The
Bolivian Army had a few German instructors. (They were among the numerous German missions, who evaded the clauses of the
Treaty of Versailles) Some, such as Major
Wilhelm "Wim" Brandt and Major
Achim R. von Kries, commanded Bolivian tanks, as did Austrian Major Walter Kohn. At least two mechanics of the armoured unit were
Chileans. The rest of the tank crews were drawn from Bolivian volunteers, who received eight weeks training. The armoured assets first saw combat on 13 September 1932 near Boquerón, when a Carden-Lloyd tankette, commanded by Kohn, tried to break the perimeter at
Yujra to aid Colonel Marzana's troops. In July 1933, at the
Second Battle of Nanawa, the Vickers 6-ton achieved some success when a Type B tank broke into the core of the Paraguayan defenses, after wiping out a number of wooden pillboxes. The other Type B was left behind by the Bolivian Army, after its transmission was damaged by an artillery round. The derelict tank was ultimately blown up by Paraguayan sappers on 8 July. Although the Paraguayan infantry was no match for the Vickers, Bolivian reports acknowledge that small-arms fire ricocheting off the tanks sapped their crews' morale. while virtually all tank crewmen suffered injuries of some degree from bullet splinters. Major von Kries was seriously wounded. The Paraguayan army used 7.62mm armour-piercing rounds during the engagement. — after which the tankettes were withdrawn from the frontlines. After this action, the Type A was placed in an open area to hold off any Paraguayan counterattack from the nearby woods; while the Type B returned to the rearguard, due to mechanical failure. 15 November saw the last operational use of the Vickers, when the Type A's machine guns defeated an assault of the Paraguayan infantry near Alihuatá. On 10 December 1933, during the
battle of Campo Vía, the two remainings Vickers tanks were ambushed and captured by a squadron of the Cavalry Regiment "General San Martin" (made up mostly of
Argentine volunteers). On 27 December 1933, during the
battle of Kilometer 7 to Saavedra, after leaving his flamethrower-equipped tankette due to heat and fighting on foot with the infantry, Major Kohn died in an assault on a machine gun nest. By 1934, Paraguayan forces had captured so many Bolivian tanks and armored vehicles that Bolivia was forced to purchase a quantity of Steyr Solothurn 15mm anti-tank rifles in order to repel their own armor, now turned against their own positions. ==Tactics and lessons==