I
am certain Robert Harte died knowing he had made a terrible mistake.
But by then it was too late to fix. He should have acted before the
man came around the corner from Morelos Street, and approached the
two Mexico Police officers guarding the single story hacienda at 19
Avenida Viena (below). It was just after four on Friday morning, 24 May,
1940, in the quiet farming suburb of Carranza, at the edge of the
arroyo of the Churubusco River. The man raised an arm in greeting.
The officers were deceived for a moment by the large military looking
overcoat he wore, and then, as he came closer, his huge, almost
comical mustache. But before they could say anything, the man
suddenly shouted “Viva Almazan!”, and pulled his pistol. The
right wing revolutionary Juan Almazan was one of the richest and most
famous men in Mexico, and currently an unpopular candidate for the
Presidency The use of his name kept the two officers bewildered
just long enough to be disarmed.
A half dozen men appeared out of
the darkness and shoved the officers through the front door of the
villa. In the reception hall were three more police officers,
sleeping. At the same time the telephone lines into the villa were
cut. All five prisoners were quickly gagged and tied up, and left on
the floor, under guard, while another score of armed men filed
silently into the dimly lit foray. The mustached man knocked heavily
on the left hand inside door After a moment, a voice was heard from inside the
villa, asking “Qué es ?” The mustached man demanded, “Abra la
puerta! La policía de la ciudad de México.” There was a
hesitation, and then the voice said, “Un momento”, followed by
the sound of a bolt being lifted, and a lock being turned.
The
second it began to move the door was violently shoved fully open,
bowling the young man opening it off his feet. Instantly, eager hands
lifted him up and spun him around. Without pause he was hustled
across the Villa's 100 yard long garden (above) There was a seven foot wall
to the left, topped by barbed wire, and a series of doors to the
villa's separate rooms to the right. At the end of the garden stood
a small, two story brick guest house, painted white (below).
With military
precision the men divided. Several spread out in front of the guest
house (above), while others filtered to the gate beyond, which opened on
Churubusco street, while others ran to a Ford pickup and a Dodge
passenger car, both parked against the back wall. At
that moment, the electrical power to the villa was cut off. At the same time a new handful of armed men men raced through the front
door, turned left in the hall and out into the garden, where they split up,
one man stopping in front of each of the villa's doors. Just as they
did so, a voice called out from the guest house, “Es que usted ,
Roberto?. Lo que está mal?” A loud blasts of automatic gunfire
ripped the suburban night apart. Over the next two minutes, the only
exit from the guest house was blocked by a continuous hail of lead..
As
soon as they heard the gunfire, the figure outside the farthest door
bent down and crashed through the five foot high door and into the study
beyond (above). As he did so the man in front of the middle room, stood and
pulled the bolt of his MP 35 German made machine gun, and the third
man bent over and crashed through the remaining door into a bedroom. (below)
Immediately all three men opened fire, blasting the adobe and plaster
walls separating them, filling the bedroom sandwiched between with
200 deadly 9mm lead missiles. The firing went on for less than
fifteen seconds, over 70 bullets thudding into the wall and the bed's
headboard. Then the middle gunman dropped his weapon, pulled a
pistol and burst through the french doors, emptying a clip directly
into the lumps on the bed (below).
As
he did so the men in the foray silently filtered toward the back
gate, followed in their turn by the kill squad, who dropped
incendiary grenades behind them, and then the squad assigned to
suppress the guards in the guest house. The raiding party then piled
into the two stolen vehicles and disappeared into the night. Within
five minutes of the two police officers being surprised at the front
door, the raid was over. It would be some hours before the raiders
realized they had failed.
The
target had survived. His wife Natalia had been awakened by the crash
of the inner door. She shook her husband and then pulled him onto the
floor beside her. The hail of bullets, when it came, passed over
their heads, and the pistol fire punctured the mattress they had been
sleeping on, but the two elderly intended victims were safe, unseen,
on the floor of their dark bedroom.
As
soon as he was certain the raiders had left, the intended target, the
old man man (above, center), asked Natalia (above left) to check on their 14 year old grandson Seva (above, right) , who was sleeping in the
bedroom next to theirs. Even after pushing aside a burning chest of
drawers, Natalia could not find her grandson. Her first panic
was that he had been kidnapped. But then she heard his voice from the
library at the end of the house, beyond, calling out in Russian, “Ded?” - grandfather? She found Seva clutching his bleeding foot. He had
been awakened when the gunfire at the guest house erupted, and had
hidden under his bed. A ricochet had clipped his toe. And that was
the only blood spilled at 19 Avenida Viena that night.
Meanwhile,
the bearded old man retrieved his wire rimmed glasses, and then ran
into his study, next to the bedroom. Inside he found two small
fires, which he quickly extinguished. That saved the secondary target
of the would-be assassins – the biography he was writing of his old
rival. Then he joined his wife and grandson in the library. He
warmly hugged them both, and told his wife, “Natalia, they have
given us one more day of life.” It was a phrase the old man, Lev
Davidovich Bronshtein, more popularly known as Leon Trotsky, would
repeat every morning for the rest of his life.
There
was one resident of the villa missing after the raid, 25 year old
New Yorker, Robert Harte (above). But had he left with his fellow conspirators , or was he the victim of a
kidnapping? The day after the raid the Communist newspaper in Mexico City reported the shooting had been staged to garner public sympathy
for Trotsky. The next day the police brought in “The Old
Man's” bodyguards for two grueling days of questioning. But at the
same time they began taking a hard look at the communist members of
the International Brigade
from the Spanish Civil War. First
step in this line was to interview the chauffeurs for the Mexican
Communist Party. And the name that kept popping up here was the
famous painter, David Alfaro Siqueiros.
Siqueiros had
recently been paying visits to an isolated farm a few miles south of
Carranza, rented by Siqueiros' sister. And the morning after the attack, not
far from the farm, the stolen pickup truck had been found abandoned
and burned. A week after the assault, the farm house and property
were searched. On the property, beside the road from Carranza,
recently disturbed earth was spotted. A month after the attack, in
a shallow grave, the police found the disfigured corpse of Robert
Harte (above). He had been shot twice, and then quick lime had been
poured over the body. It burned some his features, but it also
preserved most of the flesh and bones.
A
warrant for Siqueiros' arrest was issued. But rather than surrender,
Siqueiros (above) began issuing written statements to the communist
newspaper, at first protesting his innocence, and condemning police
incompetence. But as member after communist member of the
International Brigade was arrested, 27 in all, and their confessions
and connections to Siqueiros appeared in the general press,
Siqueiros' statements to the Communist press began to sound defiant
and arrogant, justifying the attempted murder of Leon Trotsky. And
then, finally, when Sisqueiros turned him self in, he was immediately
released without bail. And then promptly disappeared.
Trotsky
was not surprised by the ease with which his attempted assassin
escaped justice. Nor was he in any doubt that Sisqueiros was the actor but not the
author of the murderous attack on his home and family. As “Bugs”
Moran had insisted after the Chicago St. Valentines Day Massacre that
“Only Al Capone kills like that”, four years before the May 1940 attack on his own life, Leon Trotsky
had prophetically written, "(Joseph)
Stalin...seeks to
strike not at the ideas of the opponent, but at his skull.”
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