Destroyed F-9 Panther next to a damaged example
The Time when the Punta Indio Base was razed
Punta Indio WebMagdalena to the North and BAPI to the Southeast.
In the troubled 60s, the Punta Indio Base was the protagonist of some unfortunate events
"At 12:30, Panther and Corsair planes began the attack with shrapnel fire, incendiary bombs, and destructive explosives," recalls Hermindo Belastegui, a conscript from the class of '42. Deeply impacted by that experience for years, this former metalworker captured his memories in *El C-8 no se rinde*, a book he managed to publish just two months ago. The book recounts how they were relentlessly attacked throughout the day, with more than a hundred bombs, including napalm. The assault left 9 soldiers dead and 22 wounded.
The next day, the "loyal" Air Force launched a counterattack on Punta Indio. By the time the 8th Tank Regiment's armored vehicles entered the base, the damage was done: 24 naval aircraft had been destroyed, 5 marines were dead, and Captain Santiago Sabarots had fled to Uruguay. Alcides López Aufranc, nicknamed "the fox of Magdalena" in a local version of Erwin Rommel, "the desert fox," sought revenge and wanted to level Punta Indio. However, he was dissuaded by Juan Carlos Onganía and the rising Colonel Alejandro Agustín Lanusse, preventing an even bloodier outcome.
After the events of April 2-3, 1963, the Punta Indio base was occupied and once again ransacked by troops from the 8th and 10th Motorized Cavalry Regiments. The destruction of aircraft on the ground, along with the damage to maintenance workshops, was significant. The cause of this devastation was, yet again, the senseless political conflicts that led to Argentinians fighting and killing each other. In this particular case, aircraft from Punta Indio launched an attack on the 8th Regiment in Magdalena, as shown in the photos below, with a T-6 Texan firing rockets at the regiment, leaving its facilities in ruins and causing casualties. In response, the 8th and 10th Regiments launched a counterattack, seizing the Punta Indio base and destroying its aircraft and infrastructure.
A North American T-6 firing rockets over Magdalena.
The 8th Regiment of Magdalena shows the aftermath of the attack.
Location of the 8th Armored Cavalry Regiment of Magdalena.
Army forces prepare to attack Punta Indio.
Part of the runway with damaged aircraft.
The tank regiment poses on the tarmac at Punta Indio.
Location of the Punta Indio Naval Air Base (BAPI).
More photos of the damage caused. Whether in Punta Indio or Magdalena, it is difficult to comprehend today, in the 21st century, that this was not an external attack but a fratricidal war. How many poor conscripts, non-commissioned officers, and officers must have died in these senseless wars?
Damaged Corsair aircraft.
A destroyed DC-3
A damaged DC-3 and the remains of another burned aircraft.
Daños en tres Trackers
Damaged or destroyed Panthers.
Only the turbine of this Panther remained.
The Artillery Group on the runway at BAPI.
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