Empire and the People
Excerpted from a
"People's History of the United States"
By Howard Zinn
Theodore Roosevelt
wrote to a friend in the year 1897: "In strict confidence . . . I
should welcome almost any war, for I think this country needs one."
The year of the
massacre at Wounded Knee, 1890, it was officially declared by the
Bureau of the Census that the internal frontier was closed. The
profit system, with its natural tendency for expansion, had already
begun to look overseas. The severe depression that began in 1893
strengthened an idea developing within the political and financial
elite of the country: that overseas markets for American goods might
relieve the problem of underconsumption at home and prevent the
economic crises that in the 1890s brought class war.
And would not a
foreign adventure deflect some of the rebellious energy that went
into strikes and protest movements toward an external enemy? Would
it not unite people with government, with the armed forces, instead
of against them? This was probably not a conscious plan among most
of the elite-but a natural development from the twin drives of
capitalism and nationalism.
Expansion overseas
was not a new idea. Even before the war against Mexico carried the
United States to the Pacific, the Monroe Doctrine looked southward
into and beyond the Caribbean. Issued in 1823 when the countries of
Latin America were winning independence from Spanish control, it
made plain to European nations that the United States considered
Latin America its sphere of influence. Not long after, some
Americans began thinking into the Pacific: of Hawaii, Japan, and the
great markets of China.
There was more than
thinking; the American armed forces had made forays overseas. A
State Department list, "Instances of the Use of United States Armed
Forces Abroad 1798-1945" (presented by Secretary of State Dean Rusk
to a Senate committee in 1962 to cite precedents for the use of
armed force against Cuba), shows 103 interventions in the affairs of
other countries between 1798 and 1895. A sampling from the list,
with the exact description given by the State Department:
1852-53 --
Argentina. Marines were landed and maintained in Buenos Aires to
protect American interests during a revolution.
1853 -- Nicaragua-to
protect American lives and interests during political disturbances.
1853-54 -- Japan-The "Opening of Japan" and the Perry Expedition.
[The State Department does not give more details, but this involved
the use of warships to force Japan to open its ports to the United
States.]
1853-54 -- Ryukyu
and Bonin Islands-Commodore Perry on three visits before going to
Japan and while waiting for a reply from Japan made a naval
demonstration, landing marines twice, and secured a coaling
concession from the ruler of Naha on Okinawa. He also demonstrated
in the Bonin Islands. All to secure facilities for commerce.
1854 --
Nicaragua-San Juan del Norte [Greytown was destroyed to avenge an
insult to the American Minister to Nicaragua.]
1855 -- Uruguay-U.S.
and European naval forces landed to protect American interests
during an attempted revolution in Montevideo.
1859 -- China-For
the protection of American interests in Shanghai.
1860 -- Angola,
Portuguese West Africa-To protect American lives and property at
Kissembo when the natives became troublesome.
1893 --
Hawaii-Ostensibly to protect American lives and property; actually
to promote a provisional government under Sanford B. Dole. This
action was disavowed by the United States.
1894 -- Nicaragua-To
protect American interests at Bluefields following a revolution.
Thus, by the 1890s, there had been much experience in overseas
probes and interventions. The ideology of expansion was widespread
in the upper circles of military men, politicians, businessmen --
and even among some of the leaders of farmers' movements who thought
foreign markets would help them.
Captain A. T. Mahan
of the U.S. navy, a popular propagandist for expansion, greatly
influenced Theodore Roosevelt and other American leaders. The
countries with the biggest navies would inherit the earth, he said.
"Americans must now begin to look outward." Senator Henry Cabot
Lodge of Massachusetts wrote in a magazine article:
In the interests of
our commerce . . . we should build the Nicaragua canal, and for the
protection of that canal and for the sake of our commercial
supremacy in the Pacific we should control the Hawaiian islands and
maintain our influence in Samoa.... and when the Nicaraguan canal is
built, the island of Cuba ... will become a necessity.... The great
nations are rapidly absorbing for their future expansion and their
present defense all the waste places of the earth. It is a movement
which makes for civilization and the advancement of the race. As one
of the great nations of the world the United States must not fall
out of the line of march.
A Washington Post
editorial on the eve of the Spanish-American war:
"A new consciousness
seems to have come upon us-the consciousness of strength-and with it
a new appetite, the yearning to show our strength.... Ambition,
interest, land hunger, pride, the mere joy of fighting, whatever it
may be, we are animated by a new sensation. We are face to face with
a strange destiny. The taste of Empire is in the mouth of the people
even as the taste of blood in the jungle...."
Was that taste in
the mouth of the people through some instinctive lust for aggression
or some urgent self-interest? Or was it a taste (if indeed it
existed) created, encouraged, advertised, and exaggerated by the
millionaire press, the military, the government, the eager-to-please
scholars of the time? Political scientist John Burgess of Columbia
University said the Teutonic and Anglo-Saxon races were
"particularly endowed with the capacity for establishing national
states . . . they are entrusted . . . with the mission of conducting
the political civilization of the modern world." Several years
before his election to the presidency, William McKinley said: "We
want a foreign market for our surplus products." Senator Albert
Beveridge of Indiana in early 1897 declared: "American factories are
making more than the American people can use; American soil is
producing more than they can consume. Fate has written our policy
for us; the trade of the world must and shall be ours." The
Department of State explained in 1898:
It seems to be
conceded that every year we shall be confronted with an increasing
surplus of manufactured goods for sale in foreign markets if
American operatives and artisans are to be kept employed the year
around. The enlargement of foreign consumption of the products of
our mills and workshops has, therefore, become a serious problem of
statesmanship as well as of commerce.
These expansionist
military men and politicians were in touch with one another. One of
Theodore Roosevelt's biographers tells us: "By 1890, Lodge,
Roosevelt, and Mahan had begun exchanging views," and that they
tried to get Mahan off sea duty "so that he could continue full-time
his propaganda for expansion." Roosevelt once sent Henry Cabot Lodge
a copy of a poem by Rudyard Kipling, saying it was "poor poetry, but
good sense from the expansionist standpoint."
When the United
States did not annex Hawaii in 1893 after some Americans (the
combined missionary and pineapple interests of the Dole family) set
up their own government, Roosevelt called this hesitancy "a crime
against white civilization." And he told the Naval War College: "All
the great masterful races have been fighting races.... No triumph of
peace is quite so great as the supreme triumph of war." '
Roosevelt was
contemptuous of races and nations he considered inferior. When a mob
in New Orleans Iynched a number of Italian immigrants, Roosevelt
thought the United States should offer the Italian government some
remuneration, but privately he wrote his sister that he thought the
Iynching was "rather a good thing" and told her he had said as much
at a dinner with "various dago diplomats . . . all wrought up by the
Iynching."
William James, the
philosopher, who became one of the leading anti-imperialists of his
time, wrote about Roosevelt that he "gushes over war as the ideal
condition of human society, for the manly strenuousness which it
involves, and treats peace as a condition of blubberlike and swollen
ignobility, fit only for huckstering weaklings, dwelling in gray
twilight and heedless of the higher life...."
*****
While it was true
that in 1898, 90 percent of American products were sold at home, the
10 percent sold abroad amounted to a billion dollars. Walter Lafeber
writes (The New Empire): "By 1893, American trade exceeded that of
every country in the world except England. Farm products, of course,
especially in the key tobacco, cotton, and wheat areas, had long
depended heavily on international markets for their prosperity." And
in the twenty years up to 1895, new investments by American
capitalists overseas reached a billion dollars. In 1885, the steel
industry's publication Age of Steel wrote that the internal markets
were insufficient and the overproduction of industrial products
"should be relieved and prevented in the future by increased foreign
trade."
Oil became a big
export in the 1880s and 1890s: by 1891, the Rockefeller family's
Standard Oil Company accounted for 90 percent of American exports of
kerosene and controlled 70 percent of the world market. Oil was now
second to cotton as the leading product sent overseas.
*****
Businessmen had been
interested, from the start of the Cuban revolt against Spain, in the
effect on commercial possibilities there. There already was a
substantial economic interest in the island, which President Grover
Cleveland summarized in 1896:
It is reasonably
estimated that at least from $30,000,000 to $50,000,000 of American
capital are invested in the plantations and in railroad, mining, and
other business enterprises on the island. The volume of trade
between the United States and Cuba, which in 1889 amounted to about
$64,000,000, rose in 1893 to about $103,000,000.
Popular support of
the Cuban revolution was based on the thought that they, like the
Americans of 1776, were fighting a war for their own liberation. The
United States government, however, the conservative product of
another revolutionary war, had power and profit in mind as it
observed the events in Cuba. Neither Cleveland, President during the
first years of the Cuban revolt, nor McKinley, who followed,
recognized the insurgents officially as belligerents; such legal
recognition would have enabled the United States to give aid to the
rebels without sending an army. But there may have been fear that
the rebels would win on their own and keep the United States out.
There seems also to
have been another kind of fear. The Cleveland administration said a
Cuban victory might lead to "the establishment of a white and a
black republic," since Cuba had a mixture of the two races. And the
black republic might be dominant. This idea was expressed in 1896 in
an article in The Saturday Review by a young and eloquent
imperialist, whose mother was American and whose father was
English-Winston Churchill. He wrote that while Spanish rule was bad
and the rebels had the support of the people, it would be better for
Spain to keep control:
"A grave danger
represents itself. Two-fifths of the insurgents in the field are
negroes. These men . . would, in the event of success, demand a
predominant share in the government of the country . . . the result
being, after years of fighting, another black republic."
The reference to
"another" black republic meant Haiti, whose revolution against
France in 1803 had led to the first nation run by blacks in the New
World. The Spanish minister to the United States wrote to the U.S.
Secretary of State:
"In this revolution,
the negro element has the most important part. Not only the
principal leaders are colored men, but at least eight-tenths of
their supporters.... and the result of the war, if the Island can be
declared independent, will be a secession of the black element and a
black Republic."
As Philip Foner says
in his two-volume study The Spanish-Cuban American War, "The
McKinley Administration had plans for dealing with the Cuban
situation, but these did not include independence for the island."
He points to the administration's instructions to its minister to
Spain, Stewart Woodford, asking him to try to settle the war because
it "injuriously affects the normal function of business, and tends
to delay the condition of prosperity," but not mentioning freedom
and justice for the Cubans. Foner explains the rush of the McKinley
administration into war (its ultimatum gave Spain little time to
negotiate) by the fact that "if the United States waited too long,
the Cuban revolutionary forces would emerge victorious, replacing
the collapsing Spanish regime."
In February 1898,
the U.S. battleship Maine, in Havana harbor as a symbol of American
interest in the Cuban events, was destroyed by-a mysterious
explosion and sank, with the loss of 268 men. There was no evidence
ever produced on the cause of the explosion, but excitement grew
swiftly in the United States, and McKinley began to move in the
direction of war. Walter Lafeber says:
"The President did
not want war; he had been sincere and tireless in his efforts to
maintain the peace. By mid-March, however, he was beginning to
discover that, although he did not want war, he did want what only a
war could provide; the disappearance of the terrible uncertainty in
American political and economic life, and a solid basis from which
to resume the building of the new American commercial empire."
At a certain point
in that spring, both McKinley and the business community began to
see that their object, to get Spain out of Cuba could not be
accomplished without war, and that their accompanying object, the
securing of American military and economic influence in Cuba, could
not be left to the Cuban rebels, but could be ensured only by U.S.
intervention. The New York Commercial Advertiser, at first against
war, by March 10 asked intervention in Cuba for "humanity and love
of freedom, and above all, the desire that the commerce and industry
of every part of the world shall have full freedom of development in
the whole world's interest."
Before this,
Congress had passed the Teller Amendment, pledging the United States
not to annex Cuba. It was initiated and supported by those people
who were interested in Cuban independence and opposed to American
imperialism, and also by business people who saw the "open door" as
sufficient and military intervention unnecessary. But by the spring
of 1898, the business community had developed a hunger for action.
The Journal of Commerce said: "The Teller amendment . . . must be
interpreted in a sense somewhat different from that which its author
intended it to bear."
There were special
interests who would benefit directly from war. In Pittsburgh, center
of the iron industry, the Chamber of Commerce advocated force, and
the Chattanooga Tradesman said that the possibility of war "has
decidedly stimulated the iron trade." It also noted that "actual war
would very decidedly enlarge the business of transportation." In
Washington, it was reported that a "belligerent spirit" had infected
the Navy Department, encouraged "by the contractors for projectiles,
ordnance, ammunition and other supplies, who have thronged the
department since the destruction of the Maine."
Russell Sage, the banker, said that if war came, "There is no
question as to where the rich men stand." A survey of businessmen
said that John Jacob Astor, William Rockefeller, and Thomas Fortune
Ryan were "feeling militant." And J. P. Morgan believed further talk
with Spain would accomplish nothing.
On March 21, 1898,
Henry Cabot Lodge wrote McKinley a long letter, saying he had talked
with "bankers, brokers, businessmen, editors, clergymen and others"
in Boston, Lynn, and Nahant, and "everybody," including "the most
conservative classes," wanted the Cuban question "solved." Lodge
reported: "They said for business one shock and then an end was
better than a succession of spasms such as we must have if this war
in Cuba went on." On March 25, a telegram arrived at the White House
from an adviser to McKinley, saying: "Big corporations here now
believe we will have war. Believe all would welcome it as relief to
suspense."
Two days after
getting this telegram, McKinley presented an ultimatum to Spain,
demanding an armistice. He said nothing about independence for Cuba.
A spokesman for the Cuban rebels, part of a group of Cubans in New
York, interpreted this to mean the U.S. simply wanted to replace
Spain. He responded:
"In the face of the
present proposal of intervention without previous recognition of
independence, it is necessary for us to go a step farther and say
that we must and will regard such intervention as nothing less than
a declaration of war by the United States against the Cuban
revolutionists...."
Indeed, when
McKinley asked Congress for war on April 11, he did not recognize
the rebels as belligerents or ask for Cuban independence. Nine days
later, Congress, by joint resolution, gave McKinley the power to
intervene. When American forces moved into Cuba, the rebels welcomed
them, hoping the Teller Amendment would guarantee Cuban
independence.
Many histories of
the Spanish-American war have said that "public opinion" in the
United States led McKinley to declare war on Spain and send forces
to Cuba. True, certain influential newspapers had been pushing hard,
even hysterically. And many Americans, seeing the aim of
intervention as Cuban independence-and with the Teller Amendment as
guarantee of this intention-supported the idea. But would McKinley
have gone to war because of the press and some portion of the public
(we had no public opinion surveys at that time) without the urging
of the business community? Several years after the Cuban war, the
chief of the Bureau of Foreign Commerce of the Department of
Commerce wrote about that period:
"Underlying the
popular sentiment, which might have evaporated in time, which forced
the United States to take up arms against Spanish rule in Cuba, were
our economic relations with the West Indies and the South American
republics.... The Spanish-American War was but an incident of a
general movement of expansion which had its roots in the changed
environment of an industrial capacity far beyond our domestic powers
of consumption. It was seen to be necessary for us not only to find
foreign purchasers for our goods, but to provide the means of making
access to foreign markets easy, economical and safe. "
American labor
unions had sympathy for the Cuban rebels as soon as the insurrection
against Spain began in 1895. But they opposed American expansionism.
Both the Knights of Labor and the American Federation of Labor spoke
against the idea of annexing Hawaii, which McKinley proposed in
1897. Despite the feeling for the Cuban rebels, a resolution calling
for U.S. intervention was defeated at the 1897 convention of the
AFL. Samuel Gompers of the AFL wrote to a friend: "The sympathy of
our movement with Cuba is genuine, earnest, and sincere, but this
does not for a moment imply that we are committed to certain
adventurers who are apparently suffering from Hysteria...."
When the explosion
of the Maine in February led to excited calls for war in the press,
the monthly journal of the International Association of Machinists
agreed it was a terrible disaster, but it noted that the deaths of
workers in industrial accidents drew no such national clamor. It
pointed to the Lattimer Massacre of September 10, 1897, during a
coal strike in Pennsylvania. Miners marching on a highway to the
Lattimer mine-Austrians, Hungarians, Italians, Germans-who had
originally been imported as strikebreakers but then organized
themselves, refused to disperse, whereupon the sheriff and his
deputies opened fire, killing nineteen of them, most shot in the
back, with no outcry in the press. The labor journal said that the
"... carnival of
carnage that takes place every day, month and year in the realm of
industry, the thousands of useful lives that are annually sacrificed
to the Moloch of greed, the blood tribute paid by labor to
capitalism, brings forth no shout for vengeance and reparation....
Death comes in thousands of instances in mill and mine, claims his
victims, and no popular uproar is heard. "
The official organ
of the Connecticut AFL, The Craftsman, also warned about the
hysteria worked up by the sinking of the Maine:
"A gigantic . . .
and cunningly-devised scheme is being worked ostensibly to place the
United States in the front rank as a naval and military power. The
real reason is that the capitalists will have the whole thing and,
when any workingmen dare to ask for the living wage . . . they will
be shot down like dogs in the streets."
Some unions, like
the United Mine Workers, called for U.S. intervention after the
sinking of the Maine. But most were against war. The treasurer of
the American Longshoremen's Union, Bolton Hall, wrote "A Peace
Appeal to Labor," which was widely circulated:
"If there is a war,
you will furnish the corpses and the taxes, and others will get the
glory. Speculators will make money out of it-that is, out of you.
Men will get high prices for inferior supplies, leaky boats, for
shoddy clothes and pasteboard shoes, and you will have to pay the
bill, and the only satisfaction you will get is the privilege of
hating your Spanish fellow-workmen, who are really your brothers and
who have had as little to do with the wrongs of Cuba as you have."
Socialists opposed
the war. One exception was the Jewish Daily Forward. The People,
newspaper of the Socialist Labor party, called the issue of Cuban
freedom "a pretext" and said the government wanted war to "distract
the attention of the workers from their real interests." The Appeal
to Reason, another Socialist newspaper, said the movement for war
was "a favorite method of rulers for keeping the people from
redressing domestic wrongs." In the San Francisco Voice of Labor a
Socialist wrote: "It is a terrible thing to think that the poor
workers of this country should be sent to kill and wound the poor
workers of Spain merely because a few leaders may incite them to do
so."
But after war was
declared, Foner says, "the majority of the trade unions succumbed to
the war fever." Samuel Gompers called the war "glorious and
righteous" and claimed that 250,000 trade unionists had volunteered
for military service. The United Mine Workers pointed to higher coal
prices as a result of the war and said: "The coal and iron trades
have not been so healthy for some years past as at present." The war
brought more employment and higher wages, but also higher prices.
Foner says: "Not only was there a startling increase in the cost of
living, but, in the absence of an income tax, the poor found
themselves paying almost entirely for the staggering costs of the
war through increased levies on sugar, molasses, tobacco, and other
taxes.
... " Gompers,
publicly for the war, privately pointed out that the war had led to
a 20 percent reduction of the purchasing power of workers' wages. On
May Day, 1898, the Socialist Labor party organized an antiwar parade
in New York City, but the authorities would not allow it to take
place, while a May Day parade called by the Jewish Daily Forward,
urging Jewish workers to support the war, was permitted. The Chicago
Labor World said: "This has been a poor man's war-paid for by the
poor man. The rich have profited by it, as they always do...."
The Western Labor
Union was founded at Salt Lake City on May 10, 1898, because the AFL
had not organized unskilled workers. It wanted to bring together all
workers "irrespective of occupation, nationality, creed or color"
and "sound the death knell of every corporation and trust that has
robbed the American laborer of the fruits of his toil...." The
union's publication, noting the annexation of Hawaii during the war,
said this proved that "the war which started as one of relief for
the starving Cubans has suddenly changed to one of con quest."
The prediction made
by longshoreman Bolton Hall, of wartime corruption and profiteering,
turned out to be remarkably accurate. Richard Morris's Encyclopedia
of American History gives startling figures:
"Of the more than
274,000 officers and men who served in the army during the
Spanish-American War and the period of demobilization, 5,462 died in
the various theaters of operation and in camps in the U.S. Only 379
of the deaths were battle casualties, the remainder being attributed
to disease and other causes."
The same figures are
given by Walter Millis in his book The Martial Spirit. In the
Encyclopedia they are given tersely, and without mention of the
"embalmed beef" (an army general's term) sold to the army by the
meatpackers-meat preserved with boric acid, nitrate of potash, and
artificial coloring matter.
In May of 1898,
Armour and Company, the big meatpacking company of Chicago, sold the
army 500,000 pounds of beef which had been sent to Liverpool a year
earlier and had been returned. Two months later, an army inspector
tested the Armour meat, which had been stamped and approved by an
inspector of the Bureau of Animal Indus try, and found 751 cases
containing rotten meat. In the first sixty cases he opened, he found
fourteen tins already burst, "the effervescent putrid contents of
which were distributed all over the cases." (The description comes
from the Report of the Commission to Investigate the Conduct of the
War Department in the War with Spain, made to the Senate in 1900.)
Thousands of soldiers got food poisoning. There are no figures on
how many of the five thousand noncombat deaths were caused by that.
The Spanish forces
were defeated in three months, in what John Hay, the American
Secretary of State, later called a "splendid little war." The
American military pretended that the Cuban rebel army did not exist.
When the Spanish surrendered, no Cuban was allowed to confer on the
surrender, or to sign it. General William Shafter said no armed
rebels could enter the capital city of Santiago, and told the Cuban
rebel leader, General Calixto Garcia, that not Cubans, but the old
Spanish civil authorities, would remain in charge of the municipal
offices in Santiago.
American historians
have generally ignored the role of the Cuban rebels in the war;
Philip Foner, in his history, was the first to print Garcia's letter
of protest to General Shafter:
"I have not been
honored with a single word from yourself informing me about the
negotiations for peace or the terms of the capitulation by the
Spaniards. . . . when the question arises of appointing authorities
in Santiago de Cuba . . . I cannot see but with the deepest regret
that such authorities are not elected by the Cuban people, but are
the same ones selected by the Queen of Spain....
A rumor too absurd
to be believed, General, describes the reason of your measures and
of the orders forbidding my army to enter Santiago for fear of
massacres and revenge against the Spaniards. Allow me, sir, to
protest against even the shadow of such an idea. We are not savages
ignoring the rules of civilized warfare. We are a poor, ragged army,
as ragged and poor as was the army of your forefathers in their
noble war for independence...."
Along with the
American army in Cuba came American capital. Foner writes:
"Even before the
Spanish flag was down in Cuba, U.S. business interests set out to
make their influence felt. Merchants, real estate agents, stock
speculators, reckless adventurers, and promoters of all kinds of
get-rich schemes flocked to Cuba by the thousands. Seven syndicates
battled each other for control of the franchises for the Havana
Street Railway, which were finally won by Percival Farquhar,
representing the Wall Street interests of New York. Thus,
simultaneously with the military occupation began . . . commercial
occupation."
The Lumbermen's
Review, spokesman for the lumber industry, said in the midst of the
war: "The moment Spain drops the reigns of government in Cuba . . .
the moment will arrive for American lumber interests to move into
the island for the products of Cuban forests. Cuba still possesses
10,000,000 acres of virgin forest abounding in valuable timber . . .
nearly every foot of which would be saleable in the United States
and bring high prices."
Americans began
taking over railroad, mine, and sugar properties when the war ended.
In a few years, $30 million of American capital was invested. United
Fruit moved into the Cuban sugar industry. It bought 1,900,000 acres
of land for about twenty cents an acre. The American Tobacco Company
arrived. By the end of the occupation, in 1901, Foner estimates that
at least 80 percent of the export of Cuba's minerals were in
American hands, mostly Bethlehem Steel.
During the military
occupation a series of strikes took place. In September 1899, a
gathering of thousands of workers in Havana launched a general
strike for the eight-hour day, saying, ". . . we have determined to
promote the struggle between the worker and the capitalist. For the
workers of Cuba will no longer tolerate remaining in total
subjection." The American General William Ludlow ordered the mayor
of Havana to arrest eleven strike leaders, and U.S. troops occupied
railroad stations and docks. Police moved through the city breaking
up meetings. But the economic activity of the city had come to a
halt. Tobacco workers struck. Printers struck. Bakers went on
strike. Hundreds of strikers were arrested, and some of the
imprisoned leaders were intimidated into calling for an end to the
strike.
The United States
did not annex Cuba. But a Cuban Constitutional Convention was told
that the United States army would not leave Cuba until the Platt
Amendment, passed by Congress in February 1901, was incorporated
into the new Cuban Constitution. This Amendment gave the United
States "the right to intervene for the preservation of Cuban
independence, the maintenance of a government adequate for the
protection of life, property, and individual liberty...." It also
provided for the United States to get coaling or naval stations at
certain specified points.
The Teller Amendment
and the talk of Cuban freedom before and during the war had led many
Americans-and Cubans-to expect genuine independence. The Platt
Amendment was now seen, not only by the radical and labor press, but
by newspapers and groups all over the United States, as a betrayal.
A mass meeting of the American Anti-Imperialist League at Faneuil
Hall in Boston denounced it, ex-governor George Boutwell saying: "In
disregard of our pledge of freedom and sovereignty to Cuba we are
imposing on that island conditions of colonial vassalage."
In Havana, a
torchlight procession of fifteen thousand Cubans marched on the
Constitutional Convention, urging them to reject the Amendment. But
General Leonard Wood, head of the occupation forces, assured
McKinley: "The people of Cuba lend themselves readily to all sorts
of demonstrations and parades, and little significance should be
attached to them."
A committee was
delegated by the Constitutional Convention to reply to the United
States' insistence that the Platt Amendment be included in the
Constitution. The committee report, Penencia a la Convencion, was
written by a black delegate from Santiago. It said:
"For the United
States to reserve to itself the power to determine when this
independence was threatened, and when, therefore, it should
intervene to preserve it, is equivalent to handing over the keys to
our house so that they can enter it at any time, whenever the desire
seizes them, day or night, whether with good or evil design."
And:
"The only Cuban
governments that would live would be those which count on the
support and benevolence of the United States, and the clearest
result of this situation would be that we would only have feeble and
miserable governments . . . condemned to live more attentive to
obtaining the blessings of the United States than to serving and
defending the interests of Cuba...."
The report termed
the request for coaling or naval stations "a mutilation of the
fatherland." It concluded:
"A people occupied
militarily is being told that before consulting their own
government, before being free in their own territory, they should
grant the military occupants who came as friends and allies, rights
and powers which would annul the sovereignty of these very people.
That is the situation created for us by the method which the United
States has just adopted. It could not be more obnoxious and
inadmissible."
With this report,
the Convention overwhelmingly rejected the Platt Amendment.
Within the next
three months, however, the pressure from the United States, the
military occupation, the refusal to allow the Cubans to set up their
own government until they acquiesced, had its effect; the
Convention, after several refusals, adopted the Platt Amendment.
General Leonard Wood wrote in 1901 to Theodore Roosevelt: "There is,
of course, little or no independence left Cuba under the Platt
Amendment."
Cuba was thus
brought into the American sphere ...
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