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In 1916, Mario Garcia Menocal (1866-1941), Cuba's incumbent conservative
president, was reelected to office, defeating Alfredo Zayas (1861-1934), the
liberal candidate, in an election torn by strife and marred by fraud. The
liberals protested Menocal's reelection because more votes were cast than there
were qualified voters and some provincial returns were lost or altered. After
Cuba's supreme court upheld the protest, new elections were scheduled for
February 1917 in several provinces, but before they were completed, the liberals
rose in revolt. Jose Miguel Gomez (1858-1921) prepared to lead liberal forces
from Santa Clara to Havana, the Cuban capital, to overthrow the government, but
Menocal enlisted volunteers, purchased arms from the United States, assembled an
army, and blocked Gomez's advance. Various skirmishes ensued; a small force of
US Marines landed at Santiago in Oriente province, a liberal center, and
restored order; within a few weeks (March 1917) Menocal's forces had crushed the
rebels. US president Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) sought to maintain order in Cuba
now that the United States was involved in World War I and believed Menocal was
more sympathetic to the Allies. Cuba declared war on Germany on April 7, 1917.
Menocal, inaugurated as president on May 20, 1917, asked for and received US
troops, which remained in Cuba until 1923.
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