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Roosevelt Corollary

In the history of United States foreign policy, the Roosevelt Corollary was an addition to the Monroe Doctrine articulated by President Theodore Roosevelt in his State of the Union address in 1904 after the Venezuelan crisis of 1902–1903. The corollary states that the United States could intervene in the internal affairs of Latin American countries if they committed flagrant wrongdoings that "loosened the ties of civilized society".[1]

Political cartoon depicting Theodore Roosevelt using the Monroe Doctrine to keep European powers out of the Dominican Republic.

Roosevelt tied his policy to the Monroe Doctrine, and it was also consistent with his foreign policy included in his Big Stick Diplomacy. 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. President Herbert Hoover in 1930 endorsed the Clark Memorandum that repudiated the Roosevelt Corollary in favor of what was later called the Good Neighbor policy.[2]

Background Edit

The Roosevelt Corollary was articulated in the aftermath of the Venezuela Crisis of 1902–1903. In late 1902, Britain, Germany, and Italy imposed a naval blockade of several months against Venezuela after President Cipriano Castro refused to pay foreign debts and damages suffered by European people in a recent Venezuelan civil war.[3] The dispute was referred to an international court for arbitration, which concluded on 22 February 1904 that the blockading powers involved in the Venezuela crisis were entitled to preferential treatment in the payment of their claims.[3] This left a number of other countries which did not take military action, including the United States, with no recourse. The U.S. disagreed with the outcome in principle, and feared it would encourage future European intervention to gain such advantage.[3] To preclude European intervention, in December the Roosevelt Corollary asserted a right of the United States to intervene in order to "stabilize" the economic affairs of small states in the Caribbean and Central America if they were unable to pay their international debts.[4]

Content of Corollary Edit

Roosevelt's annual message on 6 December 1904, to Congress declared:[1]

All that this country desires is to see the neighboring countries stable, orderly, and prosperous. Any country whose people conduct themselves well can count upon our hearty friendship. If a nation shows that it knows how to act with reasonable efficiency and decency in social and political matters, if it keeps order and pays its obligations, it need fear no interference from the United States. Chronic wrongdoing, or an impotence which results in a general loosening of the ties of civilized society, may in America, as elsewhere, ultimately require intervention by some civilized nation, 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.

While the Monroe Doctrine had warned European powers to keep their hands off countries in the Americas, President Roosevelt was now saying that "since the United States would not permit the European powers to lay their hands on, he had an obligation to do so himself."[5]

Use Edit

Though the Roosevelt Corollary was an addition to the Monroe Doctrine, it could also be seen as a departure. While the Monroe Doctrine said European countries should stay out of Latin America, the Roosevelt Corollary took this further to say the United States had the right to exercise military force in Latin American countries to keep European countries out. Historian Walter LaFeber wrote:

[Roosevelt] essentially turns the Monroe Doctrine on its head and says the Europeans should stay out, but the United States has the right, under the doctrine, to go in to exercise police power to keep the Europeans out of the way. It is a very nice twist on the Monroe Doctrine, and of course, it becomes very, very important because over the next 15 to 20 years, the United States will move into Latin America about a dozen times with military force, to the point where the United States Marines become known in the area as "State Department Troops" because they are always moving in to protect State Department interests and State Department policy in the Caribbean. So what Roosevelt does here, by redefining the Monroe Doctrine, turns out to be very historical, and it leads the United States into a period of confrontation with peoples in the Caribbean and Central America, that was an imperative part of American imperialism.[6]

Roosevelt first used the Corollary to act in the Dominican Republic in 1904, which at the time was severely indebted and becoming a failed state. The United States dispatched two warships and demanded the customs house be turned over to U.S. negotiators, who then used a percentage of the proceeds to pay foreign creditors. This model—in which United States advisors worked to stabilize Latin American nations through temporary protectorates, staving off European action—became known as "dollar diplomacy". The Dominican experiment, like most other "dollar diplomacy" arrangements, proved temporary and untenable, and the United States launched a larger military intervention in 1916 that lasted to 1924.[7]: 371–4 

U.S. Presidents also cited the Roosevelt Corollary as justification for U.S. intervention in Cuba (1906–1909),[8] Nicaragua (1909–1910, 1912–1925 and 1926–1933),[9] Haiti (1915–1934),[9] and the Dominican Republic (1916–1924).[9]

Shift to the "Good Neighbor" policy Edit

In 1928, President Calvin Coolidge issued the Clark Memorandum, often seen as a partial repudiation of the Roosevelt Corollary, which stated that the US did not have the right to intervene when there was a threat by European powers. Herbert Hoover also helped to move the US away from the imperialist tendencies of the Roosevelt Corollary by going on good-will tours, withdrawing troops from Nicaragua and Haiti, and abstaining from intervening in the internal affairs of neighboring countries.[10]

In 1934, President Franklin D. Roosevelt further renounced interventionism and established his "Good Neighbor policy" that led to the annulment of the Platt Amendment by the Treaty of Relations with Cuba in 1934, and the negotiation of compensation for Mexico's nationalization of foreign-owned oil assets in 1938. Indeed, leaving unchallenged the emergence of dictatorships like that of Fulgencio Batista in Cuba,[11] Rafael Leonidas Trujillo in the Dominican Republic, Anastasio Somoza in Nicaragua, and François Duvalier in Haiti were each considered to be "Frankenstein dictators" due to the mishandlings of the American occupations in the countries.[11]

The era of the Good Neighbor policy ended with the start of the Cold War in 1945, as the United States felt there was a greater need to protect the Western Hemisphere from Soviet influence.[12]

In 1954, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles invoked the Monroe Doctrine and the Roosevelt Corollary at the Tenth Pan-American Conference in Caracas, denouncing the intervention of Soviet communism in Guatemala.[13] This was used to justify Operation PBSuccess that deposed the democratically elected president Jacobo Árbenz and installed the military regime of Carlos Castillo Armas, the first in a series of military dictators in the country.[14]

Criticism Edit

The argument made by Mitchener and Weidenmier in 2006[15] in support of the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine has been criticized on the grounds that it "represent[s] the one-sided approach that some scholars bring to the study of imperialistic and hegemonic interventions and also highlight how arguments for the general utility of imperialism are increasingly made and accepted." Christopher Coyne and Stephen Davies argue that a foreign policy modeled on the Roosevelt Corollary leads to negative consequences both in national security terms and in terms of its effect on domestic politics.[16]

Critics, such as linguist Noam Chomsky, have argued that the Roosevelt Corollary was merely a more explicit imperialist threat, building on the Monroe Doctrine, indicating that the US would not only intervene in defense of South America in the face of European imperialism but also use its muscle to obtain concessions and privileges for American corporations.[17] Frenchman Serge Ricard of the University of Paris goes even further and states that the Roosevelt Corollary was not merely an addendum to the earlier Monroe Doctrine through which the US pledged to protect the Americas from European imperialist interventions. Rather, the Roosevelt Corollary was "an entirely new diplomatic tenet that epitomized his 'big stick' approach to foreign policy."[18] In other words, while the Monroe Doctrine sought to bar entry to the European empires, the Roosevelt Corollary arguably indicated the United States' intention to take their place.

See also Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Roosevelt, Theodore (6 December 1904). "Document: Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine". Teaching American History. Ashland University. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  2. ^ Alan McPherson, "Herbert Hoover, Occupation Withdrawal, and the Good Neighbor Policy." Presidential Studies Quarterly 44.4 (2014): 623-639.
  3. ^ a b c Maass, Matthias (2009), Catalyst for the Roosevelt Corollary: Arbitrating the 1902–1903 Venezuela Crisis and Its Impact on the Development of the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, Diplomacy & Statecraft, Volume 20, Issue 3, p383-402
  4. ^ "Digital History". www.digitalhistory.uh.edu. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  5. ^ Bailey, Thomas Andrew. "Roosevelt Launches a Corollary." The American Spirit: Since 1865. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1998. 198. Print.
  6. ^ Theodore Roosevelt, 26th President. Prod. David Grubin. By David Grubin and Geoffrey C. Ward. Perf. Walter LaFeber. David Grubin Productions, Inc., 1996. Transcript
  7. ^ Herring, George C. (2008). From Colony to Superpower: U.S. Foreign Relations Since 1776. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195078220.
  8. ^ Brinkley, Alan. The Unfinished Nation: a Concise History of the American People. Boston: McGraw-Hill, 2008. 596. Print.
  9. ^ a b c Bailey, Thomas Andrew. "A Latin American Protests (1943)." The American Spirit: Since 1865. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1998. 199. Print.
  10. ^ Brinkley, Alan. The Unfinished Nation: a Concise History of the American People. Boston: McGraw-Hill, 2008. 706. Print.
  11. ^ a b American foreign relations: a history. Since 1895, Volume 2, 7th Edition, Wadsworth, pp. 162–168, 2010
  12. ^ "The Good Neighbor Policy: History and Impact". ThoughtCo. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  13. ^ Dickinson Jr., William B. (1960), "Challenged Monroe Doctrine", Editorial Research Reports 1960, CQ Researcher Online, Washington, D.C., United States: CQ Press, pp. 583–602, retrieved 14 February 2023
  14. ^ Alberto Tapia, Andres (Fall 2011). Carlos Castillo Armas, The United States and the 1954 counterrevolution in Guatemala (PDF) (MA thesis). California State University, Sacramento. hdl:10211.9/1455.
  15. ^ Kris James Mitchener & Marc D. Weidenmier, 2005. "Supersanctions and Sovereign Debt Repayment", NBER Working Papers 11472, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
  16. ^ Coyne, Christopher J; Davies, Stephen J (Summer 2007). "Nineteen Public Bads of Empire, Nation Building, and the Like". The Independent Review. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  17. ^ Chomsky, Noam. Hegemony or Survival: America's Quest for Global Dominance. New York: Metropolitan Books, 2004
  18. ^ Ricard, Serge. "The Roosevelt Corollary". Presidential Studies Quarterly 36 (2006) 17–26

General bibliography Edit

  • Coyne, C. J., Davies, S. (2007). "Empire: public Goods and Bads." Econ Journal Watch, 4(1), 3–45.
  • Glickman, Robert Jay. Norteamérica vis-à-vis Hispanoamérica: ¿opposición o asociación? Toronto: Canadian Academy of the Arts, 2005. ISBN 0-921907-09-5.
  • Meiertöns, Heiko (2010). The Doctrines of US Security Policy – An Evaluation under International Law, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-76648-7.
  • Mitchell, Nancy. The Danger of Dreams: German and American Imperialism in Latin America (1999).
  • Mitchener, Kris James, and Marc Weidenmier. "Empire, public goods, and the Roosevelt Corollary", Journal of Economic History (2005) 64#5 pp. 658+
  • Rabe, Stephen G. "Theodore Roosevelt, the Panama Canal and the Roosevelt Corollary: Sphere of Influence Diplomacy", ch. 16 in Serge Ricard, ed., A Companion to Theodore Roosevelt (2011)
  • Ricard, Serge. "The Roosevelt Corollary". Presidential Studies 2006 36(1): 17–26. ISSN 0360-4918 Fulltext: in Swetswise and Ingenta
  • Ricard, Serge. "Theodore Roosevelt: Imperialist or Global Strategist in the New Expansionist Age?" Diplomacy & Statecraft (2008) 19#3 pp. 639–657.
  • Sexton, Jay. The Monroe Doctrine: Empire and Nation in Nineteenth-Century America (Macmillan, 2011.)

External links Edit

  •   Works related to Roosevelt Corollary at Wikisource

roosevelt, corollary, history, united, states, foreign, policy, addition, monroe, doctrine, articulated, president, theodore, roosevelt, state, union, address, 1904, after, venezuelan, crisis, 1902, 1903, corollary, states, that, united, states, could, interve. In the history of United States foreign policy the Roosevelt Corollary was an addition to the Monroe Doctrine articulated by President Theodore Roosevelt in his State of the Union address in 1904 after the Venezuelan crisis of 1902 1903 The corollary states that the United States could intervene in the internal affairs of Latin American countries if they committed flagrant wrongdoings that loosened the ties of civilized society 1 Political cartoon depicting Theodore Roosevelt using the Monroe Doctrine to keep European powers out of the Dominican Republic Roosevelt tied his policy to the Monroe Doctrine and it was also consistent with his foreign policy included in his Big Stick Diplomacy 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 President Herbert Hoover in 1930 endorsed the Clark Memorandum that repudiated the Roosevelt Corollary in favor of what was later called the Good Neighbor policy 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Content of Corollary 3 Use 4 Shift to the Good Neighbor policy 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 Citations 8 General bibliography 9 External linksBackground EditMain article Venezuelan crisis of 1902 1903 The Roosevelt Corollary was articulated in the aftermath of the Venezuela Crisis of 1902 1903 In late 1902 Britain Germany and Italy imposed a naval blockade of several months against Venezuela after President Cipriano Castro refused to pay foreign debts and damages suffered by European people in a recent Venezuelan civil war 3 The dispute was referred to an international court for arbitration which concluded on 22 February 1904 that the blockading powers involved in the Venezuela crisis were entitled to preferential treatment in the payment of their claims 3 This left a number of other countries which did not take military action including the United States with no recourse The U S disagreed with the outcome in principle and feared it would encourage future European intervention to gain such advantage 3 To preclude European intervention in December the Roosevelt Corollary asserted a right of the United States to intervene in order to stabilize the economic affairs of small states in the Caribbean and Central America if they were unable to pay their international debts 4 Content of Corollary EditRoosevelt s annual message on 6 December 1904 to Congress declared 1 All that this country desires is to see the neighboring countries stable orderly and prosperous Any country whose people conduct themselves well can count upon our hearty friendship If a nation shows that it knows how to act with reasonable efficiency and decency in social and political matters if it keeps order and pays its obligations it need fear no interference from the United States Chronic wrongdoing or an impotence which results in a general loosening of the ties of civilized society may in America as elsewhere ultimately require intervention by some civilized nation 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 While the Monroe Doctrine had warned European powers to keep their hands off countries in the Americas President Roosevelt was now saying that since the United States would not permit the European powers to lay their hands on he had an obligation to do so himself 5 Use EditSee also Foreign interventions by the United States Though the Roosevelt Corollary was an addition to the Monroe Doctrine it could also be seen as a departure While the Monroe Doctrine said European countries should stay out of Latin America the Roosevelt Corollary took this further to say the United States had the right to exercise military force in Latin American countries to keep European countries out Historian Walter LaFeber wrote Roosevelt essentially turns the Monroe Doctrine on its head and says the Europeans should stay out but the United States has the right under the doctrine to go in to exercise police power to keep the Europeans out of the way It is a very nice twist on the Monroe Doctrine and of course it becomes very very important because over the next 15 to 20 years the United States will move into Latin America about a dozen times with military force to the point where the United States Marines become known in the area as State Department Troops because they are always moving in to protect State Department interests and State Department policy in the Caribbean So what Roosevelt does here by redefining the Monroe Doctrine turns out to be very historical and it leads the United States into a period of confrontation with peoples in the Caribbean and Central America that was an imperative part of American imperialism 6 Roosevelt first used the Corollary to act in the Dominican Republic in 1904 which at the time was severely indebted and becoming a failed state The United States dispatched two warships and demanded the customs house be turned over to U S negotiators who then used a percentage of the proceeds to pay foreign creditors This model in which United States advisors worked to stabilize Latin American nations through temporary protectorates staving off European action became known as dollar diplomacy The Dominican experiment like most other dollar diplomacy arrangements proved temporary and untenable and the United States launched a larger military intervention in 1916 that lasted to 1924 7 371 4 U S Presidents also cited the Roosevelt Corollary as justification for U S intervention in Cuba 1906 1909 8 Nicaragua 1909 1910 1912 1925 and 1926 1933 9 Haiti 1915 1934 9 and the Dominican Republic 1916 1924 9 Shift to the Good Neighbor policy EditMain article Good Neighbor policy In 1928 President Calvin Coolidge issued the Clark Memorandum often seen as a partial repudiation of the Roosevelt Corollary which stated that the US did not have the right to intervene when there was a threat by European powers Herbert Hoover also helped to move the US away from the imperialist tendencies of the Roosevelt Corollary by going on good will tours withdrawing troops from Nicaragua and Haiti and abstaining from intervening in the internal affairs of neighboring countries 10 In 1934 President Franklin D Roosevelt further renounced interventionism and established his Good Neighbor policy that led to the annulment of the Platt Amendment by the Treaty of Relations with Cuba in 1934 and the negotiation of compensation for Mexico s nationalization of foreign owned oil assets in 1938 Indeed leaving unchallenged the emergence of dictatorships like that of Fulgencio Batista in Cuba 11 Rafael Leonidas Trujillo in the Dominican Republic Anastasio Somoza in Nicaragua and Francois Duvalier in Haiti were each considered to be Frankenstein dictators due to the mishandlings of the American occupations in the countries 11 The era of the Good Neighbor policy ended with the start of the Cold War in 1945 as the United States felt there was a greater need to protect the Western Hemisphere from Soviet influence 12 In 1954 Secretary of State John Foster Dulles invoked the Monroe Doctrine and the Roosevelt Corollary at the Tenth Pan American Conference in Caracas denouncing the intervention of Soviet communism in Guatemala 13 This was used to justify Operation PBSuccess that deposed the democratically elected president Jacobo Arbenz and installed the military regime of Carlos Castillo Armas the first in a series of military dictators in the country 14 Criticism EditThe argument made by Mitchener and Weidenmier in 2006 15 in support of the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine has been criticized on the grounds that it represent s the one sided approach that some scholars bring to the study of imperialistic and hegemonic interventions and also highlight how arguments for the general utility of imperialism are increasingly made and accepted Christopher Coyne and Stephen Davies argue that a foreign policy modeled on the Roosevelt Corollary leads to negative consequences both in national security terms and in terms of its effect on domestic politics 16 Critics such as linguist Noam Chomsky have argued that the Roosevelt Corollary was merely a more explicit imperialist threat building on the Monroe Doctrine indicating that the US would not only intervene in defense of South America in the face of European imperialism but also use its muscle to obtain concessions and privileges for American corporations 17 Frenchman Serge Ricard of the University of Paris goes even further and states that the Roosevelt Corollary was not merely an addendum to the earlier Monroe Doctrine through which the US pledged to protect the Americas from European imperialist interventions Rather the Roosevelt Corollary was an entirely new diplomatic tenet that epitomized his big stick approach to foreign policy 18 In other words while the Monroe Doctrine sought to bar entry to the European empires the Roosevelt Corollary arguably indicated the United States intention to take their place See also Edit nbsp Politics portal nbsp United States portalBig stick ideology Bush Doctrine Dollar diplomacy Drago Doctrine History of the United States 1865 1918 New Imperialism Territorial evolution of the United StatesCitations Edit a b Roosevelt Theodore 6 December 1904 Document Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine Teaching American History Ashland University Retrieved 3 December 2019 Alan McPherson Herbert Hoover Occupation Withdrawal and the Good Neighbor Policy Presidential Studies Quarterly 44 4 2014 623 639 a b c Maass Matthias 2009 Catalyst for the Roosevelt Corollary Arbitrating the 1902 1903 Venezuela Crisis and Its Impact on the Development of the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine Diplomacy amp Statecraft Volume 20 Issue 3 p383 402 Digital History www digitalhistory uh edu Retrieved 14 February 2023 Bailey Thomas Andrew Roosevelt Launches a Corollary The American Spirit Since 1865 Boston Houghton Mifflin 1998 198 Print Theodore Roosevelt 26th President Prod David Grubin By David Grubin and Geoffrey C Ward Perf Walter LaFeber David Grubin Productions Inc 1996 Transcript Herring George C 2008 From Colony to Superpower U S Foreign Relations Since 1776 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195078220 Brinkley Alan The Unfinished Nation a Concise History of the American People Boston McGraw Hill 2008 596 Print a b c Bailey Thomas Andrew A Latin American Protests 1943 The American Spirit Since 1865 Boston Houghton Mifflin 1998 199 Print Brinkley Alan The Unfinished Nation a Concise History of the American People Boston McGraw Hill 2008 706 Print a b American foreign relations a history Since 1895 Volume 2 7th Edition Wadsworth pp 162 168 2010 The Good Neighbor Policy History and Impact ThoughtCo Retrieved 14 February 2023 Dickinson Jr William B 1960 Challenged Monroe Doctrine Editorial Research Reports 1960 CQ Researcher Online Washington D C United States CQ Press pp 583 602 retrieved 14 February 2023 Alberto Tapia Andres Fall 2011 Carlos Castillo Armas The United States and the 1954 counterrevolution in Guatemala PDF MA thesis California State University Sacramento hdl 10211 9 1455 Kris James Mitchener amp Marc D Weidenmier 2005 Supersanctions and Sovereign Debt Repayment NBER Working Papers 11472 National Bureau of Economic Research Inc Coyne Christopher J Davies Stephen J Summer 2007 Nineteen Public Bads of Empire Nation Building and the Like The Independent Review Retrieved 28 July 2016 Chomsky Noam Hegemony or Survival America s Quest for Global Dominance New York Metropolitan Books 2004 Ricard Serge The Roosevelt Corollary Presidential Studies Quarterly 36 2006 17 26General bibliography EditCoyne C J Davies S 2007 Empire public Goods and Bads Econ Journal Watch 4 1 3 45 Glickman Robert Jay Norteamerica vis a vis Hispanoamerica opposicion o asociacion Toronto Canadian Academy of the Arts 2005 ISBN 0 921907 09 5 Meiertons Heiko 2010 The Doctrines of US Security Policy An Evaluation under International Law Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 76648 7 Mitchell Nancy The Danger of Dreams German and American Imperialism in Latin America 1999 Mitchener Kris James and Marc Weidenmier Empire public goods and the Roosevelt Corollary Journal of Economic History 2005 64 5 pp 658 Rabe Stephen G Theodore Roosevelt the Panama Canal and the Roosevelt Corollary Sphere of Influence Diplomacy ch 16 in Serge Ricard ed A Companion to Theodore Roosevelt 2011 Ricard Serge The Roosevelt Corollary Presidential Studies 2006 36 1 17 26 ISSN 0360 4918 Fulltext in Swetswise and Ingenta Ricard Serge Theodore Roosevelt Imperialist or Global Strategist in the New Expansionist Age Diplomacy amp Statecraft 2008 19 3 pp 639 657 Sexton Jay The Monroe Doctrine Empire and Nation in Nineteenth Century America Macmillan 2011 External links Edit nbsp Works related to Roosevelt Corollary at Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roosevelt Corollary amp oldid 1171823887, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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