The positives of war may seem very minute, but its effects are everlasting. One of those everlasting effects came from the Spanish American war. The war had occurred during the term of William Mckinley when imperialism was highly disputed. The Spanish American war was a 5 month war during 1898 between America and Spain over the control of Cuba. Before the war, the us battles were fought to honor national security or Manifest destiny, as it was believed that God wanted Americans to expand. The U.S. was still a isolated nation. After Mckinley’s death, President Roosevelt took to the office and pushed for more foreign interactions. The Spanish American War was a turning point in the American Foreign Policy as the nation moved away from its previous …show more content…
He had an assertive approach to Latin America and the Caribbeans, which can often be characterized as the “Big Stick”. The Monroe Doctrine itself was established in 1823, and it was essentially passive. It had asked that Europeans not increase their influence or recolonize any part of the Western Hemisphere. During the pre-war era, the U.S. was much more confident in comparison to the previous years. In the early 1900s, Roosevelt became worried that Venezuela could again be invaded by the European powers. The Roosevelt Corollary was created in 1904. It had said that the United States would intervene if a European nation had threatened to take over a country part of the Western Hemisphere. Afterwards military force was used to restore internal stability to nations in the region. Roosevelt had even specified, “exercise international police power in, flagrant cases of such wrongdoing or impotence.” Before the Spanish American war The U.S. was in an era better known as the Gilded age. Domestic concerns prevented the U.S. from becoming involved in foreign affairs. The nationʼs foreign policy was simple, to be friendly with all nations. After the war however, the U.S. was willing to act as the regional …show more content…
After the war Spain ceded its longstanding colony of the Philippines to the United States in the Treaty of Paris. Treaty of Paris stated that the US would gain control of the Philippine Islands for no more than $20 million. Merchants and investors saw new opportunities from having access to Chinese ports. Many thought that with the protective tariff, the Philippines Would have to buy U.S. goods, benefiting its markets. The people of Philippine, however, wanted independence rather than being ruled by another nation. On February 4, 1899, fighting broke out between American forces and the Filipino. This was a mistake for the Philippines as they had to face against the better-trained and equipped American troops. The war was brutal on both sides. The U.S. government hoped to expand their power overseas in Asia, civilize the Filipinos, and spread “democracy”. Roosevelt believed that pursuing these aggressive foreign controls would mean moving away from isolationism and towards achieving his "big-stick" policy. Ultimately, the United States' policies in the Philippines and the resulting war marked the beginning of imperialistic views and policies toward foreign nations. The U.S. foreign policies with the Philippines sought to civilize the nation. This concept had never been attempted before the Spanish American
According to the United States, democracy and Christianity were principal elements of a successful society. During the end of the eighteen-hundreds and throughout the beginning of the nineteen-hundreds, America tried to colonize and reform less fortunate nations. Following a social-Darwinist point of view, Americans took their “God-given” superiority to those who were incapable of establishing their own self-government (Doc. H). After much debate, American foreign policy towards the Philippines and Cuba was that it is our duty to rule them until they could rule themselves. We pledged to save the indigenous people from their savage, bloody, and corrupt ways of life. President McKinley’s foreign policy towards the Philippines stated that “they would soon have anarchy and misrule…there was nothing left to do but take them all, educate the Filipinos, and uplift and civilize them” (Doc. A).
Throughout the course of history, the United States has remained consistent with its national interest by taking many different actions in foreign policy. There have been both immediate and long term results of these actions. Foreign policy is the United States policy that defines how we deal with other countries economically and politically. It is made by congress, the president, and the people. Some of the motivations for United States foreign policy are national security, economics, and idealism. The United States entry into World War I in 1917 and the escalation of the Vietnam War in 1964 and the both had great impact on the United States.
The Spanish-American War was known as the beginning process to the United States establishing itself as a world super power. This would be the beginning to becoming a strong and powerful Empire. This process to building a powerful Empire is something that America has built up for hundreds of years.
The Spanish-American War began as a humanitarian effort to free Cuba from Spain’s colonial grasp and ended with the United States itself acquiring territory overseas and fighting a dirty guerrilla war with Filipino nationalists who, like the Cubans, sought independence. Behind the contradiction stood the twin pillars of American foreign policy: The Monroe Doctrine made Spain’s presence in Cuba unacceptable, and U.S. determination to keep open the door to Asia made the Philippines attractive as a stepping-stone to China.
During Roosevelt’s time in office, he strengthened the United States’ ties to countries around the world. T.R. was a foreign-policy activist. He involved himself in the relations between the Dominican Republic and the European nations that the country owed money to. The president was afraid that European powers would start to collect their money by using force and Roosevelt didn’t want that to happen in Latin America. He asserted the United States’ power in the Western hemisphere by creating what is known as the ‘Roosevelt Corollary’ in 1904. This corollary states that “although the United States had not territorial ambitions in this hemisphere, cases of “chronic wrongdoing” on the part of a Latin American country that might invite occupation by a European
The Spanish-American war consisted of a series of influential battles that pitted America and many of Spain’s colonies against Spanish rule, and ended with Spain losing its colonies and America gaining control over more and more land. In 1898, America joined a war being pit against Spain to force the Spanish to relinquish all control of their colonies, including Guam, Puerto Rico, and Cuba. This same war ended only a few months later, with Spain suffering huge losses and America gaining money and territories. The Spanish American war could be split into three main points of interest: How and why the Spanish American war started, The battles of Manila, Santiago de Cuba, Asomante, and Las Guasimas ( And the Rough Riders) , and the aftermath of the war. One of the most interesting territories was Cuba. Although the Spanish american war was not a long and costly war, it changed many people's lives indefinitely.
Another victory through the Treaty of Paris was the possession of the Philippines. Though the Filipino independence leader Emilio Aguinaldo had aided in the defeat of Spain in 1898, USA refused independence to the Islands and a vicious three year war ensued. A civil government was created after the capture of Aguinaldo under William Taft and this showed a drastic change in American foreign policy. They could no longer justify interference with the excuse of the islands being within its sphere of influence but McKinley argued that America had the role to “uplift and civilize and christianize [Filipinos] as our fellow-men for whom Christ also died." McKinley was either unaware or simply chose not to inform the people that, except for some Muslim tribesmen in the south, the Filipinos were Roman Catholics, and, therefore, already Christians. In reality, the annexation of the Philippines was the centerpiece of the "large policy" pushed by the imperialist cabal to enlist the United States in the ranks of the great powers.
America's short war with Spain in 1898 was the nation's first step on the pathway to becoming a world power. The U.S. victory brought with it the unintended possession of the Philippines and a vested interest in the politics of the Pacific region that would ultimately lead to conflict with Japan. As an immediate outcome of the war, America found itself embroiled in an insurgency in the Philippines that closely mimicked the conflict in Vietnam over 60 years later.
The Spanish-American war was an important turning point of both sides. The U.S. became a recognized world power. They came out of the war “with far-flung overseas possessions and a new stake in international politics.” All of this would eventually lead to the U.S. playing a determining role in Europe’s affairs and the rest of the planet. Spain was also affected and changed. The war freed them from imperial ideology. It allowed Spain to look to their future for the first time and consider, on their own terms, the knowledge of its historical being and it development. In a way, the was also liberated
The Spanish-American War was in 1898. It was an issue between the United States and Spain. The war began in the Cuban struggle for independence from Spain, which began in February 1895. Spain’s harsh measures to stop the rebellion were represented for the U.S. public by many newspapers, and American sympathy for the rebels rose. Spain announced an armistice on April 9 and speeded up its new program.
The Spanish-American war occurred in 1898 between the United States and Spain where the U. S. interrupted Cuba’s struggle for independence which resulted into the Philippine revolution. Some historians explain that the war publicized by the Hearst and Pulitzer newspapers which blame the sinking of the ship U. S. Maine on Spain, which had been sent to protect America’s interest and Americans living there. There was rising pressure on Congress to push the President to retaliate and go to war with Spain, but the main reason was for Cuba to gain their independence from the Spanish colonization. By defending their move they said that Spain attacked them first. The U. S. came out by using strategy to impose a naval blockade of Cuba and attack the Spanish Navy in the Philippines which was successful. (America goes to war, 2016). The war ended as a result of a treaty signed in Paris which allowed the U. S. to have provisional authority over Cuba took over Guam, Puerto Rico and purchased the Philippine Islands for $20,000,000. (America as World Power, 2016) The U.S. emerged from that war as a world power.
In 1904, President Theodore Roosevelt issued the Roosevelt Corollary, an extension of the doctrine. It proclaimed that if someone or something posed a threat to the United States’ economic interests in Latin America, it had a right to intervene. Document G is an excerpt from Roosevelt’s annual message to Congress, given on December 6, 1904. He stated that the United States, as an independent nation, must exercise its power on behalf of humanity as a whole. Consequently, by acquiring Cuba from Spain, interfering in the Venezuelan boundary dispute, building the Panama Canal, and enacting the Open Door Policy in China, the United States had made good use of its independence. Document E is excerpted from one of Roosevelt’s speeches, called “The Strenuous Life,” which was given to Chicago business owners in 1899, a year after the official end of the Spanish-American War. It discusses the annexation of the Philippines and portrays the Filipinos as incapable of establishing their own form of government. Nevertheless, overthrowing Spanish misrule was not enough; it was the United States’ duty to protect their “little brown brothers” (as William H. Taft liked to refer to the Filipinos). The Jones Act eventually granted the Philippines territorial status and promised independence as soon as stable government was
At the time of the Spanish American War the United States went from relative isolation to increased global involvement because of 1. The spirit of the American people captured by the idea of the frontier and, 2. The belief it was the duty of America to maintain peace of all nations. The consequences of this increased global involvement on American Society was 3. The clashing views of the imperialist and anti-imperialist parties.
The Roosevelt Corollary greatly affected American foreign policy. It was in sharp contrast to the Monroe Doctrine, put in place to stop foreign intervention with the American continents. In 1823 President Monroe implemented US policy that stated European powers were not allowed to colonize or interfere with the newly budding United States or the Americas. In 1904 President Roosevelt expanded upon this policy in response to European intervention with Latin America. This policy became known as the Roosevelt Corollary. The document echoed the style of leadership President Roosevelt became synonymous with. This more aggressive form of policy became known as Big Stick Diplomacy. Foreign policy in the United States would forever be
"American imperialism in 1898 was not a sudden abandonment of anti-colonial tradition but was a logical extension of commercial expansion, something the US had been doing throughout its history" (SparkNotes: The Spanish American War, 1898-1901,: Effects of the Treaty). President McKinley was not interested in wars of conquest or of territorial aggression. His interest in expansion was "to make the United States first in international commerce and as a means to implement its humanitarian and democratic goals" (Faragher, J., Buhle, M. J., & Armitage, S. H. ,2008, Out of Many, A History of the American People, 6th ed., Vol. 2, p. 561). McKinley would eventually be forced to act in a humanitarian effort for the people of Cuba and to protect