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==Assassination== [[File:El cadáver de Emiliano Zapata, exhibido en Cuautla, Morelos.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Zapata's corpse, photographed in Cuautla, 10 April 1919.]] Eliminating Zapata was a top priority for President Carranza. Carranza was unwilling to compromise with domestic foes and wanted to demonstrate to Mexican elites and to American interests that Carranza was the "only viable alternative to both anarchy and radicalism."{{sfn|Katz|1981|p=533}} In mid-March 1919, General Pablo González ordered his subordinate [[Jesús Guajardo]] to begin operations against the Zapatistas in the mountains around [[Huautla, Morelos|Huautla]]. But when González later discovered Guajardo carousing in a ''[[cantina]]'', he had him arrested, and a public scandal ensued. On 21 March, Zapata attempted to smuggle in a note to Guajardo, inviting him to switch sides. The note, however, never reached Guajardo but instead wound up on González's desk. González devised a plan to use this note to his advantage. He accused Guajardo of not only being a drunk, but of being a traitor. After reducing Guajardo to tears, González explained to him that he could recover from this disgrace if he feigned a defection to Zapata. So Guajardo wrote to Zapata telling him that he would bring over his men and supplies if certain guarantees were promised.{{sfn|Womack|1968|pp=322–323}} Zapata answered Guajardo's letter on 1 April 1919, agreeing to all of Guajardo's terms. Zapata suggested a [[mutiny]] on 4 April. Guajardo replied that his defection should wait until a new shipment of arms and ammunition arrived sometime between the 6th and the 10th. By the 7th, the plans were set: Zapata ordered Guajardo to attack the Federal garrison at [[Jonacatepec]] because the garrison included troops who had defected from Zapata. Pablo González and Guajardo notified the Jonacatepec garrison ahead of time, and a mock battle was staged on 9 April. At the conclusion of the mock battle, the former Zapatistas were arrested and shot. Convinced that Guajardo was sincere, Zapata agreed to a final meeting where Guajardo would defect.{{sfn|Womack|1968|pp=323–324}} On 10 April 1919, Guajardo invited Zapata to a meeting, intimating that he intended to defect to the revolutionaries.<ref name=kpkap /> However, when Zapata arrived at the Hacienda de San Juan, in Chinameca, [[Ciudad Ayala|Ayala municipality]], Guajardo's men riddled him with bullets. Zapata's body was photographed, displayed for 24 hours, and then buried in Cuautla.{{sfn|Brunk|2008|pp= 42–43}} Pablo González wanted the body photographed, so that there would be no doubt that Zapata was dead: "it was an actual fact that the famous ''jefe'' of the southern region had died."{{sfn|Brunk|2008|p= 42}} Although Mexico City newspapers had called for Zapata's body to be brought to the capital, Carranza did not do so. However, Zapata's clothing was displayed outside a newspaper's office across from the Alameda Park in the capital.{{sfn|Brunk|2008|p= 42}} ===Immediate aftermath=== Although Zapata's assassination weakened his forces in Morelos, the Zapatistas continued the fight against Carranza.{{sfn|Katz|1981|p=533}} For Carranza the death of Zapata was the removal of an ongoing threat, for many Zapata's assassination undermined "worker and peasant support for Carranza and Pablo González."{{sfn|Brunk|2008|p=64}} Obregón seized on the opportunity to attack Carranza and González, Obregón's rival candidate for the presidency, by saying "this crime reveals a lack of ethics in some members of the government and also of political sense, since peasant votes in the upcoming election will now go to whoever runs against Pablo González."{{sfn|Brunk|2008|p= 64}} In spite of González's attempts to sully the name of Zapata and the Plan de Ayala during his 1920 campaign for the presidency,{{sfn|Brunk|2008|pp= 63–64}} the people of Morelos continued to support Zapatista generals, providing them with weapons, supplies and protection. Carranza was wary of the threat of U.S. intervention, and Zapatista generals decided to take a conciliatory approach. Bands of Zapatistas started surrendering in exchange for amnesties, and many Zapatista generals went on to become local authorities, such as Fortino Ayaquica who became municipal president of [[Tochimilco]].{{sfn|Womack|1968|p=}} Other generals such as Genovevo de la O remained active in small-scale guerrilla warfare. As Venustiano Carranza moved to curb his former allies and now rivals in 1920 to impose a civilian, [[Ignacio Bonillas]], as his successor in the presidency, Obregón sought to align himself with the Zapatista movement against that of Carranza. Genovevo de la O and Magaña supported him in the coup by former Constitutionalists, fighting in Morelos against Carranza and helping prompt Carranza to flee Mexico City toward Veracruz in May 1920. "Obregón and Genovevo de la O entered Mexico City in triumph."{{sfn|Brunk|2008|pp= 64–65}} Zapatistas were given important posts in the interim government of [[Adolfo de la Huerta]] and the administration of Álvaro Obregón, following his election to the presidency after the coup. Zapatistas had almost total control of the state of Morelos, where they carried out a program of agrarian reform and land redistribution based on the provisions of the Plan de Ayala and with the support of the government. According to "La Demócrata", after Zapata's assassination, "in the consciousness of the natives", Zapata "had taken on the proportions of a myth" because he had "given them a formula of vindication against old offenses."{{sfn|Womack|1968|p=328}} Mythmaking would continue for decades after Zapata was gunned down.
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