In the late s, U. Menu Menu. Home Milestones Monroe Doctrine, Milestones: — Thereafter, President Franklin D. Moreover, President John F. Kennedy during the Cuban missile crisis of and President Ronald Reagan during Iran-contra affair in the late s used the doctrine to defend American interests. The doctrine, therefore, not only helped the US in defending new nations of the Western hemisphere from the influence of the then European powers, it also accelerated its own presence and influence in the entire region.
Subsequently, with the increase in its economic and military might, US became the most powerful country in the entire Western hemisphere. At the time Monroe delivered his message to Congress, the United States was still a young, relatively minor player on the world stage. In , the United States did not invoke the Monroe Doctrine to oppose British occupation of the Falkland Islands; it also declined to act when Britain and France imposed a naval blockade against Argentina in As the Civil War drew to a close, the U.
From onward, as the United States emerged as a major world power, the Monroe Doctrine would be used to justify a long series of U. This was especially true after , when President Theodore Roosevelt claimed the U.
But his claim went further than that. Some later policymakers tried to soften this aggressive interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine, including President Franklin D. Roosevelt , who introduced a Good Neighbor policy to replace the Big Stick. But though treaties signed during and after World War II reflected a policy of greater cooperation between North and South American countries, including the Organization for American States OAS , the United States continued to use the Monroe Doctrine to justify its interference in the affairs of its southern neighbors.
Kennedy invoked the Monroe Doctrine during the Cuban Missile Crisis , when he ordered a naval and air quarantine of Cuba after the Soviet Union began building missile-launching sites there. In the s, President Ronald Reagan similarly used the policy principle to justify U. Bush , similarly sanctioned a U.
With the end of the Cold War and the dawn of the 21st century, the United States reduced its military involvements in Latin America, while continuing to assert a powerful influence in the affairs of the region. At the same time, socialist leaders in Latin America, such as Hugo Chavez and Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela , have earned support by resisting what they view as U.
But it may be urged that the European governments, as was shown in the late Venezuelan episode, may prove disagreeable in their efforts to collect debts due to their subjects, or, on occasion, in safe-guarding the rights of their colonists in the disorderly South American states.
The condition of these states, it is urged, offers points of serious friction between us and our European neighbors. The class of issues here raised stands quite aside from the original intent of the Monroe Doctrine. Here is the need of new international law, of the services of the Hague Tribunal, very likely of the establishment of a permanent Congress of Nations. How far ought any nation to undertake by warships and armies to collect debts for venturesome subjects who have speculated in the tumultuous politics of semi-civilized peoples?
How far is the real welfare of the world served by punitive expeditions dispatched in the name of missionaries, travelers, and traders, who have chosen to take their own lives in their hands in the wild regions of the world? There is no call for a Monroe Doctrine on these points. The issue is international, not American. The question is not so much whether France and England may send a fleet to take the customs duties of a dilapidated South American port, as it is, what course ought any government to take when wily promoters ask its assistance in carrying out their schemes in Bogota or Caracas, or Pekin; or again an equally pertinent question , what remedy, if any, international law ought to give when one of our own cities or states defaults its bonds held in Paris or Berlin.
Grant that it is uncomfortable to our traders in South America to see European sheriffs holding ports where we wish to do business. We evidently have no right to protest against other nations doing whatever we might do in like circumstances. If we can send armored ships to South America, all the others can do so. If we like to keep the perilous right to collect debts, we must concede it to others.
We may not like to see strangers, or even our own neighbors, taking liberties and quarreling in the next field to our own. But who gives us the right forcibly to drive them out of a field which we do not own? The rule here seems to be the same for the nation as for the individual. In other words, whatever the Monroe Doctrine historically means, it no longer requires us to stand guard with a show of force to maintain it.
In its most critical form, when it meant a warning against despotism, it only needed to be proclaimed, and never to be defended by fighting ships. In the face of governments practically like our own, the time has come to inquire whether there remains any reasonable issue under the name of the Monroe Doctrine, over which the American people could have the least justification for a conflict of arms with a European government.
The interests of the United States in South America are not different from those of other powers, like England and Germany. They are substantially identical interests; they are all obviously involved together with the improvement of material, political, and moral conditions in the South American states.
We have sought so far such an interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine as may honorably go in company of the Golden Rule, or, in other words, of international justice. There remains, however, a possible new definition of the Doctrine, which should be fairly faced. There is an idea in the air that the United States holds a certain protectorate or suzerainty over the whole continent of America.
A manifest destiny is thought to be working in favor of the dominion or suzerainty of a single power from the Arctic Ocean to Patagonia. Porto Rico is ours. Cuba is almost ours. Many believe that Canada will some time desire to be with us. No people to the south of us shows stable promise of what we call good government. The new canal at Panama affords additional reasons for our control of the continent. Boundless resources are yet to be developed in the virgin continent. We are the people who can provide the brains, the capital, and the political security requisite for the exploitation of practically a seventh of the surface of the earth.
The new Monroe Doctrine comes thus to mean, frankly, that we want, or at least may some time want, all America for ourselves. What else does the Monroe Doctrine mean, that there should be the pretense of a necessity to fight for it?
If Europe must not be suffered to discipline them, must we not give them their lessons? The recent movement to assume a receivership at San Domingo, to collect and pay Dominican taxes for the benefit of bond-holders both at home and abroad, brings the new doctrine into practical effect.
Here and nowhere else looms up the need of new battleships and a hundred millions of dollars a year for the navy. It is in regard to South America, and for the extension of the Monroe Doctrine to a control over the continent, that we discover in the political horizon all manner of colossal foreign responsibilities and the possibilities of friction and war. We may fancy that we would like to be the suzerain power on the continent, with United States officials in authority in every Spanish and Portuguese American capital.
The stern ancient question presses: What right has the United States to assume a protectorate, and much less any form of sovereignty, over South America? The South American governments are as independent as our own. There are no traditions common between us to constitute us an acknowledged Lord Protector over them.
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