans, taking over 5.000 prisoners, most of them Colorados. His forces reached the Rio Panuco at Tamuin within ten days, and a diversionary attack by General Liggett captured the city of San Luis Potosi on August 20th virtually without resistance. The way to Tampico was free; within another week, Pershing would be deployed to attack, with his flanks secured against his supposed rebel allies. The Navy would open that battle, but Pershing would be the one to end it. Although the local garrison of 2.000 Marines under RAdm Azueta had been augmented with 6.000 reinforcements and substantial artillery, this would not be enough against a pincer attack from land and sea.
17. A Blaze of Glory
In Mexico City, Prince Carlos Augusto thought the war was being conducted in a much too passive way. As early as August 18th, he lost his nerve and ordered Admiral Beltran to personally lead every available ship to an attack on Key West, to surprise and totally destroy the USN in its base. Beltran and Sarasarte had expected nothing less stupid and had no intention to comply. They agreed that monarchy could only be saved if the Americans feared a continuation of the war till after their elections. If Mexican morale held together, the land campaign could easily drag on that long; but if Carlos Augusto had his way, the navy would certainly be crushed, and the nation's morale right with it. It never occurred to Beltran and Sarasarte that the Americans were about to divide their fleet into manageable portions; they always assumed they would concentrate it, so any open battle would necessarily be suicide. To achieve the delay needed to make the Americans accept a compromise, the Mexican fleet needed to open up a new front and divert US resources away from the land campaign, towards an objective the Americans could not afford to ignore. Sarasarte's plan was to deploy the main fleet to Guantanamo to draw the USN out of the Gulf of Mexico and, hopefully, into a Gallipoli-style naval siege. The experience of the havoc wreaked upon the Allied fleets by the Turks the year before was still fresh, and if the Americans wanted to get Sarasarte, they’d have to repeat it – and hopefully take enough casualties to turn US public opinion against this war. This plan, though somewhat optimistically assuming the Mexican army could continue to deliver a flexible defense, was obviously much more sensible than Carlos Augusto's idea of a glorious death ride. As soon as he had his orders, Beltran contacted the Empress herself, who overruled Carlos Augusto and gave the Admiral complete freedom of action. On August 19th, the Mexican fleet – five dreadnoughts, a pre-dreadnought, two armored cruisers and substantial light forces – left Veracruz for Guantanamo, twenty-four hours before the scheduled departure of the USN from Key West. They passed Cancun at 1600 hours on August 21st, ten hours before the American armada reached the tip of Yucatan, where Grant's squadron split from the main fleet and proceeded south to Chetumal. Both fleets observed strict radio silence and missed each other. During the late afternoon of August 22nd, Grant reached Chetumal and started to bombard the Mexican fortress, planning to disembark troops in the morning. Chetumal dispatched an uncoded radio distress call at 1650 hours reporting an attack by four enemy battleships, one with a single funnel and three with three funnels, which Sarasarte picked up. He could not believe his luck. An American squadron made up of one of their huge super-superdreadnoughts and three useless pre-dreadnoughts had placed itself on a silver tablet before him. If Sarasarte could destroy them before retreating to Guantanamo, Beltran and the Empress could offer a negotiated settlement from a position of strength right then. Sarasarte turned his fleet around and headed for Chetumal, which took the best part of a day to reach. By that time, the US invasion was well underway. The garrison of Chetumal - 300 Marines and 1.500 army soldiers - had managed to repulse the initial amphibious assault, because their fortress was located close to a town full of potential insurgents, so the Americans had refrained from bombarding it with 305mm HE shells, restricting fire support to smaller guns which were more accurate, but not destructive enough forn the Mexican fortress. After this failure, Grant’s pre-dreadnoughts went closer to the coast to renew the bombardment with all available guns, while Oklahoma guarded the sea flank.. At 1800 hours on August 23rd, the Mexican fleet bore down on Chetumal from a north-easterly direction. USS Oklahoma faced the whole Mexican fleet. Grant relied on intelligence reports about poor Mexican fighting spirit and engaged; the second-most powerful battleship of the USN would surely be able to quickly sink both enemy flagships, and then the others would take heels, probably even surrender. And even if they did not, Grant hardly had another choice. Again, Sarasarte could hardly believe what he saw. The Americans did not even try to evade; instead, USS Oklahoma divided her fire, attacking both Mexican division flagships with her fore and aft turrets, respectively. Like most naval battles in US history, the engagement of Chetumal was a totally one-sided affair, but this time with the USN at the receiving end. USS Oklahoma put nine 356mm shells into Imperio and three into Emperador Maximiliano, while five Mexican battleships blanketed her with over forty 350mm and 305mm hits in as many minutes. By the time the US pre-dreadnoughts had closed to gunnery range, Oklahoma was ablaze, her guns silenced. Driven by desperation, they valiantly charged the enemy, but were understaffed and outgunned, and picked off one after another. After three hours, the US fleet was all but annihilated; Oklahoma was actually the last US ship to go down after most of her crew had abandoned her. The Mexicans suffered no total losses at all. Of the Mexican dreadnoughts, the flagship was moderately damaged, two others lightly, and two not at all. Personnel losses were 400 Mexican dead versus 1.900 US dead and 1.600 captured. Some 2.700 US Marines were marooned on the shore, many of them wounded; in the face of the Mexican armada, they dispersed inland and tried to link up with local insurgents. Two protected cruisers and three gunboats, the only survivors of the US fleet, escaped into the darkness as night fell; they headed for Belize and suffered the humiliation of being interned by the British. By morning, Sarasarte departed for Guantanamo.
18. Decisions
When the first distress call of Chetumal was received on August 22nd – with no Mexican fleet units he knew of anywhere near – Prince Carlos Augusto believed he had an excuse to tear a long-time festering sting from his flesh. He ordered the local Colorado detachment at Veracruz to arrest Beltran on charges of insubordination and cowardice, and they duly plucked him from his villa in the evening of August 23rd. Being the personal favorite of the Empress, Beltran had considered himself bulletproof and not put up any guards. While ransacking the villa, the Colorados found a draft of Beltran's proposal: Parliamentary monarchy with no executive powers for the Monarch, disestablishment of the Colorados, privileged access for US enterprises to Mexican markets - and extradition of Carlos Augusto and Huerta to be prosecuted as war criminals. When this document was presented to Carlos Augusto the following day, he added high treason to the list of Beltran's offenses and had him brought to Mexico City for torture. When the Empress was informed of his imprisonment, she threw such a fit that Carlos Augusto had her confined to an asylum and sedated. That day marked the beginning of his brief absolute dictatorship. A day later, word of Sarasarte's triumph at Chetumal spread worldwide. President Wilson was dumbstruck. The electoral campaign was running full steam, and the Republicans had already capitalized on the slowness of the Army’s advance and the apparent inactivity of the Navy. How could the USA join the European war when even the Mexicans, of all people, could stop them? And now the same Mexicans had dealt the USN her worst-ever defeat. The fact that Admiral Fletcher had been warning of the poor state of readiness of the older ships for weeks made it even worse; Wilson now looked like he had knowingly sent three and a half thousand Americans to their doom. He needed a day to recover, then he ordered the squadrons of Admirals Mayo and Rodgers turned around to hunt down the Mexican fleet. Knight proceeded to Tampico to assist Pershing taking it. On August 24th, President Wilson informed the British government that he expected them to exert diplomatic pressure upon the Japanese to stop any activities aimed at Hawaii and the Philippines; otherwise the USA might be too preoccupied to render further aid to the Entente in the European war. The British were flabberghasted. They had problems of their own in abundance and were in no mood to alienate an active ally in order to help a neutral who had repeatedly declared unwillingness to become an active ally, now or ever. Whitehall decided the only thing that would help was a Republican in the White House, and did nothing. As the battle of Chetumal had obviously shifted priorities, Admiral Benson ordered RAdm Caperton to release his battlecruisers, armored cruisers and scout cruisers, plus a squadron of destroyers, on August 25th. These were ordered to sail to San Diego, resupply, annihilate Mexico’s Pacific squadron, pass the Panama channel and join forces with the main fleet, if possible within the next thirty minutes. One Captain Sims was promoted Rear Admiral and placed in command. Vice Admiral Mayo meanwhile pondered where to look for the Mexicans, now that they were loose in the Caribbean. They had no bases west of Chetumal (or so the Americans believed) and no way to resupply their ammunition stocks, of which about half would have been used up in the battle. They could however coal and resupply at Cuba or Honduras, or proceed to Colombia, whose government still had not forgiven the Americans the Panaman secession. They would certainly allow them to coal and make repairs, and might even join forces with the Mexicans and try to retake Panama. The submarine squadron at Panama, currently looking for Mexicans in the Pacific, was recalled to the Caribbean, and airship patrols all across the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico were intensified. US warships had landed their experimental aviation facilities upon mobilization, because they interfered with gunnery arcs; now five old cruisers were hastily fitted with take-off platforms and made ready to join the fleet as additional scouts. While these preparations were underway, the Mexican submarine Esturion sank the large armored cruiser USS Memphis and radioed the position of Admiral Mayo’s main force to every interested party. In Mexico City, Carlos Alberto promoted Sarasarte to full admiral on August 27th. He ordered him to return to Veracruz immediately and get rid of those trifling enemy battleships on his way. The order, which was relayed through the commandant of Veracruz Naval base, reached Sarasarte two hours after he had dropped anchor in Guantanamo Bay. The Admiral asked for confirmation from Beltran; Carlos Augusto simply repeated his order. Suspecting something was badly wrong, Sarasarte claimed heavy battle damage and requested two weeks for repairs, without mentioning where he actually was. The Americans intercepted the transmissions; assuming someone who had just been promoted to full Admiral would not lie to his C-in-C, Fletcher expected the Mexican fleet on its way home for repairs, badly battered. Admiral Mayo doubted that, but nevertheless concentrated scouting activities west of Yucatan in order to make sure the Mexicans wouldn’t slip past him a second time. Unsurprisingly, he came up blank.
19. Circles
Knight’s squadron reached Tampico late on August 26th, a day behind schedule, and went to bombardment positions. During the night, a mass attack of Mexican destroyers and torpedo boats sank the armored cruiser Milwaukee and damaged the battleship USS Missouri, but at great cost to the attackers. Before Pershing had brought his assault force in position, Tampico’s sea front was fully engaged; the battle continued on the following day. Mexican 240mm and 305mm coastal batteries, and several older warships moored in Tampico harbor, engaged in a grim gunnery duel with the USN, and during the following night, another torpedo boat sortie destroyed the monitor Tallahassee, which took three 450mm torpedo hits and sank in shallow water on an even keel. Pershing launched his assault on August 29th, confident his numerical superiority of 4:1 would be enough to carry the day despite the Navy was unable to close in enough to provide effective covering fire. But the Mexican garrison, making good use of their semi-automatic rifles in house-to-house combat, repulsed the attack. After 48 hours, the Americans had suffered 5.000 casualties, against half that number on the Mexican side, and Pershing called it a day. Of the Mexican ships in the harbor, most had been sunk in shallow water by US gunnery, but Admiral Knight’s squadron was little better off. During the last night of the battle, a strong Mexican destroyer and torpedo boat force from Veracruz, led by an old cruiser, steamed up and involved the Americans into a confused night battle; losses were considerable on both sides, and by morning, three of Knight’s five battleships had torpedo damage to patch. The first battle of Tampico ended with a humiliating retreat of the US bombardment squadron, and during retreat, USS Missouri was sunk by the new Mexican submarine Otario. Mayo’s dreadnought squadron meanwhile reached the tip of Yucatan without picking up any sign of Sarasarte’s fleet. He dispatched Rodgers to Chetumal, where the Mexican fortress had again come under attack by the surviving US Marines, assisted by Mexican rebels under Genovevo de la O. With their land flank under attack, the Mexicans could go nowhere and were blasted by Rodgers’ cruisers, resulting in Chetumal’s surrender on August 30th. Prisoner interrogations revealed that Admiral Sarasarte had told the commandant of the fortress he was headed for Panama. He had been lying, obviously, but these reports dovetailed with Mayo's worst fears. US airships had not sighted Sarasarte in the Caribbean, but they had not sighted him anywhere else, too, after all. Mayo made up his mind. The Mexicans must know they were doomed; Sarasarte’s goal could only be to wreak as much damage as possible before – inevitably – morale of his crews failed, and where better to achieve that than at the Panama Channel? On September 1st, Mayo informed his boss Fletcher that Sarasarte had tricked them with his transmission to Carlos Augusto and most probably sailed for Panama with his entire fleet. Fletcher concurred and ordered him to give chase, and the USN steamed south into the Caribbean, where they promptly were hit by a tropical storm that caused minor damage to most of the ships. Halfway to Panama, Mayo was informed that an US airship had detected the Mexicans in Guantanamo harbor on September 3rd. Mayo knocked his head against the next bulkhead; when it rained, it really poured. Then he turned his fleet around. Guantanamo was a week away at economical speed, which needed to be observed because fueling at sea would take even longer. Admiral Benson dispatched two ancient battleships from Key West, where they were serving as guardships, to block the port entrance, and ordered Knight’s squadron to head for Habana and force the Cuban government to expel the Mexicans from Guantanamo, straight into Mayo’s fangs. The Cuban army was tiny, but the Mexicans could not possibly have moved any significant garrison to Guantanamo without anyone noticing. Either the Mexicans complied and were crushed by Mayo’s battleships, or they stayed and were trapped by the blockships. While the Americans re-deployed and Pershing prepared to renew his attack on Tampico, the Mexican Army, which had been on continuous retreat and was as demoralized as the Americans thought the Mexican Navy was, went on the offensive. Huerta knew the Army would soon be useless without at least a small victory, and ordered General Blanquet to drive a wedge through the Americans besieging Tampico, in an attempt to cut off and capture one of Pershing’s corps. Unfortunately, Blanquet was plucky and ruthless, but not overly imaginative. His preparations were hard to miss, and his focal point obvious. From September 7th, the Mexicans attacked the US Army in a seven-day battle. Pershing repulsed wave after wave with contemptuous ease, inflicting 12.000 losses against 1.500 of his own. All he lost was time, and for Pershing, time was in ample supply. Meanwhile in the Pacific, Rear Admiral Sims’ battlecruiser squadron reached the Mexican coast on September 8th, after having made the run across the Pacific and resupplying at San Diego at record speed; they were reinforced with two additional cruisers there. An US airship had spotted the Mexican Pacific squadron in the Bay of Banderas; Sims was directed to them by radio and engaged on September 10th. Although both fleets were evenly matched, with an edge in light forces for the Mexicans, USS Enterprise blew up the Mexican flagship with one of her first salvoes, and the other battleship – with obsolete fire control and crewed by reservists – proved unable to effectively return fire. After her guns were silenced also, the remaining Mexicans fled, and about half were hunted down by the Americans. Several smaller units escaped into the Gulf of California. Sims ignored them and proceeded to Panama. He enthusiastically radioed that he would reach the tip of Yucatan by September 20th. During these events, the Mexican main fleet had repaired what could be repaired at Guantanamo and topped off their bunkers and magazines. Carlos Augusto by that time had Beltran broken and made him use his personal code to convince Sarasarte that he was still in command; Beltran issued repeated orders to Sarasarte to engage and destroy the Americans. As soon as Huerta had broken the siege of Tampico and Sarasarte had routed the USN, Beltran would issue his communique offering a negotiated peace, promise. Although all that sounded a bit fishy, the code was right, and Sarasarte was compelled to move. He knew Mayo’s squadron had fallen for his ruse and headed for Panama, but he had also seen the US airship flying across Guantanamo Bay on September 3rd. Sarasarte estimated Mayo would turn up off Guantanamo between September 9th and September 11th, and as vague as his orders were, just bottling up at Guantanamo – as he and Beltran had planned – would be disobeying them. He needed to sortie. But he still was in a position to interpret his orders to his advantage, because there was another US squadron at large, inferior in numbers and quality and thoroughly demoralized. Reports of American threats to the Cuban government and a sighting report of smoke from multiple ships passing the Mexican surveillance post on the island of Bermeja made it easy to guess where Knight was heading. Destroying his squadron and escaping back to Mexico, while the US Army kept failing to take Tampico, would surely demoralize President Wilson into ending the war without eliminating Mexican monarchy. At midnight on September 10th, Sarasarte weighed anchor and headed east with five dreadnoughts, two armored cruisers and whatever light forces he could muster. The pre-dreadnought Victoria, unable to sustain 20 knots like the other Mexican capital ships, remained at Guantanamo. Upon dawn, Sarasarte sailed through the windward passage, and by noon, US aerial reconnaissance reported only one large Mexican ship in Guantanamo. Admiral Mayo was informed that the best part of the Mexican fleet was gone. They could not have gone south, because Mayo would have sighted them already; to the east, there was nothing of interest to the Mexicans, so the only logical route was west. Mayo duly went on a westerly course and gave chase. In the early morning of September 11th, Knight’s squadron arrived off Habana and delivered their message to the Cubans. The Cuban government responded that under the secret 1913 treaty, Guantanamo was considered Mexican territory and they unfortunately were in no position to intervene; then they fled into their bunker. The Americans needed a day for a decision on the highest political level; then Congress unilaterally declared that treaty null and void because it violated the US-Mexican treaty of 1898 concerning Cuba's neutrality. President Wilson gave the Cubans another day to comply, otherwise the USA would invade and all Cubans who got killed along the way were the Cuban government's fault. Knight was ordered to bombard Habana into submission if the ultimatum lapsed. By September 12th, Mayo had found no trace of the Mexican fleet south of Cuba, not even with six airships deployed in a tight search pattern. Which meant the Mexicans were not there. Which in turn meant they must have headed east – and from there, as they were not spotted anywhere near Haiti or Puerto Rico, north. Either towards Florida on some suicidal charge, or towards Habana, to assist the Cuban government against Knight’s squadron, which, coincidentally, was comfortably outgunned by the Mexicans. Without consulting his superiors, Mayo divided his fleet. USS Delaware, Florida and Utah under Rear Admiral Hood were to round the western tip of Cuba, head for Habana and join forces with Knight, whom Mayo ordered to leave Habana and head west at best speed. Mayo himself took the remaining battleships – USS Pennsylvania, New York and Texas – and headed east, accompanied by Rodgers’ armored cruisers, to block Sarasarte’s only other escape route. The Imperial fleet was trapped between a numerically superior force and a force of superior quality. Sarasarte’s fleet arrived off Habana at dawn on September 14th. The US squadron was gone. The Mexicans had picked up coded w/t signals from the US fleet, but could not decipher them; Sarasarte had to guess what happened and assumed Knight was acting as bait in order to lure the Mexican fleet to Mayo, who would join him from the west. With his plan blown, Sarasarte radioed Beltran another time, boasting to have put the USN to flight, lifting the blockade of Habana. Sarasarte openly urged Beltran to make peace immediately; his victories had taken a toll on his ships, and he could not go on like this forever. Beltran, with a gun to his head, answered by ordering Sarasarte to destroy the US fleet he had driven away from Habana, then return to Tampico and fight to the last grenade, defending the city against Pershing. There was no mention of any settlement, but the ominous hint that the Empress would die rather than accept anything short of total victory. Obviously, she and Beltran had changed their minds. Or lost them. Or Carlos Augusto was lying. Sarasarte signed off and turned his fleet around, heading back east. If Carlos Augusto wanted to squander the Imperial fleet, Sarasarte could just as well return to Guantanamo and wait for the Americans there, behind his coastal batteries and minefields. On the return leg, Sarasarte’s fleet by chance ran into the blockships USS Kentucky and USS California on September 17th, manned by skeleton crews and without ammunition aboard. Both were quickly sunk by Mexican gunfire, but not before transmitting an uncoded distress call. Mayo and Rodgers triangulated, and concluded the Mexican fleet was only a day away; if they went straight for them at best speed, they would meet just off Guantanamo harbor. The naval part of the war was about to end.
19. Escape from Guantanamo
At Tampico, General Huerta’s ill-advised offensive faltered on September 14th. Simultaneously, US forces had steadily gained ground in the west; on September 15th, General Dickman was the master of Sonora. With Blanquet’s forces broken, Pershing was free to take Tampico. He attacked at dawn on September 17th, against defenders who were weakened to the breaking point after trying to support Blanquet’s offensive. The battle raged for five days, but at nightfall on September 21st, the remaining Mexicans surrendered. RAdm Azueta had to leave the city in a submarine, and all remaining Mexican ships still afloat in Tampico were scuttled to avoid capture. Pershing’s army suffered 3.500 dead and wounded; the Mexicans lost their entire garrison of 6.000, half of them as prisoners. Prince Carlos Augusto threw a fit and slapped Huerta in the face when he received the news. He had believed Sarasarte's victories had sapped US morale and Blanquet’s offensive would break it; when he realized that Pershing’s troops were not shaken by the fate of the USN and Huerta's victory reports were blatant lies, his mood became distinctly Wagnerian. If these stinking lice-ridden Mexicans, he literally told Huerta, were too stupid to give him victory, a glorious death was the best they deserved, and this was exactly what they would get. He ordered another full-scale offensive to throw Pershing back all the way to Texas, victory or death, to be personally led by Huerta, who faced execution if he failed to retake Tampico. Huerta, who had always known that his mentor was mental and would issue suicidal orders sooner or later, told him he’d need two weeks to prepare and urgently fled the palace. He did prepare all right – not for an offensive, but to consolidate a power base for himself and launch a coup. While the Mexican Army was weakened, confused and more or less leaderless, the only factor that prevented Pershing from finishing them off was Pancho Villa, whose guerrilla indiscriminately lashed out against Americans, Imperials and other rebels, constantly endangering American supply lines. Lavishly equipped by the Americans, Carranza’s resurgent Constitutionalists tried to secure the countryside, but still were too weak to get to grips with Villa’s small gangs of highly mobile rebels. All of northern Mexico descended into chaos and anarchy. At Chetumal meanwhile, American and Zapatist forces had finally managed to rouse a major rebellion against imperial rule, and calls of local commands for reinforcements always received the same reply from Mexico City: Fight to the last or face torture and death. Naturally, this attitude weakened Imperial resistance rather than stiffening it, and the rebellion spread. All of south-eastern Mexico descended into chaos and anarchy, too. At sea, Vice Admiral Mayo’s fleet sighted Sarasarte’s ships at dusk on September 18th and gave chase. Visibility was similar as during the battle of Chetumal, with the US fleet silhouetted against the setting sun, but unlike Grant, Mayo knew what was coming for him and was able to use his advantage in gunnery range to engage the Mexicans from outside their own effective range. He went on a parallel course to the south in order to keep the Mexicans at distance; whenever Sarasarte tried to close in, Mayo opened range, leisurely firing all the while. Range and visibility ensured poor accuracy, but Sarasarte knew that the Americans would start hitting sooner or later. He ordered his light forces to charge, in what was to become a classic, even legendary engagement. Five light cruisers and twenty destroyers attacked Mayo’s screen of two scout cruisers and sixteen destroyers; although the US destroyers were individually more powerful than their Mexican counterparts, the Mexican cruisers fired with deadly accuracy and cut swathes through the American destroyer screen. To Mayo’s horror, the Mexicans broke through and headed straight for his heavies; the Americans lost both scout cruisers and seven destroyers, against only two Mexican destroyers lost. Rodgers’ armored cruisers closed in and engaged the Mexican light cruisers, promptly sinking one, but getting into effective range of the three Mexican lead ships (Imperio, Natividad and Guadelupe) which engaged and sank two of the US armored cruisers, just as Pennsylvania had bracketed Imperio. Sarasarte’s destroyers meanwhile continued their charge and loosed 48 torpedoes into the US battle line. Pennsylvania was hit twice and Texas thrice, and another US destroyer was also hit and blown up. The damage to Pennsylvania was not serious, but Texas suffered loss of power to the port shaft, resulting in an involuntary turn into the Mexican line. The Mexican battleships Soberano and Monarca engaged at extreme range, and with the last rays of sunlight, scored enough hits to stop USS Texas cold. But their own flagship now was in dire straits; she hit Pennsylvania as often as Pennsylvania hit back, but the huge US battleship shrugged the damage off, while Imperio, her damage from the battle against USS Oklahoma only provisionally patched up, suffered heavy flooding and soon listed too badly to continue firing. Shortly after sunset, a 356mm grenade from USS New York blew up the Mexican dreadnought Emperador Maximiliano, killing Sarasarte’s second in command Adamiral Bayala. Soon after, without issuing any signals on how to proceed, Imperio capsized after having sustained 28 356mm hits. She had been hard to sink, and of her crew of over 1.000, more than half successfully evacuated, and Admiral Sarasarte was taken aboard the destroyer Greifenstein. Wet, cold and wounded, the Admiral decided he had enough; he ordered the fleet to disengage, head south and seek internment in Colombia or Venezuela. Then he passed out. His cruisers laid smoke, their destroyers loosed all remaining torpedoes in the general direction of the Americans, and their remaining capital ships went to flank speed, heading south into the night. One Mexican 533mm torpedo of the second volley struck home on the unfortunate USS Texas, causing a secondary explosion in the aft Magazines, sinking her. Mayo, down to two battleships and two armored cruisers, was undeterred and gave chase. In a confused night action, USS Pennsylvania damaged the trailing Mexican battleship Imperatriz Carlota, causing her to lose speed and bearing; as USS New York passed her at close range, she finished her off with 15 356mm hits. Mayo’s remaining destroyers exhausted their torpedoes against Mexican light craft trying to keep the Americans away from the crippled battleship, sinking four of them, but losing another two of their number. By the time Carlota was gone, it was pitch dark, and as both fleets passed through the fringes of a tropical storm, visibility dropped to 3.000 meters. During the night, the Mexicans veered left and headed for Venezuela; as USS New York could not sustain Pennsylvania’s speed and Mayo did not want to follow the Mexicans all alone, they managed to open distance beyond effective range by sunrise. But Mayo had a final ace to play: Sims’ battlecruisers, approaching from the south-west at flank speed. Provided with precise bearings to the Mexican fleet, Sims maneuvered to block their path. The Mexicans, now by default commanded by Rear Admiral Millenkovich on the armored cruiser Santa Maria de Guadelupe, knew they had to continue on a straight course to Venezuela if they did not want Mayo to catch up; they deliberately allowed Sims to cross the T over them and hoped for the best. Their cruisers and destroyers once more attacked Sims’ destroyer screen; although the Mexicans were out of torpedoes, they used their guns to good effect, and both sides lost three destroyers. In addition, a third US scout cruiser was sunk by two of his Mexican pendants, leaving only a single ship of that type in all of the USN. But the engagement of the heavies went less well; USS Enterprise blanketed Guadelupe with very precise fire, setting her ablaze and causing her to lose speed. Millenkovich barely managed to avoid a collision with the trailing Natividad. At that point, Sims had overtaken the Mexicans and executed a battle turn to cross their line again; this briefly exposed his ships to Natividad’s broadside. Due to the battle turn, Independence now led the US line, and a lucky 240mm hit into turret B started a devastating fire, requiring the flooding of Independence’s forward magazines. Now USS Enterprise had to maneuver to avoid collision; she managed, but lost her fire control solution and risked to come in range of Soberano’s guns. Now it was Sims who had to evade, trading salvoes with Natividad and carefully keeping her between herself and the Mexican dreadnoughts. Sims had decimated them, but failed to throw them off course. Nobody involved could know, but this was the last naval engagement of the war. Mayo and Sims failed to catch up with the Mexicans again, and the remnants of the proud imperial fleet made port in La Guaira on September 26th.
20. Final Curtain, unglorious
When news of Sarasarte’s de-facto desertion reached Mexico City, Carlos Augusto had another nervous breakdown; he ordered Huerta to launch his offensive right now, prepared or not. He never received an answer. Instead, Pershing began to advance inland on September 25th after consolidating his hold on Tampico, meeting little resistance. By that time nearly half of Mexico’s territory was controlled by US forces and their allies, and Villa’s rebels showed first signs of depletion, their raids becoming less frequent and less effective. The Mexican army was much worse off, and with it, the whole nation. Whatever Mexican forces were still in the field were now more likely to fight each other as to try and stem Pershing’s advance on Mexico City. Many local commanders were as unwilling as Sarasarte to sacrifice their life for Carlos Augusto's honor, while many others considered it more important to shoot at 'traitors' than at the Americans. Pershing reached the outskirts of Mexico City on October 9th, and by October 11th, Carranza's forces conquered Aguas Calientes. Huerta’s successor General Blanquet took draconic measures to re-install discipline into the Imperial Army, which only worsened the situation. Carlos Augusto, entrenched in Mexico City with 12.000 Colorados, blamed Admiral Beltran, who had been reduced to a whimpering wreck by pointless brutal torture after he was no longer needed to keep contact with Sarasarte, for the loss of the fleet and had him publicly executed. During the short show trial that preceded the execution, Beltran was accused of having been the lover of the Empress since twenty years and the father of all her children. If Carlos Augusto had thought this eccentric move would unite the monarchists under his banner, he was predictably mistaken. Beltran's show trial ripped the last shreds of legitimacy off Mexican monarchy, and thus by extension off Carlos Augusto’s own power. What loyal army units were left simply dissolved, and by the end of October, the Americans, the Constitutionalists and the oppositional conservatives under General Mondragon, who turned his coat just in time and personally shot his superior Blanquet, took Mexico City against no organized resistance. The Colorados lived up to their reputation as cowards and bullies and deserted en masse, and forces loyal to Mondragon captured Carlos Augusto, who tried to escape disguised as a nun, near Queretaro on October 20th, 1916. In this garment, he was summarily shot by firing squad the day after (reports that he was gang-raped before have neither been confirmed nor denied). When Carranza's men entered the Imperial palace that day, they found the imperial princes dead, hanging upside down from hooks in the cellar; about thirty US officers who had been captured by the Mexicans during the fighting around Tampico and brought to Mexico City for questioning were in a similar state. The Empress was found heavily drugged in confinement; the overdose failed to kill her, but rendered her permanently catatonic. News of the Empire’s complete military, political and moral collapse were greedily exploited by American media and saved President Wilson’s re-election on November 7th, 1916. The Republicans had accused him of not focusing on the more pressing threat and squandering resources to face off the Japanese; now their tactic backfired. The Americans learned that the Hawaiian unrest had been staged by Mexican intelligence agents when Carranza handed over the archives of the Imperial secret service to Pershing, and with that information, the crisis in the Pacific could be de-fused diplomatically. Now Wilson appeared to have stood fast and faced down all opposition at once. A month after Wilson was re-elected, Carranza proclaimed himself president of the newly established Mexican Republic and signed a cease-fire with the US government. Huerta, Villa, Zapata and a dozen other warlords went on to fight the new government's forces, the Americans and each other, without any defined objective. Although the Americans considered the war won at this point, the Mexicans had other plans. The various leaders of the various rebel forces kept eliminating each other. First, Huerta was dispatched by Zapata, who was in turn betrayed and killed by forces loyal to Carranza, who then was murdered by forces loyal to Mondragon and in league with Alvaro Obregon, who eventually became President of the Mexican Republic in 1920 and had Mondragon exiled. Large scale fighting ebbed down after Huerta's death in July 1917, but the Americans had to keep substantial forces in Mexico to protect their interests there until March 1918 – troops which could have ended the First World War by year's end 1917 (and thus probably prevented the Russian civil war). For Mexico, her days as a recognized naval power were over. Whatever ships were still in Mexico were surrendered to the Americans by the Carranza administration. Of the ships still on stocks, those in Tampico had already been completely destroyed, and the rest had to be dismantled under the terms of Carranza’s armistice with the USA. The Americans considered total annihilation of the Mexican navy one of their primary war goals and told Carranza so in no uncertain terms. As the fleet was lost anyway, Carranza had no compunctions turning what was left of it into money. During the spring of 1917, Mexico entered secret negotiations with the Venezuelans about the future of the ships interned there. Venezuelan President Gomez jumped at the opportunity to purchase the fleet, turning his nations into a respectable naval power virtually overnight; almost 2.500 Mexican officers and sailors signed up with the Venezuelan fleet as mercenaries. As this still was not enough trained personnel to operate the battleships and the armored cruiser, the Venezuelans sold Natividad to Spain in 1925 and de-commissioned Monarca to serve as spares donator to keep at least Soberano running. Sarasarte returned to Mexico in 1917 and was made Minister of the Navy in exchange for his assistance in turning its ships into money; he did not know it yet, but he would be the last Mexican Minister of the Navy before the War and Army ministries were merged in 1919. The peace treaty between Mexico - still represented by Carranza - and the USA was signed on March 10th, 1918. To permanently eliminate the navy as a potential rival in the internal power struggles to come, Carranza did not dispute the American maximum demand: a permanent ban on Mexican possession of any warships above 2.000 tons displacement, 20 knots speed and 102mm main armament caliber; submarines and naval aviation were banned entirely. Few if any Mexicans shed tears for their glorious fleet; in the anarchic times of civil war and its aftermath, they had more pressing troubles. Naval nostalgia again began to sprout in the 1930s, when the political situation had stabilized, and in 1935, President Cardenas began a modest rebuilding of the Mexican fleet with Thiarian assistance.
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