and his presidential cabinet The main leader of the uprising,
Manuel Antonio Matos, planned and directed the initial operations from the island of Trinidad, managing to convince several local warlords dissatisfied with the government to join the fight. In addition, several foreign-owned companies operating in Venezuela were also dissatisfied and had been engaged in litigation with different governments dating back almost to the beginning of their activities in Venezuela. The French Cable Company, the New York & Bermúdez Company and the German Railway, among others, had given Matos $150,000. In December 1901, the international intrigue against President
Castro had begun when the German Chancellor
Theodor Von Holleben sent a detailed report to the US Secretary of State,
John Hay, detailing a debt of Venezuela with the bank "Disconto Gesellschaft" for 33 million bolívares, which the Venezuelan government refused to recognize. For his part, Matos had bought the ship "Ban Righ" in
London, which he renamed the "Libertador", as well as weapons and ammunition. Finally, in January 1902, Matos set sail from the
Port of Spain (
Trinidad) and, circumventing the surveillance of the national army, landed near
Coro, after which the civil war spread throughout the country. Matos also had a large, heavily armed rebel army with which he was able to seize large territories. By July 1902, only the
Miranda,
Aragua, and
Carabobo states in the center of the country remained in the power of the Castro government; and those of
Trujillo,
Zulia,
Mérida and
Táchira in the west. Many battles were fought, the most important was the siege of
La Victoria in November 1902. Castro with 9,500 men tried to stop the advance of 14,000 of the revolutionaries who tried to take Caracas by force. Despite the disadvantage, Castro had extremely important military resources,
Mauser repeating rifles and rapid-fire
Krupp cannons, the first in the country, with which his men obtained greater firepower to break the siege. After a month of combat, the rebels, defeated by Castro, became divided due to internal differences, which in the long run was the cause of their failure, because the Castro government took advantage of their division to defeat each caudillo separately, reconquering the territory they had won. Even so, some active rebel pockets remained, mainly General Nicolás Rolando in central and eastern Venezuela. The remaining rebel forces were hunted down and progressively dismantled by
Juan Vicente Gómez, disarming the revolution. With most of the
caudillos defeated and his revolution practically extinct, Matos decided to leave the country, embarking for
Curaçao. With the defeat of the Revolution in
La Victoria, international capital decided to move from opposing operations to direct intervention, and in this way they began to strangle the national economy. The culminating point was the naval blockade of the Venezuelan ports, on 9 December 1902, by German, English and Italian warships, under the pretext of forcing the government to fulfill debt commitments, especially that contracted for the construction of the railway network by German and British companies. Faced with the violence of the military actions that plunged the country into a serious international crisis, the rebels took advantage of the precarious situation of the government and on 29 December 1902, Amábilis Solagnie and Luciano Mendoza attacked the government positions in Caja de Agua, near
Barquisimeto, where they expelled the troops of Leopoldo Baptista and González Pacheco. President Castro requested the intervention of President Roosevelt of the United States as a mediator in compliance with the
Monroe Doctrine forcing the withdrawal of European ships according to the Washington Protocol signed on 13 February 1903. signaling the official end of the civil war. == Consequences ==