Samuel Guaycochea

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Samuel Guaycochea (born November 7, 1903 in Mendoza (Argentina) , † 1973 ) was an Argentine military and diplomat .

Career

From 1924 to 1926 he studied at the Colegio Militar. From 1938 to 1940 he was employed by the Escuela Superior Militar de Aviación Base Aérea. From 1947 he was an air force attaché in La Paz and Lima . In 1951 Brigadier Major Samuel Guaycochea, the Escuela de Aviación Militar Córdoba, Córdoba , Province of Córdoba , headed the Fuerza Aérea Argentina and was involved by Brigadier General Guillermo Zinny in the attempted coup by Benjamin Menéndez on September 28, 1951 against Juan Perón . After the failure of the coup, Guaycochea and Zinny fled to Uruguay .

Following the coup d'état that deposed Juan Perón in September 1955, Zinny and the others accused of participating in the 1951 uprising were reinstated into the ranks of their respective armed forces on October 12, 1955. In late 1955, Brigadier General Guillermo Zinny was appointed Ambassador to Caracas and Guaycochea was appointed Ambassador to Bogotá .

Publications

  • La aeronáutica en la defensa nacional. Bahía Blanca, Instituto tecnológico del Sur, 1950. 31 pages.

Individual evidence

  1. cf. Fuerza Aérea Argentina , Secretaría General, Dirección de estudios Históricos, Boletín de la Dirección de Estudios Históricos, p. 50
  2. cf. G. Kraft: Quien es quien en la Argentina, 1969, p. 335
predecessor Office successor
Miguel Àngel Espeche Gil Ambassador of Argentina in Bogotá
December 6, 1955 to November 25, 1959
José Rodolfo Saravia