José Domingo Molina Gómez: Difference between revisions

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He was born in 1896.
He was born in 1896.


He was appointed as [[Director General]] of the [[National Gendarmerie Argentina]] from 1945 to 1947. He was then appointed as the [[commander and chief]] of the [[Argentine Army]].
He was appointed as [[Director General]] of the [[National Gendarmerie Argentina]] from 1945 to 1947. He was then appointed as the [[Commander and Chief]] of the [[Argentine Army]].


On September 19, 1955 President [[Juan Perón]] wrote a confused letter addressed to [[General Lucero]], which appeared to be a resignation letter.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lalibertadora.org/50aniv-lanacion-nota06.html |title=50 Aniversario De La Revolución Libertadora |accessdate=2011-04-19 |quote=Highest-ranking generals formed a joint-chaired by Lieutenant-General Jose Domingo Molina, who began studying the letter of Perón. The discussion was about the questions that generated the word renunciation rather than resignation, signaled strongly by General José Embrión. ...|year=2005 |publisher= }}</ref>
The [[Revolución Libertadora]] began on September 16, 1955. On September 19, 1955 President [[Juan Perón]] wrote a confused letter addressed to [[General Lucero]], which appeared to be a resignation letter.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lalibertadora.org/50aniv-lanacion-nota06.html |title=50 Aniversario De La Revolución Libertadora |accessdate=2011-04-19 |quote=Highest-ranking generals formed a joint-chaired by Lieutenant-General Jose Domingo Molina, who began studying the letter of Perón. The discussion was about the questions that generated the word renunciation rather than resignation, signaled strongly by General José Embrión. ...|year=2005 |publisher= }}</ref>


A military junta composed of general José Domingo Molina and other military officers, was created.<ref name=junta/>
A military junta composed of general José Domingo Molina and other military officers, was created with Molina at "the reigns of Government".<ref name=junta/> The next morning Perón asked for asylum in [[Paraguay]], leaving the government in the hands of the military junta.
Later that day Perón said it was not a real resignation. The next morning he asked for asylum in [[Paraguay]], leaving the government in the hands of the military junta.


==Source==
==Source==

Revision as of 00:51, 20 April 2011

José Domingo Molina
Commander and Chief of the Argentine Army
In office
1947–1955
De facto President of Argentina
In office
September 21, 1955 – September 23, 1955
Preceded byJuan Perón
Succeeded byEduardo Lonardi
Personal details
Born1896
Buenos Aires
Died1969 (aged 72–73)
Buenos Aires
NationalityArgentine
ProfessionMilitary

José Domingo Molina Gómez (1896–1969) was the commander and chief of the Argentine Army who temporarily took over Argentina on September 19, 1955 from Juan Perón and acted as the de facto President of Argentina during the time of the Revolución Libertadora which had begun on September 16, 1955.[1]

Biography

He was born in 1896.

He was appointed as Director General of the National Gendarmerie Argentina from 1945 to 1947. He was then appointed as the Commander and Chief of the Argentine Army.

The Revolución Libertadora began on September 16, 1955. On September 19, 1955 President Juan Perón wrote a confused letter addressed to General Lucero, which appeared to be a resignation letter.[2]

A military junta composed of general José Domingo Molina and other military officers, was created with Molina at "the reigns of Government".[1] The next morning Perón asked for asylum in Paraguay, leaving the government in the hands of the military junta.

Source

  1. ^ a b "Argentina's Army Begins Peace Talks". Associated Press. September 20, 1955. Retrieved 2011-04-19. ... General Jose Domingo Molina ... took over the reigns of Government after Peron's resignation yesterday. ... Molina was mentioned today as the junta president ... {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ "50 Aniversario De La Revolución Libertadora". 2005. Retrieved 2011-04-19. Highest-ranking generals formed a joint-chaired by Lieutenant-General Jose Domingo Molina, who began studying the letter of Perón. The discussion was about the questions that generated the word renunciation rather than resignation, signaled strongly by General José Embrión. ...

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