Miami Herald (Sunday)

Gary Prado Salmón, Bolivian general who captured Ché Guevara, dies at 84

- BY PHIL DAVISON Special To The Washington Post

Gary Prado Salmón, the Bolivian army special forces officer who captured revolution­ary guerrilla fighter Ernesto “Ché” Guevara in the Bolivian jungle in 1967, died May 6 at a hospital in the Bolivian city of Santa Cruz. He was 84.

His son Gary Prado

Arauz announced the death on Facebook but did not provide a cause. His father, who had retired with the rank of general in 1988, had been in a wheelchair as a paraplegic after being shot in the spine in 1981.

There was speculatio­n at the time of the shooting that a pro-Guevara Bolivian army officer had taken revenge.

Prado described the shooting as a “mystery” but remained loyal to the Bolivian armed forces and took the matter no further.

For capturing Guevara, and thereby blunting Bolivia’s own left-wing insurgency against the country’s military leadership, Prado became a hero within the military and among its anti-communist supporters.

But that was not so much the case among younger Bolivians who, along with many fellow South Americans, had had enough of military rule throughout the continent.

Prado, who had undergone training by the U.S. Green Berets, was a captain when he pursued Guevara in the Bolivian jungle.

The Argentine-born guerrilla had been instrument­al in Fidel Castro’s Cuban revolution and, after unsuccessf­ully attempting to support left-wing guerrillas in what is now the Democratic Republic of Congo, set about exporting the Cuban revolution to other parts of Latin America.

In an interview this month with the news service CE Noticias Financiera­s, Prado recalled an important tip when a peasant potato and cattle farmer, who happened to be an old school friend, reported to him that, in October 1967, he had seen strange armed men in the Churo ravine where his cattle grazed near the village of La Higuera.

Prado also recalled Guevara surrenderi­ng to him on Oct. 8 in the ravine after the guerrilla had been shot in the leg, his pistol empty and his M2 carbine rifle shattered by Bolivian army gunfire.

“I said, ‘Who are you?’ ” the officer recalled. “He said, ‘I am Ché. I am worth more to you alive than dead.’ ”

Prado recalled Guevara asking for water and something to smoke. The Bolivian gave him an Astoria cigarette and, knowing his love of cigars from media reports, a Pacific cigar.

In the recent Noticias

Financiera­s interview, Prado recalled chatting to the wounded Guevara while the latter was laid out on the floor of a mudwalled hut used as a primary school in La Higuera.

“I was left with two images,” Prado said. “He looked like a finished man. He had reached the end of his dream; he surely saw that his world was coming to an end. He was very depressed, he was sad, he was pitiful. At that time, he was not the man he is today, who has become a myth. I asked him why he came to Bolivia, what was he looking for here . . . . He told me, ‘The revolution has no borders.’”

“The conclusion I have reached after so many years of research is that they [the Cuban leadership under Fidel Castro] sent him to Bolivia to get rid of him,” he added. “I felt pity, I couldn’t do any more. People have the image of the myth, wow. To tell the truth, I felt sorry for the guy.”

Prado subsequent­ly left to continue combat with the guerrilla fighter’s small group of surviving men in the jungle.

When he left La Higuera for his base in Vallegrand­e, Guevara was still alive in the schoolhous­e, but Prado soon learned that the guerrilla has been executed in La Higuera the following day by a Bolivian army sergeant.

In his later years, he wrote books including “How I Captured Ché” (1987) and “The Defeat of Ché Guevara” (1990). A complete list of survivors could not be determined.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States