Monroe Doctrine

Monroe Doctrine in the United States

The term “Monroe Doctrine” has been popularly used for a variety of principles intended to explain or to define the policy of the United States toward Latin-American countries. The same words have had very different meanings at different periods of our history, but are now generally used to declare that it is contrary to the interest of the United States that any European powers should establish new settlements or colonies in any part of the Americas, or should exercise preponderant influence in Latin America. The whole subject may best be taken up under the following topics: (1) Conditions of the doctrine from 1775 to 1823. (2) Monroe”s Doctrine as stated in his message of 1823 and applied down to 1845. (3) Theories as to Latin America put forward by Presidents and Secretaries of State from 1845 to 1900. (4) The modern doctrine of “the paramount interest” of the United States in American affairs, as developed since 1901. (5) The present status of the doctrine in our relations to European, Asiatic and American powers.

Conditions of the Doctrine (1775-1823)

The prime reason for the Monroe Doctrine was the rise of a new kind of nation in the western hemisphere. Down to the American Revolution all the occupied parts of both continents and the Caribbean basin were simply outlying parts of European countries and shared in the religion, institutions, law, foreign policy and wares of their mother countries. They were in the same situation as Africa at the present time, a group of dependencies, incapable of direct influence upon the world at large.

The Revolution, with its theories of the right of every people to choose their own government, resulted in the creation of the first American state. The new United States had no territory, claims or ambitions outside of the continent of North America. During the French Revolution and Napoleonic wars it stood aside as a neutral and insisted on several new principles of neutral rights in trade and citizenship. Europe quickly saw that this example was likely to be followed elsewhere and was not surprised when in 1806 the colonies of Spain and Portugal in the New World began to drop off. In 15 years the process was completed, for by 1821 not a Spanish colony remained loyal except Cuba and Porto Rico; and Brazil was forever lost to Portugal.

These new communities appealed to the example of the United States, imitated its government and expected its friendship. By 1823 there appeared on the map the independent States of Mexico, Colombia, Peru, Chile, La Plata, Haiti, Paraguay and Brazil. In the West Indies and on the north coast of South America small colonies remained to Great Britain, France, Holland, Sweden and Denmark. These, with Canada and the British plantation of Belize, were the only American colonies remaining to Europe. America boasted no longer a single star of liberty, but a brilliant constellation of independent republics.

The people of the United States felt a natural and deep interest in what seemed a repetition of their own experience of breaking away from a mastering European government They welcomed the liberal trade opened up to them in regions where for centuries Spain had restricted communication. They enjoyed the sensation of being the pioneers and leaders in what they hoped was a world movement in democracy.

The new states at once demanded recognition by their elder sister. In 1822 President Monroe, under powerful pressure from Henry Clay and other statesmen, received authority to recognize the new countries, and soon exchanged ministers with Colombia, Chile, Mexico, Brazil and La Plata. This step gave the certificate of the American Republic to the new freedom of her neighbors. It committed the United States to the principle that they were self-sustaining, self-governing, genuinely independent and entirely separated from their former European connections. They were too confidently accepted as equal sister states, a part of a free America.

Monroe”s Original Doctrine (1823-1826)

This feeling of confidence in the continuance of the new governments received a severe shock when the combination of central European powers, commonly called the Holy Alliance (q.v.), after crushing several attempts at liberal government in Europe, turned its attention to Spain and to the Spanish colonies. A French army, with the mandate of the Holy Alliance, in 1823 overran Spain and restored the royal despot to power. The Bourbon monarch naturally asked for the application to these revolted colonies of this principle of supporting the legitimate sovereign. Metternich, the grand master of the Alliance, thought well of the idea, and it was discussed at the Congress of Verona of 1822. The United States feared that France would undertake this commission also, and would claim Cuba as the price of the service to Spain, thereby securing a broader foothold in America and gaining a rich island almost overlooking the American coast. The tension was increased by the attitude of Russia on the northwest Pacific Coast, where the tsar claimed exclusive ownership of the mainland and islands as far south as the 51st parallel by an imperial ukase dated 4 Sept. 1821. The Russians also asserted the right to keep the vessels of other powers out of the north Pacific Ocean.

The United States was thus pressed in two directions by what looked like an attempt of several European powers to come in and occupy the territories wrested from Spain and the unsettled part of North America. For many years the government had been practising the “Policy of Isolation,” which was early laid down by Washington, Hamilton, Jefferson, John Adams and other statesmen. Its purport was that the United States had no share in European political combinations, was not a party to European wars and would pursue the policy of developing itself as an American state. From this policy it was an easy transition to the complementary doctrine that European powers ought not to interfere in American affairs.

The time seemed to have come in 1823 for some sort of action that would head off the threatened invasion of Latin America by third parties in behalf of Spain. Something was also needed to check the Russian advance into North America; and the opportunity was convenient for expressing the undying love of Americans for the popular government that they had chosen. At this moment George Canning, Foreign Minister of Great Britain, stepped into the controversy. England was interested in unrestricted trade with the Spanish-American countries and was extremely opposed to the constricting policy of the Holy Alliance, both in Europe and America. Hence, in August and September 1823. Canning four times proposed to Richard Rush, our Minister in London, that the United States join England in a declaration against intervention, and Monroe was inclined to accept the proposal. After long Cabinet discussions John Quincy Adams, Secretary of State, convinced the President that it would be better to make an independent declaration. Adams” papers show that he not only suggested but formulated most of the important presidential message of 2 Dec 1823, several passages in which, construed together, constitute the original and genuine Monroe Doctrine.

The principal points in this declaration, which is the original form of the Monroe Doctrine, are substantially as follows: (1) The two spheres. The whole statement is based upon the theory that there were two natural spheres of world influence, separated by a meridian drawn through the Atlantic Ocean; and that the European and the American regions had two different sets of political and commercial interests. Since the United States took no part in the affairs of the European sphere it was common sense that European powers should keep out of American affairs. (2) Intervention. The message assumed that the Latin-American states were permanently independent and capable of conducting civilized governments; and it explicitly and strongly protested against “any interposition for the purpose of oppressing them, or controlling in any other manner their destiny, by any European power.” (3) Colonization. “The American continents by the free and independent condition which they have assumed and maintain, are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by an European powers.” This was directed against Russia but had a general bearing and has often been cited as applying to all European powers. (4) Political system. Monroe held that it would be hostile and dangerous to the United States if “the allied powers should extend their political system to any portion of either continent.” This clause plainly refers to the mutual assistance given by members of the Holy Alliance; but history shows that Adams and Monroe both meant to protest against the principles of absolutism in government — and were replying to a reference to the European “political system” in a recent Russian state paper. (5) Protection of the United States. The fundamental reason for setting forth the principles just stated was not America”s interest in the Latin Americans but in the United States. Many statesmen then felt an apprehension that, after having subdued the Latin Americans in the South, the Holy Alliance might move its forces northward. (6) Geographical extent. The doctrine in terms excepts from its application the then existing European colonies, which meant Canada, Cuba, Porto Rico, the English and French West India islands and the three South American plantations. From that day to about the time of the Spanish War of 1898 there was little objection to the continuance of the old colonies. (7) Peace. Clearly the Monroe Doctrine was intended to keep the peace — to prevent wars from breaking out in other parts of America and to avoid dangers to our own republic. In that respect the doctrine has been an eminent success. With the exception of the French invasion of Mexico in 1861, no serious or devastating wars have taken place between Latin-American and European countries.

The original Monroe Doctrine was at once effective. Canning was so much interested in the result that he claimed it for himself and said (21 Dec. 1826): “I looked another way . . . I sought for compensation in another hemisphere. . . . I called the new world into existence to redress the balance of the old.” In reality it was John Quincy Adams who struck out the policy and clothed it in a set of appropriate phrases for his country. European intervention was abandoned; but when our Latin-American neighbors asked for a more distinct promise of military protection, at the Panama Congress of 1826, the United States took the ground that our neighbors must protect themselves in case of a fight with European powers; that the Monroe Doctrine was only a pledge by the United States to itself.

Enunciations (1845-1900)

In the 75 years from 1826 to 1900 a variety of official statements were made on Latin America by Presidents, Secretaries of State and other statesmen; and from time to time new questions were raised as to the application of the Monroe Doctrine to new circumstances. Out of these may be selected the following, as the principle attempts to state and apply the doctrine. (1) Van Buren, Webster and other statesmen, from 1829 to 1843, gave public notice that the United States would not permit the transfer of Cuba to any other European power; an extension of the doctrine to prevent the transfer of colonies from one European power to another. (2) President Polk in 1845 and 1848 favored the annexation of parts of America which might be in danger of European dominion. This statement was backed up by the Mexican War, as a practical demonstration that the United States was not bound by the Monroe Doctrine to refrain from enlarging her territory at the expense of Latin-American states. (3) In the disputes over the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty in the fifties, the principle of the Monroe Doctrine was invoked against the British colony in Honduras, on the ground that it was an extension of European influence. (4) Secretary Seward, undoubtedly in accord with President Lincoln, from 1861 to 1865 warned the French not to force a foreign empire upon unwilling Mexicans, and in 1865 Seward gave formal notice that the French must leave Mexico, which was backed up by a display of military force on the border. Though Seward avoided the term Monroe Doctrine, he applied its principles very effectively. (5) President Grant in 1869 repeated Polk”s warning by announcing that no territory in America could be transferred to any European power, whether the inhabitants were willing or unwilling. (6) Secretary Fish tn 1870 proposed that the United States should take the lead in a general political and commercial policy for the republics of America. This is the first distinct statement of a policy of leadership by the United States, which had undeniably been in the mind of John Quincy Adams. (7) Secretary Evarts in 1880 was the first American statesman to see the relation of the Isthmus Canal to the Monroe Doctrine. He claimed “paramount interest” for the United States in any land or water communication across the American isthmus. President Hayes added the significant declaration that any inter-oceanic canal would be “virtually a part of the coast line of the United States.” (8) Secretary Blaine in 1881 made the position of the United States more precise by stating that for any European power to share in the construction and control of the canal would be an introduction of the European political system. (9) Secretary Blaine drafted for the Panama Congress of 1889 the statement that the “principle of conquest” should not be considered as admissible under American public law. This was intended to apply to the wars between Latin-American powers, and also to foreign invasion. (10) Secretary Olney in 1895 went to the farthest point in a protest addressed to Great Britain, in relation to a boundary dispute between that power and Venezuela. He stated that the Monroe Doctrine “has been the accepted public law in this country ever since its promulgation”; he thought “any permanent political union between an European and an American state unnatural and inexpedient”; he asserted that “to-day the United States is practically sovereign on this continent and its fiat is law upon the subjects to which it confines its interposition.” President Cleveland restated the same principle in the words “The Monroe Doctrine finds its recognition in those principles of international law which are based upon the theory that every nation shall have its rights protected and its just claims enforced.”

This series of utterances, along with others of a similar tenor, clearly show a steady growth of responsibility and authority in American affairs. The Panama Canal brought out many rival interests between the United States and European powers, and the State Department at Washington insisted that it was for this government and no other to decide where, how and when the canal should be constructed. Secretary Olney and President Cleveland pushed the doctrine far beyond any previous statement. Their doctrine was certainly not the original Monroe Doctrine, for it really laid down the new principle that Great Britain, which for nearly three centuries had been one of the leading American powers, was no longer to exercise influence on Central and South America. Olney”s farther expressions, if carried to their logical outcome, would justify the United States in doing anything and taking anything in North or South America that seemed desirable, under penalty of the hostilities at which President Cleveland distinctly hinted.

Modern Doctrines (1901-19)

So far as the relation of Great Britain to American affairs was concerned the Olney Doctrine was successful, for Great Britain took the lesson to heart, accepted the arbitration with Venezuela which was thrust upon her, cheerfully accepted the finding of the arbitrators (which were almost entirely in her favor) and prepared to give up that joint control of the Canal which was embodied in the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty of 1850. During the Spanish War of 1898, Great Britain made it clear that other European powers must not interfere with the American policy of the United States. The next step was for Great Britain in the first Hay-Pauncefote Treaty of 1900 freely and without consideration to give up the joint control over isthmus transit. The Senate insisted that there should be a formal abrogation of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty and Great Britain gave way and accepted the second Hay-Pauncefote Treaty of 1901, by which the United States was left free to control any isthmus canal that might be constructed and to “neutralize” it in her own way.

When England was fairly out of the way, Germany loomed up on the horizon. That power for some years had been looking about the world for an opportunity to plant colonies, and was supposed to have a special interest in South America. President Roosevelt took up this question and in 1902 faced the issue of intervention by European powers in Venezuela. This was one of the Latin-American states which objected to foreigners coming in and occupying a privileged status superior to that of natives, by calling on their home governments to press claims for the fulfilment of contract and for damages for personal injuries.

A combination was made between Germany, Great Britain and Italy which prepared to land forces on the Venezuelan coast and hold part of the country till the claims of the subjects of those countries were satisfied. The great Brazilian jurist, Calvo, had laid down what was known as the Calvo Doctrine, to the effect that foreign governments ought not to use even diplomatic methods in behalf of private claims. Drago, Foreign Minister of the Argentine Republic, during the Venezuelan crisis proposed a modification, commonly called the Drago Doctrine (q.v.), which was to the effect that no intervention ought to be allowed to enforce the obligation of contracts, whether made by individuals or by the government. This principle was accepted by President Roosevelt as reasonable and was afterward incorporated into The Hague Conventions of 1907.

When it came to the actual dispatch of the fleets, President Roosevelt demanded from the German government a point blank statement that they would not land or occupy Venezuelan territory. The promise was reluctantly given and was kept. The squadron therefore contented itself with blockades and captures of vessels on the coast and mild bombardments. The Venezuelans finally agreed to arbitrate and the fleets were withdrawn.

The episode led the mind of President Roosevelt to consider what ought to be done in cases where Latin-American countries went beyond the negative refusal to execute contracts and advanced to attacks on the persons, property or diplomatic representatives of a foreign country. He, therefore, in various public speeches and messages declared that the Monroe Doctrine was intended to be one of peace, and that to keep the peace the United States might be forced in flagrant cases “to the exercise of an international police power.” This is the so-called “policy of the Big Stick,” and President Roosevelt and his successors proceeded to apply it in various cases.

(1) In 1902, Cuba which had been released from Spain by the Spanish War, was obliged to consent to the Platt Amendment, to the effect that the nominally independent state must not incur any obligations to foreign countries which would interfere with the interests of the United States. This virtually made Cuba a protectorate of the United States. (2) In 1903 the infant republic of Panama ceded the canal strip to the United States and entered into a treaty which left it also a dependency. (3) In 1905 President Roosevelt made an agreement with the government of the Dominican Republic to administer its customs, setting apart a portion of the proceeds for the public debt service. Santo Domingo thus ceased to be a really independent country. (4) In 1911 President Taft made a similar arrangement with Nicaragua. (5) In 1915 Haiti entered into a financial arrangement which virtually placed it under United States control and provided for an American receivership of customs.

In every instance the reason for this assumption or acceptance of authority over Latin-American republics was based upon the belief that otherwise some foreign country would come in and interfere with American interests and threaten the future of the country affected. That is, the United States acquired six protectorates lest some European power might have cause to descend upon them by armed force. A supposed attempt of Japan in 1912 to secure a footing at Magdalena Bay on the west coast of Mexico led to the adoption by the Senate of a resolution introduced by Senator Lodge against such occupation for naval or military purposes. Ex-Secretary Root in 1914 attempted to show that the Monroe Doctrine did not require the United States to exercise a domination over its neighbors. President Wilson also in public statements and addresses in 1913 disclaimed any ambition of the United States to extend its territory in America. The only way to reconcile these statements with the facts of our protectorates is to admit that the Monroe Doctrine is a check to the territorial greed of European powers but does not restrain the United States from bringing portions of Latin America under her influence.

V. Present Status. — The war of 1898, including the annexation of the Philippine Islands by the United States, was a frank admission that there were no longer two spheres in modern world politics. Eastern Asia is honeycombed with European settlements and interests, and the occupation by the United States, of the Philippine Islands, near China, makes us near neighbors of Russia, France and Great Britain. On the other side, at the conference of Algeciras in 1906, the United States accepted membership on the pressing invitation of the German emperor and had the determining voice in the result. It was therefore, no longer possible for our government to insist that European powers must keep out of America because we keep out of European affairs. The Japanese have been thought to have some designs on the western coast of North or South America which would be contrary to the Monroe Doctrine. At the other extreme was the danger, which for a time was feared, of German occupation of a part of Brazil or other South American countries. Should either danger ever occur the Monroe Doctrine would presumably become active.

As respects the Latin Americans themselves, they have always welcomed whatever protection the declarations and influence of their powerful neighbor might give against foreign agression; but many of them fear that the United States will eventually seek extensive annexations to the southward. The taking over of the six protectorates and the great interest of the United States in the Mexican question heighten that apprehension. The growth and steadiness of the ABC powers — Argentine, Brazil and Chile, — with about half the total Latin-American population, give a more positive basis for permanent alliances and relations. It has been suggested that the Monroe Doctrine will naturally develop into some kind of Pan-American Union (q.v.) in which the United States will be the most populous and strongest member of a great American federation. The difficulties in the way of a permanent union between a country of 100,000,000 and 20 other countries which together aggregate 75,000,000 are hard to surmount.

The question of the right of a nation to exercise special authority over its neighborhood was raised in another form by the steady growth of Japanese power in Eastern Asia. On 30 Nov. 1908, by the Root-Takahira agreement, the United States recognized this special interest; and in November 1917, in the Lansing-Ishii agreement, went still farther in approving practically the doctrine of special interest, it being tacitly understood that Japan would in like manner respect the American Monroe Doctrine.

The negotiations of 1919 at the end of the Great War seemed for a time likely to weaken the Monroe Doctrine by substituting a system of world peace organization which would take the place of the earlier method, inasmuch as the League of Peace provided a machinery for hearing complaints and settling controversies such as were likely to arise between Latin American and European powers. A strong protest was made in public discussions on the subject in the United States. In the final form the covenant of the League of Nations included the following limitation: “The covenant does not affect the validity of international engagements, such as treaties of arbitration or regional understandings like the Monroe Doctrine, for securing the maintenance of peace.”

This clause would seem to be a guarantee of the special relation of the United States to Latin America; and so far as ratified by those States would bind them to accept the doctrine as a “regional understanding.” It is likewise a reaffirmation of the Japanese Monroe Doctrine, and is likely to be claimed in support of spheres of interest in the Mediterranean, Asia and Africa. Acceptance of the treaty by most world nations is therefore an assertion of the right of powerful nations in various parts of the earth to exercise a general protection over groups of small or weak powers, and at the same time to exclude external powers from interfering with the leadership of the strongest power in such a combination.

In the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, President John F. Kennedy cited the Monroe Doctrine as a basis for America”s “eyeball-to-eyeball” confrontation with the Soviet Union that had embarked on a campaign to install ballistic missiles on Cuban soil.

Roosevelt Corollary

Before becoming president, Theodore Roosevelt had proclaimed the rationale of the Monroe Doctrine in supporting intervention in the Spanish colony of Cuba in 1898. After he became president, and following the Venezuela Crisis of 1902–1903, Roosevelt added the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine in 1904. This corollary asserted the right of the United States to intervene in Latin America in cases of “flagrant and chronic wrongdoing by a Latin American Nation”.

The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine was invoked to intervene militarily in Latin America to stop the spread of European influence.

The Roosevelt Corollary 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 Americas.[1] This amendment was designed to preclude violation of the doctrine by European powers that would ultimately argue that the independent nations were “mismanaged or unruly”.[1] Critics, however, argued that the Corollary simply asserted U.S. domination in that area, essentially making them a “hemispheric policeman.”

Notes

1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc. “Volume 8”. New Encyclopædia Britannica, Fifteenth Ed. p. 269

Monroe Doctrine according to Encarta Online Encyclopedia

Monroe Doctrine

I. Introduction

Monroe Doctrine, statement of United States policy on the activities and rights of European powers in the western hemisphere. It was made by President James Monroe in his seventh annual address to the Congress of the United States on December 2, 1823; it eventually became one of the foundations of U.S. policy in Latin America. Because it was not supported by congressional legislation or affirmed in international law, Monroe”s statement initially remained only a declaration of policy; its increasing use and popularity elevated it to a principle, specifically termed the Monroe Doctrine after the mid-1840s.

II. Background

The Monroe Doctrine was developed because the United States and Britain were concerned over the possibility of European colonial expansion in the Americas. Britain feared that Spain would attempt to reclaim its former colonies, which had recently gained independence. This would have caused Britain”s trade with these new nations to decline. The United States wanted to ensure that no European nations would attempt further colonialization in the western hemisphere. The British foreign minister George Canning suggested a joint venture with the United States to preserve the interests of both nations. However, John Quincy Adams, the secretary of state, convinced President Monroe that the United States should develop its own policy which would safeguard U.S. interests independent of Britain. Why, Adams asked, should the United States appear “as a cockboat in the wake of a British man-of-war?”

III. The Original Statement

In his two most notable pronouncements, Monroe asserted that European powers could no longer colonize the American continents and that they should not interfere with the newly independent Spanish American republics. He specifically warned Europeans against attempting to impose monarchy on independent American nations but added that the United States would not interfere in existing European colonies or in Europe itself. The last point reaffirmed George Washington”s Farewell Address in 1796, in which he urged the United States to avoid entangling alliances; however, the Monroe Doctrine did not represent an isolationist policy.

By thus separating Europe from America, Monroe emphasized the existence of distinct American, and specifically U.S., interests. He rejected the European political system of monarchy, believing that no American nation would adopt it and that its presence anywhere in the western hemisphere endangered the peace and safety of the young United States. He also implied that the United States alone should complete the remaining settlement of North America.

Despite the boldness of his assertions, Monroe provided no means to ensure the enforcement of his ideas. The United States alone would not have been able to uphold this policy, but Monroe knew that Britain, with its powerful navy, also opposed European intervention in Spain”s struggle to restore its colonies.

IV. Further Development in the 19th Century

As far as the United States was concerned, the Monroe Doctrine meant little until the 1840s, when presidents John Tyler and then James Polk used it to justify U.S. expansion. In 1845 Polk invoked the doctrine against British threats in California and Oregon, as Tyler had done in 1842 against French and British efforts to prevent the U.S. annexation of Texas. In 1848 Polk warned that European involvement in the Yucatán could cause the United States to take control of the region. Despite Polk”s use of the doctrine and its increasing popularity in the 1850s, the American Civil War greatly reduced its effectiveness during the 1860s; hence, Spain”s reacquisition of the Dominican Republic (1861) and France”s intervention in Mexico (1862-1867) went largely unopposed.

During the 1870s and 1880s the Monroe Doctrine took on new meaning. The United States began to interpret it both as prohibiting the transfer of American territory from one European power to another, and as granting the United States exclusive control over any canal connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans through Central America. The latter claim was recognized by Britain in the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty in 1901. The United States continued to expand the meaning of the doctrine when President Grover Cleveland successfully pressured Britain in 1895 to submit its boundary dispute with Venezuela to arbitration.

V. The Monroe Doctrine in the 20th Century

In 1904 President Theodore Roosevelt claimed, in what became known as the Roosevelt Corollary, that the United States could intervene in any Latin American nation guilty of internal or external misconduct. Roosevelt”s statement was precipitated by Germany, Britain, and Italy, which were trying to force Venezuela to repay debts to those countries. Roosevelt involved the United States in settling the matter. The corollary was part of President Roosevelt”s address to Congress that year. Roosevelt”s corollary to the Monroe Doctrine set a precedent and therefore justified subsequent U.S. intervention in Caribbean states during the administrations of Presidents William Taft and Woodrow Wilson. By the 1920s Latin American countries were protesting U.S. involvement.

In the 1920s and the 1930s, the United States reduced the doctrine”s scope by favoring action in concert with the other American republics. The Platt Amendment, which was part of the U.S. treaty with Cuba in 1903 and which provided for U.S. involvement in the rule of Cuba, was revoked in 1934. This emphasis on acting with other nations, or Pan-Americanism, continued during and after World War II with the Act of Chapultepec (1945) and the Rio Pact (1947), which declared that an attack on one American nation was an attack on all. The formation of the Organization of American States in 1948 was designed to achieve the aims of the Monroe Doctrine through Pan-Americanism. Subsequently, however, fear of Communism in Latin America prompted the United States to return to unilateral actions against Guatemala (1954), Cuba (1961), and the Dominican Republic (1965), without consulting its Latin American allies.

The administration of U.S. President Ronald Reagan (1981-1989) openly espoused the Monroe Doctrine once again as it resisted Communism in the Americas. This reaffirmed the original intent of the Monroe Doctrine to prevent European expansion in the Americas. Despite this position, Reagan supported Britain”s claim to the Falkland Islands off the coast of Argentina in 1982.

VI. Effect

As a component of foreign policy, the Monroe Doctrine has had considerable effect and has had strong support in the United States, in part because it has promoted U.S. interests. The doctrine has served other American nations, too, particularly because it asserts their right to independence. Because the doctrine as originally formulated made no clear distinction between the interests of the United States and those of its neighbors, however, the United States has used it to justify intervention in the internal affairs of other American nations. Given growing U.S. anxiety about the unstable politics of Latin American countries, intervention has been especially prevalent and controversial in the 20th century.

Source: “Monroe Doctrine,” Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia. Contributed By Randall Shrock, Ph.D.
Professor of History, Earlham College.

Further Reading

  • Adams, J. Q., ‘Memoirs’ (Vol. VI, 163; 177-179; 186-216);
  • Blakeslee, W., ‘Latin America’ (1914);
  • Channing, Hart and Turner, ‘Guide to the Study of American History’ (1912);
  • Ford, W. C. (in American Historical Review, Vol. VII, p. 676; Vol. VIII, 28);
  • Hart, A. B., ‘The Monroe Doctrine, An Interpretation’ (1916);
  • Henderson, J. B., ‘American Diplomatic Questions’ (1901);
  • Kraus, ‘Die Monroedoktrin’ (1913);
  • Moore, John Bassett, ‘Digest of International Law’ (1906);
  • Paxson, F. L., ‘Independence of the South American Republics’ (1903);
  • Polk, J. K., ‘Diary of James K. Polk’ (1910);
  • Reddaway, W. F., ‘The Monroe Doctrine’ (1898);
  • Richardson, ‘Messages and Papers of the Presidents’ (1896-99);
  • Roosevelt, Theodore, ‘Theodore Roosevelt : An Autobiography’ (New York 1913);
  • Rush, ‘Residence at the Court of London’ (1855);
  • Sherrill, ‘The Monroe Doctrine’ (1916).
  • “Present Status of the Monroe Doctrine,” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 54 (1914): pp 1–129.
  • Bemis, Samuel Flagg. John Quincy Adams and the Foundations of American Foreign Policy (1949)
  • Dozer, Donald. The Monroe Doctrine: Its Modern Significance. New York: Knopf, 1965.
  • Lawson, Leonard Axel. The Relation of British Policy to the Declaration of the Monroe Doctrine, (1922)
  • May, Ernest R. The Making of the Monroe Doctrine. (Harvard University Press, 1975)
  • Meiertöns, Heiko. The Doctrines of US Security Policy – An Evaluation under International Law, (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
  • Merk, Frederick. The Monroe Doctrine and American Expansionism, 1843–1849. (1966).
  • Murphy, Gretchen. Hemispheric Imaginings: The Monroe Doctrine and Narratives of U.S. Empire. Duke University Press, 2005.
  • Perkins, Dexter. The Monroe Doctrine, 1823–1826. 3 vols. 1927.
  • Sexton, Jay. The Monroe Doctrine: Empire and Nation in Nineteenth-Century America (Hill & Wang; 2011) 290 pages;
  • Gaddis Smith. The Last Years of the Monroe Doctrine, 1945–1993. New York: Hill and Wang, 1994

Monroe Doctrine (1823)

The Monroe Doctrine was articulated in President James Monroe’s seventh annual message to Congress on December 2, 1823. The European powers, according to Monroe, were obligated to respect the Western Hemisphere as the United States’ sphere of interest.

President James Monroe’s 1823 annual message to Congress contained the Monroe Doctrine, which warned European powers not to interfere in the affairs of the Western Hemisphere.

Understandably, the United States has always taken a particular interest in its closest neighbors – the nations of the Western Hemisphere. Equally understandably, expressions of this concern have not always been favorably regarded by other American nations.

The Monroe Doctrine is the best known U.S. policy toward the Western Hemisphere. Buried in a routine annual message delivered to Congress by President James Monroe in December 1823, the doctrine warns European nations that the United States would not tolerate further colonization or puppet monarchs. The doctrine was conceived to meet major concerns of the moment, but it soon became a watchword of U.S. policy in the Western Hemisphere.

The Monroe Doctrine was invoked in 1865 when the U.S. government exerted diplomatic and military pressure in support of the Mexican President Benito Juárez. This support enabled Juárez to lead a successful revolt against the Emperor Maximilian, who had been placed on the throne by the French government.

Almost 40 years later, in 1904, European creditors of a number of Latin American countries threatened armed intervention to collect debts. President Theodore Roosevelt promptly proclaimed the right of the United States to exercise an “international police power” to curb such “chronic wrongdoing.” As a result, U. S. Marines were sent into Santo Domingo in 1904, Nicaragua in 1911, and Haiti in 1915, ostensibly to keep the Europeans out. Other Latin American nations viewed these interventions with misgiving, and relations between the “great Colossus of the North” and its southern neighbors remained strained for many years.

In 1962, the Monroe Doctrine was invoked symbolically when the Soviet Union began to build missile-launching sites in Cuba. With the support of the Organization of American States, President John F. Kennedy threw a naval and air quarantine around the island. After several tense days, the Soviet Union agreed to withdraw the missiles and dismantle the sites. Subsequently, the United States dismantled several of its obsolete air and missile bases in Turkey.

(Information excerpted from Milestone Documents [Washington, DC: The National Archives and Records Administration, 1995] pp. 26º29′)

Monroe Doctrine (1823) is one of the 100 Most U.S. Influential Documents

Source: The People’s Vote, National Archives of the United States.

Theodore Roosevelt’s Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine (1905)

In his annual messages to Congress in 1904 and 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt expanded the Monroe Doctrine. The corollary stated that not only were the nations of the Western Hemisphere not open to colonization by European powers, but that the United States had the responsibility to preserve order and protect life and property in those countries.

European intervention in Latin America (see the Platt Amendment) resurfaced as an issue in U.S. foreign policy when European governments began to use force to pressure several Latin American countries to repay their debts. For example, British, German, and Italian gunboats blockaded Venezuela’s ports in 1902 when the Venezuelan government defaulted on its debts to foreign bondholders. Many Americans worried that European intervention in Latin America would undermine their country’s traditional dominance in the region.

To keep other powers out and ensure financial solvency, President Theodore Roosevelt issued his corollary. “Chronic wrongdoing . . . may in America, as elsewhere, ultimately require intervention by some civilized nation,” he announced in his annual message to Congress in December 1904, “and in the Western Hemisphere the adherence of the United States to the Monroe Doctrine may force the United States, however reluctantly, in flagrant cases of such wrongdoing or impotence, to the exercise of an international police power.”

Roosevelt tied his policy to the Monroe Doctrine, and it was also consistent with his foreign policy of “walk softly, but carry a big stick.” Roosevelt stated that in keeping with the Monroe Doctrine, the United States was justified in exercising “international police power” to put an end to chronic unrest or wrongdoing in the Western Hemisphere. This so-called Roosevelt Corollary-a corollary is an extension of a previous idea-to the Monroe Doctrine contained a great irony. The Monroe Doctrine had been sought to prevent European intervention in the Western Hemisphere, but now the Roosevelt Corollary justified American intervention throughout the Western Hemisphere. In 1934, Franklin D. Roosevelt renounced interventionism and established his Good Neighbor policy within the Western Hemisphere.

Theodore Roosevelt’s Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine (1905) is one of the 100 Most U.S. Influential Documents

Source: The People’s Vote, National Archives of the United States.

Monroe Doctrine: Richardson, Messages and Papers of the Presidents 207 (1823)

United States Constitution

According to the Encyclopedia of the American Constitution, about its article titled 516 MONROE DOCTRINE 2 Richardson, Messages and Papers of the Presidents 207 (1823) The United States, the first true revolutionary nation, became, in 1823, the guardian of the emerging revolutionary states of the New World. The American constitutional ideal of republican, limited government, founded on
(read more about Constitutional law entries here).

Some Constitutional Law Popular Entries

Introduction to MONROE DOCTRINE: (1823)

In the context of the legal history: American foreign policy espoused by President Monroe in response to problems on the northwest coast of America and the fear of European colonization of Latin America. The Russians had long visited the northwest coast for fishing and resources. While in Europe the creation of the Holy Alliance gave the United States reason to fear possible European intervention in Latin American affairs. The Doctrine had four parts: a. The American continents would no longer be considered open for European colonization b. Americans would consider any European forms of government forced upon a nation in the Americas as potentially threatening to the stability of the hemisphere c. The United States would not interfere with existing European colonies d. The United States would not interfere in European affairs or conflicts

Monroe Doctrine in the U.S. Legal History

Summary

In this 1823 statement of American foreign policy, President James Monroe declared that the United States would not allow Euro
pean powers to create new colonies in the Western Hemisphere or to expand the boundaries of existing colonies.

Resources

In the context of the legal history:

See Also

  • International Treaties
  • Multilateral Treaties

Posted

in

, , ,

by

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *