Everything about Monroe Doctrine totally explained
The
Monroe Doctrine is a
U.S. doctrine which, on
December 2,
1823, proclaimed that
European powers were no longer to
colonize or interfere with the affairs of the newly independent nations of the
Americas. The United States planned to stay neutral in wars between European powers and their colonies. However, if later on, these types of wars were to occur in the Americas, the
United States would view such action as hostile.
President James Monroe first stated the doctrine during his seventh annual
State of the Union Address to
Congress, a defining moment in the
foreign policy of the United States. Most recently, during the
Cold War, the doctrine was invoked as a reason to intervene militarily in
Latin America to stop the spread of
Soviet Communism.
History
The doctrine's authors, especially
Thomas Jefferson, saw it as a proclamation by the
United States of moral opposition to
colonialism, but it has subsequently been re-interpreted in a wide variety of ways, including by
President Theodore Roosevelt, who asserted the right of the United States to intervene to stabilize the economic affairs of small nations in the
Caribbean and
Central America if they were unable to pay their international debts. This interpretation, intended to forestall intervention by European powers who had lent money to said countries, has been termed the
Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine.
The
United Kingdom was torn between monarchical principle and a desire for new markets;
South America as a whole constituted, at the time, a much larger market for British goods than the United States. When
Russia and
France proposed that Britain join in helping
Spain regain her
New World colonies, Britain vetoed the idea. British naval power, commercial interests, and common cultural, philosophical, and political links to the United States contributed to the strength of the doctrine. Britain was in fact negotiating with the United States before it was announced as to whether the policies in the Monroe Doctrine should be declared jointly (see Lawson below).
The United States was also fighting with Spain to
purchase Florida, and once that treaty was ratified, the Monroe administration began to extend recognition to the new Latin American nations —
Argentina,
Chile,
Colombia and
Mexico were recognized in 1822.
In 1823, France invited Spain to restore the
House of Bourbons to power, and there was talk of France and Spain warring upon the new republics with the backing of the
Holy Alliance (
Russia,
Prussia and
Austria). This news appalled the British government — all the work of
James Wolfe,
William Pitt and other eighteenth-century British statesmen to expel France from the New World would be undone, while markets in the former Spanish colonies that had recently become open to British trade might be closed off if Spain regained control.
British Foreign Minister George Canning proposed that the United States and the United Kingdom join to warn off France and Spain from intervention. Both
Thomas Jefferson and
James Madison urged Monroe to accept the offer, but
John Quincy Adams was more suspicious. Adams also was quite concerned about the efforts of Russia and Mexico to extend their influence over the
Oregon Country, which had already been jointly claimed by the Americans and British (see
New Albion).
At the Cabinet meeting of
November 7,
1823, Adams argued against Canning's offer, and declared, "It would be more candid, as well as more dignified, to avow our principles explicitly to Russia and France, than to come in as a cockboat in the wake of the British
man-of-war."
He argued and finally won over the Cabinet to an independent policy. In Monroe's Annual Message to Congress on
December 2,
1823, he delivered what we've come to call the Monroe Doctrine. Essentially, the United States was informing the powers of the Old World that the Americas were no longer open to European colonization, and that any effort to extend European political influence into the New World would be considered by the United States "as dangerous to our peace and safety." The United States wouldn't interfere in European wars or internal affairs, and expected Europe to stay out of the affairs of the New World.
This explicitly stated intent was contradicted by cooperation with European powers in the repeated re-occupation of various territories of the island of
Hispaniola, which had been divided between France and Spain. Both nations were interested in re-claiming their territories in Hispaniola, or re-exerting their influence. Ultimately, the new Republic of
Haiti not only resisted recolonisation attempts but also gained control of the other portion of the island, controlling it until 1844 when it gained its independence as the
Dominican Republic. In practice, the United States used the Monroe Doctrine to support the side of a regional conflict that favoured its short-term economic interests, rather than definitively drawing a barrier against European interventionism.
The Monroe Doctrine states three major ideas, with one more added by President
Theodore Roosevelt. First, it conveys that European countries can't colonize in any of the Americas: North, Central, or South as well as islands of the Caribbean which were considered to be a part of the Americas. Second, it enforces Washington's rule of foreign policy, in which the U.S. will only be involved in European affairs if America's rights are disturbed. Third, the U.S. will consider any attempt at colonization a threat to its national security. Roosevelt added to the doctrine, and summed up his additions with the statement, "Speak softly and carry a big stick".
A quotation from Monroe's address follows:
Legacy
The first use of the yet unnamed doctrine was in 1836 when Americans objected to Britain's alliance with
Texas on the principle of the Monroe Doctrine.
On
December 2,
1845, U.S. President
James Polk announced to Congress that the principle of the Monroe Doctrine should be strictly enforced and that the United States should aggressively expand into the West (see
Manifest Destiny).
In 1852, some politicians used the principle of the Monroe Doctrine to argue for forcefully removing the Spanish from
Cuba. In 1898, following the
Spanish-American War, the United States obtained
Puerto Rico from Spain and began an occupation of Cuba that lasted until 1902.
In 1863, French forces under
Napoleon III invaded Mexico and set up a
French puppet regime headed by
Emperor Maximilian; Americans proclaimed this as a violation of "The Doctrine" (see
Maximilian Affair), but were unable to intervene due to the
American Civil War. This marked the first time the Monroe Doctrine was widely referred to as a "Doctrine". After the war, the U.S. government began to pressure Napoleon to withdraw his troops, and he did so in 1867.
In the 1870s, U.S. President
Ulysses S. Grant extended the Monroe Doctrine, saying that the United States wouldn't tolerate a colony in the Americas being transferred from one European country to another.
President Grover Cleveland used it when he threatened to take strong action against the United Kingdom in 1895 if the British wouldn't arbitrate their dispute with Venezuela. His Secretary of State,
Richard Olney extended the Monroe Doctrine to give the United States the authority to mediate border disputes in
South America. This is known as the
Olney interpretation.
The
Drago Doctrine was announced on
December 29,
1902 by the Foreign Minister of
Argentina, Luis Maria Drago. Extending the Monroe Doctrine, it set forth the policy that no European power could use force against an American nation to collect debt.
Roosevelt corollary
In 1904, U.S. President
Theodore Roosevelt added the
Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, which asserted the right of the United States to intervene in Latin America. This was the most significant amendment to the original doctrine and was widely opposed by critics, who argued that the Monroe Doctrine was originally meant to stop European influence in the Western Hemisphere while the Corollary much more directly asserted U.S. hegemony in that area, essentially making them a "hemispheric policeman."
Clark memorandum
In 1928, the
Clark Memorandum was released, concluding that the United States need not invoke the Monroe Doctrine as a defense of its interventions in Latin America. The Memorandum argued that the United States had a self-evident right of self-defense, and that this was all that was needed to justify certain actions. The policy was announced to the public in 1930.
In 1954, Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles evoked the Monroe Doctrine at the
Tenth Inter-American Conference, denouncing the intervention of Soviet Communism in Guatemala. This was used to justify
Operation PBSUCCESS.
U.S. President
John F. Kennedy at an
August 29 1962 news conference:
CriticismNoam Chomsky, argue that in practice the Monroe Doctrine has functioned as a declaration of
hegemony and a right of unilateral intervention over the Western Hemisphere — limited only by prudence, as in the case of British military. Critics including Chomsky and Butler also point to the work of mercenaries such as
William Walker, who briefly installed himself as president of
Nicaragua, as inspired by the Monroe Doctrine.
Many Latin American popular movements have come to resent this "Monroe Doctrine", which has been summarized there in the phrase: "America for the Americans", translated into
Spanish ironically as
América para los americanos. The irony lies in the fact that the
Spanish term
americano is used to name the inhabitants of both North and South America. However, in English, the
term American is related almost exclusively to the nationals of the United States, although this wasn't always the case. Thus, while "America for the Americans" sounds very much like a call to share a common destiny, it becomes apparent that it could really imply: America (the continent) for the United States. At the turn of the century popular resentment in Latin America gave rise to a series of left of center leaders who questioned Washington's sincerity. In order to explicitly explain what is meant, the phrase is usually changed to "America for North American Americans".
Other critics have interpreted the Monroe Doctrine as
isolationist in intent.
The Cold War
During the
Cold War, the Monroe doctrine was applied to Latin America by the framers of U.S. foreign policy. When the
Cuban Revolution established a
socialist regime with ties to the
Soviet Union, after trying to establish fruitful relations with the U.S., it was argued that the spirit of the Monroe Doctrine should be again invoked, this time to prevent the further spreading of Soviet-backed
Communism in Latin America. During the Cold War, the United States thus often provided intelligence and military aid to Latin and South American governments that claimed or appeared to be threatened by Communist subversion. This, in turn, led to some domestic controversy within the United States, especially among some members of the
left who argued that the Communist threat and Soviet influence in Latin America was greatly exaggerated. (See
Operation PBSUCCESS.)
The debate over this new spirit of the Monroe Doctrine came to a head in the 1980s, as part of the
Iran-Contra Affair. Among other things, it was revealed that the U.S.
Central Intelligence Agency had been covertly training "
Contra" guerrilla soldiers in
Nicaragua in an attempt to destabilize the country and overthrow the
Sandinista revolutionary government and its President,
Daniel Ortega. CIA director
Robert Gates vigorously defended the Contra operation, arguing that avoiding U.S. intervention in Nicaragua would be "totally to abandon the Monroe doctrine". In a case brought before the
International Court of Justice by
Nicaragua, however, the court ruled that the United States had exercised "unlawful use of force." The U.S. ignored the verdict. The
Carter and
Reagan administrations embroiled themselves in the civil war in
El Salvador, again citing the Monroe Doctrine as justification. The conflict was marked by large scale
human rights abuses and the 1980 assassination of
Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero by right-wing death squads. The Monroe Doctrine was also cited during the U.S. intervension in Guatemala and the invasion of Grenada.
Critics of the
Reagan administration's support for Britain in the
Falklands War charge that the U.S. ignored the Monroe Doctrine in that instance (even though an American nation,
Argentina, attacked the possession of an existing European power,
Britain, that predated the Doctrine).
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