Attack on Richard Nixon's motorcade

Attack on Richard Nixon's Motorcade
Nixon's car attacked in Caracas
DateMay 13, 1958
Location
10°28′50″N 66°54′13″W / 10.48056°N 66.90361°W / 10.48056; -66.90361
Caused by
Resulted in
  • President Eisenhower mobilizes aircraft carrier USS Tarawa along with eight destroyers and two amphibious assault ships towards Venezuela.
  • Early departure of Richard Nixon
Parties
Venezuelan protesters
Lead figures
Units involved

Unknown

Venezuelan Army
Caracas Municipal Police

Number
200–500[1]
Unknown
12
Attack on Richard Nixon's motorcade is located in Caracas
Attack on Richard Nixon's motorcade
Location within Caracas
Attack on Richard Nixon's motorcade is located in Venezuela
Attack on Richard Nixon's motorcade
Attack on Richard Nixon's motorcade (Venezuela)

On May 13, 1958, US Vice President Richard Nixon's motorcade was attacked by a mob in Caracas, Venezuela, during Nixon's goodwill tour of South America. The event was described at the time as the "most violent attack ever perpetrated on a high American official while on foreign soil."[2] Close to being killed while a couple of his aides were injured in the melee, Nixon ended up unharmed and his entourage managed to reach the U.S. embassy. The visit took place only months after the overthrow in January of Venezuelan dictator Marcos Pérez Jiménez, who in 1954 had been awarded the Legion of Merit and was later granted asylum by the United States, and the incident may have been orchestrated by the Communist Party of Venezuela. U.S. Navy Admiral Arleigh Burke mobilized fleet and Marine units to the region, compelling the Venezuelan government to provide full protection to Nixon for the remainder of the trip.

The attack was denounced by all major Venezuelan presidential candidates standing in that year's election, except for the incumbent leader Admiral Wolfgang Larrazábal. Nixon was generally applauded in American press reports for his calm and adept handling of the incident and was feted with a "hero's welcome" on his return to the United States. His recollections of the attack form one of the "six crises" explored in his 1962 Six Crises book.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference earl was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference pathe was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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