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Francisco "Pancho" Villa (1877-1923) is famed in Mexico as a
revolutionary and in the United States as a violent bandit. The 1911 overthrow
of Mexico's haded dictatorial president Porfirio Diaz (1830-1915) set off a
struggle for power that Villa, who had American support, was winning until 1915,
when the troops of Alvaro Obregon (1880-1928) defeated him and elevated as
acting chief of Mexico Villa's enemy Venustiano Carranza (1859-1920). the United
States recognized Carranza and repudiated Villa, who responded by attacking
Americans' in Mexico. Villa's men raided across the border into Columbus, New
Mexico (March 9, 1916), killing about a dozen Americans before being driven off.
US president Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) order General John J. Pershing
(1860-1948) to lead a punitive expedition into Mexico in pursuit of Villa, whose
forces skirmished several times with the invaders. This American invasion, which
was labeled a failure after 11 months (Pershing withdrew in February 1917)
because Villa, whose raids continued, could not be captured, so angered his
countrymen that Villa was regarded as a national hero, despite the fact that he
led rebels in northern Mexico until 1920, the year of Carranza's death.
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