LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OP CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO FROM ISOLATION TO LEADERSHIP REVISED A Review of American Foreign Policy BY JOHN HOLLADAY LATANE, PH.D., LL.D. PROFESSOR OF AMERICAN HISTORY AND DEAN OF THE COLLEGE FACULTY IN THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY Author of "The United States and Latin America" "America as a World Power" Etc. GARDEN CITY NEW YORK DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY 1922 COPYRIGHT, I9l8, 1922, BY DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES AT THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N.' Y. PREFACE THE first edition of this book appeared in October, 1918, a few weeks before the signing of the Armistice, when the United States was at the high tide of its power and influence. In view of the subsequent course of events, some of my readers may question the propriety of the original title. In fact, one of my friends has suggested that a more appropriate title for the new edition would be " From Isolation to Lead- ership, and Back." But I do not regard the verdict of 1920 as an expression of the final judg- ment of the American people. The world still waits on America, and sooner or later we must recognize and assume the responsibilities of our position as a great world power. The first nine chapters are reprinted with only a few verbal changes. Chapter X has been rewritten, and chapters XI and XII have been added. JOHN H. LATANE. Baltimore, June 10, 1922. 'CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I. ORIGIN OF THE POLICY OF ISOLATION . 3 II. FORMULATION OF THE MONROE DOC- TRINE 19 III. THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND THE EUROPEAN BALANCE OF POWER . 43 IV. INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION WITH- OUT THE SANCTION OF FORCE . 57 V. THE OPEN-DOOR POLICY .... 83 VI. ANGLO-AMERICAN RELATIONS ... 99 VII. IMPERIALISTIC TENDENCIES OF THE MONROE DOCTRINE ...... 131 VIII. THE NEW PAN-AMERICANISM . . . 151 IX. THE FAILURE OF NEUTRALITY AND ISOLATION 169 X. THE WAR AIMS OF THE UNITED STATES 191 XI. THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES . . . 225 XII. THE WASHINGTON CONFERENCE . . 259 INDEX 291 I ORIGIN OF THE POLICY OF ISOLATION From Isolation to Leadership ORIGIN OF THE POLICY OF ISOLATION THE Monroe Doctrine and the policy of polit- ical isolation are two phases of American diplo- macy so closely related that very few writers appear to draw any distinction between them. The Monroe Doctrine was in its origin nothing more than the assertion, with special applica- tion to the American continents, of the right of independent states to pursue their own careers without fear or threat of intervention, domina- tion, or subjugation by other states. President Monroe announced to the world that this prin- ciple would be upheld by the United States in this hemisphere. The policy of isolation was the outgrowth of Washington's warning against permanent alliances and Jefferson's warning against entangling alliances. Both Washington and Jefferson had in mind apparently the form of European alliance common in their day, 3 4 From Isolation to Leadership which bound one nation to support another both diplomatically and by force in any dispute that might arise no matter whether it concerned the interests of the first state or not. Such alliances were usually of the nature of family compacts between different dynasties, or be- tween different branches of the same dynasty, rather than treaties between nations. In fact, dynastic aims and ambitions were frequently, if not usually, at variance with the real interests of the peoples affected. It will be shown later that neither Washington nor Jefferson intended that the United States should refrain perma- nently from the exercise of its due influence in matters which properly concern the peace and welfare of the community of nations. Washing- ton did not object to temporary alliances for special emergencies nor did Jefferson object to special alliances for the accomplishment of defi- nite objects. Their advice has, however, been generally interpreted as meaning that the United States must hold aloof from world politics and attend strictly to its own business. The Monroe Doctrine was a perfectly sound principle and it has been fully justified by nearly a century of experience. It has saved South America from the kind of exploitation to which the continents of Africa and Asia have, during Origin of the Policy of Isolation 5 the past generation, fallen a prey. The policy of isolation, on the other hand, still cherished by so many Americans as a sacred tradition of the fathers, is in principle quite distinct from the Monroe Doctrine and is in fact utterly in- consistent with the position and importance of the United States as a world power. The dif- ference in principle between the two policies can perhaps best be illustrated by the following sup- position. If the United States were to sign a permanent treaty with England placing our navy at her disposal in the event of attack from Germany or some other power, on condi- tion that England would unite with us in oppos- ing the intervention of any European power in Latin America, such a treaty would not be a violation of the Monroe Doctrine, but a dis- tinct recognition of that principle. Such a treaty would, however, be a departure from our traditional policy of isolation. Of the two policies, that of avoiding political alliances is the older. It was announced by Washington under circumstances that will be considered in a moment. In the struggle for independence the colonies deliberately sought foreign alliances. In fact, the first treaty ever signed by the United States was the treaty of alliance with France, negoti- 6 From Isolation to Leadership ated and ratified in 1778. The aid which France extended under this treaty to our revo- lutionary ancestors in men, money, and ships enabled them to establish the independence of our country. A few years later came the French Revolution, the establishment of the French Republic followed by the execution of Louis XVI, and in 1793 the war between Eng- land and France. With the arrival in this country of Genet, the minister of the newly established French Republic, there began a heated debate in the newspapers throughout the country as to our obligations under the treaty of alliance and the commercial treaty of 1778. President Washington requested the opinions in writing of the members of his cabinet as to whether Genet should be received and the new government which had been set up in France recognized, as to whether the treaties were still binding, and as to whether a procla- mation of neutrality should be issued. Hamilton and Jefferson replied at great length, taking as usual opposite sides, particularly on the ques- tion as to the binding force of the treaties. Hamilton took the view that as the government of Louis XVI, with which the treaties had been negotiated, had been overthrown, we were under no obligations to fulfill their stipulations Origin of the Policy of Isolation 7 and had a perfect right to renounce them. Jefferson took the correct view that the treaties were with the French nation and that they were binding under whatever government the French people chose to set up. Thisjmnjciple, which is now one of the fundamental doctrines of international law, was so ably expounded by Jefferson that his words are well worth quoting. "I consider the people who constitute a so- ciety or nation as the source of all authority in that nation, as free to transact their common concerns by any agents they think proper, to change these agents individually, or the organ- ization of them in form or function whenever they please: that all the acts done by those agents under the authority of the nation, are the acts of the nation, are obligatory on them, and enure to their use, and can in no wise be annulled or affected by any change in the form of the government, or of the persons adminis- tering it. Consequently the Treaties between the United States and France were not treaties between the United States and Louis Capet, but between the two nations of America and France, and the nations remaining in existence, tho' both of them have since changed their forms of government, the treaties are not annulled by these changes." 8 From Isolation to Leadership The argument was so heated that Washington was reluctant to press matters to a definite con- clusion. From his subsequent action it appears that he agreed with Jefferson that the treaties were binding, but he held that the treaty of alliance was purely defensive and that we were under no obligation to aid France in an offensive war such as she was then waging. He accord- ingly issued his now famous proclamation of neutrality, April, 1793. Of this proclamation W. E. Hall, a leading English authority on inter- national law, writing one hundred years later, said: "The policy of the United States in 1793 constitutes an epoch in the development of the usages of neutrality. There can be no doubt that it was intended and believed to give effect to the obligations then incumbent upon neutrals. But it represented by far the most advanced existing opinions as to what those obligations were; and in some points it even went farther than authoritative international custom has up to the present time advanced. In the main, however, it is identical with the standard of conduct which is now adopted by the com- munity of nations." Washington's proclama- tion laid the real foundations of the American policy of isolation. The very novelty of the rigid neutrality pro- Origin of the Policy ot Isolation 9 claimed by Washington made the policy a diffi- cult one to pursue. In the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars, which lasted for nearly a quarter of a century, the United States was the principal neutral. The problems to which this situation gave rise were so similar to the prob- lems raised during the early years of the World War that many of the diplomatic notes prepared by Jefferson and Madison might, with a few changes of names and dates, be passed off as the correspondence of Wilson and Lansing. Washington's administration closed with ths clouds of the European war still hanging heavy on the horizon. Under these circumstances he delivered his famous Farewell Address in which he said: "The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign nations is, in extending our commer- cial relations to have with them as little political connection as possible. So far as we have al- ready formed engagements let them be fulfilled with perfect good faith. Here let us stop. "Europe has a set of primary interests which to us have none or a very remote relation. Hence she must be engaged in frequent con- troversies, the causes of which are essentially foreign to our concerns. Hence, therefore, it must be unwise in us to implicate ourselves io From Isolation to Leadership by artificial ties in the ordinary vicissitudes of her politics or the ordinary combinations and collisions of her friendships or enmities. "Our detached and distant situation invites and enables us to pursue a different course. If we remain one people, under an efficient government, the period is not far off when we may defy material injury from external annoy- ance; when we may take such an attitude as will cause the neutrality we may at any time re- solve upon to be scrupulously respected; when belligerent nations, under the impossibility of making acquisitions upon us, will not lightly hazard the giving us provocation; when we may choose peace or war, as our interest, guided by justice, shall counsel. "Why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation ? Why quit our own to stand upon foreign ground? Why, by interweaving our destiny with that of any part of Europe, en- tangle our peace and prosperity in the toils of European ambitions, rivalship, interest, humor, or caprice ? "It is our true policy to steer clear of perma- nent alliances with any portion of the foreign world, so far, I mean, as we are now at liberty to do it; for let me not be understood as capable of patronizing infidelity to existing engage- Origin of the Policy of Isolation 1 1 ments. I hold the maxim no less applicable to public than to private affairs that honesty is always the best policy. I repeat, therefore, let thpse engagements be observed in their genuine sense. But in my opinion it is un- necessary and would be unwise to extend them. "Taking care always to keep ourselves by suitable establishments on a respectable defen- sive posture, we may safely trust to temporary alliances for extraordinary emergencies. " It will be observed that Washington warned his countrymen against permanent alliances. He expressly said that we might "safely trust to temporary alliances for extraordinary emergen- cies." Further than this many of those who are continually quoting Washington's warning against alliances not only fail to note the limitations under which the advice was given, but they also overlook the reasons assigned. In a succeeding paragraph of the Farewell Address he said: "With me a predominant motive has been to endeavor to gain time to our country to settle and mature its yet recent institutions, and to progress without interruption to that degree of strength and consistency which is necessary to give it, humanly speaking, the command of its own fortunes." 12 From Isolation to Leadership The expression "entangling alliances" does not occur in the Farewell Address, but was given currency by Jefferson. In his first in- augural address he summed up the principles by which he proposed to regulate his foreign policy in the following terms: "Peace, com- merce, and honest friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with none." During the brief interval of peace following the treaty of Amiens in 1801, Napoleon under- took the reestablishment of French power in Santo Domingo as the first step in the develop- ment of a colonial empire which he determined upon when he forced Spain to retrocede Louis- iana to France by the secret treaty of San Ildefonso in 1800. Fortunately for us the ill- fated expedition to Santo Domingo encountered the opposition of half a million negroes and ul- timately fell a prey to the ravages of yellow fever. As soon as Jefferson heard of the cession of Louisiana to France, he instructed Living- ston, his representative at Paris, to open nego- tiations for the purchase of New Orleans and West Florida, stating that the acquisition of New Orleans by a powerful nation like France would inevitably lead to friction and conflict. "The day that France takes possession of New Orleans fixes the sentence which is to restrain Origin of the Policy of Isolation 13 fter forever within her low water mark. It seals the union of two nations who in conjunc- tion can maintain exclusive possession of the ocean. From that moment we must marry ourselves to the British fleet and nation. We must turn all our attentions to a maritime force, for which our resources place us on very high grounds : and having formed and cemented together a power which may render reinforce- ment of her settlements here impossible to France, make the first cannon, which shall be fired in Europe the signal for tearing up any settlement she may have made, and for holding the two continents of America in sequestration for the common purposes of the united British and American nations. This is not a state of things we seek or desire. It is one which this measure, if adopted by France, forces on us, as necessarily as any other cause, by the laws of nature, brings on its necessary effect." Monroe was later sent to Paris to support Livingston and he was instructed, in case there was no prospect of a favorable termination of the negotiations, to avoid a rupture until the spring and "in the meantime enter into con- ferences with the British Government, through their ambassador at Paris, to fix principles of alliance, and leave us in peace until Congress 14 From Isolation to Leadership meets." Jefferson had already informed the British minister at Washington that if France should, by closing the mouth of the Mississippi, force the United States to war, "they would throw away the scabbard." Monroe and Livingston were now instructed, in case they should become convinced that France medi- tated hostilities against the United States, to negotiate an alliance with England and to stipulate that neither party should make peace or truce without the consent of the other. Thus notwithstanding his French proclivities and his warning against "entangling alliances," the author of the immortal Declaration of In- dependence was ready and willing in this emergency to form an alliance with England. The unexpected cession of the entire province of Louisiana to the United States made the contemplated alliance with England unneces- sary. The United States was no more successful in its effort to remain neutral during the Na- poleonic wars than it was during the late war, though the slow means of communication a hundred years ago caused the struggle for neutral rights to be drawn out for a much longer period of time. Neither England nor France regarded us as having any rights which they Origin of the Policy of Isolation 15 were bound to respect, and American commerce was fairly bombarded by French decrees and British orders in council. There was really not much more reason why we should have fought England than France, but as England's naval supremacy enabled her to interfere more effec- tually with our commerce on the sea and as this interference was accompanied by the practice of impressing American sailors into the British service, we finally declared war against her. No effort was made, however, to form an alliance or even to cooperate with Napoleon. The United States fought the War of 1812 without allies, and while we gained a number of single-ship actions and notable victories on Lake Erie and Lake Champlain, we failed utterly in two campaigns to occupy Canada, and the final result of the conflict was that our national capitol was burned and our commerce absolutely swept from the seas. Jackson's victory at New Orleans, while gratify- ing to our pride, took place two weeks after the treaty of Ghent had been signed and had, consequently, no effect on the outcome of the war, II FORMULATION OF THE MONROE DOCTRINE II FORMULATION OF THE MONROE DOCTRINE THE international situation which gave rise to the Monroe Doctrine was the most unusual in some respects that modern history records. The European alliance which had been organ- ized in 1813 for the purpose of bringing about the overthrow of Napoleon continued to domi- nate the affairs of Europe until 1823. This alliance, which met at the Congress of Vienna in 1815 and held later meetings at Aix-la- Chapelle in 1818, at Troppau in 1820, at Lay- bach in 1821, and at Verona in 1822, undertook to legislate for all Europe and was the nearest approach to a world government that had ever been tried. While this alliance publicly pro- claimed that it had no other object than the maintenance of peace and that the repose of the world was its motive and its end, its real object was to uphold absolute monarchy and to suppress every attempt at the establishment of representative government. As long as 19 2O From Isolation to Leadership England remained in the alliance her statesmen exercised a restraining influence, for England was the only one of the allies which professed to have a representative system of government. As Castlereagh.was setting out for the meeting at Aix-la-Chapelle Lord Liverpool, who was then prime minister, warned him that, "The Russian must be made to feel that we have a parliament and a public, to which we are re- sponsible, and that we cannot permit ourselves to be drawn into views of policy which are wholly incompatible with the spirit of our government." The reactionary spirit of the continental members of the alliance was soon thoroughly aroused by the series of revolutions that fol- lowed one another in 1820. In March the Spanish army turned against the government of Ferdinand VII and demanded the restoration of the constitution of 1812. The action of the army was everywhere approved and sustained by the people and the king was forced to pro- claim the constitution and to promise to uphold it. The Spanish revolution was followed in July by a constitutional movement in Naples, and in August by a similar movement in Portu- gal; while the next year witnessed the outbreak of the Greek struggle for independence. Thus Formulation of the Monroe Doctrine 21 in all three of the peninsulas of Southern Europe the people were struggling for the right of self- government. The great powers at once took alarm at the rapid spread of revolutionary ideas and proceeded to adopt measures for the sup- pression of the movements to which these ideas gave rise. At Troppau and Laybach measures were taken for the suppression of the revolu- tionary movements in Italy. An Austrian army entered Naples in March, 1821, over- threw the constitutional government that had been inaugurated, and restored Ferdinand II to absolute power. The revolution which had broken out in Piedmont was also suppressed by a detachment of the Austrian army. Eng- land held aloof from all participation in the conferences at Troppau and Laybach, though her ambassador to Austria was present to watch the proceedings. The next meeting of the allied powers was arranged for October, 1822, at Verona. Here the affairs of Greece, Italy, and in particular Spain came up for consideration. At this con- gress all five powers of the alliance were repre- sented. France was especially concerned about the condition of affairs in Spain, and England sent Wellington out of self-defense. The Con- gress of Verona was devoted largely to a discus- 22 From Isolation to Leadership sion of Spanish affairs. Wellington had been instructed to use all his influence against the adoption of measures of intervention in Spain. When he found that the other powers were bent upon this step and that his protest would be unheeded, he withdrew from the congress. The four remaining powers signed the secret treaty of Verona, November 22, 1822, as a revision, so they declared in the preamble, of the Treaty of the Holy Alliance, which had been signed at Paris in 1815 by Austria, Russia, and Prussia. This last mentioned treaty sprang from the erratic brain of the Czar Alexander under the influence of Baroness Krudener, and is one of the most remarkable political documents extant. No one had taken it seriously except the Czar himself and it had been without influence upon the politics of Europe. The text of the treaty of Verona was never officially published, but the following articles soon appeared in the press of Europe and America: "Article I. The high contracting powers being convinced that the system of representa- tive government is equally as incompatible with the monarcjjical principles as the maxim of the sovereignty of the people with the divine right, engage mutually, in the most solemn manner, to use all their efforts to put an end to Formulation of the Monroe Doctrine 23 the system of representative governments, in whatever country it may exist in Europe, and to prevent its being introduced in those coun- tries where it is not yet known. "Article II. As it cannot be doubted that the liberty of the press is the most powerful means used by the pretended supporters of the rights of nations, to the detriment of those of Princes, the high contracting parties promise reciprocally to adopt all proper measures to suppress it, not only in their own states, but, also, in the rest of Europe. "Article III. Convinced that the principles of religion contribute most powerfully to keep nations in the state of passive obedience which they owe to their Princes, the high contracting parties declare it to be their intention to sustain, in their respective states, those measures which the clergy may adopt, with the aim of amelio- rating their own interests, so intimately con- nected with the preservation of the authority of Princes; and the contracting powers join in offering their thanks to the Pope, for what he has already done for them, and solicit his con- stant cooperation in their views of submitting the nations. "Article IV. The situation of Spain and Portugal unite unhappily all the circumstances 24 From Isolation to Leadership to which this treaty has particular reference. The high contracting parties, in confiding to France the care of putting an end to them, en- gage to assist her in the manner which may the least compromise them with their own people and the people of France, by means of a sub- sidy on the part of the two empires, of twenty millions of francs every year, from the date of the signature of this treaty to the end of the war." Such was the code of despotism which the continental powers adopted for Europe and which they later proposed to extend to America. It was an attempt to make the world safe for autocracy. Wellington's protest at Verona marked the final withdrawal of England from the alliance which had overthrown Napoleon and naturally inclined her toward a rap- prochement with the United States. The aim of the Holy Allies, as the remaining mem- bers of the alliance now called themselves, was to undo the work of the Revolution and of Napoleon and to restore all the peoples of Europe to the absolute sway of their legitimate sovereigns. After the overthrow of the consti- tutional movements in Piedmont, Naples, and Spain, absolutism reigned supreme once more in western Europe, but the Holy Allies felt that Formulation of the Monroe Doctrine 25 their task was not completed so long as Spain's revolted colonies in America remained un- subjugated. These colonies had drifted into practical independence while Napoleon's brother Joseph was on the throne of Spain. Nelson's great victory at Trafalgar had left England supreme on the seas and neither Napoleon nor Joseph had been able to establish any control over Spain's American colonies. When Ferdi- nand was restored to his throne in 1814, he un- wisely undertook to refasten on his colonies the yoke of the old colonial system and to break up the commerce which had grown up with England and with the United States. The dif- ferent colonies soon proclaimed their independ- ence and the wars of liberation ensued. By 1822 it was evident that Spain unassisted could never resubjugate them, and the United States after mature deliberation recognized the new republics and established diplomatic intercourse with them. England, although enjoying the full benefits of trade with the late colonies of Spain, still hesitated out of regard for the mother country to take the final step of recog- nition. In the late summer of 1823 circular letters were issued inviting the powers to a conference at Paris to consider the Spanish-American 26 From Isolation to Leadership question. George Canning, the British foreign secretary, at once called into conference Richard Rush, the American minister, and proposed joint action against the schemes of the Holy Alliance. Rush replied that he was not author- ized to enter into such an agreement, but that he would communicate the proposal at once to his government. As soon as Rush's dispatch was received President Monroe realized fully the magnitude of the issue presented by the proposal of an Anglo-American alliance. Be- fore submitting the matter to his cabinet he transmitted copies of Rush's dispatch to ex- Presidents Jefferson and Madison and the fol- lowing interesting correspondence took place. In his letter to Jefferson of October lyth, the President said: "I transmit to you two despatches, which were received from Mr. Rush, while I was lately in Washington, which involve interests of the highest importance. They contain two letters from Mr. Canning, suggesting designs of the holy alliance, against the Independence of S. America, & proposing a co-operation, between G. Britain & the U States, in support of it, against the members of that alliance. The project aims, in the first instance, at a mere expression of opinion, somewhat in the abstract, Formulation of the Monroe Doctrine 27 but which, it is expected by Mr. Canning, will have a great political effect, by defeating the combination. By Mr. Rush's answers, which are also enclosed, you will see the light in which he views the subject, & the extent to which he may have gone. Many important considera- tions are involved in this proposition. I st Shall we entangle ourselves, at all, in European politicks, & wars, on the side of any power, against others, presuming that a concert, by agreement, of the kind proposed, may lead to that result? 2 d If a case can exist in which a sound maxim may, & ought to be departed from, is not the present instance, precisely that case? 3 d Has not the epoch arriv'd when G. Britain must take her stand, either on the side of the monarchs of Europe, or of the U States, & in consequence, either in favor of Despotism or of liberty & may it not be pre- sum'd that, aware of that necessity, her gov- ernment has seiz'd on the present occurrence, as that, which it deems, the most suitable, to announce & mark the commenc'ment of that career ? "My own impression is that we ought to meet the proposal of the British govt. & ta make it known, that we would view an inter- ference on the part of the European powers, and 28 From Isolation to Leadership especially an attack on the Colonies, by them, as an attack on ourselves, presuming that, if they succeeded with them, they would extend it to us. I am sensible however of the extent & difficulty of the question, & shall be happy to have yours, & Mr. Madison's opinions on it." Jefferson's reply dated Monticello, October 24th, displays not only a profound insight into the international situation, but a wide vision of the possibilities involved. He said : "The question presented by the letters you have sent me, is the most momentous which has ever been offered to my contemplation since that of Independence. That made us a nation, this sets our compass and points the course which we are to steer through the ocean of time opening on us. And never could we embark on it under circumstances more aus- picious. Our first and fundamental maxim should be, never to entangle ourselves in the broils of Europe. Our second, never to suffer Europe to intermeddle with cis-Atlantic affairs. America, North and South, has a set of in- terests distinct from those of Europe, and peculiarly her own. She should therefore have a system of her own, separate and apart from that of Europe. While the last is laboring to become the domicil of despotism, our endeavor Formulation of the Monroe Doctrine 29 should surely be, to make our hemisphere that of freedom. One nation, most of all, could disturb us in this pursuit; she now offers to lead, aid, and accompany us in it. By acceding to her proposition, we detach her from the bands, bring her mighty weight into the scale of free government, and emancipate a continent at one stroke, which might otherwise linger long in doubt and difficulty. Great Britain is the nation which can do us the most harm of any one, or all on earth; and with her on our side we need not fear the whole world. With her then, we should most sedulously cherish a cordial friendship; and nothing would tend more to knit our affections than to be fighting once more, side by side, in the same cause. Not that I would purchase even her amity at the price of taking part in her wars. But the war in which the present proposition might engage us, should that be its consequence, is not her war, but ours. Its object is to introduce and establish the American system, of keeping out of our land all foreign powers, of never per- mitting those of Europe to intermeddle with the affairs of our nations. It is to maintain our own principle, not to depart from it. And if, to facilitate this, we can effect a division in the body of the European powers, and draw 30 From Isolation to Leadership over to our side its most powerful member, surely we should do it. But I am clearly of Mr. Canning's opinion, that it will prevent instead of provoking war. With Great Britain withdrawn from their scale and shifted into that of our two continents, all Europe com- bined would not undertake such a war. For how would they propose to get at either enemy without superior fleets? Nor is the occasion to be slighted which this proposition offers, of declaring our protest against the atrocious violations of the rights of nations, by the inter- ference of any one in the internal affairs of another, so flagitiously begun by Bonaparte, and now continued by the equally lawless Alliance, calling itself Holy." Madison not only agreed with Jefferson as to the wisdom of accepting the British proposal of some form of joint action, but he went even further and suggested that the declaration should not be limited to the American republics, but that it should express disapproval of the late invasion of Spain and of any interference with the Greeks who were then struggling for independence from Turkey. Monroe, it ap- pears, was strongly inclined to act on Madison's suggestion, but his cabinet took a different view of the situation. From the diary of Formulation of the Monroe Doctrine 3 1 John Quincy Adams, Monroe's secretary of state, it appears that almost the whole of November was taken up by cabinet discussions on Canning's proposals and on Russia's aggres- sions in the northwest. Adams stoutly opposed any alliance or joint declaration with Great Britain. The composition of the President's message remained in doubt until the 27th, when the more conservative views of Adams were, according to his own statement of the case, adopted. He advocated an independent course of action on the part of the United States, without direct reference to Canning's proposals, though substantially in accord with them. Adams defined his position as follows: "The ground that I wish to take is that of earnest remonstrance against the interference of the European powers by force with South America, but to disclaim all interference on our part with Europe; to make an American cause and adhere inflexibly to that." Adams's dissent from Monroe's position was, it is claimed, due partly to the influence of Clay who advocated a Pan-American system, partly to the fact that the proposed cooperation with Great Britain would bind the United States not to acquire some of the coveted parts of the Spanish posses- sions, and partly to the fear that the United 32 From Isolation to Leadership States as the ally of Great Britain would be compelled to play a secondary part. He proba- bly carried his point by showing that the same ends could be accomplished by an independent declaration, since it was evident that the sea power of Great Britain would be used to prevent the reconquest of South America by the Euro- pean powers. Monroe, as we have seen, thought that the exigencies of the situation justified a departure from the sound maxim of political isolation, and in this opinion he was supported by his two predecessors in the presi- dency. The opinions of Monroe, Jefferson, and Madi- son in favor of an alliance with Great Britain and a broad declaration against the intervention of the great powers in the affairs of weaker states in any part of the world, have been severely criticised by some historians and ridi- culed by Others, but time and circumstances often bring about a complete change in our point of view. After the beginning of the great world conflict, especially after our en- trance into it, several writers raised the ques- tion as to whether, after all, the three elder statesmen were not right and Adams and Clay wrong. If the United States and England had come out in favor of a general declaration Formulation of the Monroe Doctrine 33 against intervention in the concerns of small states and established it as a world-wide princi- ple, the course of human history during the next century might have been very different, but Adams's diary does not tell the whole story. On his own statement of the case he might be justly censured by posterity for per- suading the president to take a narrow American view of a question which was world-wide in its bearing. An important element in the situation, however, was Canning's change of attitude between the time of his conference with Rush in August and the formulation of the president's message. Two days after the delivery of his now famous message Monroe wrote to Jefferson in explanation of the form the declaration had taken: "Mr. Canning's zeal has much abated of late." It appears from Rush's correspondence that the only thing which stood in the way of joint action by the two powers was Canning's unwillingness to extend immediate recognition to the South American republics. On August 27th, Rush stated to Canning that it would greatly facilitate joint action if England would acknowledge at once the full independence of the South American colonies. In communicating the ac- count of this interview to his government Mr, 34 From Isolation to Leadership Rush concluded: "Should I be asked by Mr. Canning, whether, in case the recognition be made by Great Britain without more delay, I am on my part prepared to make a declara- tion, in the name of my government, that it will not remain inactive under an attack upon the independence of those states by the Holy Alliance, the present determination of my judgment is that I will make such a declaration explicitly, and avow it before the world." About three weeks later Canning, who was growing restless at the delay in hearing from Washington, again urged Rush to act without waiting for specific instructions from his govern- ment. He tried to show that the proposed joint declaration would not conflict with the American policy of avoiding entangling alliances, for the question at issue was American as much as European, if not more. Rush then indicated his willingness to act provided Eng- land would "immediately and unequivocally acknowledge the independence of the new states.*' Canning did not care to extend full recognition to the South American states until he could do so without giving unnecessary offense to Spain and the allies, and he asked if Mr. Rush could not give his assent to the proposal on a promise of future recognition. -Formulation of the Monroe Doctrine 3 5 Mr. Rush refused to accede to anything but immediate acknowledgment of independence and so the matter ended. As Canning could not come to a formal under- standing with the United States, he determined to make a frank avowal of the views of the Brit- ish cabinet to France and to this end he had an interview with Prince Polignac, the French am- bassador at London, October 9, 1823, in which he declared that Great Britain had no desire to has- ten recognition, but that any foreigrunterference, by force, or by menace, would be a motive for immediate recognition; that England "could not go into a joint deliberation upon the sub- ject of Spanish America upon an equal footing with other powers, whose opinions were less formed upon that question." This declaration drew from Polignac the admission that he con- sidered the reduction of the colonies by Spain as hopeless and that France "abjured in any case, any design of acting against the colonies by force of arms." This admission was a dis- tinct victory for Canning, in that it prepared the way for ultimate recognition by England, and an account of the interview was com- municated without delay to the allied courts. The interview was not communicated to Rush until the latter part of November, and therefore 36 From Isolation to Leadership had no influence upon the formation of Monroe's message. The Monroe Doctrine is comprised in two widely separated paragraphs that occur in the message of December 2, 1823. The first, relating to Russia's encroachments on the northwest coast, and occurring near the be- ginning of the message, was an assertion to the effect- that the American continents had as- sumed an independent condition and were no longer open to European colonization. This may be regarded as a statement of fact. No part of the continent at that time remained unclaimed. The second paragraph, relating to Spanish America and occurring near the close of the message, was a declaration against the extension to the American continents of the system of intervention adopted by the Holy Alliance for the suppression of popular government in Europe. The language used by President Monroe is as follows: I. "At the proposal of the Russian Imperial Government, made through the minister of the Emperor residing here, a full power and instruc- tions have been transmitted to the minister of the United States at St. Petersburg to arrange by amicable negotiation the respective rights Formulation of the Monroe Doctrine 37 and interests of the two nations on the north- west coast of this continent. A similar pro- posal had been made by His Imperial Majesty to the Government of Great Britain, which has likewise been acceded to. The Government of the United States has been desirous by this friendly proceeding of manifesting the great value which they have invariably attached to the friendship of the Emperor and their solicitude to cultivate the best understanding with his Government. In the discussions to which this interest has given rise and in the arrangements by which they may terminate the occasion has been judged proper for asserting, as a principle in which the rights and interests of the United States are involved, that the American conti- nents, by the free and independent condition which they have assumed and maintain, are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by any European powers." 2. "In the wars of the European powers in matters relating to themselves we have never taken any part, nor does it comport with our policy so to do. It is only when our rights are invaded or seriously menaced that we resent injuries or make preparation for our defense. With the movements in this hemisphere we are of necessity more immediately connected, and 38 From Isolation to Leadership by causes which must be obvious to all enlight- ened and impartial observers. The political system of the allied powers is essentially differ- ent in this respect from that of America. This difference proceeds from that which exists in their respective Governments; and to the de- fense of our own, which has been achieved by the loss of so much blood and treasure, and matured by the wisdom of their most enlightened citi- zens, and under which we have enjoyed unex- ampled felicity, this whole nation is devoted. We owe it, therefore, to candor and to the amicable relations existing between the United States and those powers to declare that we should consider any attempt on their part to extend their system to any portion of this hemisphere as dangerous to our peace and safety. With the existing colonies or depend- encies of any European power we have not interfered and shall not interfere. But with the Governments who have declared their inde- pendence and maintained it, and whose inde- pendence we have, on great consideration and on just principles, acknowledged, we could not view any interposition for the purpose of op- pressing them, or controlling in any other manner their destiny, by any European power in any other light than as the manifestation Formulation of the Monroe Doctrine 39 of an unfriendly disposition toward the United States." The message made a profound impression on the world, all the more profound for the fact that Canning's interview with Polignac was known only to the chancelleries of Europe. To the public at large it appeared that the United States was blazing the way for democracy and liberty and that Canning was holding back through fear of giving offense to the allies. The governments of Europe realized only too well that Monroe's declarationjwould be backed by the British navyT^and "all thought of inter- vention lii LatinAmerica was therefore aban- doned. A few months later England formally recognized the independence of the Spanish- American republics, and Canning made his famous boast on the floor of the House of Com- mons. In a speech delivered December 12, 1826, in defense of his position in not having arrested the French invasion of Spain, he said : "I looked another way I sought for compensa- tion in another hemisphere. Contemplating Spain, such as our ancestors had known her, I resolved that, if France had Spain, it should not be Spain with the Indies. I called the New World into existence to redress the balance of the Old." Ill THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND THE EUROPEAN BALANCE OF POWER Ill THE MONROE DOCTRINE AND THE EUROPEAN BALANCE OF POWER PRESIDENT MONROE said in effect that the western hemisphere must be made safe for democracy. It was reserved for our own gene- ration and for President Wilson to extend the declaration and to say that the world must be made safe for democracy. President Monroe announced that we would uphold international law and republican government in this hemi- sphere, and as a quid pro quo he announced that it was the settled policy of the United States to refrain from all interference in the internal affairs of European states. He based his decla- ration, therefore, not mainly on right and justice, but on the doctrine of the separation of the European and American spheres of politics. The Monroe Doctrine and the policy of isolation thus became linked together in the public mind as compensating policies, neither one of which could stand without the other. Even Secre- tary Olney as late as 1895 declared that "Ameri- 44 From Isolation to Leadership can non-intervention in Europe implied Euro- pean non-intervention in America." It is not strange, therefore, that the public at large should regard the policy of isolation as the sole justification for the Monroe Doctrine. There is, however, neither logic nor justice in basing our right to uphold law and freedom in this hemisphere on our promise not to interfere with the violation of law and humanity in Eu- rope. The real difficulty is that the Monroe Doctrine as interpreted in recent years has developed certain imperialistic tendencies and that the imperialistic implications of the policy resemble too closely the imperialistic aims of the European powers. For three quarters of a century after Monroe's declaration the policy of isolation was more rigidly adhered to than ever, the principal departure from it being the signature and rati- fication of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty in 1850. By the terms of"thfs~freaTy we recognized a joint British interest in any canal that might be built through the isthmus connecting North and South America, undertook to establish the general neutralization of such canal, and agreed to invite other powers, European and American, to unite in protecting the same. Owing to dif- ferences that soon arose between the United Monroe Doctrine and European Balance 45 States and England as to the interpretation of the treaty, the clause providing for the adher- ence of other powers was never carried out. For nearly a hundred years we have success- fully upheld the Monroe Doctrine without a resort to force. The policy has never been favorably regarded by the powers of continental Europe. Bismarck described it as "an interna- tional impertinence." In recent years it has stirred up rather intense opposition in certain parts of Latin America. Until recently no American writers appear to have considered the real nature of the sanction on which the doctrine rested. How is it that without an army and until recent years without a navy of any size we have been able to uphold a policy which has been described as an impertinence to Latin America and a standing defiance to Europe? Americans generally seem to think that the Monroe Doctrine has in it an inherent sanctity which prevents other nations from violating it. In view of the general disregard of sanctities, inherent or acquired, during the early stages of the late war, this explanation will not hold good and some other must be sought. Ameri- cans have been so little concerned with interna- tional affairs that they have failed to see any connection between the Monroe Doctrine and 46 From Isolation to Leadership the balance oLpQger in Europe. The existence of a European balance of power is the only ex- planation of our having been able to uphold the Monroe Doctrine for so long a time without a resort to force. Some one or more of the Eu- ropean powers would long ago have stepped in and called our bluff, that is, forced us to repudi- ate the Monroe Doctrine or fight for it, had it not been for the well-grounded fear that as soon as they became engaged with us some other European power would attack them in the rear. A few illustrations will be sufficient to establish this thesis. The most serious strain to which the Monroe Doctrine was ever subjected was the attempt of Louis Napoleon during the American Civil War to establish the empire of Maximilian in Mexico under French auspices. He was clever enough to induce England and Spain to go in with him in 1861 for the avowed purpose of collecting the claims of their subjects against the government of Mexico. Before the joint intervention had gone very far, however, these two powers became convinced that Napoleon had ulterior designs and withdrew their forces. Napoleon's Mexican venture was deliberately calculated on the success of the Southern Con- federacy. Hence, his friendly relations with Monroe Doctrine and European Balance 47 the Confederate commissioners and the talk of an alliance between the Confederacy and Maximilian backed by the power of France. Against each successive step taken by France in Mexico Mr. Seward, Lincoln's Secretary of State, protested. As the Civil War drew to a successful conclusion his protests became more and more emphatic. Finally, in the spring of 1866, the United States Government began massing troops on the Mexican border and Mr. Seward sent what was practically an ultimatum to the French Emperor; he requested to know when the long-promised withdrawal of the French troops would take place. Napoleon replied, fixing the dates for their withdrawal in three separate detachments. American historians have usually attributed Napoleon's backdown to Seward's diplomacy supported by the military power of the United States, which was, of course, greater then than at any previous time in our history. All this un- doubtedly had its effect on Napoleon's mind, but it appears that conditions in Europe just at that particular moment had an even greater influence in causing him to abandon his Mexi- can scheme. Within a few days of the receipt of Seward's ultimatum Napoleon was informed of Bismarck's determination to force a war with 48 From Isolation to Leadership Austria over the Schleswig-Holstein contro- versy. Napoleon realized that the territorial aggrandizement of Prussia, without any corres- ponding gains by France, would be a serious blow to his prestige and in fact endanger his throne. He at once entered upon a long and hazardous diplomatic game in which Bismarck outplayed him and eventually forced him into war. In order to have a free hand to meet the European situation he decided to yield to the American demands. As the European situa- tion developed he hastened the final withdrawal of his troops and left Maximilian to his fate. Thus the Monroe Doctrine was vindicated ! Let us take next President Cleveland's inter- vention in the Venezuelan boundary dispute. Here surely was a clear and spectacular vindi- cation of the Monroe Doctrine which no one can discount. Let us briefly examine the facts. Some 30,000 square miles of territory on the border of Venezuela and British Guiana were in dispute. Venezuela, a weak and helpless state, had offered to submit the question to arbitra- tion. Great Britain, powerful and overbearing, refused. After Secretary Olney, in a long correspondence ably conducted, had failed to move the British Government, President Cleveland decided to intervene. In a message Monroe Doctrine and European Balance 49 to Congress in December, 1895, he reviewed the controversy at length, declared that the acquisition of territory in America by a Euro- pean power through the arbitrary advance of a boundary line was a clear violation of the Mon- roe Doctrine, and asked Congress for an appro- priation to pay the expenses of a commission which he proposed to appoint for the purpose of determining the true boundary, which he said it would then be our duty to uphold. Lest there should be any misunderstanding as to his intentions he solemnly added: "In making these recommendations I am fully alive to the respon- sibility incurred and keenly realize all the conse- quences that may follow." Congress promptly voted the appropriation. Here was a bold and unqualified defiance of England. No one before had ever trod so roughly on the British lion's tail with impunity. The English-speaking public on both sides of the Atlantic was stunned and amazed. Outside of diplomatic circles few persons were aware that any subject of controversy between the two countries existed, and no one had any idea that it was of a serious nature. Suddenly the two nations found themselves on the point of war. After the first outburst of indignation the storm passed; and before the American 50 From Isolation to Leadership boundary commission completed its investiga- tion England signed an arbitration agreement with Venezuela. Some persons, after looking in vain for an explanation, have concluded that Lord Salisbury's failure to deal more seri- ously with Mr. Cleveland's affront to the British Government was due to his sense of humor. But here again the true explanation is to be found in events that were happening in another quarter of the globe. Cleveland's Venezuelan message was sent to Congress on December I7th. At the end of the year came Dr. Jameson's raid into the Transvaal and on the third of January the German Kaiser sent his famous telegram of congratulation to Paul Kruger.* The wrath of England was suddenly diverted from America to Germany, and Lord Salisbury avoided a rupture with the United States over a matter which after all was not of such serious moment to England in order to be free to deal with a question involving much greater interests in South Africa. The Monroe Doctrine was none the less effectively vindicated. In 1902 Germany made a carefully planned and determined effort to test out the Monroe Doctrine and see whether we would fight for it. In that year Germany, England, and Italy made a naval demonstration against Venezuela Monroe Doctrine and European Balance 51 for the purpose of forcing her to recognize as valid certain claims of their subjects. How England was led into the trap is still a mystery, but the Kaiser thought that he had her thor- oughly committed, that if England once started in with him she could not turn against him. But he had evidently not profited by the ex- perience of Napoleon III in Mexico. Through the mediation of Herbert Bowen, the American minister, Venezuela agreed to recognize in principle the claims of the foreign powers and to arbitrate the amount. England and Italy accepted this offer and withdrew their squad- rons. Germany, however, remained for a time obdurate. This much was known at the time. A rather sensational account of what followed next has recently been made public in Thayer's "Life and Lettert of John Hay." Into the merits of the controversy that arose over Thayer's version of the Roosevelt-Holleben interview it is not necessary to enter. The significant fact, that Germany withdrew from Venezuela under pressure, is, however, amply established. Admiral Dewey stated publicly that the entire American fleet was assembled at the time under his command in Porto Rican waters ready to move at a moment's notice. 52 From Isolation to Leadership Why did Germany back down from her posi- tion? Her navy was supposed to be at least as powerful as ours. The reason why the Kaiser concluded not to measure strength with the United States was that England had accepted arbitration and withdrawn her support and he did not dare attack the United States with the British navy in his rear. Again the nicely adjusted European balance prevented the Monroe Doctrine from being put to the test of actual war. While England has from time to time ob- jected to some of the corollaries deduced from the Monroe Doctrine, she has on the whole been not unfavorably disposed toward the essential features of that policy. The reason for this is that the Monroe Doctrine has been an open-door policy, and has thus been in general accord with the British policy of free trade. The United States has not used the Monroe Doctrine for the establishment of exclusive trade relations with our southern neighbors. In fact, we have largely neglected the South American countries as a field for the development of American commerce. The failure to cultivate this field has not been due wholly to neglect, however, but to the fact that we have had employment for all our capital Monroe Doctrine and European Balance 53 at home and consequently have not been in a position to aid in the industrial development of the Latin-American states, and to the further fact that our exports have been so largely the came and hence the trade of both North and South America has been mainly with Europe. There has, therefore, been little rivalry between the United States and the powers of Europe in the field of South American commerce. Our interest has been political rather than com- mercial. We have prevented the establish- ment of spheres of influence and preserved the open door. This situation has been in full accord with British policy. Had Great Britain adopted a high tariff policy and been compelled to demand commercial concessions from Latin America by force, the Monroe Doctrine would long since have gone by the board and been forgotten. Americans should not forget the fact, moreover, that at any time during the past twenty years Great Britain could have settled all her outstanding difficulties with Germany by agreeing to sacrifice the Monroe Doctrine and give her rival a free hand in South America. In the face of such a combina- tion our navy would have been of little avail. IV IV INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION WITH- OUT THE SANCTION OF FORCE PRESIDENT MONROE'S declaration had a nega- tive as well as a positive side. It was in effect an announcement to the world that we would not use force in sapport of law and justice anywhere except in the Western Hemisphere, that we intended to stay at home and mind our own business. Washington and Jefferson had recommended a policy of isolation on grounds of expediency. Washington, as we have seen, regarded this policy as a temporary expedient, wkile Jeffersen upon two separate occasions was ready to form an alliance with England. Probably neither one of them contemplated the possibility of the United States shirking its responsibilities as a member of the family of nations. Monroe's message contained the im- plied promise that if Europe would refrain from interfering in the political concerns of this hemisphere, we would abstain from all inter- vention in Europe. From that day until our SI 58 From Isolation to Leadership entrance into the World War it was generally understood, and on numerous occasions offi- cially proclaimed, that the United States would not resort to force on any question arising outside of America except where its material interests were directly involved. We have not refrained from diplomatic action in matters not strictly American, but it has always been understood that such action would not be backed by force. In the existing state of world politics this limitation has been a serious handi- cap to American diplomacy. To take what we could get and to give nothing in return has been a hard rule for our diplomats, and has greatly circumscribed their activities. Diplomatic ac- tion without the use or threat of force has, however, accomplished something in the world at large, so that American influence has by no means been limited to the western hemisphere. During the first half of the nineteenth century the subject of slavery absorbed a large part of the attention of American statesmen. The fact that they were not concerned with foreign problems outside of the American hemisphere probably caused them to devote more time and attention to this subject than they would otherwise have done. Slavery and isolation had a very narrowing effect on men in public International Cooperation 59 life, especially during the period from 1830 to 1860. As the movement against slavery in the early thirties became world-wide, the retention of the "peculiar institution" in this country had the effect of increasing our isola- tion. The effort of the American Colonization Society to solve or mitigate the problem of slavery came very near giving us a colony in Africa. In fact, Liberia, the negro republic founded on the west coast of Africa by the Colonization Society, was in all essentials an American protectorate, though the United States carefully refrained in its communications with other powers from doing more than ex- pressing its good will for the little republic. As Liberia was founded years before Africa became a field for European exploitation, it was suffered to pursue its course without outside interference, and the United States was never called upon to decide whether its diplomatic protection would be backed up by force. The slave trade was a subject of frequent discussion between the United States an4 Eng- land during the first half of the nineteenth century, and an arrangement for its suppression was finally embodied in Article VIII of the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842. The only reason why the two countries had never been 60 From Isolation to Leadership able to act in accord on this question before was that Great Britain persistently refused to renounce the right of impressment which she had exercised in the years preceding the War of 1812. The United States therefore refused to sign any agreement which would permit British naval officers to search American vessels in time of peace. In 1820 the United States declared the slave trade to be a form of piracy, and Great Britain advanced the view that as there was no doubt of the right of a naval officer to visit and search a ship suspected of piracy, her officers should be permitted to visit and search ships found off the west coast of Africa under the American flag which were suspected of being engaged in the slave trade. The United States stoutly refused to acquiesce in this view. In the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842 it was finally agreed that each of the two powers should maintain on the coast of Africa a sufficient squadron "to enforce, sepa- rately and respectively, the laws, rights, and obligations of each of the two countries for the suppression of the slave trade." It was further agreed that the officers should act in concert and cooperation, but the agreement was so worded as to avoid all possibility of our being drawn into an entangling alliance. International Cooperation 61 The United States has upon various occa- sions expressed a humanitarian interest in the natives of Africa. In 1884 two delegates were sent to the Berlin conference which adopted a general act giving a recognized status to the Kongo Free State. The American delegates signed the treaty in common with the delegates of the European powers, but it was not sub- mitted to the Senate for ratification for reasons stated as follows by President Cleveland in his annual message of December 8, 1885: "A conference of delegates of the principal commercial nations was held at Berlin last winter to discuss methods whereby the Kongo basin might be kept open to the world's trade. Dele- gates attended on behalf of the United States on the understanding that their part should be merely deliberative, without imparting to the results any binding character so far as the United States were concerned. This reserve was due to the indisposition of this Government to share in any disposal by an international congress of jurisdictional questions in remote foreign territories. The results of the confer- ence were embodied in a formal act of the na- ture of an international convention, which laid down certain obligations purporting to be binding on the signatories, subject to ratifica- 62 From Isolation to Leadership tion within one year. Notwithstanding the reservation under which the delegates of the United States attended, their signatures were attached to the general act in the same manner as those of the plenipotentiaries of other govern- ments, thus making the United States appear, without reserve or qualification, as signatories to a joint international engagement imposing on the signers the conservation of the territorial integrity of distant regions where we have no established interests or control. "This Government does not, however, regard its reservation of liberty of action in the premises as at all impaired; and holding that an engage- ment to share in the obligation of enforcing neutrality in the remote valley of the Kongo would be an alliance whose responsibilities we are not in a position to assume, I abstain from asking the sanction of the Senate to that general act." The United States also sent delegates to the international conference held at Brussels in 1890 for the purpose of dealing with the slave trade in certain unappropriated regions of Central Africa. The American delegates in- sisted that prohibitive duties should be imposed on the importation of spirituous liquors into the Kongo. The European representatives, International Cooperation 65, being unwilling to incorporate the American proposals, framed a separate tariff convention for the Kongo, which the American delegates refused to sign. The latter did, however, affix their signatures to the general treaty which pro- vided for the suppression of the African slave trade and the restriction of the sale of firearms, ammunition, and spirituous liquors in certain parts of the African continent. In ratifying the treaty the Senate reaffirmed the American policy of isolation in the following resolution: "That the United States of America, having neither possessions nor protectorates in Africa, hereby disclaims any intention, in ratifying this treaty, to indicate any interest whatsoever in the possessions or protectorates established or claimed on that Continent by the other powers, or any approval of the wisdom, expediency or lawfulness thereof, and does not join in any expressions in the said General Act which might be construed as such a declaration or acknowl- edgement; and, for this reason, that it is desir- able that a copy of this resolution be inserted in the protocol to be drawn up at the time of the exchange of the ratifications of this treaty on the part of the United States." The United States has always stood for legality in international relations and has al- 64 From Isolation to Leadership ways endeavored to promote the arbitration uf international disputes. Along these lines we have achieved notable success. It is, of course, sometimes difficult to separate questions f in- ternational law from questions of international politics. We have been so scrupulous in our efforts to keep out of political entanglements that we have sometimes failed to uphold prin- ciples of law in the validity of which we were as much concerned as any other nation. We have always recognized international law as a part of the law of the land, and we have al- ways acknowledged the moral responsibilities that rested on us as a member of the society of nations. In fact, the Constitution of the United States expressly recognizes the binding force of the law of nations and of treaties. As inter- national law is the only law that governs the relations between states, we are, of course, di- rectly concerned in the enforcement of exist- ing law and in the development of new law. When the Declaration of Paris was drawn up by the European powers at the close of the Crimean War in 1856, the United States was invited to give its adherence. The four rules embodied in the declaration, which have since formed the basis of maritime law, are as follows: First, privateering is, and remains, abolished. Sec- International Cooperation 65 ond, the neutral flag covers enemy's goods, with the exception of contraband of war. Third, neutral goods, with the exceptiom of contraband of war, are not liable to capture under the enemy's flag. Fourth, blockades, in order to be binding, must be effective. The United States Government was in thorough accord with the second, third, and fourth rules but was unwill- ing, as matters then itood, to commit itself to the first rule. It had never been our policy to maintain a large standing navy. In the War of 1812, as in the Revolution, we depended upon privateers to attack the commerce of the enemy. In reply to the invitation to give our adherence to the declaration, Secretary Marcy made a counter proposition, namely, that the powers of Europe should agree to exempt all private prop- erty, except of course contraband of war, from capture on the high seas in time of war. He said that if they would agree to this, the United States would agree to abolish privateering. The powers of Europe refused to accept this amend- ment. We refrained from signing the Declara- tion of Paris, therefore, not because it went too far, but because it did not go far enough. During the Civil War the United States Government used its diplomatic efforts to pre- vent the recognition of the independence of the 66 From Isolation to Leadership Confederacy and the formation of hostile alli- ances. It made no effort to form any alliance itself and insisted that the struggle be regarded as an American question. The dispute with England over the Alabama Claims came near precipitating war, but the matter was finally adjusted by the Treaty of Washington. The most significant feature of this treaty, as far as the present discussion is concerned, was the formal adoption of three rules which were not only to govern the decision of the "Ala- bama Claims," but which were to be binding upon England and the United States for the future. It was further agreed that these rules should be brought to the knowledge of other maritime powers who should be invited to accede to them. The rules forbade the fitting out, arming, or equipping within neutral juris- diction of vessels intended to cruise or carry on war against a power with which the neutral is at peace; they forbade the use of neutral ports or waters as a base of naval operations; and they imposed upon neutrals the exercise of due dili- gence to prevent these things from being done. While these rules have never been formally adopted by the remaining powers, they are gen- erally recognized as embodying obligationswhich are now incumbent upon all neutrals. International Cooperation 67 When the United States decided to accept the invitation of the Czar of Russia to attend the first peace conference at The Hague in 1899, grave misgivings were expressed by many of the more conservative men in public life. The participation of the United States with the powers of Europe in this conference was taken by many Americans to mark the end of the old order and the beginning of a new era in American diplomacy. The conference, how- ever, was concerned with questions of general international interest, and had no bearing upon the internal affairs of any state, European or American. Lest there should be any mis- apprehension as to the historic policy of the United States, the final treaty was signed by the American delegation under the express reservation of a declaration previously read in open session. This declaration was as follows: "Nothing contained in this convention shall be so construed as to require the United States of America to depart from its traditional policy of not intruding upon, interfering with, or entangling itself in the political questions or policy or internal administration of any foreign state; nor shall anything contained in the said convention be construed to imply a relinquish- ment by the United States of America of 68 From Isolation to Leadership its traditional attitude toward purely American questions." The establishment of the Perma- nent Court of Arbitration at The Hague which resulted from the first conference was a notable achievement, although the Court has accom- plished less than its advocates hoped. This was the most important occasion on which American delegates had sat together with European diplomats in a general conference. Our delegation was the object of considerable interest and was not without influence in shap- ing the provisions of the final treaty. It was through the personal influence of Andrew D. White that the Emperor of Germany was per- suaded to permit his delegation to take part in the proceedings establishing the Court of Arbi- tration. The second Hague Conference revised the Convention for the Pacific Settlement of Inter- national Disputes, drew up a plan for an Inter- national Prize Court, and attempted a codifica- tion of the rules of international law on a number of subjects relating to the conduct of war and the rights of neutrals. The American dele- gates, headed by Mr. Choate, not only took a prominent part in these proceedings, but, acting under instructions from Secretary Root, they proposed to the Conference the creation International Cooperation 69 of a permanent international court of justice. The creation of an international court of justice whose decisions would have the force of law, as distinguished from an international court of arbitration whose decisions are usually arrived at by a compromise of conflicting legal or poli- tical points of view, had long been advocated by advanced thinkers, but the proposition had always been held by practical statesmen to be purely academic. The serious advocacy of the proposition at this time by a great nation like the United States and the able arguments ad- vanced by Mr. Choate marked an important step forward and made a profound impression. There were two difficulties in the way of estab- lishing such a court at the second Hague Conference. In the first place, the delegation of the United States was the only one which had instructions on this subject, and in the second place it was found to be impossible to agree upon a method of selecting the judges. The great world powers, with the exception of the United States, demanded permanent repre- sentation on the court. The smaller nations, relying on the doctrine of the equality of states, demanded likewise to be represented. If each nation could have been given the right to appoint a judge, the court could have been 70 From Isolation to Leadership organized, but there would have been forty- four judges instead of fifteen, the number suggested in the American plan. The Draft Convention for the Establishment of the Court of Arbitral Justice, as it was agreed the new court should be designated, was submitted to the Conference and its adoption recommended to the signatory powers. This Draft contained thirty-five articles and covered everything except the method of appointing judges. This question was to be settled by diplomatic nego- tiation, and it was agreed that the court should be established as soon as a satisfactory agree- ment with regard to the choice of judges could be reached. After the adjournment of the Con- ference the United States continued its ad- vocacy of the international court of justice through the ordinary diplomatic channels. The proposal was made that the method of selecting judges for the Prize Court be adopted for the court of justice, that is, that each power should appoint a judge, that the judges of the larger powers should always sit on the court while the judges of the other powers should sit by a system QL-Fotatiqn forlimited-periods. It was found, however, that many of the smaller states were unwilling to accept this suggestion, and as difficulties which we will mention pres- International Cooperation 71 ently prevented the establishment of the Prize Court, the whole question of the court of justice was postponed. Most of the conventions adopted by the second Hague Conference were ratified by the United States without reservation. The fact, however, that certain of these conventions were not ratified by all the powers represented at the Conference, and that others were ratified with important reservations, left the status of most of the conventions in doubt, so that at the beginning of the World War there was great confusion as to what rules were binding and what were not binding. The Conference found it impossible to arrive at an agreement on many of the most vital questions of maritime law. Under these circumstances the powers were not willing to have the proposed International Prize Court established without the previous codification of the body of law which was to govern its decisions. In order to supply this need the London Naval Conference was convened in December, 1908, and issued a few months later the Declara- tion of London. The London Naval Confer- ence was attended by representatives of the principal maritime powers including the United States, and the Declaration which it issued was 72 From Isolation to Leadership avowedly a codification of the existing rules of international law. This was not true, how- ever, of all the provisions of the Declaration. On several of the most vital questions of mari- time law, such as blockade, the doctrine of continuous voyage, the destruction of neutral prizes, and the inclusion of food stuffs in the list of conditional contraband, the Declaration was a compromise and therefore unsatisfactory. It encountered from the start the most violent opposition in England. In Parliament the Naval Prize Bill, which was to give the Declara- tion effect, was discussed at considerable length. It passed the House of Commons by a small vote, but was defeated in the House of Lords. It was denounced by the press, and a petition to the king, drawn up by the Imperial Maritime League protesting against it, was signed by a long list of commercial associations, mayors, members of the House of Lords, general offi- cers, and other public officials. One hundred and thirty-eight naval officers of flag rank addressed to the prime minister a public protest against the Declaration. In the debate in the House ,of Lords the main objections to the Declaration were (i) that it made food stuffs conditional contraband instead of placing them on the free list, (2) that the clause permitting International Cooperation 73 the seizure of conditional contraband bound for a fortified place or "other place serving as a base for the armed forces of the enemy" would render all English ports liable to be treated as bases by an enemy, and (3) that it permitted the destruction of neutral prizes. The refusal of England to ratify the Declara- tion of London sealed its fate. The United States Senate formally ratified it, but this rati- fication was, of course, conditional on the rati- fication of other powers. At the beginning of the Great War the United States made a formal proposal to the belligerent powers that they should agree to adopt the Declaration for the period of the war in order that there might be a definite body of law for all parties concerned. This proposal was accepted by Germany and Austria, but England, France, and Russia were not willing to accept the Declaration of London without modifications. The United States, therefore, promptly withdrew its pro- posal and stated that where its rights as a neutral were concerned it would expect the belligerent powers to observe the recognized rules of international law and existing treaties. The Hague Conferences were concerned with questions of general international in- terest, and had no bearing upon the internal 74 From Isolation to Leadership affairs of states. Such, however, was not the character of the conference which convened at Algeciras, Spain, in December, 1905, for the purpose of adjusting the very serious dispute that had arisen between France and Germany over the status of Morocco. France had been engaged for some years in the peaceful penetra- tion of Morocco. By the terms of the Entente of 1904 England recognized Morocco as being within the French sphere of influence and France agreed to recognize England's position in Egypt. The German Kaiser had no idea of permitting any part of the world to be divided up without his consent. In March, 1905, while on a cruise in the Mediterranean, he disembarked at Tan- gier and paid a visit to the Sultan "in his character of independent sovereign." As the Russian armies had just suffered disastrous defeats at the hands of the Japanese, France could not count on aid from her ally and the Kaiser did not believe that the recently formed Entente was strong enough to enable her to count on English support. His object in landing at Tangier was, therefore, to check and humiliate France while she was isolated and to break up the Entente before it should develop into an alliance. Delcasse, the French foreign minister, "wanted to stand firm, but International Cooperation 75 Germany demanded his retirement and the prime minister accepted his resignation. In recognition of this triumph, the German chan- cellor Count von Billow was given the title of Prince. Not satisfied with this achievement, the Kaiser demanded a general European con- ference on the Moroccan question, and, in order to avoid war, President Roosevelt persuaded France to submit the whole dispute to the pow- ers interested. The Algeciras conference turned out to be a bitter disappointment to Germany. Not only did France receive the loyal support of England, but she was also backed by the United States and even by Italy a warning to Germany that the Triple Alliance was in danger. As the conference was called nominally for the purpose of instituting certain administrative reforms in Morocco, President Roosevelt decided, in view of our rights under a commercial treaty of 1880, to take part in the proceedings. The American delegates were Henry White, at that time ambassador to Italy, and Samuel R. Gummere, minister to Morocco. As the United States professed to have no political interests at stake, its delegates were instrumen- tal in composing many of the difficulties that arose during the conference and their influence was exerted to preserve the European balance of 76 From Isolation to Leadership power. The facts in regard to America's part in this conference were carefully concealed from the public. There was nothing in any published American document to indicate that the par- ticipation of our representatives was anything more than casual. Andre Tardieu, the well- known French publicist, who reported the con- ference and later published his impressions in book form, first indicated that President Roose- velt was a positive factor in the proceedings. But it was not until the publication of Bishop's "Theodore Roosevelt and His Time" that the full extent of Roosevelt's activities in this con- nection became known. There can be no doubt that our participation in the Moroccan conference was the most radical departure ever made from our traditional policy of isolation. Roosevelt's influence was exerted for preserving the balance of power in Europe. As we look back upon the events of that year we feel, in view of what has since happened, that he was fully justified in the course he pursued. Had his motives for participating in the conference been known at the time, they would not have been upheld either by the Senate or by public opinion. There are many serious objections to secret diplomacy, but it cannot be entirely done away with even under international Cooperation 77 a republican form of government until the people are educated to a fuller understanding of international politics. The German Kaiser was relentless in his attempt to score a diplo- matic triumph while France was isolated. He was thwarted, however, by the moral sup- port which England, Italy, and the United States gave to France. During the proceedings of the conference the American delegates declared in open session that the United States had no political interest in Morocco and that they would sign the treaty only with the understanding that the United States would thereby assume no "obligation or responsibility for the enforcement thereof." This declaration did not satisfy the United States Senate, which no doubt suspected the part that was actually played by America in the conference. At any rate, when the treaty was finally ratified the Senate attached to its resolution of ratification the following declara- tion: "Resolved further, That the Senate, as a part of this act of ratification, understands that the participation of the United States in the Algeciras conference and in the formation and adoption of the general act and protocol which resulted therefrom, was with the sole 78 From Isolation to Leadership purpose of preserving and increasing its com- merce in Morocco, the protection as to life, liberty, and property of its citizens residing or traveling therein, and of aiding by its friendly offices and efforts, in removing friction and controversy which seemed to menace the peace between powers signatory with the United States to the treaty of 1880, all of which are on terms of amity with this Government; and without purpose to depart from the traditional American foreign policy which forbids partici- pation by the United States in the settlement of political questions which are entirely European in their scope." The determination of the United States not to interfere in the internal politics of European states has not prevented occasional protests in the name of humanity against the harsh treatment accorded the Jews in certain European countries. On July 17, 1902, Secretary Hay protested in a note to the Rumanian govern- ment against a policy which was forcing thou- sands of Jews to emigrate from that country. The United States, he claimed, had more than a philanthropic interest in this matter, for the enforced emigration of the Jews from Rumania in a condition of utter destitution was "the mere transplantation of an artificially produced International Cooperation 79 diseased growth to a new place"; and, as the United States was practically their only place of refuge, we had a clearly established right of remonstrance. In the case of Russia informa- tion has repeatedly been sought through diplo- matic channels as to the extent of destitution among the Jewish population, and permission has been requested for the distribution of relief funds raised in the United States. Such in- quiries have been so framed as to amount to diplomatic protests. In his annual message of 1904 President Roosevelt went further and openly expressed the horror of the nation at the massacre of the Jews at Kishenef. These protests, however, were purely diplomatic in character. There was not the slightest hint at intervention. During the early stages of the Great War in Europe the Government of the United States endeavored to adhere strictly to its historic policy. The German invasion of Belgium with its attendant horrors made a deep impression upon the American people and aroused their righting spirit even more per- haps than the German policy of submarine war- fare, but it was on the latter issue, in which the interests and rights of the United States were directly involved, that we finally entered the war. V THE OPEN-DOOR POLICY V THE OPEN-DOOR POLICY IN THE Orient American diplomacy has had a somewhat freer hand than in Europe. Com- modore Perry's expedition to Japan in 1852- 1854 was quite a radical departure from the general policy of attending strictly to our own business. It would hardly have been under- taken against a country lying within the Euro- pean sphere of influence. There were, it is true, certain definite grievances to redress, but the main reason for the expedition was that Japan refused to recognize her obligations as a member of the family of nations and closed her ports to all intercourse with the outside world. American sailors who had been shipwrecked on the coast of Japan had failed to receive the treatment usually accorded by civilized nations. Finally the United States decided to send a naval force to Japan and to force that country to abandon her policy of exclusion and to open her ports to intercourse with other countries. Japan yielded only under the threat of superior 83 84 From Isolation to Leadership force. The conduct of the expedition, as well as our subsequent diplomatic negotiations with Japan, was highly creditable to the United States, and the Japanese people later erected a monument to the memory of Perry on the spot where he first landed. The acquisition of the Philippine Islands tended to bring us more fully into the current of world politics, but it did not necessarily disturb the balancing of European and American spheres as set up by President Monroe. Vari- ous explanations have been given of President McKinley's decision to retain the Philippine group, but the whole truth has in all probability not yet been fully revealed. The partition of China through the establishment of European spheres of influence was well under way when the Philippine Islands came within our grasp. American commerce with China was at this time second to that of England alone, and the concessions which were being wrung from China by the European powers in such rapid succession presented a bad outlook for us. The United States could not follow the example of the powers of Europe, for the seizure of a sphere of influence in China would not have been supported by the Senate or upheld by public opinion. It is probable that President McKin- The Open-Door Policy 85 ley thought that the Philippine Islands would not only provide a market for American goods, which owing to the Dingley tariff were begin- ning to face retaliatory legislation abroad, but that they would provide a naval base which would be of great assistance in upholding our interests in China. Talcott Williams made public some years later another explanation of President McKinley's decision which is interesting and appears to be well vouched for. He was informed by a mem- ber of McKinley's cabinet that while the Presi- dent's mind was not yet made up on the ques- tion, a personal communication was received from Lord Salisbury who warned the President that Germany was preparing to take over the Philippine Islands in case the United States should withdraw; that such a step would prob- ably precipitate a world war and that in the interests of peace and harmony it would be best for the United States to retain the entire group. The famous open-door policy was outlined by Secretary Hay in notes dated September 6, 1899, addressed to Great Britain, Germany, and Russia. Each of these powers was requested to give assurance and to make a declaration to the following effect: (i) that it would not interfere with any treaty port or vested interests in its so- 86 From Isolation to Leadership called sphere of influence; (2) that it would per- mit the Chinese tariff to continue in force*in such sphere and to be collected by Chinese officials; (3) that it would not discriminate against other foreigners in the matter of port dues or railroad rates. Similar notes were later addressed to France, Italy, and Japan. Eng- land alone expressed her willingness to sign such a declaration. The other powers, while professing thorough accord with the principles set forth by Mr. Hay, avoided committing them- selves to a formal declaration and no such decla- ration was ever made. Mr.'Hay made a skill- ful move, however, to clinch matters by in- forming each of the powers to whom the note had been addressed that in view of the favor- able replies from the other powers, its acceptance of the proposals of the United States was con- sidered "as final and definitive." Americans generally are under the impres- sion that John Hay originated the open-door policy and that it was successfully upheld by the United States. Neither of these im- pressions is correct. A few months before John Hay formulated his famous note Lord Charles Beresford came through America on his return from China and addressed the lead- ing chambers of commerce from San Francisco The Open-Door Policy 87 to New York, telling Americans what was actu- ally taking place in China and urging this coun- try to unite with England and Japan in an ef- fort to maintain the open door. Like the Monroe Doctrine, the open-door policy was thus Anglo-American in origin. There is little doubt that England and Japan were willing to form an alliance with the United States for the purpose of maintaining the open door in China, but our traditional policy of isolation prevented our committing ourselves to the employment of force. President McKinley, following the ex- ample of President Monroe, preferred an- nouncing our policy independently and re- questing the other powers to consent to it. Had John Hay been able to carry out the plan which he favored of an alliance with England and Japan, the mere announcement of the fact would have been sufficient to check the aggres- sions of the powers in China. Instead of such an alliance, however, we let it be known that while we favored the open door we would not fight for it under any conditions. The utter worthlessness of the replies that were made in response to Hay's note of Septem- ber 6, 1899, became fully apparent in the discussions that soon arose as to the status of consuls in the various spheres of influence. 88 From Isolation to Leadership Japan claimed that sovereignty did not pass with a lease and that even if China should sur- render jurisdiction over her, own people, the lessee governments could not acquire jurisdic- tion over foreigners in leased territory. This position was undoubtedly correct if the terri- torial integrity of China was really to be pre- served, but after negotiations with Russia and the other powers concerned Mr. Hay wrote to Minister Conger on February 3, 1900, that "The United States consuls in districts adja- cent to the foreign leased territories are to be instructed that they have n authority to exercise extra-territorial consular jurisdiction or to perform ordinary non-judicial consular acts within the leased territory under their present Chinese exequaturs/' Application was then made to the European powers for the ad- mission of American consuls in the leased ter- ritories for the performance of the ordinary consular functions, but in no case were they to exercise extra-territorial jurisdiction within a leased territory. The exploitation of China which continued at a rapid rate naturally aroused an intense anti-foreign sentiment and led to the Boxer \ uprising. Events moved with startling rapid- ity and United States troops took a prominent The Open-Door Policy 89 part with those of England, France, Russia, and Japan in the march to Peking for the relief of the legations. In a note to the powers July 3, 1900, Secretary Hay, in defining the attitude of the United States on the Chinese question, said: "The policy of the government of the United States is to seek a solution which may bring about permanent safety and peace to China, preserve Chinese territorial and admin- istrative entity, protect all rights guaranteed to friendly powers by treaty and international law, and safeguard for the world the principle of equal and impartial trade with all parts of che Chinese empire." Mr. Hay's notes were skillfully worded and had some influence in helping to formulate public opinion on the Chinese question both in this country and abroad, but we know now from his private letters which have recently been made public that he realized only too fully the utter futility of his efforts to stay the course of events. Dur- ing the exciting days of June, 1900, when the foreign legations at Peking were in a state of siege, Mr. Hay wrote to John W. Foster as follows : "What can be done in the present diseased state of the public mind ? There is such a mad- dog hatred of England prevalent among news- 90 From Isolation to Leadership papers and politicians that anything we should now do in China to take care of our imperiled interests would be set down to 'subservience to Great Britain'. . . . Every Senator I see says, 'For God's sake, don't let it appear we have any understanding with England.' How can I make bricks without straw? That we should be compelled to refuse the assistance of the greatest power in the world, in carrying out our own policy, because all Irishmen are Demo- crats and some Germans are' fools is enough to drive a man mad. Yet we shall do what we can." A little later (September 20, 1900) in confi- dential letters to Henry Adams, he exclaimed : "About China, it is the devil's own mess. We cannot possibly publish all the facts without breaking off relations with several Powers. We shall have to do the best we can, and take the consequences, which will be pretty serious, I do not doubt. 'Give and take' the axiom of diplomacy to the rest of the world is posi- tively forbidden to us, by both the Senate and public opinion. We must take what we can and give nothing which greatly narrows our possibilities. "I take it, you agree with us that we are to limit as far as possible our military operations The Open-Door Policy 91 in China, to withdraw our troops at the earliest day consistent with our obligations, and in the final adjustment to do everything we can for the integrity and reform of China, and to hold on like grim death to the Open Door. . . ." Again, November 21, 1900: "What a business this has been in China! So far we have got on by being honest and nai'f. . . . At least we are spared the infamy of an alliance with Germany. I would rather, I think, be the dupe of China, than the chum of the Kaiser. Have you noticed how the world will take anything nowadays from a German? Billow said yesterday in substance 'We have demanded of China everything we can think of. If we think of anything else we will demand that, and be d d to you' and not a man in the world kicks." During the long negotiations that followed the occupation of Peking by the powers, the United States threw the weight of its influence on the side of moderation, urging the powers not to impose too many burdens on China and declaring that the only hope for the future lay in a strong, independent, responsible Chinese government. Contrary to the terms of the final protocol, however, Russia retained in Manchuria the troops concentrated there dur- 92 From Isolation to Leadership ing the Boxer movement with a view to ex- acting further concessions from China. The open-door policy was again ignored. The seri- ousness of the situation led England and Japan to sign a defensive agreement January 30, 1902, recognizing England's interest in China and Japan's interest in Korea, and providing that if either party should be attacked in de- fense of its interest, the other party would re- main neutral, unless a third power joined in, in which event the second party would come to the assistance of the first. A formal protest made by the United States, February I, against some of the demands Russia was making on China led Russia to conclude that the American gov- ernment had an understanding with England and Japan, but Mr. Hay gave the assurance that he had known nothing about the Anglo- Japanese agreement until it was made public. He succeeded in securing from Russia, however, a definite promise to evacuate Manchuria, but as the time for the withdrawal of her troops drew near, Russia again imposed new conditions on China, and deliberately misrepresented to the United States the character of the new proposals. After the suppression of the Boxer uprising, China had agreed to extend the scope of her commercial treaties with the powers. When The Open-Door Policy 93 the negotiation of a new treaty with the United States was begun, our representative demanded that at least two new ports in Manchuria be opened to foreign trade and residence. The Chinese commissioners declined to discuss the subject on the alleged ground that they had no instructions to do so. It was evident that there was secret opposition somewhere, and after considerable difficulty Mr. Hay finally secured evidence that it came from Russia. When con- fronted with the evidence the Russian Govern- ment finally admitted the facts. We were told that we could not be admitted to one of the ports that we had designated because it was situated within the Russian railway zone, and therefore not under the complete jurisdiction of China, but that another port would be substi- tuted for it. Secretary Hay and President Roose- velt were helpless. They accepted what they could get and kept quiet. "The administra- tive entity" of China was again utterly ignored. The difficulty was that we did not have a strong enough navy in the Pacific to fight Russia alone, and President Roosevelt and Secretary Hay realized that neither the Senate nor public opinion would consent to an alliance with England and Japan. Had these three powers made a joint declaration in support of the open- 94 From Isolation to Leadership door policy, the exploitation of China would have ceased, there would have been no Russo- Japanese war, and the course of world history during the period that has since intervened might have been very different. When we backed down and abandoned Man- churia to Russian exploitation Japan stepped into the breach. After long negotiations the Japanese Government finally delivered an ulti- matum to Russia which resulted in the rupture of diplomatic relations and war. After a series of notable victories on land and sea Japan was fast approaching the end of her resources, and it is now an open secret that the Emperor wrote a personal letter to President Roosevelt re- questing him to intervene diplomatically and pave the way for peace. The President was quick to act on the suggestion and the commis- sioners of Russia and Japan met at Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Here President Roosevelt's intervention should have ceased. The terms of the Treaty of Portsmouth were a bitter disappointment to the Japanese people and the Japanese commissioners undertook to shift the burden from their shoulders by stating that President Roosevelt had urged them to sur- render their claim to the Island of Saghalien and to give up all idea of an indemnity. Japa- The Open-Door Policy 95 nese military triumph had again, as at the close of the Chino-Japanese War, been followed by di- plomatic defeat, and for this defeat Japanese public opinion held President Roosevelt respon- sible. From the days of Commodore Perry and Townsend Harris to the Treaty of Portsmouth, relations between the United States and Japan had been almost ideal. Since the negotiations at Portsmouth there has been a considerable amount of bad feeling, and at times diplomatic relations have been subjected to a severe strain. Having fought a costly war in order to check the Russian advance in Manchuria, the Japanese naturally felt that they had a para- mount interest in China. They consequently sharply resented the attempts which the United States subsequently made, particularly Secre- tary Knox's proposal for the neutralization of the railways of Manchuria, to formulate policies for China. They took the position that we had had our day and that we must henceforth remain hands off so far as China was concerned. This attitude of mind was not unnatural and during the World War the United States, in order to bind the Japanese government more closely to the Allied Cause, agreed to recognize, in the Lansing-Ishii agreement, the "special in- terests" of Japan in China. VI ANGLO-AMERICAN RELATIONS VI ANGLO-AMERICAN RELATIONS A FEW years ago George L. Beer, one of oijr leading students of British colonial policy, said. "It is easily conceivable, and not at all improb- able, that the political evolution of the next centuries may take such a course that the American Revolution will lose the great sig- nificance that is now attached to it, and will appear merely as the temporary separation of two kindred peoples whose inherent similarity was obscured by superficial differences result- ing from dissimilar economic and social condi- tions." This statement does not appear as extravagant to-day as it did ten years ago. As early as 1894, Captain Mahan, the great author- ity on naval history, published an essay entitled "Possibilities of an Anglo-American Reunion," in which he pointed out that these two countries were the only great powers which were by geo- graphical position exempt from the burden of large armies and dependent upon the sea for intercourse with the other great nations. 99 ioo From Isolation to Leadership In a volume dealing with questions of Ameri- can foreign policy, published in 1907, the pres- ent writer concluded the last paragraph with this statement: "By no means the least signifi- cant of recent changes is the development of cordial relations with England; and it seems now that the course of world politics is destined to lead to the further reknitting together of the two great branches of the Anglo-Saxon race in bonds of peace and international sympathy, in a union not cemented by any formal alliance, but based on community .of ^interests and of aims, a union that will constitute the highest guar- antee of the political stability and moral progress of the world." The United States has very naturally had closer contact with England than with any other European power. This has been due to the fact that England was the mother country, that after independence was established a large part of our trade continued to be with the British Isles, that our northern boundary touches British territory for nearly four thou- sand miles, and that the British navy and mercantile marine have dominated the Atlantic Ocean which has been our chief highway of intercourse with other nations. Having had more points of contact we have had more dis- Anglo-American Relations 101 putes with England than with any other nation. Some writers have half jocularly attributed this latter fact to our common language. The Englishman reads our books, papers, and magazines, and knows what we think of him, while we read what he writes about us, and in neither case is the resulting impression flatter- ing to the national pride. Any one who takes the trouble to read what was written in England about America and the Americans between 1820 and 1850 will wonder how war was avoided. A large number of English travellers came to the United States during this period and published books about us when they got home. The books were bad enough in themselves, but the great Eng- lish periodicals, the Edinburgh Review, Black' wood's, the British Review, and the Quarterly, quoted at length the most objectionable pas- sages from these writers and made malicious attacks on Americans and American institu- tions. American men were described as "tur- bulent citizens, abandoned. Christians, incon- stant husbands, unnatural fathers, and treach- erous friends." Our soldiers and sailors were charged with cowardice in the War of 1812. It was stated that "in the southern parts of the Union the rites of our holy faith are almost IO2 From Isolation to Leadership never practised. . . . Three and a half millions enjoy no means of religious instruction. The religious principle is gaining ground in the northern parts of the Union; it is becoming fashionable among the better orders of society to go to church . . . The greater number of states declare it to be unconstitutional to refer to the providence of God in any of their public acts." The Quarterly Review informed its readers that "the supreme felicity of a true- born American is inaction of body and inanity of mind." Dickens's American Notes was an ungrateful return for the kindness and enthusi- asm with which he had been received in this country. De Tocqueville's Democracy in Amer- ica was widely read in England and doubtless had its influence in revising opinion concerning America. Richard Cobden was, however, the first Englishman to interpret correctly the significance of America as an economic force. His essay on America, published in 1835, pointed out that British policy should be more concerned with economic relations with Amer- ica than with European politics. As Professor Dunning says, "Cobden made the United States the text of his earliest sermon against militarism and protectionism." Notwithstanding innumerable disputes over Anglo-American Relations 103 boundaries, fisheries, and fur seals, trade with the British West Indies and Canada, and ques- tions of neutral rights and obligations, we have had unbroken peace for more than a hun- dred years. Upon several occasions, notably during the Canadian insurrection of 1837 and during our own Civil War, disturbances along the Canadian border created strained relations, but absence of frontier guards and forts has prevented hasty action on the part of either government. The agreement of 1817, effecting disarmament on the Great Lakes, has not only saved both countries the enormous cost of maintaining navies on these inland waters, but it has prevented hostile demonstrations in times of crisis. During the Canadian rebellion of 1837 Ameri- cans along the border expressed openly their sympathy for the insurgents who secured arms and munitions from the American side. In December a British force crossed the Niagara River, boarded and took possession of the Caro- line^ a vessel which had been hired by the insurgents to convey their ca'nnon and other sup- plies. The ship was fired and sent over the Falls. When the Caroline was boarded one American, Amos Durfee, was killed and several others wounded. The United States at once IO4 From Isolation to Leadership demanded redress, but the British Government took the position that the seizure of the Caro- line was a justifiable act of self-defense against people whom their own government either could not or would not control. The demands of the United States were still unredressed when in 1840 a Canadian named Alexander McLeod made the boast in a tavern on the American side that he had slain Durfee. He was taken at his word, examined before a magistrate, and committed to jail in Lockport. McLeod 's arrest created great excitement on both sides of the border. The British minister at Washington called upon the Government of the United States "to take prompt and effectual steps for the liberation of Mr: McLeod." Secretary of State Forsyth replied that the of- fense with which McLeod was charged had been committed within the State of New York; that the jurisdiction of each State of the United States was, within its proper sphere, perfectly independent of the Federal Government; that the latter could not interfere. The date set for the trial of McLeod was the fourth Monday in March, 1841. Van Buren's term ended and Harrison's began on the 4th of March, and Webster became Secretary of .State. The British minister was given instructions bv his Anglo-American Relations 105 government to demand the immediate release of McLeod. This demand was made, he said, because the attack on the Caroline was an act of a public character; because it was a justifiable use of force for the defense of British territory against unprovoked attack by "British rebels and American pirates"; because it was contrary to the principles of civilized nations to hold individuals responsible for acts done by order of the constituted authorities of the State; and be- cause Her Majesty's government could not ad- mit the doctrine that the Federal Government had no power to interfere and that the decision must rest with the State of New York. The relations of foreign powers were with the Fed- eral Government. To admit that the Federal Government had no control over a State would lead to the dissolution of the Union so far as foreign powers were concerned, and to the accrediting of foreign diplomatic agents, not to the Federal Government, but to each separate State. Webster received the note quietly and sent the attorney-general to Lockport to see that McLeod had competent counsel. After con- siderable delay, during which Webster replied to the main arguments of the British note, McLeod was acquitted and released. In the midst of the dispute over the case of the lo6 From Isolation to Leadership Caroline serious trouble arose between the authorities of Maine and New Jlrunswick over the undeterminecPBoundary between the St. Croix River and the Highlands, and there en- sued the so-called "Aroostook War." During the summer of 1838 British and American lum- bermen began operating along the Aroostook River in large numbers. The governor of Maine sent a body of militia to enforce the au- thority of that State, and the New Brunswick authorities procured a detachment of British regulars to back up their position. Bloodshed was averted by the arrival of General Winfield Scott, who managed to restrain the Maine authorities. The administration found it neces- sary to take up seriously the settlement of the boundary question, and for the next three years the matter was under consideration, while each side had surveyors employed in a vain attempt to locate a line which would correspond to the line of the treaty. As soon as the McLeod affair was settled, Webster devoted himself earnestly to the boundary question. He de- cided to drop the mass of data accumulated by the surveyors and historians, and to reach an agreement by direct negotiation. In April, 1842, Alexander Baring, Lord Ash- burton, arrived in Washington and the follow- Anglo-American Relations 107 ing August the Webster-Ashburton treaty was signed. The boundary fixed by the treaty gave Maine a little more than half the area which she claimed and the United States appropriated $150,000 to compensate Maine for the territory which she had lost. The settlement of these matters did not, how- ever, insure peace with England. Settlers were crowding into Oregon and it was evident that the joint occupation, established by the convention of 1818, would soon have to be ter- minated and a divisional line agreed upon. Great Britain insisted that her southern bound- ary should extend at least as far as the Columbia River, while Americans finally claimed the whole of the disputed area, and one of the slo- gans of the presidential campaign of 1844 was "Fifty-Four-Forty or Fight." At the same time Great Britain actively opposed the an- nexation of Texas by the United States. Her main reason for this course was that she wished to encourage the development of Texas as a cotton-growing country from which she could draw a large enough supply to make her in- dependent of the United States. If Texas should thus devote herself to the production of cotton as her chief export crop, she would, of course, adopt a free-trade policy and thus io8 From Isolation to Leadership create a considerable market for British goods. As soon as it became evident that Tyler con- templated taking definite steps toward annexa- tion, Lord Aberdeen secured the cooperation of the government of Louis Philippe in opposing the absorption of Texas by the American repub- lic. While the treaty for the annexation of Texas was before the Senate, Lord Aberdeen came forward with a proposition that England and France should unite with Texas and Mexico in a diplomatic act or perpetual treaty, securing to Texas recognition as an independent republic, but preventing her from ever acquiring territory beyond the Rio Grande or joining the American union. While the United States would be in- vited to join in this act, it was not expected that the government of that country would agree to it. Mexico obstinately refused to recognize the independence of Texas. Lord Aberdeen was 30 anxious to prevent the annexation of Texas that he was ready, if supported by France, to coerce Mexico and fight the United States, but the French Government was not willing to go this far, so the scheme was abandoned. The two foremost issues in the campaign of 1844 were the annexation of Texas and the occu- pation of Oregon. Texas was annexed by joint Anglo-American Relations 109 ^resolution a few days before the inauguration of Polk. This act, it was foreseen, would prob- ably provoke a war with Mexico, so Folk's first task was to adjust the Oregon dispute in order to avoid complications with England. The fate of California was also involved. That province was not likely to remain long in the hands of a weak power like Mexico. In fact, British consular agents and naval officers had for several years been urging upon their govern- ment the great value of Upper California. Aberdeen refused to countenance any insur- rectionary movement in California, but he directed his agents to keep vigilant watch on the proceedings of citizens of the United States in that province. Had England and Mexico arrived at an understanding and joined in a war against the United States, the probabilities are that England would have acquired not only the whole of Oregon, but California besides. In fact, in May, 1846, just as we were on the point of going to war with Mexico, the president of Mexico officially proposed to transfer California to England as security for a loan. Fortunately, the Oregon question had been adjusted and England had no reason for wishing to go to war with the United States. Mexico's offer was therefore rejected. Polk managed the diplo- no From Isolation to Leadership matic situation with admirable promptness and firmness. Notwithstanding the fact that the democratic platform had demanded "Fifty- Four-Forty or Fight," as soon as Polk became President he offered to compromise with Eng- land on the 49th parallel. When this offer was declined he asked permission of Congress to give England the necessary notice for the termina- tion of the joint occupation agreement, to pro- vide for the military defense of the territory in dispute, and to extend over it the laws of the United States. A few months later notice was given to England, but at the same time the hope was expressed that the matter might be adjusted diplomatically. As soon as it was evident that the United States was in earnest, England gracefully yielded and accepted the terms which had been first proposed. As war with Mexico was imminent the public generally approved of the Oregon compromise, though the criticism was made by some in the North that the South, having secured in Texas a large addition to slave territory, was indifferent about the expansion of free territory. In fact, Henry Cabot Lodge, in his recent little book, "One Hundred Years of Peace," says: "The loss of the region between the forty-ninth parallel and the line of 54-40 was one of the most severe Anglo-American Relations in which ever befell the United States. Whether it could have been obtained without a war is probably doubtful, but it never ought to have been said, officially or otherwise, that we would fight for 54-40 unless we were fully prepared to do so. If we had stood firm for the line of 54-40 without threats, it is quite possible that we might have succeeded in the end; but the hy- potheses of history are of little practical value, and the fact remains that by the treaty of 1846 we lost a complete control of the Pacific coast." That the United States lived through what Professor Dunning calls "the roaring forties" without a war with England seems now little less than a miracle. During the next fifteen years relations were much more amicable, though by no means free from disputes. The most important diplomatic act was the signa- ture in 1850 of the Clayton-Bulwer treaty which conceded to England a joint interest in any canal that might be built through the isth- mus connecting North and South America. One of the interesting episodes of this period was the dismissal of Crampton, the British minister, who insisted on enlisting men in the United States for service in the Crimean War, an act which pales into insignificance in comparison 112 From Isolation to Leadership with some of the things which Bernstorff did during the early stages of the Great War. Relations between the United States and England during the American Civil War in- volved so many highly technical questions that it is impossible to do more than touch upon them in the present connection. Diplomatic discussions centred about such questions as the validity of the, blockade established by President Lincoln, the recognition by England of Confederate belligerency, the Trent affair, and the responsibility of England for the depre- dations committed by the Alabama and other Confederate cruisers. When the United States first demanded reparation for the damage in- flicted on American commerce by the Confed- erate cruisers, the British Government dis- claimed all liability on the ground that the fitting out of the cruisers had not been com- pleted within British jurisdiction. Even after the close of the war the British Government continued to reject all proposals for a settle- ment. The American nation, flushed with vic- tory, was bent on redress, and so deep-seated was the resentment against England, that the Fenian movement, which had for its object the establishment of an independent republic in Ireland, met with open encouragement in this Anglo-American Relations 113 country. The House of Representatives went so far as to repeal the law forbidding Americans to fit out ships for belligerents, but the Senate failed to concur. The successful war waged by Prussia against Austria in 1866 disturbed the European balance, and rumblings of the ap- proaching Franco-Prussian war caused uneasi- ness in British cabinet circles. Fearing that if Great Britain were drawa into the conflict the American people might take a sweet revenge by fitting out "Alabamas" for her enemies, the British Government assumed a more concilia- tory attitude, and in January, 1869, Lord Clar- endon signed with Reverdy Johnson a conven- tion providing for the submission to a mixed commission of all claims which had arisen since 1853. Though the convention included, it did not specifically mention, the Alabama Claims, and it failed to contain any expression of regret for the course pursued by the British Govern- ment during the war. The Senate, therefore, refused by an almost unanimous vote to ratify the arrangement. When Grant became President, Hamilton Fish renewed the negotiations through Motley, the American minister at London, but the latter was unduly influenced by the extreme views of Sumner, chairman of the Senate committee 1 14 From Isolation to Leadership on foreign relations, to whose influence he owed his appointment, and got things in a bad tangle. Fish then transferred the negotiations to Washington, where a joint high commission, appointed to settle the various disputes with Canada, convened in 1871. A few months later the treaty of Washington was signed. Among other things it provided for submitting the Alabama Claims to an arbitration tri- bunal composed of five members, one appointed by England, one by the United States, and the other three by the rulers of Italy, Switzerland, and Brazil. When this tribunal met at Geneva, the following year, the United States, greatly to the surprise of everybody, presented not only the direct claims for the damage inflicted by the Confederate cruisers, but also indirect claims for the loss sustained through the transfer of American shipping to foreign flags, for the prolongation of the war, and for increased rates of insurance. Great Britain threatened to withdraw from the arbitration, but Charles Francis Adams, the American member of the tribunal, rose nobly to the occasion and decided against the contention of his own government. The indirect claims were rejected by a unani- mous vote and on the direct claims the United States was awarded the sum of $15,500,000. Anglo-American Relations 115 Although the British member of the tribunal dissented from the decision his government promptly paid the award. This was the most important case that had ever been submitted to arbitration and its successful adjustment encouraged the hope that the two great branches of the English-speaking peoples would never again have to resort to war. Between the settlement of the Alabama Claims and the controversy over the Venezue- lan boundary, diplomatic intercourse between the two countries was enlivened by the efforts of Blaine and Frelinghuysen to convince the British Government that the Clayton-Bulwer treaty was out of date and therefore no longer binding, by the assertion of American ownership in the seal herds of Bering Sea and the attempt to prevent Canadians from taking these animals in the open sea, and by the summary dismissal of Lord Sackville-West, the third British minis- ter to receive his passports from the United States without request. President Cleveland's bold assertion of the Monroe Doctrine in the Venezuelan boundary dispute, while the subject of much criticism at the time both at home and abroad, turned out to be a most opportune assertion of the intention of the United States to protect the n6 From Isolation to Leadership American continents from the sort of exploita-* tion to which Africa and Asia have fallen a prey, and, strange to say, it had a clarifying effect on our relations with England, whose attitude has since been uniformly friendly. The Venezuelan affair was followed by the proposal of Lord Salisbury to renew the nego- tiations for a permanent treaty of arbitration which had been first entered into by Secretary Gresham and Sir Julian Pauncefote. In the spring of 1890 the Congress of the United States had adopted a resolution in favor of the negotiation of arbitration treaties with friendly nations, and the British House of Commons had in July, 1893, expressed its hearty approval of a general arbitration treaty between the United States and England. The matter was then taken up diplomatically, as stated above, but was dropped when the Venezuelan boundary dispute became acute. Lord Salisbury's pro- posal was favorably received by President Cleveland, and after mature deliberation the draft of a treaty was finally drawn up and signed by Secretary Olney and Sir Julian Pauncefote. This treaty provided for the submission of pecuniary claims to the familiar mixed commission with an umpire or referee to decide disputed points. Controversies in- Anglo-American Relations 117 volving the determination of territorial claims were to be submitted to a tribunal composed of six members, three justices of the Supreme Court of the United States or judges of the Circuit Court to be nominated by the president of the United States, and three judges of the British Supreme Court of Judicature or mem- bers of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council to be nominated by the British sovereign, and an award made by a majority of not less than five to one was to be final. In case of an award made by less than the prescribed ma- jority, the award was also to be final unless either power should within three months protest against it, in which case the award was to be of no validity. This treaty was concluded in January, 1897, and promptly submitted to the Senate. When President Cleveland's term ex- pired in March no action had been taken. President McKinley endorsed the treaty in his inaugural address and urged the Senate to take prompt action, but when the vote was t^ken, May 5th, it stood forty-three for, and twenty-six against, the treaty. It thus lacked three votes of the two thirds required for rati- fication. The failure of this treaty was a great disappointment to the friends of inter- national arbitration. The opposition within n8 From Isolation to Leadership his own party to President Cleveland, undet whose direction the treaty had been negotiated, and the change of administration, probably had a good deal to do with its defeat. Public opinion, especially . in the Northern States of the Union, was still hostile to England. Irish agitators could always get a sympathetic hear- ing in America, and politicians could not resist the temptation to play on anti-British preju- dices in order to bring out the Irish vote. The Spanish War was the turning point in our relations with England as in many other things. The question as to who were our friends in 1898 was much discussed at the time, and when revived by the press upon the occasion of the visit of Prince Henry of Prussia to the United States in February,- 1902, even the cabinets of Europe could not refrain from taking part in the controversy. In order to diminish the enthusiasm over the Prince's visit the British press circulated the story that Lord Pauncefote had checked a movement of the European powers to prevent any inter- vention of the United States in Cuba; while the German papers asserted that Lord Paunce- fote had taken the initiative in opposing American intervention. It is certain that the attitude of the British Government, as well as Anglo-American Relations 119 of the British people, from the outbreak of hostilities to the close of the war, was friendly. As for Germany, while the conduct of the government was officially correct, public sen- timent expressed itself with great violence against the United States. The conduct of the German admiral, Diederichs, in Manila Bay has never been satisfactorily explained. Shortly after Dewey's victory a German squad- ron, superior to the American in strength, steamed into the Bay and displayed, according to Dewey, an "extraordinary disregard of the usual courtesies of naval intercourse." Dewey finally sent his flag-lieutenant, Brumby, to inform the German admiral that "if he wants a fight he can have it right now." The German admiral at once apologized. It is well known now that the commander of the British squad- ron, which was in a position to bring its guns to bear on the Germans, gave Dewey to under- stand that he could rely on more than moral support from him in case of trouble. In fact, John Hay wrote from London at the beginning of the war that the British navy was at our disposal for the asking. Great Britain's change of attitude toward the United States was so marked that some writers have naively concluded that a secret I2O From Isolation to Leadership treaty of alliance between the two countries was made in 1897. The absurdity of such a statement was pointed out by Senator Lodge several years ago. England's change of attitude is not difficult to understand. For a hundred years , after the battle of Trafalgar, England had pursued the policy of maintaining a navy large enough to meet all comers. With the rapid growth of other navies during the closing years of the nineteenth century, England real- ized that she could no longer pursue this policy. Russia, Japan, and Germany had all adopted extensive naval programs when we went to war with Spain. Our acquisition of the Philip- pines and Porto Rico and our determination to build an isthmian canal made a large American navy inevitable. Great Britain realized, there- fore, that she would have to cast about for future allies. She therefore signed the Hay- Pauncefote Treaty with us in 1901, and a de- fensive alliance with Japan in 1902. In view of the fact that the United States was bent on carrying out the long-deferred canal scheme, Great Britain realized that a further insistence on her rights under the Clayton- Bulwer Treaty would lead to friction and possible conflict. She wisely decided, therefore, to recede from the position which she had held Anglo-American Relations 121 for half a century and to give us a free hand in the construction and control of the canal at whatever point we might choose to build it. While the Hay-Pauncefote treaty was limited in terms to the canal question, it was in reality of much wider significance. It amounted, in fact, to the recognition of American naval su- premacy in the West Indies, and since its signa- ture Great Britain has withdrawn her squadron from this important strategic area. The su- premacy of the United States in the Caribbean is now firmly established and in fact unques- tioned. The American public did not appre^ ciate at the time the true significance of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, and a few years later Congress inserted in the Panama Tolls Act a clause exempting American ships engaged in the coast-wise trade from the payment of tolls. Great Britain at once protested against the exemption clause as a violation of the Hay- Pauncefote Treaty and anti-British sentiment at once flared up in all parts of the United States. Most American authorities on inter- national law and diplomacy believed that Great Britain's interpretation of the treaty was correct. Fortunately President Wilson took the same view, and in spite of strong oppo- sition he persuaded Congress to repeal the ex- 122 From Isolation to Leadership emption clause. This was an act of simple justice and it removed the only outstanding subject of dispute between the two countries. The Hay-Pauncefote Treaty was by no means the only evidence of a change of attitude on the part of Great Britain. As we have already seen, Great Britain and the United States were in close accord during the Boxer uprising in China and the subsequent negotiations. During the Russo-Japanese war public sentiment in both England and the United States was strongly in favor of Japan. At the Algeciras conference on Moroccan affairs in 1905 the United States, in its effort to preserve the European balance of power, threw the weight of its influence on the side of England and France. The submission of the Alaskan boundary dis- pute to a form of arbitration in which Canada could not win and we could not lose was another evidence of the friendly attitude of Great Brit- ain. The boundary between the southern strip of Alaska and British Columbia had never been marked or even accurately surveyed when gold was discovered in the Klondike. The shortest and quickest route to the gold-bearing region was by the trails leading up from Dyea and Skagway on the headwaters of Lynn Canal. The Canadian officials at once advanced claims Anglo-American Relations 123 to jurisdiction over these village ports. The question turned on the treaty made in 1825 between Great Britain and Russia. Whatever rights Russia had under that treaty we ac- quired by the purchase of Alaska in 1867. Not only did a long series of maps issued by the Canadian government in years past confirm the American claim to the region in dispute, but the correspondence of the British negotiator of the treaty of 1825 shows that he made every effort to secure for England an outlet to deep \j water through this strip of territory and failed. Under the circumstances President Roosevelt was not willing to submit the case to the arbi- tration of third parties. He agreed, however, to submit it to a mixed commission composed of three Americans, two Canadians, and Lord Alverstone, chief justice of England. As there was little doubt as to the views that would be taken by the three Americans and the two Cana- dians it was evident from the first that the trial was really before Lord Alverstone. In case he sustained the American contention there would be an end of the controversy; in case he sus- tained the Canadian view, there would be an even division, and matters would stand where they stood when the trial began except that a great deal more feeling would have been en- 124 From Isolation to Leadership gendered and the United States might have had to make good its claims by force. Fortunately Lord Alverstone agreed with the three Ameri- cans on the main points involved in the contro- versy. The decision was, of course, a disap- pointment to the Canadians and it was charged that Lord Alverstone had sacrificed their interest in order to further the British policy of friendly relations with the United States. At the beginning of the Great War the in- terference of the British navy with cargoes con- signed to Germany at once aroused the latent anti-British feeling in this country. Owing to the fact that cotton exports were so largely involved the feeling against Great Britain was even stronger in the Southern States than in the Northern. The State Department promptly protested against the naval policy adopted by Great Britain, and the dispute might have as- sumed very serious proportions had not Ger- many inaugurated her submarine campaign. The dispute with England involved merely prop- erty rights, while that with Germany involved the safety and lives of American citizens. The main feature of British policy, that is, her appli- cation of the doctrine of continuous voyage, was so thoroughly in line with the policy adopted by the United States during the Civil War that Anglo-American Relations 125 the protests of our State Department were of little avail. In fact Great Britain merely carried the American doctrine to its logical conclusions. We have undertaken in this brief review of Anglo-American relations to outline the more important controversies that have arisen be- tween the two countries. They have been suf- ficiently numerous and irritating to jeopardize seriously the peace which has so happily sub- sisted for one hundred years between the two great members of the English-speaking family. After all, they have not been based on any fun- damental conflict of policy, but have been for the most part superficial and in many cases the result of bad manners. In this connection Lord Bryce makes the following interesting observations: "There were moments when the stiff and frigid attitude of the British foreign secretary exasperated the American negotiators, or when a demagogic Secretary of State at Washington tried by a bullying tone to win credit as the pa- triotic champion of national claims. But when- ever there were bad manners in London there was good temper at Washington, and when there was a storm on the Potomac there was calm on the Thames. It was the good fortune of the two 126 From Isolation to Leadership countries that if at any moment rashness or vehe- mence was found on one side, it never happened to be met by the like quality on the other." "The moral of the story of Anglo-American relations," Lord Bryce says, " is that peace can always be kept, whatever be the grounds of con- troversy, between peoples that wish to keep it." He adds that Great Britain and the United States "have given the finest example ever seen in history of an undefended frontier, along which each people has trusted to the good faith of the other that it would create no naval armaments; and this very absence of armaments has itself helped to prevent hostile demonstra- tions. Neither of them has ever questioned the sanctity of treaties, or denied that states are bound by the moral law." It is not strange that so many controversies about more or less trivial matters should have obscured in the minds of both Englishmen and Americans the fundamental identity of aim and purpose in the larger things of life. For not- withstanding the German influence in America which has had an undue part in shaping our edu- cational methods, our civilization is still Eng- lish. Bismarck realized this when he said that one of the most significant facts in modern history was that all North America was English- Anglo-American Relations 127 speaking. Our fundamental ideals are the same. We have a passion for liberty; we up- hold the rights of the individual as against the extreme claims of the state; we believe in govern- ment through public opinion; we believe in the rule of law; we believe in government lim- ited by fundamental principles and constitu- tional restraints as against the exercise of arbi- trary power; we have never been subjected to militarism or to the dominance of a military caste; we are both so situated geographically as to be dependent on sea power rather than on large armies, and not only do navies not en- danger the liberty of peoples but they are negligible quantities politically. Great Britain had in 1914 only 137,500 officers and men in her navy and 26,200 reserves, a wholly insignificant number compared to the millions that formed the army of Germany and gave a military color to the whole life and thought of the nation. Not only are our political ideals the same, but in general our attitude toward world poli- tics is the same, and most people are surprised when they are told that our fundamental foreign policies are identical. The two most characteristic American foreign policies, the Monroe Doctrine and the Open Door, were both, as we have seen, Anglo-American in origin. VII IMPERIALISTIC TENDENCIES OF THE MONROE DOCTRINE VII IN ITS original form the Monroe Doctrine was a direct defiance of Europe, and it has never been favorably regarded by the nations of the old world. Latterly, however, it has encountered adverse criticism in some of the Latin-American states whose independence it helped to secure and whose freedom from European control it has been instrumental in maintaining. The Latin-American attacks on the Doctrine during the last few years have been reflected to a greater or less extent by writers in this country, par- ticularly in academic circles. The American writer who has become most conspicuous in this connection is Professor Bingham of Yale, who has travelled extensively in South America and who published in 1913 a little volume en- titled "The Monroe Doctrine, an Obsolete Shibboleth." The reasons why the "-Monroe Doctrine has called forth so much criticism during the last few years are not far to seek. 132 From Isolation to Leadership f The rapid advance of the United States in the Caribbean Sea since 1898 has naturally aroused the apprehensions of the feebler Latin-American states in that region, while the building of the Panama Canal has rendered inevitable the adoption of a policy of naval supremacy in the Caribbean and has led to the formulation of new political policies in the zone of the Carib- bean what Admiral Chester calls the larger Panama Canal Zone that is, the West Indies, Mexico and Central America, Colombia and Venezuela. Some of these policies, which have already been formulated to a far greater extent than is generally realized, are the estab- lishment of protectorates, the supervision of finances, the control of all available canal routes, the acquisition of coaling stations, and the polic- ing of disorderly countries. The long-delayed advance of the United States in the Caribbean Sea actually began with the Spanish War. Since then we have made rapid strides. Porto Rico was annexed at the close of the war, and Cuba became a protectorate; the Canal Zone was a little later leased on terms that amounted to practical annexation, and the Dominican Republic came under the financial supervision of the United States; President Wilson went further and assumed Imperialistic Tendencies 133 the administration of Haitian affairs, leased from Nicaragua for a term of ninety-nine years a naval base on Fonseca Bay, and purchased the Danish West Indies. As a result of this rapid extension of American influence the political relations of the countries bordering on the Caribbean will of necessity be profoundly affected. Our Latin-American policy has been enlarged in meaning and limited in territorial application so far as its newer phases are concerned. In 1904 President Roosevelt made a radical departure from our traditional policy in propos- ing that we should assume financial supervision over the Dominican Republic in order to prevent certain European powers from forcibly collect- ing debts due their subjects. Germany seemed especially determined to force a settlement of her demands, and it was well known that Ger- many had for years regarded the Monroe Doc- trine as the main hindrance in the way of her acquiring a foothold in Latin America. The only effective method of collecting the interest on the foreign debt of the Dominican Republic appeared to be the seizure and administration of her custom houses by some foreign power or group of foreign powers. President Roosevelt foresaw that such an occupation of the Domini- 134 From Isolation to Leadership can custom houses would, in view of the large debt, constitute the occupation of American territory by European powers for an indefinite period of time, and would, therefore, be a vio- lation of the Monroe Doctrine. He had before him also the results of a somewhat similar financial administration of Egypt undertaken jointly by England and France in 1878, and after Arabi's revolt continued by England alone, with the result that Egypt soon became a possession of the British crown to almost as great a degree as if it had been formally an- nexed, and during the World War it was in fact treated as an integral part of the Brit- ish Empire. President Roosevelt concluded, therefore, that where it was necessary to place a bankrupt American republic in the hands of a receiver, the United States must under- take to act as receiver and take over the ad- ministration of its finances. He boldly adopted this policy and finally forced a reluctant Senate to acquiesce. The arrangement has worked admirably. In spite of the criticism that this policy encountered, the Taft administration not only continued it in Santo Domingo, but tried to extend it to Nicaragua and Honduras. In January, 1911, a treaty placing the finances of Honduras under the supervision of the Imperialistic Tendencies 135 United States was signed by Secretary Knox, and in June a similar treaty was signed with Nicaragua. These treaties provided for the refunding of the foreign debt, in each case through loans made by American bankers and secured by the customs duties, the collector in each case to be approved by the United States and to make an annual report to the Depart- ment of State. These treaties were not ratified by the Senate. Secretary Knox then tried another solution of the question. On February 26, 1913, a new treaty with Nicaragua was submitted to the Senate by the terms of which Nicaragua agreed to give the United States an exclusive right of way for a canal through her territory and a naval base in Fonseca Bay, in return for the payment of three millions of dollars. The Senate failed to act on this treaty, as the close of the Taft administration was then at hand. The Wilson administration followed the same policy, however, and in July, 1913, Mr. Bryan submitted to the Senate a third treaty with Nicaragua containing the provisions of the second Knox treaty and in addition certain pro- visions of the Platt amendment, which defines our protectorate over Cuba. This treaty aroused strong opposition in the other Central 136 From Isolation to Leadership American states, and Costa Rica, Salvador, and Honduras filed formal protests with the United States Government against its ratifica- tion on the ground that it would convert Nic- aragua into a protectorate of the United States and thus defeat the long-cherished plan for a union 'of the Central American republics. The Senate of the United States objected to the protectorate feature of the treaty and re- fused to ratify it, but the negotiations were renewed by the Wilson administration and on February 18, 1916, a new treaty, which omits the provisions of the Platt amendment, was accepted by the Senate. This treaty grants to the United States in perpetuity the exclusive right to construct a canal by way of the San Juan River and Lake Nicaragua, and leases to the United States for ninety-nine years a naval base on the Gulf of Fonseca, and also the Great Corn and Little Corn islands as coal- ing stations. The consideration for these favors was the sum of three millions of dollars to be expended, with the approval of the Secretary of State of the United States, in paying the public debt of Nicaragua and for other public purposes to be agreed on by the two contracting parties. The treaty with the black Republic of Haiti, ratified by the Senate February 28, 1916, Imperialistic Tendencies 137 carries the new Caribbean policies of the United States to the farthest limits short of actual annexation. It provides for the estab- lishment of a receivership of Haitian customs under the control of the United States similar in most respects to that established over the Dominican Republic. It provides further for the appointment, on the nomination of the President of the United States, of a financial adviser, who shall assist in the settlement of the foreign debt and direct expenditures of the surplus for the development of the agricul- tural, mineral, and commercial resources of the republic. It provides further for a native constabulary under American officers appointed by the President of Haiti upon nomination by the President of the United States. It further extends to Haiti the main provisions of the Platt amendment. By controlling the internal financial administration of the government the United States hopes to remove all incentives for those revolutions which have in the past had for their object a raid on the public treasury, and by controlling the customs and maintaining order the United States hopes to avoid all possibility of foreign intervention. The treaty is to remain in force for a period of ten years and for another period of ten years if either 138 From Isolation to Leadership party presents specific reasons for continuing it on the ground that its purpose has not been fully accomplished. Prior to the Roosevelt administration the Monroe Doctrine was regarded by the Latin- American states as solely a protective policy. The United States did not undertake to control the financial administration or the foreign policy of any of these republics. It was only after their misconduct had gotten them into difficulty and some foreign power, or group of foreign powers, was on the point of demand- ing reparation by force that the United States stepped in and undertook to see to it that foreign intervention did not take the form of occupation of territory or interference in internal politics. The Monroe Doctrine has always been in prin- ciple a policy of American intervention for the purpose of preventing European intervention, but American intervention always awaited the threat of immediate action on the part of some European power. President Roosevelt concluded that it would be wiser to restrain the reckless conduct of the smaller American republics before disorders or public debts should reach a point which gave European powers an excuse for intervening. In a message to Con- gress in 1904 he laid down this new doctrine, Imperialistic Tendencies 139 which soon became famous as the Big Stick policy. He said: "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 civil- ized society, may in America, as elsewhere, ultimately require intervention by some civil- ized nation, and in the Western Hemisphere the adherence of the United States to the Mon- roe Doctrine may .force the United States, however reluctantly, in flagrant cases of such wrongdoing or impotence, to the exercise of an international police power." In other words, since we could not permit European powers to restrain or punish American states in cases of wrongdoing, we must ourselves undertake that task. As long as the Monroe Doctrine was merely a policy of benevolent protection which Latin-American states could invoke after their unv/ise or evil conduct had brought Euro- pean powers to the point of demanding just retribution, it was regarded with favor and no objection was raised to it; but the Roosevelt doctrine, that if we were to continue to protect Latin-American states against European inter- 140 From Isolation to Leadership vention, we had a right to demand that they should refrain from conduct which was likely to provoke such intervention, was quite a dif- ferent thing, and raised a storm of criticism and opposition. The Roosevelt application of the Monroe Doctrine was undoubtedly a perfectly logical step. It was endorsed by the Taft administra- tion and further extended by the Wilson admin- istration and made one of our most important policies in regard to the zone of the Caribbean. President Roosevelt was right in drawing the conclusion that we had arrived at a point where we had either to abandon the Monroe Doctrine or to extend its application so as to cover the constantly increasing number of disputes arising from the reckless creation of public debts and loose financial administration. It was absurd for us to stand quietly by and witness the utterly irresponsible creation of financial obligations that would inevitably lead to European intervention and then under- take to fix the bounds and limits of that inter- vention. It is interesting to note that President Wilson did not hesitate to carry the new policy to its logical conclusion, and that he went so far as to warn Latin-American countries against granting to foreign corporations con- Imperialistic Tendencies 141 cessions which, on account of their extended character, would be certain to give rise to foreign claims which would, in turn, give an excuse for European intervention. In discussing our Latin-American policy shortly after the begin- ning of his administration, President Wilson said: "You hear of 'concessions' to foreign capitalists in Latin America. You do not hear of concessions to foreign capitalists in the United States. They are not granted conces- sions. They are invited to make investments. The work is ours, though they are welcome to invest in it. We do not ask them to supply the capital and do the work. It is an invitation, not a privilege; and states that are obliged, because their territory does not lie within the main field of modern enterprise and action, to grant concessions are in this condition, that foreign interests are apt to dominate their domestic affairs a condition of affairs always dangerous and apt to become intolerable. . . . What these states are going to seek, therefore, is an emancipation from the subordination, which has been inevitable, to foreign enterprise and an assertion of the splendid character which, in spite of these difficulties, they have again and again been able to demonstrate.* These remarks probably had reference to the 142 From Isolation to Leadership oil concession which Pearson and Son of London had arranged with the president of Colombia. This concession is said to have covered practi- cally all of the oil interests in Colombia, and carried with it the right to improve harbors and dig canals in the country. However, before the meeting of the Colombian congress in November, 1913, which was expected to confirm the concession, Lord Cowdray, the president of Pearson and Son, withdrew the contract, alleging as his reason the opposition of the United States. Unfortunately President Roosevelt's asser- tion of the Big Stick policy and of the duty of the United States to play policeman in the western hemisphere was accompanied by his seizure of the Canal Zone. This action natur- ally aroused serious apprehensions in Latin America and gave color to the charge that the United States had converted the Monroe Doc- trine from a protective policy into a policy of selfish aggression. Colombia felt outraged and aggrieved, and this feeling was not alleviated by Mr. Roosevelt's speech several years later to the students of the University of California, in which he boasted of having taken the Canal Zone and said that if he had not taken it as he did, the debate over the matter in Congress Imperialistic Tendencies 143 would still be going on. Before the close of his administration President Roosevelt under- took to placate Colombia, but the sop which he offered was indignantly rejected. In Jan- uary, 1909, Secretary Root proposed three treaties, one between the United States and Panama, one between the United States and Colombia, and one between Colombia and Pana- ma. These treaties provided for the recognition of the Republic of Panama by Colombia and r _f 1_ L _ j *-- " for the transference to Colombia of the first ten installments of the annual rental of $250,000 which the United States had agreed to pay to Panama for the lease of the Canal Zone. The treaties were ratified by the United States and by Panama, but not by Colombia. TheTaft administration made repeated efforts to appease Colombia, resulting in the formula- tion of a definite proposition by Secretary Knox shortly before the close of President Taft's term. His proposals were that if Colombia would ratify the Root treaties just referred to, the United States would be willing to pay $10,000,000 for an exclusive right of way for a canal by the Atrato route and for the perpetual lease of the islands of St. Andrews and Old Providence as coaling stations. These pro- posals were also rejected. The American minis- 144 From Isolation to Leadership ter, Mr. Du Bois, acting, he said, on his own responsibility, then inquired informally whether $25,000,000 without options of any kind would satisfy Colombia. The answer was that Colom- bia would accept nothing but the arbitration of the whole Panama question. Mr. Knox, in reporting the matter to the President, said that Colombia seemed determined to treat with the incoming Democratic administration. Sec- retary Bryan took up the negotiations where Knox dropped them, and concluded a treaty, according to the terms of which the United States was to express regret at what had oc- curred and to pay Colombia $25,000,000. The Senate of the United States refused to ratify this treaty while Wilson was in the White House, but as soon as Harding became president they consented to the payment and ratified the treaty with a few changes in the preamble. The facts stated above show conclusively that the two most significant developments of American policy in the Caribbean during the last twenty years have been the establishment of formal protectorates and the exercise of financial supervision over weak and disorderly states. Our protectorate over Cuba was clearly defined in the so-called Pjat-amnjdment, which was inserted in the army appropriation bill of Imperialistic Tendencies 145 March 2, 1901, and directed the President to leave control of the island of Cuba to its people so soon as a government should be established under a constitution which defined the future relations with the United States substantially as follows: (i) That the government of Cuba would never enter into any treaty or other com- pact with any foreign power which would im- pair the independence of the island; (2) that the said government would not contract any public debt which could not be met by the ordinary revenues of the island; (3) that the government of Cuba would permit the United States to exercise the right to intervene for the preservation of Cuban independence, and for the protection of life, property, and in- dividual liberty; (4) that all acts of the United States in Cuba during its military occupancy thereof should be ratified and validated; (5) that the government of Cuba would carry out the plans already devised for the sanitation of the cities of the island; and finally that the government of Cuba would sell or lease to the United States lands necessary for coaling or naval stations at certain specified points, to be agreed upon with the President of the United States. It is understood that these articles, with the 146 From Isolation to Leadership exception of the fifth, which was proposed by General Leonard Wood, were carefully drafted by Elihu Root, at that time Secretary of War, discussed at length by President McKinley's Cabinet, and entrusted to Senator Platt of Connecticut, who offered them as an amend- ment to the army appropriation bill. The Wilson administration, as already stated, em- bodied the first three provisions of the Platt amendment in the Haitian treaty of 1916. Prior to the World War, which has upset all calculations, it seemed highly probable that the Platt ^amendment would in time be extended to all theweaker states within the zone of the Caribbean. If the United States is to exercise a protectorate over such states, the right to inter- vene and the conditions of intervention should be clearly defined and publicly proclaimed. Hitherto whatever action we have taken in Latin America has been taken under the Monroe Doctrine a policy without legal sanc- tion which an international court might not recognize. Action under a treaty would have the advantage of legality. In other words, the recent treaties with Caribbean states have converted American policy into law. The charge that in establishing protectorates and financial supervision over independent Imperialistic Tendencies 147 states we have violated the terms of the Mon- roe Doctrine is one that has been frequently made. Those who have made it appear to be laboring under the illusion that the Monroe Doctrine was wholly altruistic in its aim. As a matter of fact, the Monroe Doctrine has never been regarded by the United States as in any sense a self-denying declaration. President Monroe said that we should consider any at- tempt on the part of the European powers "to extend their system to any portion of this hemi- sphere as dangerous to our peace and safety." The primary object of the policy outlined by President Monroe was, therefore, the peace and safety of the United States. The protection of Latin-American states against European inter- vention was merely a means of protecting our- selves. While the United States undertook to prevent the encroachment of European powers in Latin America, it never for one moment ad- mitted any limitation upon the possibility of its own expansion in this region. The whole course of American history establishes the contrary point of view. Since the Monroe Doctrine was enunciated we have annexed at the expense of Latin-American states, Texas, New Mexico, California, and the Canal Zone. Upon other occasions we emphatically declined 148 From Isolation to Leadership i , to bind ourselves by treaty stipulations with England and France that under no circumstance would we annex the island of Cuba. Shortly after the beginning of his first term President Wilson declared in a public address at Mobile that "the United States will never again seek one additional foot of territory by conquest." This declaration introduces a new chapter in American diplomacy. VIII THE NEW PAN-AMERICANISM VIII THE NEW PAN-AMERICANISM WHEN President Wilson assumed office March 4, 1913, there was nothing but the Huerta revolution, the full significance of which was not then appreciated, to suggest to his mind the forecast that before the close of his term questions of foreign policy would absorb the attention of the American people and tax to the limit his own powers of mind and body. It seems now a strange fact that neither in his writings nor in his public addresses had Presi- dent Wilson ever shown any marked interest in questions of international law and diplomacy. He had, on the contrary, made a life-long study of political organization and legislative proce- dure. Those who knew him had always thought that he was by nature fitted to be a great parliamentary leader and it soon appeared that he had a very definite legislative program which he intended to put through Congress. The foreign problems that confronted him so suddenly and unexpectedly were doubtless felt 152 From Isolation to Leadership to be annoying distractions from the work which he had mapped out for himself and which was far more congenial to his tastes. As time went by, however, he was forced to give more and more thought to our relations with Latin America on the one hand and to the European war on the other. His ideas on international problems at first cautiously set forth, soon caught step with the rapid march of events and guided the thought of the world. The Mexican situation, which reached a crisis a few days before Mr. Wilson came into office, at once demanded his attention and led to the enunciation of a general Latin-American policy. He had scarcely been in office a week when he issued a statement which was forwarded by the secretary of state to all American diplomatic officers in Latin America. In it he said : "One of the chief objects of my administra- tion will be to cultivate the friendship and deserve the confidence of our sister republics of Central and South America and to promote in every proper and honorable way the interests which are common to the peoples of the two continents. . . . "The United States has nothing to seek in Central and South America except the lasting interests of the peoples of the two continents, The New Pan-Americanism 153 the security of governments intended for the people and for no special group or interest, and the development of personal and trade rela- tionships between the two continents which shall redound to the profit and advantage of both, and interfere with the rights and liberties of neither. "From these principles may be read so much of the future policy of this government as it is necessary now to forecast, and in the spirit of these principles I may, I hope, be permitted with as much confidence as earnestness, to ex- tend to the governments of all the republics of America the hand of genuine disinterested friendship and to pledge my own honor and the honor of my colleagues to every enterprise of peace and amity that a fortunate future may disclose." The policy here outlined, and elaborated a few months later in an address before the Southern Commercial Congress at Mobile, Alabama, has been termed the New Pan- Americanism. The Pan-American ideal is an old one, dating back in fact to the Panama Congress of 1826. The object of this congress was not very definitely stated in the call, which was issued by Simon Bolivar, but his purpose was to secure the independence and peace of the 1 54 From Isolation to Leadership new Spanish republics through either a perma- nent confederation or a series of diplomatic con- gresses. President Adams through Henry Clay, who was at that time Secretary of State, promptly accepted the invitation to send dele- gates. The matter was debated at such length, however, in the House and Senate that the American delegates did not reach Panama until after the congress had adjourned. In view of the opposition which the whole scheme en- countered in Congress, the instructions to the American delegates were very carefully drawn and their powers were strictly limited. They were cautioned against committing their gov- ernment in any way to the establishment of "an amphictyonic council, invested with power fully to decide controversies between the American states or to regulate in any respect their conduct." They were also to oppose the formation of an offensive and defensive alli- ance between the American powers, for, as Mr. Clay pointed out, the Holy Alliance had aban- doned all idea of assisting Spain in the recon- quest of her late colonies. After referring to "the avoidance of foreign alliances as a leading maxim" of our foreign policy, Mr. Clay con- tinued: "Without, therefore, asserting that an exigency may not occur in which an alliance of The New Pan-Americanism 155 the most intimate kind between the United States and the other American republics would be highly proper and expedient, it may be safely said that the occasion which would war- rant a departure from that established maxim ought to be one of great urgency, and that none such is believed now to exist." The British Government sent a special envoy to reside near the Congress and to place himself in frank and friendly communication with the delegates. Canning's private instructions to this envoy declared that, "Any project for put- ting the U. S. of North Ameirca at the head of a*i American Confederacy, as against Europe, would be highly displeasing to your Govern- ment. It would be felt as an ill return for the service which has been rendered to those States,, and the dangers which have been averted from them, by the countenance and friendship, and public declarations of Great Britain; and it would probably, at no distant period, endanger the peace both of America and of Europe." The Panama Congress was without practical results and it was more than half a century be- fore the scheme for international coopera- tion on the part of American states was again taken up. In 1881 Secretary Blaine issued an invitation to the American republics to hold I $6 From Isolation to Leadership a conference at Washington, but the continu- ance of the war between Chile and Peru caused an indefinite postponement of the proposed conference. Toward the close of President Cleveland's first administration the invitation was renewed and the First International Con- ference of American States convened at Wash- ington in 1890. It happened that when the Conference met Mr. Elaine was again Secretary of State and presided over its opening sessions. The most notable achievement of this Confer- ence was the establishment of the Bureau of American Republics, now known as the Pan- American Union. The Second International Conference of American States, held in the City ^j* Mati*** *n TnnT i arranged for all American states to become parties to the Hague Conven- tion of 1899 for the pacific settlement of inter- national disputes and drafted a treaty for the compulsory arbitration, as between American states, of pecuniary claims. The Third Con- ference, held at Rio Janeiro in 1906, extended the above treaty for another period of five years and proposed that the subject of pecuniary claims be considered at the second Hague Con- ference. Added significance was given to the Rio Conference by the presence of Secretary Root who, although not a delegate, made it the The New Pan-Americanism 157 occasion of a special mission to South America. The series of notable addresses which he deliv- ered on this mission gave a new impetus to the Pan-American movement. The Fourth Con- ference, held at Buenos Ayres in ic^io, was occu- pied largely with routine matters. It extended the pecuniary claims convention for an indefi- nite period. The conferences above referred to were polit- ical or diplomatic in character. There have been held two Pan-American Scientific Con- gresses in which the United States participated, one at Chile in 1908 and one at Washington, December, 1915, to January, 1916. A very important Pan-American Financial Congress was held at Washington in May, 1915. These congresses have accomplished a great deal in the way of promoting friendly feeling as well as the advancement of science and commerce among the republics of the Western Hemisphere. The American Institute of International Law, organized at Washington in October, 1912, is a body which is likely to have great influence in promoting the peace and welfare of this hemi- sphere. The Institute is composed of five repre- sentatives from the national society of interna- tional law in each of the twenty-one American republics. At a session held in the city of Wash- 158 From Isolation to Leadership ington, January 6, 1916, the Institute adopted a Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Nations. This declaration, designed to give a solid legal ba- sis to the new Pan-Americanism, was as follows : I. Every nation has the right to exist and to protect and to conserve its existence; but this right neither implies the right nor justifies the act of the state to protect itself or to conserve its ex- istence by the commission of unlawful acts against innocent and unoffending states. II. Every nation has the right to independ- ence in the sense that it has a right to the pursuit of happiness and is free to develop itself without interfer- ence or control from other states, provided that in so doing it does not interfere with or violate the rights of other states. III. Every nation is in law and before law the equal of every other nation be- longing to the society of nations, and all nations have the right to claim and, according to the Declaration of Independence of the United States, "to assume, among the powers of the The New Pan-Americanism 1 59 earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of Nature's God entitle them." IV. Every nation has the right to territory within defined boundaries, and to exer- cise exclusive jurisdiction over its ter- ritory, and all persons whether native or foreign found therein. V. Every nation entitled to a right by the law of nations is entitled to have that right respected and protected by all other nations, for right and duty are correla- tive, and the right of one is the duty of all to observe. VI. International law is at one and the same time both national and international; national in the sense that it is the law of the land and applicable as such to the decision of all questions involving its principles; international in the sense that it is the law of the society of nations and applicable as such to all questions between and among the members of the society of nations in- volving its principles. This Declaration has been criticised as being too altruistic for a world in which diplomacy 160 From Isolation to Leadership has been occupied with selfish aims, yet Mr. Root, in presenting it at the annual meeting of the American Society of International Law, claimed that every statement in it was "based upon the decisions of American courts and the authority of American publicists." The Mexican situation put the principles of the new Pan-Americanism to a severe test. On February 18, 1913, Francisco Madero was seized and imprisoned as the result of a con- spiracy formed by one of his generals, Victoriano Huerta, who forthwith proclaimed himself dic- tator. Four days later Madero was mur- dered while in the custody of Huerta's troops. Henry Lane Wilson, the American ambassador, promptly urged his government to recognize Huerta, but President Taft, whose term was rap- idly drawing to a close, took no action and left the question to his successor. President Wilson thus had a very disagreeable situation to face when he assumed control of affairs at Washington. He refused to recognize Huerta, whose authority was contested by in- surrectionary chiefs in various parts of the country. It was claimed by the critics of the administration that the refusal to recognize Huerta was a direct violation of the well-known American policy of recognizing de facto gov- The New Pan-Americanism 161 ernments without undertaking to pass upon the rights involved. It is perfectly true that the United States has consistently followed the policy of rprnp-nirinpr fl* fg|^ ft gftyert|plpnf s as soon as it is evident in each case that the new government rests on popular approval and is likely to be permanent. This doctrine of recognition is distinctively an American doc- trine. It was first laid down by Thomas Jef- ferson when he was Secretary of State as an offset to the European doctrine of divine right, and it was the natural outgrowth of that other JefFersonian doctrine that all governments de- rive their just powers from the consent of the governed. Huerta could lay no claim to au- thority derived from a majority or anything like a majority of the Mexican people. He was a self-constituted dictator, whose authority rested solely on military force. President Wilson and Secretary Bryan were fully justified in refusing to recognize his usurpation of power, though they probably made a mistake in announcing that they would never recognize him and in de- manding his elimination from the presidential contest. This announcement made him deaf to advice from Washington and utterly indifferent to the destruction of American life and property. The next step in the President's course with 162 From Isolation to Leadership reference to Mexico was the occupation of Vera Cruz. On April 20, 1914, the President asked Congress for authority to employ the armed forces of the United States in demanding redress for the arbitrary arrest of American marines at Vera Cruz, and the next day Ad- miral Fletcher was ordered to seize the custom house at that port. This he did after a sharp fight with Huerta's troops in which nineteen Americans were killed and seventy wounded. The American charge d'affaires, Nelson O'Shaughnessy, was at once handed his pass- ports, and all diplomatic relations between the United States and Mexico were severed. A few days later the representatives of the so-called ABC Alliance, Argentina, Brazil, and Chile, tendered their good offices for a peaceful settlement of the conflict and President Wilson promptly accepted their mediation. The resulting conference at Niagara, May 20, was not successful in its immediate object, but it resulted in the elimination of Huerta who resigned July 15, 1914. On August 20, General Venustiano Carranza, head of one of the revolutionary factions, assumed control of affairs at the capital, but his authority was disputed by General Francisco Villa, another insurrectionary chief. On Carranza 's promise The New Pan-Americanism 163 to respect the lives and property of American citizens the United States forces were with- drawn from Vera Cruz in November, 1914. In August, 1915, at the request of President Wilson, the six ranking representatives of Latin America at Washington made an unsuccessful effort to reconcile the contending factions of Mexico. On their advice, however, President Wilson decided in October to recognize the government of Carranza, who now controlled three fourths of the territory of Mexico. As a result of this action Villa began a series of at- tacks on American citizens and raids across the border, which in March, 1916, compelled the President to send a punitive expedition into Mexico and later to dispatch most of the regu- lar army and large bodies of militia to the border. The raids of Villa created a very awkward situation. Carranza not only made no real effort to suppress Villa, but he vigorously op- posed the steps taken by the United States to protect its own citizens along the border, and even assumed a threatening attitude. There was a loud and persistent demand in the United States for war against Mexico. American investments in land, mines, rubber plantations, and other enterprises were very 164 From Isolation to Leadership large, and these financial interests were par- ticularly outraged at the President's policy of "watchful waiting." The President re- mained deaf to this clamor. No country had been so shamelessly exploited by foreign capital as Mexico. Furthermore, it was suspected and very generally believed that the recent revolu- tions had been financed by American capital. President Wilson was determined to give the Mexican people an opportunity to reorganize their national life on a better basis and to lend them every assistance in the task. War with Mexico would have been a very serious under- taking and even a successful war would have meant the military occupation of Mexico for an indefinite period. After our entrance into the World War many of those Americans who dissented radically from Wilson's Mexican policy became convinced that his refusal to become involved in war with Mexico was a most fortunate thing for us. It has been charged that there was a lack of consistency between the President's Mexican policy and his Haitian policy. The difference between the two cases, however, was that order could be restored in Haiti with a relatively small force of marines, while any attempt to apply force to Mexico would have led to a The New Pan-Americanism 165 long and bloody conflict. The most novel feature of the President's Mexican policy was his acceptance of the mediation of the ABC Alliance and his subsequent consultation with the leading representatives of Latin America. This action brought the Pan-American ideal almost to the point of realization. It was received with enthusiasm and it placed our relations with Latin America on a better footing than they had been for years. It was suggested by more than one critic of American foreign policy that if we were to un- dertake to set the world right, we must come before the bar of .public opinion with clean hands, that before we denounced the imperial- istic policies of Europe, weshould have abandoned imperialistic policies at home. The main fea- tures of President Wilson's Latin-American pol- icy, if we may draw a general conclusion, were to pledge American republics not to do anything which would invite European intervention, and to secure by treaty the right of the United States to intervene for the protection of life, liberty, and property, and for the establishment of self-government. Such a policy, unselfishly carried out, was not inconsistent with the gen- eral war aims defined by President Wilson. IX THE FAILURE OF NEUTRALITY AND ISOLATION IX THE FAILURE OF NEUTRALITY AND ISOLATION IN WASHINGTON'S day the United States was an experiment in democracy. The vital ques- tion was not our duty to the rest of the world, but whether the rest of the world would let us live. The policy of wisdom was to keep aloof from world politics and give as little cause for offense as possible to the great powers of Europe. Washington pointed out that "our detached and distant situation" rendered such a course possible. This policy was justified by events. We were enabled to follow unhin- dered the bent of our own political genius, to extend our institutions over a vast continent and to attain a position of great prosperity and power in the economic world. While we are still a young country, our government is, with the possible exception of that of Great Britain, the oldest and most stable in the world, and since we declared ourselves a nation and adopted our present constitution the British 169 170 From Isolation to Leadership Government has undergone radical changes of a democratic character. By age and stability we have long been entitled to a voice and influence in the world, and yet we have been singularly indifferent to our responsibilities as a member of the society of nations. We have been in the world, but not of it. Our policy of isolation corresponded with the situation as it existed a hundred years ago, but not with the situation as it exists to-day and as it has existed for some years past. We no longer occupy a "detached and distant situation." Steam and electricity, the cable and wireless telegraphy have overcome the intervening space and made us the close neigh- bors of Europe. The whole world has been drawn together in a way that our forefathers never dreamed of, and our commercial, finan- cial, and social relations with the rest of the world are intimate. Under such circumstances political isolation is an impossibility. It has for years been nothing more than a tradition, but a tradition which has tied the hands of American diplomats and caused the American public to ignore what was actually going on in the world. The Spanish War and the acquisi- tion of the Philippines brought us into the full current of world politics, and yet we refused The Failure of Neutrality and Isolation 171 to recognize the changes that inevitably fol- lowed. The emergence of Japan as a first-class power, conscious of achievement and eager to enter on a great career, introduced a new and disturb- ing element into world politics. Our diplo- macy, which had hitherto been comparatively simple, now became exceedingly complex. For- merly the United States was the only great power outside the European balance. The exis- tence of a second detached power greatly com- plicated the international situation and presented opportunities for new combinations. We have already seen how Germany undertook to use the opportunity presented by Russia's war with Japan to humiliate France and that the United States took a prominent part in the Algeciras Conference for the purpose of prevent- ing the threatened overthrow of the European balance of power. Thus, even before the World War began, it had become evident to close ob- servers of international affairs that the Euro- pean balance would soon be superseded by a world balance in which the United States would be forced to take its place. It took a world war, however, to dispel the popular illusion of isolation and to arouse us to a temporary sense of our international responsi- 172 From Isolation to Leadership bilities. When the war began the President, following the traditions of a hundred years, issued, as a matter of course, a proclamation of neutrality, and he thought that the more scru- pulously it was observed the greater would be the opportunity for the United States to act as im- partial mediator in the final adjustment of peace terms. As the fierceness of the conflict grew it became evident that the role of neutral would not be an easy one to play and that the vital interests of the United States would be involved to a far greater extent than anyone had foreseen. ^Neutrality in the modern sense is essentially j an American doctrine and the result of our \policy of isolation. If we were to keep out of European conflicts, it was necessary for us to pursue a course of rigid impartiality in wars between European powers. In the Napoleonic wars we insisted that neutrals had certain rights which belligerents were bound to respect and we fought the War of 1812 with England in order to establish that principle. Half a century later, in the American Civil War, we insisted that neutrals had certain duties which every belligerent had a right to expect them to perform, and we forced Great Britain in the settlement of the Alabama Claims to pay us damages to the extent of $15,500,000 for having The Failure of Neutrality and Isolation 173 failed to perform her neutral obligations. We have thus been the leading champion of the rights and duties of neutrals, and tlie principles for which we have contended have been written into the modern law of nations. When two or three nations are engaged in war and the rest of the world is neutral, there is usually very little difficulty in enforcing neutral rights, but when a majority of the great powers are at war, it is impossible for the remaining great powers, much less for the smaller neutrals, to maintain their rights. This was true in the Napoleonic wars, but at that time the law of neutrality was in its infancy and had never been fully recognized by the powers at war. The failure of neutrality in the Great War was far more serious, for the rights of neutrals had been clearly defined and universally recognized. Notwithstanding the large German popula- tion in this country and the propaganda which we now know that the German Government had systematically carried on for years in our very midst, the invasion of Belgium and the atro- cities committed by the Germans soon arrayed opinion on the side of the Allies. This was not a departure from neutrality, for it should be remembered that neutrality is not an attitude of mind, but a legal status. As long as our 174 From Isolation to Leadership Government fulfilled its obligations as defined by the law of nations, no charge of a violation of neutrality could be justly made. To deny to the citizens of a neutral country the right to express their moral judgments would be to deny that the world can ever be governed by public opinion. The effort of the German propagan- dists to draw a distinction between so-called ethical and legal neutrality was plausible, but without real force. While neutrality is based on the general principle of impartiality, this prin- ciple has been embodied in a fairly well-defined set of rules which may, and frequently do, in any given war, work to the advantage of one bellig- erent and to the disadvantage of the other. In the Great War this result was brought about by the naval superiority of Great Britain. So far as our legal obligations to Germany were concerned she had no cause for complaint. If, on the other hand, our conduct had been deter- mined solely by ethical considerations, we wojuld have joined the Allies long before we did. The naval superiority of Great Britain made it comparatively easy for her to stop all direct trade with the enemy in articles contraband of war, but this was of little avail so long as Ger- many could import these articles through the neutral ports of Italy, Holland, and the Scan- The Failure of Neutrality and Isolation 175 dinavian countries. Under these circumstances an ordinary blockade of the German coast would have had little effect. Therefore , no such blockade was proclaimed by Great Britain. She adopted other methods of cutting off over- seas supplies from Germany. She enlarged the lists of both absolute and conditional contra- band and under the doctrine of continuous voy- age seized articles on both lists bound for Ger- many through neutral countries. As to the right of a belligerent to enlarge the contraband lists there can be no doubt. Even the Declaration of London, which undertook for the first time to establish an international classi- fication of contraband, provided in Article 23 that "articles and materials which are exclu- sively used for war may be added to the list of absolute contraband by means of a notified declaration," and Article 25 provided that the list of conditional contraband might be en- larged in the same manner. Under modern conditions of warfare it would seem impossible to determine in advance what articles are to be treated as contraband. During the Great War many articles regarded in previous wars as in- nocent became indispensable to the carrying on of the war. Great Britain's application of the doctrine of 176 From Isolation to Leadership continuous voyage was more open to dispute. She assumed that contraband articles shipped to neutral countries adjacent to Germany and Austria were intended for them unless proof to the contrary was forthcoming, and she failed to draw any distinction between absolute and con- ditional contraband. The United States pro- tested vigorously against this policy, but the force of its protest was weakened by the fact that during the Civil War the American Government had pursued substantially the same policy in] regard to goods shipped by neutrals to Nassau, Havana, Matamoros, and other ports adjacent to the Confederacy. Prior to the American Civil War goods could not be seized on any grounds unless bound directly for a belligerent port. Under the English doctrine of continuous voyage as advanced during the Napoleonic wars, goods brought from the French West Indies to the United States and reshipped to conti- nental Europe were condemned by the British Admiralty Court on the ground that notwith- standing the unloading and reloading at an American port the voyage from the West Indies to Europe was in effect a continuous voyage, and under the Rule of 1756 Great Britain re- fused to admit the right of neutral ships to en- gage in commerce between France and her col- The Failure of Neutrality and Isolation 177 onies. Great Britain, however, seized ships only on the second leg of the voyage, that is, when bound directly for a belligerent port. During the American Civil War the United States seized goods under an extension of the English doctrine on the first leg of the voyage, that is, while they were in transit from one neutral port to another neutral port, on the ground that they were to be subsequently shipped in another vessel to a Confederate port. Great Britain adopted and applied the American doctrine during the Boer War. The doctrine of continuous voyage, as applied by the United States and England, was strongly con- demned by most of the continental writers on international law. The Declaration of London adopted a compromise by providing that abso- lute contraband might be seized when bound through third countries, but that conditional contraband was not liable to capture under such circumstances. As the Declaration of London was not ratified by the British Government this distinction was ignored, and conditional as well as absolute contraband was seized when bound for Germany through neutral countries. While Great Britain may be charged with having unwarrantably extended the application of certain rules of international law and may 178 From Isolation to Leadership have rendered herself liable to pecuniary dam- ages, she displayed in all her measures a scrupu- lous regard for human life. Her declaration that "The whole of the North Sea must be considered a military area," was explained as an act of retaliation against Germany for having scattered floating mines on the high seas in the path of British commerce. She did not under- take to exclude neutral vessels from the North Sea, but merely notified them that certain areas had been mined and warned them not to enter without receiving sailing directions from the British squadron. The German decree of February 4, 1915, es- tablishing a submarine blockade or "war zone'* around the British Isles, on the other hand, was absolutely without legal justification. It did not fulfill the requirements of a valid blockade, because it cut off" only a very small percentage of British commerce, and the first requirement of a blockade is that it must be effective. The decree was aimed directly at enemy merchant vessels and indirectly at the ships of neutrals. It utterly ignored the well-recognized right of neutral passengers to travel on merchant vessels of belligerents. The second decree announcing unrestricted submarine warfare after February I, 1917, was directed against neutral as well as The Failure of Neutrality and Isolation 179 enemy ships. It undertook to exclude all neutral ships from a wide zone extending far out on the high seas, irrespective of their mis- sion or the character of their cargo. It was an utter defiance of all law. The citizens of neutral countries have always had the right to travel on the merchant vessels of belligerents, subject, of course, to the risk of capture and detention. The act of the German ambassador in inserting an advertisement in a New York paper warning Americans not to take passage on the Lusitania, when the Presi- dent had publicly asserted that they had a per- fect right to travel on belligerent ships, was an insolent and unparalleled violation of diplo- matic usage and would have justified his instant dismissal. Some action would probably have been taken by the State Department had not the incident been overshadowed by the carrying out of the threat and the actual destruction of the Lusitania. The destruction of enemy prizes at sea is recognized by international law under excep- tional circumstances and subject to certain definite restrictions, but an unlimited right of destruction even of enemy merchant vessels had never been claimed by any authority on international law or by any government prior 180 From Isolation to Leadership to the German decree. The destruction of neutral prizes, though practised by some gov- ernments, has not been so generally acquiesced in, and when resorted to has been attended by an even more rigid observance of the rules de- signed to safeguard human life. Article 48 of the Declaration of London provided that, "A captured neutral vessel is not to be destroyed by the captor, but must be taken into such port as is proper in order to determine there the rights as regards the validity of the cap- ture." Unfortunately Article 49 largely nega- tived this statement by leaving the whole matter to the discretion of the captor. It is as follows: "As an exception, a neutral vessel captured by a belligerent ship, and which would be liable to condemnation, may be destroyed if the ob- servance of Article 48 would involve danger to the ship of war or to the success of the operations in which she is at the time engaged." The next article provided the following safeguards: "Be-, fore the destruction the persons on board must be placed in safety, and all the ship's papers and other documents which those interested consider relevant for the decision as to the validity of the capture must be taken on board the ship of war." The Declaration of London was freely criti- The Failure of Neutrality and Isolation 181 cised for recognizing an unlimited discretionary right on the part of a captor to destroy a neutral prize. Under all the circumstances the main grievance against Germany was not that she destroyed prizes at sea, but that she utterly ignored the restrictions imposed upon this right and the rules designed to safeguard human life. Germany sought to justify her submarine policy on the ground (i) that the American man- ufacture and sale of munitions of war was one- sided and therefore unneutral, and (2) that the United States had practically acquiesced in what she considered the unlawful efforts of Great Britain to cut off the food supply of Germany. The subject of the munitions trade was brought to the attention of the United States by Germany in a note of April 4, 1915. While not denying the legality of the trade in munitions under ordinary circumstances the contentions of the German Government were that the situation in the present war differed from that of any previous war; that the recog- nition of the trade in the past had sprung from the necessity of protecting existing industries, while in the present war an entirely new indus- try had been created in the United States; and it concluded with the following statement which 1 82 From Isolation to Leadership was the real point of the note: "This industry is actually delivering goods to the enemies of Germany. The theoretical willingness to sup- ply Germany also, if shipments were possible, does not alter the case. If it is the will of the American people that there should be a true neutrality, the United States will find means of preventing this one-sided supply of arms or at least of utilizing it to protect legitimate trade with Germany, especially that in food stuffs." To this note Secretary Bryan replied that "Any change in its own laws of neutrality during the progress of the war which would affect unequally the relations of the United States with the na- tions at war would be an unjustifiable departure from the principle of strict neutrality." Two months later the discussion was re- newed by the Austro-Hungarian Government. The Austrian note did not question the inten- tion of the United States to conform to the letter of the law, but complained that we were not carrying out its spirit, and suggested that a threat to withhold food stuffs and raw materials from the Allies would be sufficient to protect legitimate commerce between the United States and the Central Powers. To this note Secretary Lansing replied at length. He held: (i) that the United States was under no obligation to The Failure of Neutrality and Isolation 183 change or modify the rules of international usage on account of special conditions. (2) He rejected what he construed to be the con- tention of the Austrian Government that "the advantages gained to a belligerent by its su- periority on the sea should be equalized by the neutral powers by the establishment of a system of non-intercourse with the victor." (3) He called attention to the fact that Austria- Hungary and Germany had during the years preceding the present European war produced "a great surplus of arms and ammunition which they sold throughout the world and especially to belligerents. Never during that period did either of them suggest or apply the principle now advocated by the Imperial and Royal Government." (4) "But, in addition to the question of principle, there is a practical and substantial reason why the Government of the United States has from the foundation of the Republic to the present time advocated and practised unrestricted trade in arms and mili- tary supplies. It has never been the policy of this country to maintain in time of peace a large military establishment or stores of arms and ammunition sufficient to repel invasion by a well-equipped and powerful enemy. It has desired to remain at peace with all nations and 184 From Isolation to Leadership to avoid any appearance of menacing such peace by the threat of its armies and navies. In con- sequence of this standing policy the United States would, in the event of attack by a foreign power, be at the outset of the war seriously, if not fatally, embarrassed by the lack of arms and ammunition and by the means to produce them in sufficient quantities to supply the re- quirements of national defense. The United States has always depended upon the right and power to purchase arms and ammunition from neutral nations in case of foreign attack. This right, which it claims for itself, it cannot deny to others." The German and Austrian authorities were fully aware that their arguments had no basis in international law or practice. Indeed, their notes were probably designed to influence public opinion and help the German propagandists in this country who were making a desperate effort to get Congress to place an embargo on the export of munitions. Having failed in this attempt, an extensive conspiracy was formed to break up the trade in munitions by a resort to criminal methods. Numerous explosions occurred in munition plants destroying many lives and millions of dollars' worth of property, and bombs were placed in a number of ships The Failure of Neutrality and Isolation 185 engaged in carrying supplies to the Allies. The Austrian ambassador and the German military and naval attaches at Washington were involved in these activities and their recall was promptly demanded by Secretary Lansing. The violations of international law by Ger- many were so flagrant, her methods of waging war so barbarous, the activities of her diplomats so devoid of honor, and her solemn pledges were so ruthlessly broken that the technical discussion of the rules of maritime law was com- pletely overshadowed by the higher moral issues involved in the contest. All further efforts to maintain neutrality finally became intolerable even to President Wilson, who had exercised patience until patience ceased to be a virtue. Having failed in his efforts to persuade Congress to authorize the arming of merchantmen, the President finally concluded, in view of Ger- many's threat to treat armed guards as pirates, that armed neutrality was impracticable. He accepted the only alternative and on April 2, 1917, went before Congress to ask for a formal declaration of war against Germany. Had Germany observed the rules of inter- national law, the United States would probably have remained neutral notwithstanding the imminent danger of the overthrow of France 1 86 From Isolation to Leadership and the possible invasion of England. The upsetting of the European balance would eventually have led to a conflict between Ger- many and the United States. The violation of American rights forced us to go to war, but having once entered the war, we fought not merely for the vindication of American rights, but for the establishment of human freedom and the recognition of human rights throughout the world. In his war address President Wilson said: "Neutrality is no longer feasible or desirable where the peace of the world is in- volved and the freedom of its peoples, and the menace to that peace and freedom lies in the existence of autocratic Governments backed by organized force which is controlled wholly by their will, not by the will of their people. We have seen the last of neutrality in such circumstances." Having once abandoned neu- trality and isolation we are not likely to re- main neutral again in any war which involves the balance of power in the world or the des- tinies of the major portion of mankind. Neu- trality and isolation were correlative. They were both based on the view that we were a remote and distant people and had no intimate concern with what was going on 'in the great world across the seas. The Failure of Neutrality and Isolation 187 The failure of neutrality and the abandon- ment of isolation marked a radical, though in- evitable, change in our attitude toward world politics. President Wilson did not propose, however, to abandon the great principles for which we as a nation had stood, but rather to extend them and give them a world-wide appli- cation. In his address to the Senate on Janu- ary 22, 1917, he said: "I am proposing, as it were, that the nations should with one accord adopt the doctrine of President Monroe as the doctrine of the world; that no nation should seek to extend its polity over any other nation or people, but that every people should be left free to determine its own polity, its own way of development, unhindered, unthreatened, unafraid, the little along with the great and powerful. "I am proposing that all nations henceforth avoid entangling alliances which would draw them into competitions of power, catch them in a net of intrigue and selfish rivalry, and disturb their own affairs with influences in- truded from without. There is no entangling alliance in a concert of power." In other words, the Monroe Doctrine, stripped of its imperialistic tendencies, was to be inter- nationalized, and the American policy of isola- 1 88 From Isolation to Leadership i tion, in the sense of avoiding secret alliances, was to become a fundamental principle of the new international order. If the United States was to go into a league of nations, every member of the league must stand on its own footing. We were not to be made a buffer between al- liances and ententes. X THE WAR AIMS OF THE UNITED STATES] X THE WAR AIMS OF THE UNITED STATES THE advent of the United States into the family of nations nearly a century and a half ago was an event of worldwide significance. Our revo- lutionary ancestors set up a government founded on a new principle, happily phrased by Jefferson in the statement that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. This principle threatened, although remotely, the existence of the aristocratic governments of the Old World which were still based on the doctrine of divine right. The entrance of the United States into the World War was an event of equal significance because it gave an Amer- ican president, who was thoroughly grounded in the political philosophy of the Virginia Bill of Rights, the Declaration of Independence, and the writings of the founders of the Republic, an opportunity to proclaim to the world the things for which America has always stood. In this connection H. W. V. Temperley in "A History of the Peace Conference of Paris" (vol. i, page 173) says: "The utterances of Pres- 191 192 From Isolation to Leadership ident Wilson have a unique significance, not only because they were taken as the legal basis of the Peace negotiations, but because they form a definite and coherent body of political doctrine. This doctrine, though developed and expanded in view of the tremendous changes produced by the war, was not formed or even altered by them. His ideas, like those of no other great statesman of the war, are capable of being worked out as a complete political philosophy. A peculiar interest, therefore, attaches to his pre-war speeches, for they contain the germs of his political faith and were not influenced by the terrifying portents of to-day. The tenets in themselves were few and simple, but their con- sequences, when developed by the war, were such as to produce the most far-reaching results. It is not possible or necessary to discuss how far these tenets were accepted by the American people as a whole, for, as the utterances of their legal representative at a supreme moment of world history, they will always retain their value." The principal features of Wilson's political philosophy were revealed in his policy toward Latin America before he had any idea of inter- vening in the European situation. At the out- set of his administration he declared that the The War Aims of the United States 193 United States would "never again seek one additional foot of territory by conquest." In December, 1915, he declared: "From the first we have made common cause with all partisans of liberty on this side of the sea and . . . have set America aside as a whole for the uses of independent nations and political freemen/' A few weeks later he proposed that the nations of America should unite "in guaranteeing to each other absolute political independence and territorial integrity." This proposal was act- ually embodied in a treaty, but this plan for an American league of nations did not meet with the approval of the other states, who probably feared that the United States would occupy too dominant a position in such a league. President Wilson's refusal to recognize the despotic power of Huerta, while expressing sympathy for the people of Mexico, was the first application of the policy which later so successfully drove a wedge in between the Kaiser and the German people. His refusal to invade Mexico and his determina- tion to give the people of that country a chance to work out their own salvation gave evidence to the world of the unselfishness and sincerity of his policies, and paved the way for the moral leadership which he later exercised over the peoples of Europe. 194 From Isolation to Leadership President Wilson's insistence on neutrality in "thought, word, and deed," the expression "too proud to fight," and his statement in regard to the war, May 27, 1916, that "with its causes and objects we are not concerned," caused deep offense to many of his countrymen and were received with ridicule by others at home and abroad. His reasons for remaining neutral were best stated in the speech accepting his second nomination for the presidency, Septem- ber 2, 1916: "We have been neutral not only because it was the fixed and traditional policy of the United States to stand aloof from the politics of Europe and because we had had no part either of action or of policy in the influences which brought on the present war, but also be- cause it was manifestly our duty to prevent, if it were possible, the indefinite extension of the fires of hate and desolation kindled by that terrible conflict and seek to serve mankind by reserving our strength and our resources for the anxious and difficult days of restoration and healing which must follow, when peace will have to build its house anew." Other speeches made during the year 1916 show, however, that he was being gradually forced to the conclusion that "peace is not always within the choice of the nation" and that The War Aims of the United States 195 we must be " ready to fight for our rights when those rights are coincident with the rights of man and humanity." After the German peace proposals of Decem- ber 12, 1916, President Wilson called on all the belligerents to state publicly what they were fighting for. This demand caused a searching of hearts everywhere, led to a restatement of aims on the part of the Allies, and threw the Central Governments on the defensive. In formulating their replies the Allies were some- what embarrassed by the secret treaties relating to Russia and Italy, which were later made public by the Bolsheviki. In March, 1915, England and France had made an agreement with Russia by which she was to get Constanti- nople, the aim of her policy since the days of Peter the Great. By the secret Treaty of Lon- don, signed April 26, 1915, England, France, and Russia had promised Italy that she should re- ceive the Trentino and Southern Tyrol, includ- ing in its population more than 250,000 Germans. Italy was also promised Trieste and the Istrian peninsula, the boundary running just west of Fiume, over which city, it should be remem- bered, she acquired no claim under this treaty. Italy was also to receive about half of Dalmatia, including towns over half of whose population 196 From Isolation to Leadership were Jugo-Slavs. To President Wilson's note the Allies had to reply, therefore, in somewhat general terms. Their territorial demands were : "The restitution of provinces formerly torn from the Allies by force or against the wish of their inhabitants; the liberation of the Italians, as also of the Slavs, Roumanes, and Czecho- slovaks from foreign domination, the setting free of the populations subject to the bloody tyranny of the Turks; and the turning out of Europe of the Ottoman Empire as decidedly foreign to Western civilization." The German reply contained no statement of territorial claims and gave no pledge even as to the future status of Belgium. In reporting the results of this interchange of views to the Senate, January 22, 1917, President Wilson delivered the first of that series of ad- dresses on the essentials of a just and lasting peace which made him the recognized spokes- man of the liberal element in all countries and gained for him a moral leadership that was with- out parallel in the history of the world. "In every discussion of the peace that must end this war," he declared, "it is taken for granted that that peace must be followed by some definite concert of power which will make it virtually impossible that any such catastrophe should The War Aims of the United States 197 ever overwhelm us again. Every lover of man- kind, every sane and thoughtful man must take that for granted." In fact, there was no dissent from this statement. Most of our leading men, including Taft, Roosevelt, and Lodge, were committed to the idea of a league of nations for the maintenance of law and international peace. The League to Enforce Peace, which had branches in all the Allied countries, had done a great work in popularizing this idea. The President came before the Senate, he said, "as the council associated with me in the final de- termination of our international obligations," to formulate the conditions upon which he would feel justified in asking the American people to give "formal and solemn adherence to a League for Peace." He disclaimed any right to a voice in determining what the terms of peace should be, but he did claim a right to "have a voice in determining whether they shall be made lasting or not by the guarantees of a universal cove- nant." First of all, the peace must be a "peace without victory," for "only a peace between equals can last." And, he added, "there is a deeper thing involved than even equality of right among organized nations. No peace can last, or ought to last, which does not recognize and accept the principle that governments de- 198 From Isolation to Leadership rive all their just powers from the consent of the governed, and that no right anywhere exists to hand peoples about from sovereignty to sov- ereignty as if they were property." He cited Poland as an example, declaring that statesmen everywhere were agreed that she should be "united, independent, and autonomous." He declared that every great people "should be assured a direct outlet to the sea," and that "no nation should be shut away from free access to the open paths of the world's commerce." He added: "The freedom of the seas is the sine qua non of peace, equality, and cooperation." This problem, he said, was closely connected with the limitation of naval armaments. "The question of armaments, whether on land or sea, is the most immediately and intensely practical question connected with the future fortunes of nations and of mankind." The Russian revolution, which came in March, 1917, and resulted in the overthrow of the Czar's government, cleared the political atmosphere for the time being, and enabled President Wilson in his address to Congress on April 2 to proclaim a war of democracy against autocracy. The new Russian government re- pudiated all imperialistic aims and adopted the formula: "Self-determination, no annexations, The War Aims of the United States 199 no indemnities." Poland was given her freedom and the demand for Constantinople was aban- doned. The Allies were thus relieved from one of their most embarrassing secret treaties. Even after America entered the war, President Wilson continued to advance the same ideas as to the ultimate conditions of peace. His attitude remained essentially different from that of the Allies, who were hampered by secret treaties wholly at variance with the President's aims. In his war address he declared that we had "no quarrel with the German people. We have no feeling towards them but one of sym- pathy and friendship. It was not upon their impulse that their government acted in enter- ing this war." Prussian autocracy was the ob- ject of his attack. "We are now about to ac- cept gauge of battle with this natural foe to liberty and shall, if necessary, spend the whole force of the nation to check and nullify its pre- tensions and its power. We are glad, now that we see the facts with no veil of false pretense about them, to fight thus for the ultimate peace of the world and for the liberation of its peoples, the German peoples included: for the rights of nations great and small and the privilege of men everywhere to choose their way of life and of obedience. The world must be made safe for 2OO From Isolation to Leadership democracy. Its peace must be planted upon the tested foundations of political liberty. We have no selfish ends to serve. We desire no conquest, no dominion. We seek no indemni- ties for ourselves, no material compensation for the sacrifices we shall freely make. We are but one of the champions of the rights of mankind. We shall be satisfied when those rights have been made as secure as the faith and the freedom of nations can make them." About the time that the United States de- clared war, Austria and Germany began another so-called "peace offensive." Overtures were made by Austria to France in March, and in August the Pope made a direct appeal to the Powers. This move was unmasked by Presi- dent Wilson in a public address at the Washing- ton Monument, June 14, 1917. "The military masters under whom Germany is bleeding," he declared, "see very clearly to what point fate has brought them: if they fall back or are forced back an inch, their power abroad and at home will fall to pieces. It is their power at home of which they are thinking now more than of their power abroad. It is that power which is trem- bling under their very feet. Deep fear has entered their hearts. They have but one chance to perpetuate their military power, or The War Aims of the United States 201 even their controlling political influence. If they can secure peace now, with the immense advantage still in their hands, they will have justified themselves before the German people. They will have gained by force what they prom- ised to gain by it an immense expansion of German power and an immense enlargement of German industrial and commercial opportuni- ties. Their prestige will be secure, and with their prestige their political power. If they fail, their people will thrust them aside. A govern- ment accountable to the people themselves will be set up in Germany, as has been the case in England, the United States, and France in all great countries of modern times except Ger- many. If they succeed they are safe, and Ger- many and the world are undone. If they fail, Germany is saved and the world will be at peace. If they succeed, America will fall within the menace, and we, and all the rest of the world, must remain armed, as they will remain, and must make ready for the next step in their aggression. If they fail, the world may unite for peace and Germany may be of the union." The task of replying to the Pope was left by the Allied governments to Wilson, who was not hampered by secret treaties. In this remark- able document he drove still further the wedge 2O2 From Isolation to Leadership between the German people and the Kaiser. "The American people have suffered intolerable wrongs at the hands of the Imperial German Government, but they desire no reprisal upon the German people who have themselves suf- fered all things in this war which they did not choose. They believe that peace should rest upon the rights of peoples, not the rights of Governments the rights of peoples great or small, weak or powerful their equal right to freedom and security and self-government and to a participation upon fair terms in the econ- omic opportunities of the world, the German people of course included if they will accept equality and not seek domination." In conclusion he said: "We cannot take the word of the present rulers of Germany as a guarantee of anything that is to endure, unless explicitly supported by such conclusive evidence of the will and purpose of the German people themselves as the other peoples of the world would be justified in accepting. Without such guarantees, treaties of settlement, agreements for disarmament, covenants to set up arbitration in the place of force, territorial adjustments, reconstitutions of small nations, if made with the German Government, no man, no nation &>uld now depend on. We must await some The War Aims of the United States 203 new evidence of the purposes of the great peoples of the Central Powers. God grant it may be given soon and in a way to restore the confidence of all peoples everywhere in the faith of nations and the possibility of covenanted peace." Early in November, 1917, the Kerensky Gov- ernment was overthrown in Russia and the Bolsheviki came into power. They at once proposed a general armistice and called upon all the belligerents to enter into peace negotiations. The Central Powers accepted the invitation, and early in December negotiations began at Brest- Litovsk. The Russian peace proposals were: the evacuation of occupied territories, self- determination for nationalities not hitherto in- dependent, no war indemnities or economic boycotts, and the settlement of colonial ques- tions in accordance with the above principles. The Austrian minister, Count Czernin, replied for the Central Powers, accepting more of the Russian program than had been expected, but rejecting the principle of a free plebiscite for national groups not hitherto independent, and conditioning the whole on the acceptance by the Allies of the offer of general peace. The con- ference called on the Allies for an answer by January 4. No direct reply was made to this 204 From Isolation to Leadership demand, but the Russian proposals had made a profound impression on the laboring classes in all countries, and both Lloyd George and Presi- dent Wilson felt called on to define more clearly the war aims of the Allies. In a speech delivered January 5, 1918, Lloyd George made the first comprehensive and au- thoritative statement of British war aims. He had consulted the labor leaders and Viscount Grey and Mr. Asquith, as well as some of the representatives of the overseas dominions, and he was speaking, he said, for "the nation and the Empire as a whole." He explained first what the British were not fighting for. He dis- claimed any idea of overthrowing the German Government, although he considered military autocracy "a dangerous anachronism"; they were not fighting to destroy Austria-Hungary, but genuine self-government must be granted to "those Austro-Hungarian nationalities who have long desired it"; they were not fighting "to deprive Turkey of its capital or of the rich and renowned lands of Thrace, which are predomi- nantly Turkish in race," but the passage between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea must be "internationalized and neutralized." The posi- tive statement of aims included the complete restoration of Belgium, the return of Alsace- The War Aims of the United States 205 Lorraine to France, rectification of the Italian boundary, the independence of Poland, the restoration of Serbia, Montenegro, and the occupied parts of France, Italy, and Rumania, and a disposition of the German colonies with "primary regard to the wishes and interests of the native inhabitants of such colonies." He insisted on reparation for injuries done in viola- tion of international law, but disclaimed a de- mand for war indemnity. In conclusion he declared the following conditions to be essential to a lasting peace: "First, the sanctity of treaties must be reestablished; secondly, a territorial settlement must be secured, based on the right of self-determination or the consent of the governed; and lastly, we must seek, by the creation of some international organization, to limit the burden of armaments and diminish the probability of war." On January 8, 1918, three days after Lloyd George's speech, President Wilson appeared before both Houses of Congress and delivered the most important of all his addresses on war aims. It contained the famous Fourteen Points : I. Open covenants of peace, openly arrived at, after which there shall be no private international understandings of any kind, but diplomacy shall proceed 2o6 From Isolation to Leadership always frankly and in the public view. II. Absolute freedom of navigation upon the seas, outside territorial waters, alike in peace and in war, except as the seas may be closed in whole or in part by international action for the en- forcement of international covenants. III. The removal, so far as possible, of all economic barriers and the establish- ment of an equality of trade conditions among all the nations consenting to the peace and associating themselves for its maintenance. IV. Adequate guarantees given and taken that national armaments will be re- duced to the lowest point consistent with domestic safety. V. A free, open-minded and absolutely im- partial adjustment of all colonial claims, based upon a strict observance of the principle that in determining all such questions of sovereignty the interests of the populations concerned must have equal weight with the equitable claims of the Government whose title is to be determined. VI. The evacuation of all Russian territory The War Aims of the United States 207 and such a settlement of all questions affecting Russia as will secure the best and freest cooperation of the other nations of the world in obtaining for her an unhampered and unembar- rassed opportunity for the independent determination of her own political development and national policy and assure her of a sincere welcome into the society of free nations under insti- tutions of her own choosing; and, more than a welcome, assistance also of every kind that she may need and may herself desire. The treatment accorded Russia by her sister nations will be the acid test of their good will, of their comprehension of her needs as distinguished from their own interests and of their intelligent and unselfish sympathy. VII. Belgium, the whole world will agree, must be evacuated and restored, with- out any attempt to limit the sov- ereignty which she enjoys in common with all other free nations. No other single act will serve as this will serve to restore confidence among the na- tions in the laws which they have 208 From Isolation to Leadership themselves set and determined for the government of their relations with one another. Without this healing act the whole structure and validity of in- ternational law is forever impaired. VIII. All French territory should be freed and the invaded portions restored, and the wrong done to France by Prussia in 1871 in the matter of Alsace-Lorraine, which has unsettled the peace of the world for nearly fifty years, should be righted, in order that peace may once more be made secure in the interest of all. IX. A readjustment of the frontiers of Italy should be effected along clearly recog- nizable lines of nationality. X. The peoples of Austria-Hungary, whose place among the nations we wish to see safeguarded and assured, should be accorded the freest opportunity of autonomous development. XI. Rumania, Serbia, and Montenegro should be evacuated: occupied territories re- stored; Serbia accorded free and secure access to the sea; and the relations of the several Balkan states to one an- other determined by friendly counsel The War Aims of the United States 209 along historically established lines of allegiance and nationality; and inter- national guarantees of the political and economic independence and terri- torial integrity of the several Balkan states should be entered into. XII. The Turkish portions of the present Ottoman Empire should be assured a secure sovereignty, but the other na- tionalities which are now under Turkish rule should be assured an undoubted security of life and an absolutely un- molested opportunity of autonomous development, and the Dardanelles should be permanently opened as a free passage to the ships and com- merce of all nations under interna- tional guarantees. XIII. An independent Polish state should be erected which should include the terri- tories inhabited by indisputably Polish populations, which should be assured a free and secure access to the sea, and whose political and economic inde- pendence and territorial integrity should be guaranteed by international covenant. XIV. A general association of nations must 2io From Isolation to Leadership be formed under specific covenants for the purpose of affording mutual guar- antees of political independence and territorial integrity to great and small states alike. In February negotiations at Brest-Litovsk were broken off as a result of the excessive de- mands of the Germans and the armistice was declared at an end. The Germans quickly overran Poland and the Baltic provinces and occupied Ukraine under a treaty which vir- tually placed the material resources of that country at the disposal of the Central Powers. In an address at Baltimore, April 6, the anniver- sary of our entrance into the war, President Wilson denounced the insincerity and perfidy of the German rulers, who, he said, were "enjoying in Russia a cheap triumph in which no brave or gallant nation can long take pride." He con- cluded with these strong words: "Germany has once more said that force, and force alone, shall decide whether justice and peace shall reign in the affairs of men, whether right as America conceives it or dominion as she conceives it shall determine the destinies of mankind. There is, therefore, but one response possible from us: Force, force to the utmost, force without stint or limit, the righteous and triumphant force The War Aims of the United States 211 which shall make right the law of the world and cast every selfish dominion down in the dust." Between the addresses of January 8 and the Armistice, the President delivered other ad- dresses in which he elaborated some of the prin- ciples of the Fourteen Points. Of special signifi- cance were his speeches of February n, July 4, and September 27. In the last his mind cen- tered on the League of Nations. "There can be no leagues or alliances or special covenants and understandings within the general and common family of the League of Nations," he declared, and "there can be no special selfish economic combinations within the League, and no employment of any form of economic boycott or exclusion, except as the power of economic penalty, by exclusion from the markets of the world, may be vested in the League of Nations itself as a means of discipline and control." In conclusion he said that the United States was prepared "to assume its full share of responsibil- ity for the maintenance of the common cove- nants and understandings upon which peace must henceforth rest." We now know from the published memoirs of German and Austrian statesmen that President Wilson's speeches made a profound impression on the peoples of Central Europe. His utter- 212 From Isolation to Leadership ances in behalf of the oppressed nationalities, not only Belgium, Serbia, and Poland, but also the Czecho-Slovaks and the Jugo-Slavs, became stronger and more frequent during the spring and summer of 1918, and solidified the opposi- tion to Germany at a critical period of the war. On September 3 he recognized the Czecho- slovak National Council as a belligerent govern- ment. This meant the break-up of the Austro- Hungarian Empire, which had not been con- templated at an earlier period, but, as he stated in his reply to the Austrian request for an armis- tice in October, conditions had changed since the announcement of the Fourteen Points, and these peoples would no longer be satisfied with mere autonomy. As a result of the Russian collapse and the negotiations at Brest-Litovsk, the Germans withdrew their divisions from the eastern front and staked everything on the great western drive of March, 1918. When this movement was finally checked and the Allied advance be- gan, the German military leaders knew that the game was up, but they did not have the courage to face the facts, for an acknowledgment of de- feat meant the overthrow of the old system of. government based on military success. They waited in vain for some military advantage The War Aims of the United States 213 which would give them an opportunity to open negotiations without openly acknowledging de- feat. Finally the state of demoralization at Headquarters became so complete that there was no alternative but to ask for an immediate armistice. In order to pave the way for this step, the ministry resigned October i, and Prince Max of Baden was called on to form a new government. On the 4th he dispatched a note to President Wilson through the Swiss Government, requesting him to call a peace con- ference and stating that the German Govern- ment "accepts the program set forth by the President of the United States in his message to Congress of the 8th January, 1918, and in his later pronouncements, especially his speech of the 27th September, as a basis for peace ne- gotiations." In reply the President asked for a clearer understanding on three points: (i) Did the Im- perial Chancellor mean that the German Govern- ment accepted the terms laid down in the President's addresses referred to, and "that its object in entering into discussion would be only to agree upon the practical details of their application ? " (2) The President would not feel at liberty to propose a cessation of arms to the Allied Governments so long as the armies of the 214 From Isolation to Leadership Central Powers were upon their soil. (3) The President asked whether the Chancellor was speaking for the constituted authorities of the Empire who had so far conducted the war. The German reply of October 12 was satis- factory on the first point. With respect to the withdrawal of their troops from occupied terri- tory they proposed a mixed commission to arrange the details. On the third point it was stated that the new government had been formed in agreement with the great majority of the Reichstag. Having accomplished this much, the President's next step was skilfully taken. He replied that the process of evacua- tion and the conditions of an armistice were matters which must be left to the judgment of the military advisers of the United States and the Allied Governments, but that he would not agree to any arrangement which did not provide "absolutely satisfactory safeguards and guaran- tees of the maintenance of the present military supremacy of the armies of the United States and of the Allies in the field/' Referring next to submarine warfare, he declared that the United States and the Allied Governments could not consider an armistice "so long as the armed forces of Germany continue the illegal and inhumane practices which they persist in." In The War Aims of the United States 215 conclusion he referred to a clause contained in his speech of July 4, now accepted by the Ger- man Government as one of the conditions of peace, namely, "The destruction of every arbi- trary power anywhere that can separately, se- cretly, and of its single choice disturb the peace of the world." He added: "The power which has hitherto controlled the German nation is of the sort here described. It is within the choice of the German nation to alter it." He de- manded that the United States and the Allied Governments "should know beyond a perad- venture" with whom they were dealing. In reply the Chancellor assured the President that a bill had been introduced in the Reichstag to alter the constitution of the Empire so as to give the representatives of the people the right to decide for war or peace, but the President was not satisfied that there had been any real change. "It may be that future wars have been brought under the control of the German people, but the present war has not been; and it is with the present war that we are dealing." He was not willing to accept any armistice which did not make a renewal of hostilities on the part of Ger- many impossible. If, he concluded, the United States "must deal with the military masters and the monarchical autocrats of Germany now, or 216 From Isolation to Leadership if it is likely to have to deal with them later in regard to the international obligations of the German Empire, it must demand not peace negotiations but surrender. Nothing can be gained by leaving this essential thing unsaid." This note was written October 23. Four days later the Chancellor replied: ''The President knows the deep-rooted changes which have taken place and are still taking place in Ger- man constitutional life. The peace negotiations will be conducted by a People's Government, in whose hands the decisive legal power rests in accordance with the Constitution, and to which the Military Power will also be subject. The German Government now awaits the proposals for an armistice which will introduce a peace of justice such as the President in his manifesta- tions has described." The terms of the Armistice were drawn up by the Interallied Council at Versailles and completed by November 5. They were much more severe than the public had expected them to be. Germany was required immediately to evacuate Belgium, France, Alsace-Lorraine, and Luxemburg; to withdraw her armies from the entire territory on the left bank of the Rhine, and from Russia, Austria-Hungary, Rumania, and Turkey; she was to surrender enormous The War Aims of the United States 217 quantities of heavy artillery and airplanes, all her submarines, and most of her battleships, cruisers, and destroyers. This was practically unconditional surrender. Contrary to the gen- eral belief at the time, it is now known that Foch and Haig considered these terms too se- vere and feared that Germany would not accept them. They wanted an armistice that Germany would accept. General Bliss, on the other hand, wanted to demand "the complete dis- armament and demobilization of the military and naval forces of the enemy." In America there was much criticism of the President for being willing to negotiate with Germany at all. "On to Berlin" was a popular cry, and it was thought that the President was preventing a complete military triumph. On October 10 Senator Lodge declared in the Senate: "The Republican party stands for unconditional sur- render and complete victory, just as Grant stood. My own belief is that the American people mean to have an unconditional surrender. They mean to have a dictated, not a negotiated peace." After reviewing the Armistice negotiations Andre Tardieu, a member of the French Cabinet and delegate to the Peace Conference, says: "What remains of the fiction, believed by so 218 From Isolation to Leadership many, of an armistice secretly determined upon by an American dictator; submitted to by the European governments : imposed by their weak- ness upon the victorious armies, despite the opposition of the generals ? The Armistice was discussed in the open light of day. President Wilson only consented to communicate it to his associates on the triple condition that its prin- ciple be approved by the military authorities and its clauses would be drawn up by them; that it be imposed upon the enemy and not discussed with him; that it be such as to pre- vent all resumption of hostilities and assure the submission of the vanquished to the terms of peace. So it was that the discussion went on with Berlin till October 23, and in Paris from that date till November 5. It was to the Commander-in-Chief [Foch] that final decision was left not only on the principle of the Armis- tice but upon its application. He it was who drew up the text. And it was his draft that was adopted. The action of the governments was limited to endorsing it and making it more severe. That is the truth: it is perhaps less picturesque but certainly more in accord with common sense." The terms of the Armistice were delivered to the Germans by Marshal Foch November 7, The War Aims of the United States 219 and they were given seventy-two hours to accept or reject them. Meanwhile Germany's allies were rapidly deserting her. Bulgaria surren- dered September 30, and on October 30 Turkey signed an armistice. Finally on November 4, the rapidly disintegrating Austro-Hungarian Monarchy also signed an armistice. On Octo- ber 28 there had been a naval mutiny at Kiel which spread rapidly to the other ports. On the 3 ist the Emperor departed for Army Head- quarters, leaving Berlin on the verge of revolu- tion. On the yth of November the Social Democrats demanded the abdication of the Emperor and the Crown Prince. On the 9th Prince Max resigned the Chancellorship, and the Kaiser abdicated and ignominiously fled across the border into Holland. On the I ith at 5 A. M. the Armistice was signed by the German dele- gates and Marshal Foch, and it went into effect at ii o'clock that day. In two particulars the Wilson principles had been modified by the Allies. In the American note to Germany of November 5 Secretary Lansing stated that the President had submitted his correspondence with the German authorities to the Allied Governments and that he had re- ceived in reply the following memorandum: "The Allied Governments have given careful 22O From Isolation to Leadership consideration to the correspondence which has passed between the President of the United States and the German Government. Subject to the qualifications which follow, they declare their willingness to make peace with the Government of Germany on the terms of peace laid down in the President's Address to Congressof January 8, 1918, and the principles of settlement enunciated in his subsequent Addresses. They must point out, however, that Clause 2, relating to what is usually described as the freedom of the seas, is open to various interpretations, some of which they could not accept. They must therefore reserve to themselves complete freedom on this subject when they enter the Peace Conference. Further, in the conditions of peace laid down in his Address to Congress of January 8, 1918, the President declared that the invaded territories must be restored as well as evacuated and freed, and the Allied Governments feel that no doubt ought to be allowed to exist as to what this pro- vision implies. By it they understand that compensation will be made by Germany for all damage done to the civilian population of the Allies and their property by the aggression of Germany by land, by sea, and from the air." In transmitting this memorandum Secretary Lansing stated that he was instructed by the The War Aims of the United States 221 President to say that he agreed with this inter- pretation. With these modifications the Wilson princi- ples were accepted by all parties as the legal basis of the peace negotiations. XI THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES XI THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES IT WAS agreed that the Peace Conference should meet at Paris, and President Wilson considered the issues involved of such magnitude that he decided to head the American delegation him- self. Great Britain, France, and Italy were to be represented by their premiers, and it was fitting that the United States should be repre- sented by its most responsible leader, who, fur- thermore, had been the chief spokesman of the Allies and had formulated the principles upon which the peace was to be made. But the de- cision of the President to go to Paris was with- out precedent in our history and, therefore, it met with criticism and opposition. When he announced the names of the other members of the delegation, the criticism became even more outspoken and severe. They were Secretary of State Lansing, Henry White, former am- bassador to France, Colonel Edward M. House, and General Tasker H. Bliss. There had been a widespread demand for a non-partisan peace commission, and many people thought that the 225 226 From Isolation to Leadership President should have taken Root, or Roosevelt, or Taft. Mr. White was a Republican but he had never been active in party affairs or in any sense a leader. In the Senate there was deep resentment that the President had not selected any members of that body to accompany him. President McKinley had appointed three sena- tors as members of the commission of five that negotiated the treaty of peace at the close of the Spanish War. With that exception, senators had never taken part directly in the negotiation of a treaty. The delegation was attended by a large group of experts on military, economic, geographical, ethnological, and legal matters, some of whom were men of great ability, and in their selection no party lines were drawn. But just before the signing of the Armistice, the President had suffered a serious political defeat at home. There had been severe criti- cism of Democratic leadership in Congress and growing dissatisfaction with some of the mem- bers of the Cabinet. In response to the appeals of Democratic Congressmen, the President is- sued a statement from the White House on Octo- ber 25, asking the people, if they approved of his leadership and wished him to continue to be their "unembarrassed spokesman in affairs at home and abroad," to vote for the Democratic The Treaty of Versailles 227 candidates for Congress. He acknowledged that the Republicans in Congress had loyally sup- ported his war measures, but he declared that they were hostile to the administration and that the time was too critical for divided leader- ship. This statement created a storm of criti- cism, and did more than any other act in his administration to turn the tide of public opinion against the President. The elections resulted in a Republican majority of thirty-nine in the House and two in the Senate. The President had followed the practice of European premiers in appealing to the people, but under our con- stitutional system he could not very well resign. Had he not issued his appeal, the election would have been regarded as a repudiation of the Democratic Congress, but not necessarily as a repudiation of the President. The situation was most unfortunate, but the President made no comments and soon after announced his in- tention of going to Paris. In December Lloyd George went to the country, and on pledging himself to make Germany pay for the war and to hang the Kaiser, he was returned by a sub- stantial majority. These pledges were un- necessary and had a most unfortunate influence on the subsequent negotiations at Paris. The President sailed for France December 4, 228 From Isolation to Leadership leaving a divided country behind him. His enemies promptly seized the opportunity to assail him. Senator Sherman introduced a resolution declaring the presidency vacant be- cause the President had left the territory of the United States, and Senator Knox offered an- other resolution declaring that the Conference should confine itself solely to the restoration of peace, and that the proposed league of nations should be reserved for consideration at some future time. While his enemies in the Senate were busily organizing all the forces of opposition against him, the President was welcomed by the war- weary peoples of Europe with demonstrations of genuine enthusiasm such as had been the lot of few men in history to receive. Sovereigns and heads of States bestowed the highest honors upon him, while great crowds of working men gathered at the railroad stations in order to get a glimpse of the man who had led the crusade for a peace that would end war and establish justice as the rule of conduct between the na- tions of the world, great and small nations alike. No mortal man could have fulfilled the hopes and expectations that centered in Wilson when he landed on the shores of France in December, 1918. The Armistice had been signed on the The Treaty of Versailles 229 basis of his ideals, and the peoples of Europe confidently expected to see those ideals em- bodied in the treaty of peace. He still held the moral leadership of the world, but the war was over, the German menace ended, and national rivalries and jealousies were beginning to reap- pear, even among those nations who had so recently fought and bled side by side. This change was to be revealed when the Conference met. There was no sign of it in the plaudits of the multitudes who welcomed the President in France, in England, and in Italy. He returned on January 7, 1919, from Italy to Paris, where delegates to the Conference from all the coun- tries which had been at war with Germany were gathering. The first session of the Peace Conference was held January 18. The main work of the Con- ference was carried on by the Supreme Council, constituted at this meeting and composed of the two ranking delegates of each of the five great powers, Great Britain, France, Italy, the United States, and Japan. The decisions which this Council arrived at, with the aid of the large groups of technical advisers which accompanied the delegations of the great powers, were re- ported to the Conference in plenary session from time to time and ratified. The Supreme Coun- 230 From Isolation to Leadership cil was, however, gradually superseded by the "Big Four," Wilson, Lloyd George, Clemen- ceau, and Orlando, while the "Five," composed of ministers of foreign affairs, handled much of the routine business, and made some important decisions, subject to the approval of the "Four." According to statistics compiled by Tardieu, the Council of Ten held seventy-two sessions, the "Five" held thirty-nine, and the "Four" held one hundred and forty-five. As one of the American experts puts it: "The 'Ten' fell into the background, the 'Five' never emerged from obscurity, the 'Four' ruled the Conference in the culminating period when its decisions took shape." At the plenary session of January 25, Presi- dent Wilson made a notable speech in which he proposed the creation of a league of nations, and a resolution to organize such a league and make it an integral part of the general treaty was unanimously adopted. A commission to draft a constitution for the League was ap- pointed with President Wilson as chairman. On February 14 the first draft of the Covenant of the League was presented by him to the Con- ference, and on the following day he sailed for the United States in order to consider the bills passed by Congress before the expiration of the The Treaty of Versailles 23 1 session on March 4. The first draft of the Covenant was hastily prepared, and it went back to the commission for revision. As soon as the text was made known in the United States, opposition to the Covenant was ex- pressed in the Senate. During the President's brief visit to Washington, he gave a dinner at the White House to members of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs for the purpose of explaining to them the terms of the Covenant. There was no official report of what occurred at this dinner, but it was stated that some of the senators objected to the Covenant on the ground that it was contrary to our tra- ditional policies and inconsistent with our Con- stitution and form of government. On March 4, the day before the President left New York to resume his duties at the Conference, Senators Lodge and Knox issued a round robin, signed by thirty-seven senators, declaring that they would not vote for the Covenant in the form proposed, and that consideration of the League of Nations should be postponed until peace had been con- cluded with Germany. That same night the President made a speech at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City in which, after explaining and defining the Covenant, he said: 232 From Isolation to Leadership "When that treaty comes back gentlemen on this side will find the Covenant not only in it, but so many threads of the treaty tied to the Covenant that you cannot dissect the Covenant from the treaty without destroying the whole vital structure." In this same address he also said: "The first thing I am going to tell the , people on the other side of the water is that an overwhelming majority of the American people is in favour of the League of Nations. I know that this is true. I have had unmistakable in- timations of it from all parts of the country, and the voice rings true in every case." The President was evidently quite confident that public sentiment would compel the Senate to ratify the peace treaty, including the Covenant of the League. A nation-wide propaganda was being carried on by the League to Enforce Peace and other organizations, and public senti- ment for the League appeared to be overwhelm- ing. The President took back to Paris with him various suggestions of changes in the Covenant, and later ex-President Taft, Elihu Root, and Charles E. Hughes proposed amend- ments which were forwarded to him and carefully considered by the commission. Some of these suggestions, such as the reservation of the Monroe Doctrine and the right of with- The Treaty of Versailles 233 drawal from the League, were embodied in the final draft. When the President returned to Paris he found that Secretary Lansing and Colonel House had consented to the separation of the League from the treaty of peace. He immediately reversed this decision, but the final adoption of the Covenant was delayed by the demand of Japan that a clause be inserted establishing "the prin- ciple of equality of nations and just treatment of their nationals," which would have brought within the jurisdiction of the League the status of Japan's subjects in California and in the Brit- ish dominions. France urged the inclusion of a provision creating a permanent General Staff to direct the military operations of the League, and Belgium insisted that Brussels rather than Gen- eva should be the seat of the League. Mean- while other national aspirations were also brought forward which delayed the general treaty of peace. France wanted the entire left bank of the Rhine; Italy put forth a claim to Fiume; and Japan, relying on secret agree- ments with England, France, and Italy, in- sisted on her claims to Shantung. No eco- nomic settlement had as yet been agreed upon, and the question of reparations was threaten- ing the disruption of the Conference. 234 From Isolation to Leadership The most difficult problem that the Confer- ence had to solve was the establishment of a new Franco-German frontier. There was no ques- tion about Alsace-Lorraine. That had been disposed of by the Fourteen Points, and Ger- many had acquiesced in its return to France in the pre-Armistice agreement. But no sooner was the Armistice signed than Foch addressed a note to Clemenceau, setting forth the necessity of making the Rhine the western frontier of Germany. The Left Bank, extending from Alsace-Lorraine to the Dutch frontier, embraced about 10,000 square miles and 5,500,000 people. The debate on this question continued at inter- vals for six months and at times became very acrimonious. The French representatives did not demand the direct annexation of the Left Bank, but they proposed an independent or autonomous Rhineland and French, or inter- Allied, occupation of the Rhine for an indefinite period, or at least until the full execution by Germany of the financial clauses of the treaty. Both the British and American delegates op- posed the French proposals. Lloyd George repeatedly said: "We must not create another Alsace-Lorraine." He also remarked on one occasion: "The strongest impression made upon me by my first visit to Paris was the statue The Treaty of Versailles 235 of Strasburg veiled in mourning. Do not let us make it possible for Germany to erect a similar statue." This discussion was being carried on with great earnestness and intensity of feeling when Wilson returned to Paris March 14. That very afternoon he met Lloyd George and Clemenceau. The French argument was set forth again at length and with great skill. The fact was again pointed out that the destruction of the German fleet had relieved England from all fear of Ger- man invasion, and that the Atlantic Ocean lay between Germany and the United States, while France, which had suffered two German inva- sions in half a century, had no safeguard but the League of Nations, which she did not deem as good a guarantee as the Rhine bridges. Finally Wilson and Lloyd George offered the guarantee treaties, and Clemenceau agreed to take the proposal under consideration. Three days later he came back with a counter proposi- tion and a compromise was reached. France gave up her demand for a separate Rhineland, but secured occupation of the Left Bank, in- cluding the bridge-heads, for a period of fifteen years as a guarantee of the execution of the treaty. In return the United States and Great Britain pledged themselves to come to the im- 236 From Isolation to Leadership mediate aid of France, in case of an unprovoked attack, by an agreement which was to be bind- ing only if ratified by both countries. This treaty the United States Senate refused to ratify. Foch was opposed to this compromise, and adopted a course of action which was very embarrassing to Clemenceau. Fierce attacks on the French Government and on the repre- sentatives of Great Britain and the United States, inspired by him, appeared in the papers. When the treaty was finally completed, he even went so far as to refuse to transmit the note summoning the German delegates to Versailles to receive it. Wilson and Lloyd George finally protested so vigorously to Clemenceau that Foch had to give way. In view of the promises of Clemenceau and Lloyd George that Germany should pay the cost of the war, the question of reparations was an exceedingly difficult one to adjust. Presi- dent Wilson stoutly opposed the inclusion of war costs as contrary to the pre-Armistice agreement, and Lloyd George and Clemenceau finally had to give in. The entire American delegation and their corps of experts endeavored to limit the charges imposed on Germany rigidly to reparation for damage done to civilians in the occupied areas and on land and sea. Lloyd The Treaty of Versailles 237- George, remembering the promises which he had made prior to the December elections, insisted that pensions paid by the Allied governments should be included as damage done to the civil- ian population. This claim was utterly illogi- cal, for pensions fall properly into the category of military expenses, but it was pressed with such skill and determination by Lloyd George and General Smuts that President Wilson finally gave his assent. From the first the American delegates and experts were in favor of fixing definitely the amount that Germany was to pay in the way of reparations and settling this question once for all. They hoped to agree upon a sum which it was within Germany's power to pay. But Clemenceau and Lloyd George had made such extravagant promises to their people that they were afraid to announce at this time a sum which would necessarily be much less than the people expected. They, therefore, insisted that the question should be left open to be deter- mined later by a Reparations Commission. They declared that any other course would mean the .immediate overthrow of their govern- ments and the reorganization of the British and French delegations. President Wilson did not care to put himself in the position of appearing 238 From Isolation to Leadership to precipitate a political crisis in either country, so he finally gave way on this point also. These concessions proved to be the most serious mis- takes that he made at Paris, for they did more than anything else to undermine the faith of liberals everywhere in him. The Italian delegation advanced a claim to Fiume which was inconsistent both with the Treaty of London and the Fourteen Points. When disagreement over this question had been delaying for weeks the settlement of other mat- ters, President Wilson finally made a public statement of his position which was virtually an appeal to the Italian people over the heads of their delegation. The entire delegation with- drew from the Conference and went home, but Premier Orlando received an almost unanimous vote of confidence from his parliament, and he was supported by an overwhelming tide of pub- lic sentiment throughout Italy. This was the first indication of Wilson's loss of prestige with the peoples of Europe. As already stated, the Japanese had insisted on the insertion in the Covenant of the League of the principle of racial equality. It is very doubtful whether they ever expected to succeed in this. The probability is that they advanced this principle in order to compel concessions on The Treaty of Versailles 239 other points. Japan's main demand was that the German leases and concessions in the Chi- nese province of Shantung should be definitely confirmed to her by the treaty. Two weeks after the outbreak of the World War, Japan had addressed an ultimatum to Germany to the effect that she immediately withdraw all Ger- man vessels from Chinese and Japanese waters and deliver not later than September 15 "to the Imperial Japanese authorities without con* dition or compensation the entire leased terri- tory of Kiao-chau with a view to the eventual restoration of the same to China." In a state- ment issued to the press Count Okuma said: "As Premier of Japan, I have stated and I now again state to the people of America and all the world that Japan has no ulterior motive or de- sire to secure more territory, no thought of depriving China or any other peoples of any- thing which they now possess." The Germans had spent about $100,000,000 in improving Tsing-tau, the principal city of Kiao-chau, and they had no intention of surren- dering. After a siege of two months the city was captured by the Japanese army and navy, assisted by a small force of British troops. This was the first act in the drama. On Janu- ary 8, 1915, Japan suddenly presented to the 240 From Isolation to Leadership Chinese government the now famous Twenty- one Demands, deliberately misrepresenting to the United States and other powers the nature of these demands. Among other things, Japan demanded not only that China should assent to any agreement in regard to Shantung that Japan and Germany might reach at the con- clusion of the war, but that she should also grant to her greater rights and concessions in Shantung than Germany had enjoyed. China was finally forced to agree to these demands. Japan's next step was to acquire from the Allies the assurance that they would support her claims to Shantung and to the islands in the Pacific north of the equator on the conclu- sion of the war. This she did in secret agree- ments signed in February and March, 1917, with England, France, Italy, and Russia. Eng- land agreed to support Japan's claim on condi- tion that Japan would support her claims to the Pacific islands south of the equator. France signed on condition that Japan would use her influence on China to break relations with Germany and place at the disposal of the Allies the German ships interned in Chinese ports. The Allies were evidently uneasy about Japan, and were willing to do anything that was neces- sary to satisfy her. This uncertainty about The Treaty of Versailles 241 Japan may also be the explanation of the Lansing-Ishii agreement signed November 2, 1917, in which the United States recognized the "special interests" of Japan in China. The secret treaties of the Allies relating to the Japanese claims were not revealed until the disposition of the German islands in the Pacific was under discussion at the Peace Conference. When informed by Baron Makino that the is- lands north of the equator had been pledged to Japan by agreements signed two years before, President Wilson inquired whether there were other secret agreements, and was informed that the German rights in Shantung had also been promised to Japan. As the other powers were pledged to support Japan's claims, President Wilson found himself in a very embarrassing situation, especially as he had also to oppose Japan's demand that a clause recognizing ra- cial equality be inserted in the Covenant of the League. This was a moral claim that Japan urged with great strategic effect. In pushing her claims to Shantung she ignored all moral considerations and relied entirely upon her legal status, secured (i) by the secret treaties with the Allies, (2) by the treaty of 1915 with China, and (3) by right of conquest. When charged with having coerced China into signing the 242 From Isolation to Leadership treaty of 1915, Japan replied with truth that most of the important treaties with China had been extorted by force. Japan declared, how- ever, that she had no intention of holding Shan- tung permanently, but that she would restore the province in full sovereignty to China, re- taining only the economic privileges transferred from Germany. In view of this oral promise, President Wilson finally acquiesced in the recog- nition of Japan's legal status in Shantung. On May 7 the completed treaty was presented to the German delegates who had been sum- moned to Versailles to receive it. When the text was made public in Berlin there was an indignant outcry against the alleged injustice of certain provisions which were held to be in- consistent with the pledges given by President Wilson in the pre-Armistice negotiations, and the Germans made repeated efforts to draw the Allies into a general discussion of principles. They were, however, finally given to understand that they must accept or reject the treaty as it stood, and on June 28 it was signed in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles the same hall in which William I had been crowned Emperor of Ger- many forty-eight years before. The next day President Wilson sailed for the United States, and on July 10 personally pre- The Treaty of Versailles 243 sented the treaty to the Senate with an earnest appeal for prompt ratification. The Committee on Foreign Relations, to which the treaty was referred, proceeded with great deliberation, and on July 3 1 began a series of public hearings which lasted until September 12. The Committee called before it Secretary Lansing and several of the technical advisors to the American delega- tion, including B. M. Baruch, economic adviser, Norman H. Davis, financial adviser, and David Hunter Miller, legal adviser. The Committee also called before it a number of American citi- zens who had had no official connection with the negotiations but who wished to speak in behalf of foreign groups, including Thomas F. Millard for China, Joseph W. Folk for Egypt, Dudley Field Malone for India, and a large delegation of Americans of Irish descent, who opposed the League of Nations on the ground that it would stand in the way of Ireland's aspiration for independence. The rival claims of Jugo- Slavs and Italians to Fiume, the demand of Albania for self-determination, the claims of Greece to Thrace, and arguments for and against the separation of Austria and Hungary were all presented at great length to the Committee. On August 19 the President received the Com- mittee at the White House, and after submit- 244 From Isolation to Leadership ting a written statement on certain features of the Covenant, he was questioned by members of the Committee and a general discussion followed. Meanwhile, the treaty was being openly de- bated in the Senate. The President had been an advocate of publicity in diplomacy as well as in other things, and the Senate now under- took to use his own weapon against him by a public attack on the treaty. Although the opposition to the treaty was started in the Senate by Lodge, Borah, Johnson, Sherman, Reed, and Poindexter, it was not confined to that body. Throughout the country there were persons of liberal views who favored the League of Nations but objected to the severe terms imposed on Germany, and charged the President with having proved false to the prin- ciples of the Fourteen Points. There were others who did not object to a severe peace, but who were bound fast by the tradition of isolation and thought membership in the League of Na- tions would involve the sacrifice of national sovereignty. The main object of attack was Article X, which guaranteed the territorial integrity and political independence of all the members of the League. President Wilson stated to the Senate Committee that he regarded The Treaty of Versailles 245 Article X as "the very backbone of the whole Covenant," and that "without it the League would be hardly more than an influential de- bating society." The opponents of the League declared that this article would embroil the United States in the internal affairs of Europe, and that it deprived Congress of its constitu- tional right to declare war. In the Senate there were three groups: the small number of "irreconcilables" who opposed the ratification of the treaty in any form; a larger group who favored ratification without amendments, but who finally expressed their willingness to accept "interpretative reserva- tions"; and a large group composed mainly of Republicans who favored the ratification of the treaty only on condition that there should be attached to it reservations safeguarding what they declared to be the fundamental rights and interests of the United States. This group differed among themselves as to the character of the reservations that were necessary, and some of them became known as "mild reservation- ists." It is probable that at the outset only the small group of "irreconcilables" hoped or intended to bring about the defeat of the treaty, but as the debate proceeded and the opposition to the 246 From Isolation to Leadership treaty received more and more popular support, the reservationists determined to defeat the treaty altogether rather than to accept any com- promise. The Republican leaders were quick to realize that the tide of public opinion had turned and was now running strongly against the President. They determined, therefore, to ruin him at all hazards, and thus to bring about the election of a Republican president. When President Wilson realized that the treaty was really in danger of defeat, he deter- mined to go on an extended tour of the country for the purpose of explaining the treaty to the people and bringing pressure to bear on the Senate. Beginning at Columbus, Ohio, on September 4, he proceeded through the northern tier of states to the Pacific coast, then visited California and returned through Colorado. He addressed large audiences who received him with great enthusiasm. He was "trailed" by Senator Hiram Johnson, who was sent out by the opposition in the Senate to present the other side. Johnson also attracted large crowds. On the return trip, while delivering an address at Wichita, Kansas, September 26, the President showed signs of a nervous break- down and returned immediately to Washington. He was able to walk from the train to his auto- The Treaty of Versailles 247 mobile, but a few days later he was partially paralyzed. The full extent and seriousness of his illness was carefully concealed from the public. He was confined to the White House for five months, and had to abandon all efforts in behalf of the treaty. On September 10 the Committee on Foreign Relations reported the treaty to the Senate with a number of amendments and reservations. The Committee declared that the League was an alliance, and that it would "breed wars in- stead of securing peace/' They also declared that the Covenant demanded "sacrifices of American independence and sovereignty which would in no way promote the world's peace," and that the amendments and reservations which they proposed were intended "to guard American rights and American sovereignty." The following day the minority members of the Committee submitted a report opposing both amendments and reservations. A few days later Senator McCumber presented a third report representing the views of the "mild reservationists." It objected to the phraseol- ogy of the Committee's reservations as un- necessarily severe and recommended substitute reservations. The treaty then became the regular order in the Senate and was read section 248 From Isolation to Leadership by section and debated each day for over two months. The amendments of the text of the treaty were all rejected by substantial major- ities for the reason that their adoption would have made it necessary to resubmit the treaty not only to the Allies but also to Germany. The majority of the senators were opposed to such a course. The Committee, therefore, decided to substitute reservations for amend- ments, and Senator Lodge finally submitted, on behalf of the Committee, fourteen reserva- tions preceded by a preamble, which de- clared that the ratification of the treaty was not to take effect or bind the United States until these reservations had been accepted as a con- dition of ratification by at least three of the four principal Allied and associated powers, namely, Great Britain, France, Italy, and Japan. The first reservation provided that in case of withdrawal from the League the United States should be the sole judge as to whether its inter- national obligations under the Covenant had been fulfilled. This reservation was adopted by a vote of 50 to 35. The second reservation declared that the United States assumed no obligation to preserve the territorial integrity or political independence of any other country or to interfere in contro- The Treaty of Versailles 249 versies between nations under the provisions of Article X "or to employ the military or naval forces of the United States under any article of the treaty for any purpose, unless in any particu- lar case the Congress, which, under the Consti- tution, has the sole power to declare war or authorize the employment of the military or naval forces of the United States, shall by act or joint resolution so provide." This reservation was adopted by a vote of 46 to 33. Reservation Number 3, providing that no mandate under the treaty should be accepted by the United States except by action of Congress, was adopted by a vote of 52 to 31. Number 4, excluding domestic questions from consideration by the Council or the Assembly of the League, was adopted by a vote of 59 to 26. Number 5, declaring the Monroe Doctrine "to be wholly outside the jurisdiction of said League of Nations and entirely unaffected by any provision contained in said treaty of peace with Germany," and reserving to the United States the sole right to interpret the Monroe Doctrine, was adopted by a vote of 55 to 34. Number 6, withholding the assent of the United States from the provisions of the treaty relating to Shantung and reserving full liberty of action with respect to any controversy which 250 From Isolation to Leadership might arise under said articles between China and Japan, was adopted by a vote of 53 to 41. Number 7, reserving to Congress the right to provide by law for the appointment of the repre- sentatives of the United States in the Assembly and Council of the League and members of commissions, committees or courts under the League, and requiring the confirmation of all by the Senate, was adopted by a vote of 53 to 40. Number 8, declaring that the Reparations Commission should not be understood as having the right to regulate or interfere with exports from the United States to Germany or from Germany to the United States without an act or joint resolution of Congress, was adopted by a vote of 54 to 40. Number 9, declaring that the United States should not be under any obligation to contribute to any of the expenses of the League without an act of Congress, was adopted by a vote of 56 to 39- Number 10, providing that if the United States should at any time adopt any plan for the limitation of armaments proposed by the Coun- cil of the League, it reserved "the right to in- crease such armaments without the consent of the Council whenever the United States is The Treaty of Versailles 251 threatened with invasion or engaged in war," was adopted by a vote of 56 to 39. Number II, reserving the right of the United States to permit the nationals of a Covenant- breaking State residing within the United States to continue their commercial, financial, and personal relations with the nationals of the United States, was adopted by a vote of 53 to 41. Number 12, relating to the very complicated question of private debts, property rights and interests of American citizens, was adopted by a vote of 52 to 41. Number 13, withholding the assent of the United States from the entire section of the treaty relating to international labor organiza- tion until Congress should decide to participate, was adopted by a vote of 54 to 35. Number 14 declared that the United States would not be bound by any action of the Coun- cil or Assembly in which any member of the League and its self-governing dominions or colonies should cast in the aggregate more than one vote. This reservation was adopted by a vote of 55 to 38. A number of other reservations were offered and rejected. Under the rules of the Senate, amendments and reservations to a treaty may be adopted by a majority vote, while a treaty 252 From Isolation to Leadership can be ratified Dnly by a two-thirds vote. A number of senators who were opposed to the treaty voted for the Lodge reservations in order to insure its defeat. When the vote on the treaty with the reservations was taken Novem- ber 19, it stood 39 for and 55 against. A motion to reconsider the vote was then adopted, and Senator Hitchcock, the Democratic leader, proposed five reservations covering the right of withdrawal, domestic questions, the Monroe Doctrine, the right of Congress to decide on the employment of the naval and military forces of the United States in any case arising under Article X, and restrictions on the voting powers of self-governing colonies or dominions. These reservations were rejected, the vote being 41 to 50. Another vote was then taken on the treaty with the Lodge reservations, the result being 41 for and 51 against. Senator Under- wood then offered a resolution to ratify the treaty without reservations of any kind. The vote on this resolution was 38 for and 53 against. It was now evident that there was little pros- pect of securing the ratification of the treaty without compromise. On January 8, 1920, a letter from the President was read at the Jack- son Day dinner in Washington, in which he re- fused to accept the decision of the Senate as The Treaty of Versailles 253 final and said: "There can be no reasonable objection to interpretations accompanying the act of ratification itself. But when the treaty is acted upon, I must know whether it means that we have ratified or rejected it. We cannot re- write this treaty. We must take it without changes which alter its meaning, or leave it, and then, after the rest of the world has signed it, we must face the unthinkable task of making another and separate kind of treaty with Ger- many.'* In conclusion he declared: "If there is any doubt as to what the people of the country think on this vital matter, the clear and single way out is to submit it for determination at the next election to the voters of the nation, to give the next election the form of a great and solemn referendum, a referendum as to the part the United States is to play in completing the settle- ments of the war and in the prevention in the future of such outrages as Germany attempted to perpetrate." During the last week of January a compromise was discussed by an informal by-partisan com- mittee, and the President wrote a letter saying he would accept the Hitchcock reservations, but Lodge refused to accept any compromise. On February 9 the Senate again referred the treaty to the Committee on Foreign Relations 254 From Isolation to Leadership with instructions to report it back immediately with the reservations previously adopted. After several weeks of fruitless debate a fifteenth reservation, expressing sympathy for Ireland, was added to the others, by a vote of 38 to 36. It was as follows: "In consenting to the ratifica- tion of the treaty with Germany the Unitecl States adheres to the principle of self-determin- ation and to the resolution of sympathy with the aspirations of the Irish people for a govern- ment of their own choice adopted by the Senate June 6, 1919, and declares that when such gov- ernment is obtained by Ireland, a consumma- tion it is hoped is at hand, it should promptly be admitted as a member of the League of Na- tions." With a few changes in the resolutions pre- viously adopted and an important change in the preamble, the ratifying resolution was finally put to the vote March 19, 1920. The result was 49 votes for and 35 against. On the fol- lowing day the secretary of the Senate was in- structed by a formal resolution to return the treaty to the President and to inform him that the Senate had failed to ratify it. The treaty thus became the leading issue in the presidential campaign, but unfortunately it was not the only issue. The election proved The Treaty of Versailles 255 to be a referendum on the Wilson administra- tion as a whole rather than on the treaty. The Republican candidate, Senator Harding, at- tacked the Wilson administration for its arbi- trary and unconstitutional methods and advo- cated a return to "normalcy." He denounced the Wilson League as an attempt to set up a super-government, but said he favored an asso- ciation of nations and an international court. Governor Cox, the Democratic candidate, came out strongly for the treaty, particularly during the latter part of his campaign. The result was an overwhelming victory for Harding. President Wilson had been too ill to take any part in the campaign. His administration had been the chief issue, and the people had, cer- tainly for the time being, repudiated it. He accepted the result philosophically and re- frained from comments, content, apparently, to leave the part he had played in world affairs to the verdict of history. In December, 1920, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to him as a foreign recognition of the services he had ren- dered to humanity. XII THE WASHINGTON CONFERENCE XII THE WASHINGTON CONFERENCE AFTER the rejection of the Treaty of Versailles by the Senate, President Wilson withdrew as far as possible from participation in European affairs, and after the election of Harding he let it be known that he would do nothing to em- barrass the incoming administration. The pub- lic had been led to believe that when Harding became President there would be a complete reversal of our foreign policy all along the line, but such was not to be the case. The new ad- ministration continued unchanged the Wilson policy toward Mexico and toward Russia, and before many months had passed was seeking from Congress the authority, withheld from Wilson, to appoint a member on the Reparations Commission. On the question of our rights in mandated areas, Secretary Hughes adopted in whole the arguments which had been advanced by Secretary Colby in his note to Great Britain of November 20, 1920, in regard to the oil re- sources of Mesopotamia. By the San Remo agreement of April 25, 1920, Great Britain and 259 260 From Isolation to Leadership France had agreed upon a division of the oil output of Mesopotamia by which France was to be allowed 25 per cent, and Great Britain 75 per cent. The British Government had inti- mated that the United States, having declined to join the League of Nations, had no voice in the matter. On this point Secretary Colby took sharp issue in the following statement: "Such powers as the Allied and Associated na- tions may enjoy or wield, in the determination of the governmental status of the mandated areas, accrued to them as a direct result of the war against the Central Powers. The United States, as a participant in that conflict and as a contributor to its successful issue, cannot con- sider any of the Associated Powers, the smallest not less than herself, debarred from the dis- cussion of any of its consequences, or from par- ticipation in the rights and privileges secured under the mandates provided for in the treaties of peace." Japan likewise assumed that we had nothing to do with the disposition of the former German islands in the Pacific. When the Supreme Council at Paris decided to give Japan a man- date over the islands north of the equator, President Wilson reserved for future considera- tion the final disposition of the island of Yap, The Washington Conference 261 which lies between Guam and the Philippines, and is one of the most important cable stations in the Pacific. The entire question of cable communications was reserved for a special con- ference which met at Washington in the autumn of 1920, but this conference adjourned about the middle of December without having reached any final conclusions, and the status of Yap became the subject of a very sharp correspondence be- tween the American and Japanese governments. When Hughes became Secretary of State, he restated the American position in a note of April 2, 1921, as follows: "It will not be questioned that the right to dispose of the overseas possessions of Germany was acquired only through the victory of the Allied and Associated Powers, and it is also be- lieved that there is no disposition on the part of the Japanese Government to deny the partici- pation of the United States in that victory. It would seem to follow necessarily that the right accruing to the Allied and Associated Powers through the common victory is shared by the United States and that there could be no valid or effective disposition of the overseas posses- sions of Germany, now under consideration, without the assent of the United States." The discussion between the two governments 262 From Isolation to Leadership was still in progress when the Washington Con- ference convened, and at the close of the Con- ference it was announced that an agreement had been reached which would be embodied in a treaty. The United States recognized Japan's mandate over the islands north of the equator on the condition that the United States should have full cable rights on the island of Yap, and that its citizens should enjoy certain rights of residence on the island. The agreeement also covered radio telegraphic service. During the presidential campaign Harding's position on the League of Nations had been so equivocal that the public knew not what to expect, but when Hughes and Hoover were appointed members of the Cabinet, it was gen- erally expected that the new administration would go into the League with reservations. This expectation was not to be fulfilled, however, for the President persistently ignored the exist- ence of the League, and took no notice of the establishment of the permanent Court of Inter- national Justice provided for in Article 14 of the Covenant. Meanwhile Elihu Root, who as Secretary of State had instructed our delegates to the Hague Conference of 1907 to propose the establishment of such a court, had been invited by the Council of the League to be one of a The Washington Conference 263 commission of distinguished jurists to draft the statute establishing the court. This service he performed with conspicuous ability. As an- other evidence of Europe's unwillingness to leave us out, when the court was organized John Bassett Moore, America's most distinguished authority on international law, was elected one of the judges. Meanwhile a technical state of war with Ger- many existed and American troops were still on the Rhine. On July 2, 1921, Congress passed a joint resolution declaring the war at an end, but undertaking to reserve to the United States "all rights, privileges, indemnities, reparations or advantages" to which it was entitled under the terms of the Armistice, or by reason of its participation in the war, or which had been stipulated for its benefit in the Treaty of Ver- sailles, or to which it was entitled as one of the Principal Allied and Associated Powers, or to which it was entitled by virtue of any act or acts of Congress. On August 25 the United States Government, through its commissioner to Germany, signed at Berlin a separate treaty of peace with Germany, reserving in detail the rights referred to in the joint resolution of Con- gress. About the same time a similar treaty was signed with Austria, and the two treaties 264 From Isolation to Leadership were ratified by the Senate of the United States October 18. The proclamation of peace pro- duced no immediate results of any importance. American troops continued on the Rhine, and there was no apparent increase in trade, which had been carried on before the signing of the treaty by special licenses. If mankind is capable of learning any lessons from history, the events leading up to the World War should have exploded the fallacy that the way to preserve peace is to prepare for war. Competition in armament, whether on land or sea, inevitably leads to war, and it can lead to nothing else. And yet, after the terrible lessons of the recent war, the race for armaments continued with increased momentum. France, Russia, and Poland maintained huge armies, while the United States and Japan entered upon the most extensive naval construction pro- grams in the history of the world. Great Britain, burdened with debt, was making every effort to keep pace with the United States. This naval rivalry between powers which had so lately been united in the war against Ger- many, led thoughtful people to consider the probable outcome and to ask against whom these powers were arming. We had no quarrel with England, but England was the ally of Ja- The Washington Conference 265 pan, and relations between Japan and the United States in the Pacific and in Eastern Asia were far from reassuring. The question of the continuance of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance was discussed at the British Imperial Conference, which met at London in the early summer of 1921 . The original purpose of this compact was to check the Russian advance in Manchuria. It was renewed in revised form in 1905 against Germany, and again renewed in 1911 against Germany for a period of ten years. With the removal of the German menace, what reasons were there for Great Britain to continue the alliance? It bore too much the aspect of a combination against the United States, and was of course the main reason for the naval program which we had adopted. So long as there were only three navies of importance in the world and two of them united in a defensive alliance, it behooved us to safeguard our posi- tion as a sea power. One of the main objects of the formation of the League of Nations was to bring about a limitation of armaments on land and sea, and a commission was organized under the League to consider this question, but this commission could not take any steps toward the limitation of navies so long as a great naval power like the 266 From Isolation to Leadership United States refused to cooperate with the League of Nations or even to recognize its exist- ence. As President Harding had promised the American people some substitute for the League of Nations, he decided, soon after coming into office, to convene an international conference to consider the limitation of armament on land and sea. By the time the Conference convened it was evident that no agreement was possible on the subject of land armament. It was recog- nized from the first that the mere proposal to limit navies would be utterly futile unless effec- tive steps could be taken to remove some of the causes of international conflict which make navies necessary. Therefore the formal invita- tion to the Conference extended to the govern- ments of Great Britain, France, Italy and Japan, August n, 1921, linked the subject of Limitation of Armament with Pacific and Far Eastern Questions. The European powers accepted the invitation without much enthusiasm, but Ja- pan's answer was held back for some time. She was reluctant to have the powers review the course she had pursued in China and Siberia while they were at war with Germany. After agreeing to attend the Conference, Japan en- deavored to confine the program to as narrow limits as possible, and she soon entered The Washington Conference 267 into negotiations with China over the Shantung question with the hope of arriving at a settle-* ment which would prevent that question from coming before the Conference. Invitations to the Conference were later sent to the govern- ments of Belgium, the Netherlands, Portugal and China. Portugal was interested because of her settlement at Macao, the oldest European settlement in China. Holland of course is one of the great colonial powers of the Pacific. While Belgium has no territorial interests in the Orient, she has for years been interested in Chinese financial matters. * The Washington Conference convened in plenary session November 12, 1921, in Memorial Continental Hall. Seats were reserved on the main floor for press representatives, and the galleries were reserved for officials and those in- dividuals who were fortunate enough to secure tickets of admission. The question of open diplomacy which had been much discussed, was settled at the first session by Secretary Hughes, who, in his introductory speech, boldly laid the American proposals for the limitation of navieg before the Conference. There were in all seven plenary sessions, but the subsequent sessions did little more than confirm agreements that had already been reached in committee. The 268 From Isolation to Leadership real work of the Conference was carried on by committees, and from the meetings of these committees the public and press representatives were as a matter of course excluded. There were two principal committees, one on the Limitation of Armament, and the other on Pacific and Far Eastern Questions. There were various sub-committees, in the work of which technical delegates participated. Min- utes were kept of the meetings of the two prin- cipal committees, and after each meeting a communique was prepared for the press. In fact, the demand for publicity defeated to a large extent its own ends. So much matter was given to the press that when it was published in full very few people had time to read it. As a general rule, the less real information there was to give out, the longer were the communiques. Experienced correspondents maintained that decisions on delicate questions were made with as much secrecy in Washington as at Paris. The plan of the United States for the limita- tion of armament presented by Secretary Hughes at the first session proposed (i) that all programs for the construction of capital ships, either actual or projected, be abandoned; (2) that a large number of battleships of older types still in commission be scrapped; and (3) The Washington Conference 269 that the allowance of auxiliary combatant craft, such as cruisers, destroyers, submarines, and airplane carriers, be in proportion to the ton- nage of capital ships. These proposals, it was claimed, would leave the powers under consider- ation in the same relative positions. Under this plan the United States would be allowed 500,000 tons of capital ships, Great Britain 500,000 tons, and Japan 300,000 tons. Japan objected to the 5-5-3 ratio proposed by Secretary Hughes, and urged a 10-10-7 ratio as more in accord with existing strength. The American proposal included the scrapping of the Mutsu, the pride of the Japanese navy, which had been launched but not quite completed. The sacrifices voluntarily proposed by the United States for its navy were much greater than those which England or Japan were called upon to make, and in this lay the strength of the American position. The Japanese refused, how- ever, to give up the Mutsu, and they were finally permitted to retain it, but in order to preserve the 5-5-3 ratio, it was necessary to increase the tonnage allowance of the United States and Great Britain. In the treaty as finally agreed upon, Japan was allowed 315,000 tons of capital ships and the United States and Great Britain each 525,000 tons. 270 From Isolation to Leadership In his address at the opening session, Secre- tary Hughes said : " In view of the extraordinary conditions due to the World War affecting the existing strength of the navies of France and Italy, it is not thought to be necessary to discuss at this stage of the proceedings the tonnage allowance of these nations, but the United States proposes that this subject be reserved for the later consideration of the Conference." This somewhat blunt, matter-of-fact way of stating the case gave unexpected offense to the French delegation. During the next four or five weeks, while Great Britain, the United States, and Japan were discussing the case of the Mutsu and the question of fortifications in the Pacific, the French delegates were cherishing their resentment at being treated as the repre- sentatives of a second-class power. Hughes's failure to regard the susceptibilities of a great nation like France undoubtedly had a good deal to do with the upsetting of that part of the naval program relating to subsidiary craft and sub- marines. When, after the agreement on the 5-5-3 ratio, the question of the allowance of capital ship tonnage for France and Italy was taken up in committee, the other powers were wholly un- prepared for France's demand of 350,000 tons The Washington Conference 271 of capital ships. According to Hughes 's figures based on existing strength, she was entitled to 175,000 tons. It is not probable that the French delegates intended to insist on such a large tonnage. It is more likely that they put forth this proposal in the committee in order to give the other delegates to understand that France could not be ignored or dictated to with impunity and in order to pave the way for their submarine proposal. Unfortunately the French demands were given to the press throiigh some misunderstanding and caused an outburst of criticism in the British and American papers. In the committee the relations between the Brit- ish and French delegates became very bitter over the refusal of the latter to abandon the submarine, or even agree to a moderate pro- posal as to submarine tonnage. On December 16 Secretary Hughes cabled an appeal, over the heads of the French delegation, to Briand, who had returned to Paris. As a result, the French finally agreed to accept the 1.75 ratio for capital ships, but refused to place any reasonable limits upon cruisers, destroyers, submarines, or air- craft. Italy accepted the same ratio as France. Thus an important part of the Hughes pro- gram failed. As a result, the treaty leaves the contracting parties free to direct their 272 From Isolation to Leadership energies, if they so desire, to the comparatively new fields of submarine and aerial warfare. As is well known, many eminent naval authorities, such as Sir Percy Scott in England and Admiral Sims in this country, believe that the capital ship is an obsolete type, and that the warfare of the future will be carried on by submarines, aircraft, and lighter surface ships. The unfor- tunate feature of the situation created by the naval treaty is, therefore, that those who regard the capital ship as obsolete will now have an opportunity to bring forward and press their submarine and aircraft programs. There is no limitation upon the building of cruisers, pro- vided they do not exceed 10,000 tons displace- ment or carry guns with a calibre exceeding eight inches. By Article 19 of the naval treaty the United States, Great Britain, and Japan agreed to main- tain the status quo as regards fortifications and naval bases in the islands of the Pacific with certain exceptions, notably the Hawaiian Is- lands, Australia, and New Zealand. This agree- ment relieves Japan of all fear of attack from us, and let us hope that it may prove as beneficent and as enduring as the agreement of 1817 be- tween the United States and Great Britain for disarmament on the Great Lakes. The Washington Conference 273 The 5-5-3 ratio puts the navies of Great Bri- tain, the United States, and Japan, for the present at least, on a strictly defensive basis. Each navy is strong enough to defend its home territory, but no one of them will be able to attack the home territory of the others. Of course it is possible that the development of aircraft and submarines, together with cruisers and other surface craft, may eventually alter the situation. Hitherto navies have existed for two purposes: national defense and the en- forcement of foreign policies. The new treaty means that as long as it lasts the navies of the ratifying powers can be used for defense only and not for the enforcement of their policies in distant quarters of the globe. In other words, when disputes arise, British policies will pre- vail in the British area, American policies in the American area, and Japanese poli- cies in the Japanese area. Having agreed to place ourselves in a position in which we can- not attack Japan, the only pressure we can bring to bear upon her in China or elsewhere is moral pressure. Through what was con- sidered by some a grave strategical error, the naval treaty was completed before any settle- ment of the Chinese and Siberian questions had been reached. 274 From Isolation to Leadership . The French insistence on the practically un- limited right to build submarines caused much hard feeling in England. The British delegates had proposed the total abolition of submarines, and this proposal had been ably supported by the arguments of Mr. Balfour and Lord Lee. Unfortunately the United States delegation stood for the submarine, proposing merely cer- tain limits upon its use. The five naval powers finally signed a treaty reaffirming the old rules of international law in regard to the search and seizure of merchant vessels, and declaring that "any person in the service of any Power who shall violate any of those rules, whether or not such person is under orders of a governmental superior, shall be deemed to have violated the laws of war and shall be liable to trial and pun- ishment as if for an act of piracy and may be brought to trial before the civil or military authorities of any Power within the jurisdiction of which he may be found." By the same treaty the signatory powers solemnly bound themselves to prohibit the use in war of poison- ous gases. The attempt to limit by treaty the use of the submarine and to prohibit altogether the use of gases appears to many to be utterly futile. Af- ter the experience of the late war, no nation The Washington Conference 275 would readily trust the good faith of another in these matters. Each party to a war would probably feel justified in being prepared to use the submarine and poison gases, contrary to law, in case the other party should do so. We would thus have the same old dispute as in the late war in regard to floating mines as to which party first resorted to the outlawed practice. What is the use in solemnly declaring that a submarine shall not attack a merchant vessel, and that the commander of a submarine who violates this law shall be treated as a pirate, when the contracting parties found it utterly impossible to agree among themselves upon a definition of a merchant vessel ? But the reader may ask, what is the use in signing any treaty if nations are so devoid of good faith? The answer is that the vast ma- jority of treaties are faithfully kept in time of peace, but that very few treaties are fully ob- served in time of war. Had these five powers signed a treaty pledging themselves not to build or maintain submarines of any kind or descrip- tion, we would have every reason to expect them to live up to it. But when a nation is engaged in war and has a large flotilla of sub- marines which it has agreed to use only for cer- tain purposes, there is apt to come a time when 276 From Isolation to Leadership the temptation to use them for wholly different purposes will be overwhelming. i The Committee on Pacific and Far Eastern Questions held its first meeting November 1 6. This committee was primarily concerned with the very delicate situation created by the ag- gressive action and expansion of Japan during the past twenty years. In 1905, by the Treaty of Portsmouth, Japan succeeded to the Russian rights in southern Manchuria; in 1910 she an- nexed Korea; in 1911, during the Chinese Revo- lution, she stationed troops at Hankow and later constructed permanent barracks; in 1914, after the defeat of the Germans at Kiao-chau, she took over all the German interests in the Shan- tung peninsula; in 1915 she presented the Twenty-one Demands to China and coerced that power into granting most of them; and in 1918, in conjunction with the United States, Great Britain, and France, she landed a military force in the Maritime Province of Siberia for the definite purpose of rescuing the Czecho-Slovak troops who had made their way to that province and of guarding the military stores at Vladivos- tok. The other powers had all withdrawn their contingents, but Japan had increased her force from one division to more than 70,0x30 troops. The eastern coast of Asia was thus in the firm The Washington Conference 277 grip of Japan, and she had secured concessions from China which seriously impaired the in- dependence of that country. It was commonly supposed that the United States delegation had prepared a program on the Far Eastern question, and that this would be presented in the same way that Hughes had presented the naval program. If this was the intention there was a sudden change of plan, for between one and two o'clock at night the Chinese delegates were aroused from their slumbers and informed that there would be an opportunity for them to present China's case before the committee at eleven o'clock that morning. They at once went to work with their advisers, and a few minutes before the appointed hour they completed the drafting of the Ten Points, which Minister Sze read before the committee. These Points constituted a Chinese declaration of independence, and set forth a series of general principles to be applied in the determination of questions relating to China. Several days later the committee adopted four resolutions, presented by Mr. Root, covering in part some of the Chinese prin- ciples. By these resolutions the powers agreed to respect the independence and territorial in- tegrity of China, to give China the fullest op- 278 From Isolation to Leadership portunity to develop and maintain an effective and stable government, to recognize the princi- ple of equality for the commerce and industry of all nations throughout the territory of China, and to refrain from taking advantage of present conditions in order to seek special rights or privileges. This somewhat vague and general declaration of principles appeared to be all that China was likely to get. Had Mr. Hughes pre- sented a Far Eastern program and gotten nothing more than this, it would have been a serious blow to the prestige of the United States. That is probably why he decided at the last moment to let China present her own case. At the fourth plenary session of the Confer- ence the treaty relating to the Pacific islands, generally known as the Four-Power Treaty, was presented by Senator Lodge. By the terms of this treaty, the United States, Great Britain, France, and Japan agreed "to respect their rights in relation to their insular possessions and insular dominions in the region of the Pacific Ocean," and in case of any dispute arising out of any Pacific question to refer the matter to a joint conference for consideration and adjust- ment. This article appeared harmless enough, but Article 2 seemed to lay the foundations of an alliance between these powers. It was as The Washington Conference 279 follows: "If the said rights are threatened by the aggressive action of any other Power, the High Contracting Parties shall communicate with one another fully and frankly in order to arrive at an understanding as to the most efficient measures to be taken, jointly or sepa- rately, to meet the exigencies of the particular situation.'* This treaty is to remain in force for ten years, after which it may be terminated by any of the High Contracting Parties on twelve months' notice. It supersedes the Anglo- Japanese Alliance which, it expressly provided, should terminate onthe exchange of ratifications. In presenting the treaty, Senator Lodge as- sured his hearers that "no military or naval sanc- tion lurks anywhere in the background or un- der cover of these plain and direct clauses," and Secretary Hughes in closing the discus- sion declared that it would probably not be possible to find in all history " an international document couched in more simple or even briefer terms," but he added, "we are again reminded that the great things are the simple ones." In view of these statements the mem- bers of the Conference and the public generally were completely flabbergasted some days later when Secretary Hughes and the President gave out contradictory statements as to whether 280 From Isolation to Leadership the treaty included the Japanese homeland. Hughes stated to the correspondents that it did, the President said it did not. Whereupon some wag remarked that at Paris President Wil- son did not let the American delegation know what he did, while at Washington the dele- gates did not let President Harding know what they were doing. In deference to the Presi- dent's views and to criticisms of the treaty in the Japanese press a supplementary treaty was later signed expressly declaring that the term "insular possessions and insular dominions" did not include the Japanese homeland. Meanwhile the Shantung question was being discussed by China and Japan outside of the Conference, but with representatives of the British and American governments sitting as observers ready to use their good offices if called on. The reason for not bringing the question before the Conference was that Great Britain, France, and Italy were parties to the Treaty of Versailles, which gave Japan a legal title to the German leases in Shantung. The restoration of the province to China was vital to a satisfac- tory adjustment of Chinese affairs generally. Japan, however, was in no hurry to reach an agreement with China, wishing for strategical purposes to keep the matter in suspense to The Washington Conference 281 the last, if not to avoid a settlement until after the adjournment of the Conference and con- tinue negotiations under more favorable con- ditions at Peking or Tokio. By Christmas it seemed that the Conference had accomplished about all that was possible, and that it would adjourn as soon as the agree- ments already reached could be put into treaty form and signed. At the end of the first week in January it looked as if the Chinese and Japan- ese had reached a deadlock, and that the Con- ference would adjourn without a satisfactory adjustment of any of the Chinese problems. Mr. Balfour and other important delegates had engaged return passage, and all indications pointed to an early dissolution of the Confer- ence. But the unexpected happened. At an informal gathering of Administration leaders at the White House on Saturday night, January 7, stock was taken of the work of the Conference, and some of the senators present expressed the opinion that if it adjourned without doing more for China, there would be little hope of getting the treaties ratified. As a result Secretary Hughes persuaded the British and Japanese delegates to cancel their sailings, and with characteristic energy and determination took personal charge of the Far Eastern situation, 282 From Isolation to Leadership which up to this time had been left mainly to Mr. Root. After a little pressure had been brought to bear on the Chinese by President Harding, and probably on the Japanese by Mr. Balfour, Secretary Hughes was finally able to announce at the plenary session of February i that China and Japan had reached an agree- ment as to the terms on which Shantung was to be restored. At the same session the agreements in regard to China reached by the Committee on Far Eastern Affairs were an- nounced. These agreements were finally em- bodied in two treaties, one dealing with the tariff and the other with the open door, and a series of ten resolutions. Since the middle of the last century Chinese tariffs have been regulated by treaties with foreign powers, the customs service organized and administered by foreigners, and the receipts mortgaged to meet the interest on foreign loans. China has never been permitted to levy duties in excess of 5 per cent., and, in fact, as a result of the methods of valuation the duties have not averaged above 3^ per cent. This has been an unjust state of affairs, and has deprived the Chinese Government of what would naturally be one of its main sources of revenue. By the new agreement there is to be an immediate re- The Washington Conference 283 vision of tariff valuations so as to make the 5 per cent, effective. China is also to be allowed to levy a surtax on certain articles, mainly luxuries, which will yield an additional revenue. It is estimated that the total annual increase in revenue derived from maritime customs will be about $150,000,000 silver. It is claimed by some, with a certain degree of truth, that any increase in Chinese customs duties will be im- mediately covered by liens to secure new loans, and that putting money into the Chinese treas- ury just now is like pouring it into a rat hole. As soon as China is able to establish a stable and honest government, she should, without ques- tion, be relieved of all treaty restrictions on her tariffs. The Conference also took certain steps to restore to China other sovereign rights long im- paired by the encroachments of foreign powers. A commission is to be appointed to investigate the administration of justice with a view to the ultimate extinction of extraterritorial rights now enjoyed by foreigners. The powers also agreed to abandon not later than January I, 1923, their existing postal agencies in China, provided an efficient Chinese postal service be maintained. The system of foreign post offices in China has been the subject of great abuses, as through 284 From Isolation to Leadership these agencies goods of various kinds, including opium and other drugs, have been smuggled into China. The powers further made a general promise to aid the Chinese Government in the unification of railways into a general system under Chinese control. They also agreed to restore to China all radio stations other than those regulated by treaty or maintained by foreign governments within their legation limits. In the treaty relating to the open door, the Contracting Powers other than China pledged themselves to the following principles: "(l) To respect the sovereignty, the inde- pendence, and the territorial and administrative integrity of China; "(2) To provide the fullest and most unem- barrassed opportunity to China to develop and maintain for herself an effective and stable government ; "(3) To use their influence for the purpose of effectually establishing and maintaining the principle of equal opportunity for the commerce and industry of all nations throughout the terri- tory of China; "(4) To refrain from taking advantage of conditions in China in order to seek special rights or privileges which would abridge the rights of subjects or citizens of friendly States, The Washington Conference 285 and from countenancing action inimical to the security of such States." China on her part accepted fully the principle of the open door, and pledged herself for the first time to respect it. Pledges to respect the open door in China have been made by foreign powers upon various occasions in the past and broken as often as made. The expression "equal opportunity for the commerce and in- dustry of all nations " is not new. It occurs in the Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1902, in the Root-Takahira agreement of 1908, and in nu- merous other documents. In recent years, how- ever, the United States has been the only power which has tried to preserve the open door in China. Most of the other powers have regarded the Chinese situation as hopeless, and have be- lieved that the only solution was to let foreign powers come in and divide and rule the territory of the empire. In view of the new treaty the open door is no longer merely an American policy, but an international policy, and responsibility for its enforcement rests not on the United States alone but on all nine parties to the treaty. The agenda or program of the Conference offered as one of the subjects to be considered the status of existing commitments in China. When Secretary Hughes brought this subject 286 From Isolation to Leadership up before the Far Eastern Committee, Japan entered an emphatic objection to its considera- tion, and the matter was dropped immediately without argument. The treaty, therefore, is not retroactive, for it recognizes the status quo in Manchuria and to a less extent in other parts of China. The saving clause of the new agree- ment is, however, a resolution providing for the establishment of an international board of reference, to which questions arising in regard to the open door may be referred. Will Japan respect the pledges she has made and live up to the spirit of her promises ? If she does, the Washington Conference will prove to be a great success. If, on the contrary, Japan does not intend to live up to her pledges or in- tends to fulfill them only in part, her position in Asia has been greatly strengthened. She is more firmly intrenched in Manchuria than ever. She holds the Maritime Province of Siberia under a promise to get out, which she has re- peatedly made and repeatedly broken, as was plainly stated by Secretary Hughes before the full Committee on Far Eastern Affairs, and re- peated at a plenary session of the Conference. His statement was one of the most remarkable, by reason of its directness and unvarnished truth, in the history of American diplomacy. The Washington Conference 287 After reviewing the correspondence between the two governments and the reiterated assurances of Japan of her intention to withdraw from Siberia, assurances which so far had not been carried out, Mr. Hughes expressed his gratifica- tion at the renewal of these assurances before the Conference in plenary session. Unless Japan is utterly devoid of moral shame, she will have to make good her word this time. When the treaties drafted by the Conference were submitted by the President to the Senate, they encountered serious opposition, but were finally ratified. The Republican leaders, par- ticularly Senator Lodge, were twitted with charges of inconsistency in advocating certain features of these treaties when they had violently opposed the League of Nations. The Four- Power Treaty is much more of an entangling alliance than the Covenant of the League, and the Naval Treaty deprives Congress for a pe- riod of fifteen years of its constitutional right to determine the size of the navy and to provide for the defense of Guam and the Philippines. In fact, there were very few objections raised to the League of Nations which could not with equal force be applied to the Four-Power and Naval Treaties. The Four-Power Treaty was the main object of attack, and Senators Lodge 288 From Isolation to Leadership and Underwood were greatly embarrassed in attempting to explain its meaning. Its "baf- fling brevity" demanded explanations, but no satisfactory explanations were forthcoming. They talked in general terms about the tremen- dous importance of the treaty, but they dared not state the real fact that the treaty was drafted by Mr. Balfour and Baron Kato as the most convenient method of terminating the Anglo- Japanese Alliance without making it appear to the Japanese public that their government had surrendered the alliance without due com- pensation. According to an Associated Press Dispatch from Tokio, January 31, 1922, Baron Uchida, the Jananese Minister of Foreign Affairs, replying to interpolations in the House of Peers, said: "The Four-Power Treaty was not intended to abrogate the Anglo-Japanese Alli- ance, but rather to widen and extend it." The real quid pro quo for the termination of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance was the agreement of the United States not to construct naval bases or new fortifications in Guam and the Philip- pines, and the clause terminating the Anglo- Japanese Alliance might just as well have been attached to the Naval Treaty, but this would not have satisfied Japanese public opinion. Great Britain and Japan were permitted to The Washington Conference 289 terminate their alliance in any way that they might deem best. After the Four-Power Treaty was accepted by the American delegates, they feared that it would look too much as if the United States had merely been drawn into the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. It was decided, there- fore, at the eleventh hour to give the agreement a more general character by inviting France to adhere to it. France agreed to sign, although she resented not having been consulted during the negotiation of the treaty. The achievements of the Conference, although falling far short of the extravagant claims made by the President and the American delegates, are undoubtedly of great importance. The actual scrapping of millions of dollars' worth of ships in commission or in process of construction gives the world an object lesson such as it has never had before. One of the most significant results of the Conference was the development of a complete accord between England and the United States, made possible by the settlement of the Irish question and furthered by the tact and gracious bearing of Mr. Balfour. One of the unfortunate results was the increased isolation of France, due to the failure of her delegates to grasp the essential elements of the situation and to play any but a negative role. The success of 290 From Isolation to Leadership 1 the Conference was due largely to Secretary Hughes who, though handicapped at every point by fear of the Senate and by the unfortunate commitments of President Harding during the last campaign, may be said on the whole to have played his hand reasonably well. Meanwhile we are still drifting, so far as a general European policy is concerned. Presi- dent Harding's idea of holding aloof from "Europe's league," as he prefers to designate the League of Nations, and of having a little league of our own in the Pacific, will not work. The world's problems cannot be segregated in this way. Europe's league includes all of the prin- cipal American nations except the United States and Mexico, while our Pacific league includes the two leading European powers. As soon as the American people realize and there are in- dications that they are already waking up to the reality that the depression in domestic in- dustry and foreign commerce is due to conditions in Europe and that prosperity will not return un- til we take a hand in the solution of European problems, there will be a general demand for a constructive policy and America will no longer hesitate to reassume the leadership which she re- nounce.d in the referendum of 1920, but which the rest of the world is ready to accord to her again. INDEX ABC alliance, 162, 165. Aberdeen, Lord, opposes annexation of Texas by United States, 108. Adams, Charles Francis, 114. Adams, Henry, letter from Hay to, 90. Adams, John Quincy, opposes joint action with England, 31; accepts invitation to send delegates to Pan- ama Congress, 154. "Alabama Claims," 66, 113, 114. Alaskan Boundary Dispute, 122, 124. Algeciras Conference, 74; American participation in, 76, 77. Alliance, of 1778 with France, 5-8; proposed alliance with England, 13, 26; Holy Alliance, 22, 24; Anglo-Japanese alliance, 92, 120. See "Entangling Alliances." Alverstone, Lord, member of Alaskan boundary commission, 123. American Colonization Society, 59. American delegation to Peace Confer- ence, 225. American Institute of International Law, 157. American Republics, Bureau of, 156. American Revolution, significance of, 99- Anglo-American ideals, 126, 127. Anglo-Japanese Alliance, 92, I2O, 265 279, 288. Arbitration, international, 64. Sff Hague Court, Olney-Pauncefote Treaty. Armistice, negotiations preceding, 213-217. Arms and ammunition. Ste Muni- tions of war. "Aroostook War," 106. Austria-Hungary, protests against trade in munitions, 182. Balfour, Arthur James, 274, 288, 289. Beer, George L., quoted, 99. Belgium, German invasion of, 79; restoration of, demanded, 207. Beresford, Lord Charles, advocate* open door in China, 86. Berlin Conference of 1884, 6l. "Big Four," at Peace Conference, 230. Bingham, Hiram, on Monroe Doctrine, Bismarck, Prince, on Monroe Doc- trine, 45; on English control of North America, 126; forces war on Austria, 47; forces war on France, 48. Elaine, James G., efforts to modify Clayton-Bulwer treaty, 115; issues invitation to International Confer- ence of American States, IJ5, 156. Bliss, Gen. Tasker H., 225. Board of Reference, in China, 286. Bolivar, Simon, 153. Bolsheviki, 203. Bonaparte, Napoleon, acquires Louisi- ana, 12; fails to establish control over Spain's Colonies, 25. Bowea, Herbert, 51. Boxer uprising in China, 88 Breat-Litovsk, peace negotiations at, 203, 210, 212. Brussels Conference on African slave trade, 62. Bryan, William Jennings, negotiates treaty with Nicaragua, 135; with Colombia, 144; refuses to modify neutrality laws at demand of Ger- many, 182. Bryce, Lord, quoted, 125, 126. Biilow, Prince von, 75, 91. California, danger of English occupa- tion of, 109. Canada, insurrection of 1837, 103. Canning, George, British foreign secretary, proposes Anglo-American alliance, 26; delays recognition of South American republics, 33, 34> interview with Prince Polignac, 35; boasts of calling new world into existence, 39; opposes Pan-Ameri- can movement, 155. Caribbean Sea, American supremacy in, 121; advance of United States in, 132; new American policies in, 132, 137, 144- Caroline, the, 103. Carranza, Venustiano, 162, 163. Castlereagh, Viscount, 20. China, treaties relating to tariff and open door, 282-285. Ste Open-door policy. Choate, Joseph H., at Second Hague Conference, 68, 69. 291 292 Index Civil War, foreign policy of United States during, 65; disputes with England, 112. Clay, Henry, opposes joint action with England, 31; instructions to delegates to Panama Congress, IS4- Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, 44, III. Cleveland, Grover, intervenes in Venezuelan boundary dispute, 48; withholds Kongo treaty from Sen- ate, 61; Venezuelan policy justified by events, 115; favours general arbi- tration treaty with England, 1 16. Cobden, Richard, essay on America, IOZ. Colby, Bainbridge, secretary of state, 259, 260. Colombia, aggrieved at seizure of Canal Zone, 142; attempts of United States to settle controversy, 143, 144- Consuls, status of, in European leases in China, 87, 88. Continuous voyage, doctrine of, 72. 124, 176, 177. Cowdray, Lord, seeks concession from Colombia, 142. Cox, James M., candidate for Presi- dent, 255. Crampton, British Minister to United States, dismissal of, ill. Declaration of London, 71-73, 175, 177. Declaration of Paris, 64, 65. Declaration of Rights and Duties of Nations, adopted by American Institute of International Law, 158, IS9- Democracy against autocracy, 198. Dewey, Admiral George, on with- drawal of Germany from Venezuela, 51; demands apology from German admiral in Manila Bay, 119. Dickens, Charles, "American Notes," IO2. Diederichs, German Admiral, 119. Diplomacy, secret, 76, 77. Dunning, William A., "British Em- pire and the United States," quoted, IO2, III. Durfee, Amos, 103. Egypt, financial administration of, by Great Britain. 134. England. See Great Britain. "Entangling Alliances," warning of Jefferson against, 12; Wilson's views on, 187. Entente treaty of 1904 between Eng- land and France, 74. European balance of power, interest of United States in preserving, 76; disturbed by Japan, 171. Fenian movement, encouraged in United States, 112, 113. Ferdinand VII, king of Spain, 20, 25. Fish. Hamilton, secretary of state, renews negotiations for settlement of "Alabama Claims," 113, 114. Fiume, and Treaty of London, 195. Foch, Ferdinand, 217-219, 236. Fonseca Bay, United States acquires naval base on, 135, 136. Forsyth, John, secretarv of state, 104. Fortifications in the Pacific, limitation of, 272. Foster, JohnW., letter from Hay, to, 89. Four-power Treaty, 278-280, 287-289. Fourteen Points, 205-210, 220, 221. France, treaty of alliance with, 5-8; refuses to accept plan for limitation of navies, 270, 271; isolation of, 289. Gases, use of poisonous, prohibited, 274, 275- Genet, Edmond C., minister of the French Republic, 6. George, David Lloyd, defines British war aims, 204-205; pre-election pledges of, 227; opposes French de- mand for Left Bank of Rhine, 234. Germany, intervenes in Venezuela, 50; excluded from South America by aid of England, 53; designs of, on Philippine Islands, 85; adopts naval policy, 120; influence of, in America, 126; submarine policy of, 178, 179; attempts of, to justify, 181; protests against munitions trade, 181; organizes propaganda and con- spiracy in United States, 184. Great Britain, withdraws from Euro- pean alliance, 22; intervenes in Mexico, 46; not unfavorable to Monroe Doctrine, 52, 53; forms alli- ance with Japan, 92; points of con- tact with United States, too; un- friendly attitude, 101; change of attitude in Spanish War, 118; naval policy of, 120; interference with shipments to Germany re- sented in United States, 124; size of navy, 127; so-called blockade of Germany, 174-178. See Anglo- American ideals. Great Lakes, disarmament on, 103. Guarantee treaties, offered to France, 235. Gummere, S. R., delegate to Algeciras Conference, 75. Hague Conference, of 1899, 67; of 1907, 68. Hague Conventions, status of, 71. Hague Court of Arbitration, 68. Haiti, Republic of, United States ac- quires financial supervision over, 136, 137- Index 293 Hamilton, Alexander, opinion on jects to 5-5-3 ratio, 269; expansion French treaty of 1^78, 6. of, 276. Harding, Warren G., elected presi- Jefferson, Thomas, opinion on French dent, 255; ignores League of Nations, treaty of 1778. 7; warns against 262; calls Washington Conference, "entangling alliances," 12; plans 266; differs with Hughes as to mean- alliance 'with England against ing of Four-Power Treaty, 279; France, 12-14; favors joint action attitude toward Europe, 290. with England against Holy Alli- Harris, Townsend, 95. ance, 28-30; author of doctrine Hay, John, secretary of state, protests of recognition, 161. i against persecution of Jews in Ru- Jews, diplomatic protests against mania, 78; formulates open-door harsh treatment of, 78, 79. policy for China, 85; defines status Johnson, Senator Hiram, 246. of consuls in European leases in Johnson-Clarendon convention, 113. China, 88; insists on "territorial and administrative entity" of Knox, Philander C., proposes neu- China, 89; private correspondence tralization of railwaysof Manchuria, on Chinese situation, 89-91. 95; negotiates treaties with Hon- Hay-Pauncefote treaty, IZO,_I2I. duras and Nicaragua, 134, 135; Henry, of Prussia, Prince, visit of, to proposes settlement with Colombia, United States, 118. 143; opposes League of Nations, 228, Hitchcock, Senator G. H., 2J2. 231. Holy Alliance, 22, 24. Kongo Free State, treaty establish- House, Edward M., 225, 233. ing, signed by American delegates Huerta, Victoriano, 160, 162, 193. but withheld from Senate by Presi- Hughes, Charles E., suggests changes dent Cleveland, 61, 62. in Covenant of League, 232; asserts Kruger, Paul, 50. rights of the United States in man- dated areas, 261; proposes reduction Lansing, Robert, secretary of state, of navies, 267; details of plan, 268, replies to Austro-Hungarian note 269; offends the French delegates, on munitions trade, 182, 183; dis- 270; takes personal charge of Far misses Austrian Ambassador and Eastern question, 281; success of German military and naval attaches, Washington Conference, due to, 185; delegate to Peace Conference, 290. 225, 233. .. Lansmg-Ishii agreement, 95. International Conference of American ***** of Nation^ 188, 196, 205, 209, "srfe; tf^sas feiffl n ?v"jsa of International Justice, 263. T .r r> . 3 S' n ,, M - _, International Law, American Insti- U v wool', Lord, 2O. International Prize Court, plan for, Livingston, Robert R., minister to adopted by Second Hague Confer- Lod r g a e) S enator H enry Cabot, on Ore- Isolation, policy of, distinct from Mon- * on dis P" te - "' ' ' J ; de ^ s is ' sars? 3> s; ^ no loneer ."VSs^forLcTnditfonfi surrender of Germany, 217; issues round robin, 231; presents reser- Jameton Raid, in the Transvaal, 50. vations to Treaty of Versailles, 248; apan, beginning of American inter- presents Four-Power Treaty, 278; course with, 83, 84; forms alliance inconsistency of, 287. with Great Britain, 92; goes to war London Naval Conference, 71. with Russia, 94; disturbing factor Lusitania, sinking of, 179. in world politics, 171; advocates principle of racial equality, 233, 238; Madero, Francisco, 160. demands German leases in Shan- Madison, James, favors joint action tung, 239; secures consent of Allies, with England against Holy Alliance, 240; reluctantly accepts invitation to 30. Washington Conference, 266; oh- Mahan, Alfred T., 99. 294 Maine, boundary dispute with New signs general arbitration treaty with Brunswick, 106. England, 116. Manchuria, Russian encroachments Olney-Pauncefote treaty, 116, 117. on, 91-93, 95. Open-door policy in China, Hay's Marcy, William L., secretary of state, note of September 6, 1899, 85; views on Declaration of Paris, Anglo-American origin of, 87; 65. guaranteed by treaty, 284. Maximilian, Prince, placed by Louis Oregon, joint occupation of, 107. Napoleon on throne of Mexico, O'Shaughnessy, Nelson, 162. 46. Merchant vessels, proposal to arm, Pacific and Far Eastern Questions, 185. Conference on, 266-290. Mexico, French intervention in, 46; Panama Canal, effect of, on naval Huerta revolution in, 160; American policy, 132. policy toward, 160-164. Panama Canal Zone, seizure of, 142. Monroe, James, sent to Paris to aid Panama Congress of 1826, 153, 154. Livingston in negotiations for pur- Panama Tolls Act, 121. chase of New Orleans and West Pan-American Financial Congress, Florida, 13; consults Jefferson and 157. Madison on subject of British pro- Pan-American Scientific Congress posals for joint action against Holy 157. Alliance, 26-28; message of Decem- Pan-American Union, 156. her 2, 1823, 36-39; emphasizes Pan-Americanism, 153-157. separation of European and Ameri- Pauncefote, Sir Julian, signs general can politics, 43. arbitration treaty with United Monroe Doctrine, compared with pol- States, 116; signs Canal treaty, 120. icy of isolation, 3; justification of, Platt Amendment, provisions of, 144, 4; formulation of, 19; text of, 36- 145. 39; reception of, in Europe, 39; Peace Conference of Paris, 225-242. basis of, 43; sanction of, 45; relation See Hague Conference. of, to European balance of power, Perry, Commodore Matthew C. com- 46, 52; attitude of England toward, mands expedition to Japan, 83, 84, 52; negative side of, 57; adverse 95. criticism of, 131; not a self-denying Philippine Islands, McKinley's rea- declaration, 147; reservation of, sons for retaining, 84, 85. 232, 249. Polignac, Prince, interview with Can- Moore, John Bassett, 263. ning on subject of the Spanish col- Moroccan question. S^ Algeciras onies, 35. Conference. Polk, James K., settles Oregon di- Motley, John L., 113. pute, no. Munitions of war, sale of to bellig- Portsmouth, treaty of, 94. erents, 181-184. Prize Court. See International Prize McKinley, William, reasons for re- Court. taining Philippine Islands, 84, 85. Prizes, destruction of, 179, 180. McLeod, Alexander, arrest of, 104; acquittal of, 105. Recognition, doctrine of, discussed with reference to Mexican question, Napoleon, Louis, intervenes in Mexico, T ' ,,; 46; decides to withdraw, 47, 48. Reparations, 236 237. Neutral prizes, destruction of, 72, 180. *^^tgy Versailles, f- _ of I7Q5 8 f 'I f ' M Roosevelt, Theodore, forces Germany SsSvw'JSHJj p. k 5fei"^Xus,fts j^SSrtiisS fHsSSlS NiIga h ra M con n fere I nfe on Mexican ques- 79; invites , Russia and - Japa 9? tion 162 peace conference, 94; incurs ill will of Japan, 95; submits Alaskan boundary dispute to limited arbi- Olney, Richard, on Monroe Doctrine, tration, 123; establishes financial 43; conducts correspondence on supervision over Dominican Repub- Venezuelan boundary dispute, 48; lie, 133, 138; Big-Stick policy, 139; Index 295 extension of Monroe Doctrine, lish friendly relations with Colom- 140; seizure of Canal Zone, 142. bia, 143; suggests changes in Cove- Root, Elihu, proposes international nant of League, 232. court of justice, 69; author of Platt Tardieu, Andre, report of Algeciras Amendment, 146; visits South Conference, 76; quoted on Armistice America, 156; suggests changes in negotiations, 217, 218; Covenant of League, 232; member Temperley, H. W. V., "History of the of commission to draft statute of Peace Conference of Paris," 191. Permanent Court of International "Ten Points," 278. Justice, 263; presents resolutions on Texas, annexation of, opposed by China, 277. Great Britain, 107, 108. Rush, Richard, conferences with Can- Thayer, William R., gives version ning on South American situation, of Roosevelt-Holleben interview, 26, 33, 34. Si- Russia, occupies Manchuria, 91, 92; Tocqueville, Alexis de, "Democracy opposes opening of Manchurian in America," 102. ports to American commerce, 93; Treaty of London, 195. goes to war with Japan, 94; revo- Treaty of Peace with Austria, 263. lution, of March, 1917, 198; of Treaty of Peace with Germany, 263. November, 1917, 203. Treaty of Versailles, signed, 242; laid Russo-Japanese war, 94. before Senate, 243; debate on, 244- 254; votes on, 252-254. Sackville-West, Lord, dismissal of, Twenty-One Demands, 276. IIS- Salisbury, Lord, backs down in Vene- Vera Cruz, American occupation of, zuelan dispute, 50; warns President 162; evacuation of, 163. McKinley of Germany's designs on Verona, Congress of, 19, 21; secret Philippines, 85. treaty of, 22-24. San Remo agreement, 259, 260. Vienna, Congress of, 19. Santo Domingo, financial supervision Villa, Francisco, 162, 163. over, 133, 134. Secret Treaties, 193. War aims, of Allies, 196; British, 204. Self-determination, 198, 203, 205. War of 1812, 15. Senate of the United States, debates Washington, George, requests opinions Treaty of Versailles, 244-254. of cabinet on French treaty, 6; issues Seward, William H., protests against proclamation of neutrality, 8; Fare- French occupation of Mexico, 47. well Address, 9-11. Shantung question, at Peace Confer- Washington Conference, 266-290. ence of Paris, 239-242; at Washing- Washington, treaty of, 66, 114. ton Conference, 280-282. Webster, Daniel, secretary of state, Siberia, Japanese troops in, 276; 104, 105. promise of Japan to evacuate, 286. Webster-Ashburton treaty, 59, 60, Slave trade, provision for suppression 107. of, in Webster-Ashburton treaty, Wellington, Duke of, at Congress of 59, 60; Brussels conference on, Verona, 21; protest and withdrawal, 62. 22. Slavery, and isolation, 58 West Indies, American supremacy South America, neglected by United in, 1 20. States as field for commercial devel- White, Henry, delegate to Algeciras opment, 52; open door in, 53. Conference, 75; to Peace Confer- Spanish colonies, revolt of, 25. ence, 225. Spanish revolution of 1820, 20. William II, German Kaiser, telegram Spanish War, turning point in rela- to President Kruger, 50; forced to tions of United States and England, withdraw from Venezuela, 51; visits Morocco, 74; demands retirement ~ se, 75; insists on general , . , on Morocco, 75 ; thwarted 272; use of, limited by treaty, 274, in efforts to humiliate France, 77; 275. abdicates and flees to Holland, 219. Sumner, Charles, 113. Williams, Talcott, on McKinley's rea- sons for retaining Philippines, 85. Taft, William H., proposes to bring Wilson, Henry Lane, 160. Nicaragua and Honduras under Wilson, Woodrow, secures modifica- financial supervision of United tion of Panama Tolls Act, 121; ex- States, 134, 135; tries to reestab- tends financial supervision over Submarines, question of, discussed of Delcasse, 75; insists on general at Washington Conference, 271, conference on I " 296 Index Nicaragua and Haiti, 136, IJ7; warns Latin-American states against granting concessions to European syndicates, 140, 141; attitude of, on questions of international law and diplomacy, 151, 152; general Latin-American policy, igi, 165; New Pan-Americanism, 153; Mex- ican policy, 160-164; asks f r decla- ration of war on Germany, 185; views on extension of Monree Doc- trine, 187; political philosophy of, 192; refusatto recognize Huerta, 193; reasons for neutrality, 194; calls on all belligerents to state war aims, 195; first discussion of war aims, 196; war address, 199; draws distinc- tion between German people and German Goyernment, 2OO-2O2; re- ply to Pope, 201; announces Four- teen Points, 205-210; decides to go to Paris, 225; suffers political defeat, 226, 227; greeted with enthusiasm rn Europe, 228; proposes League of Nations, 230; returns temporarily to th Uni ted States, 231; makes con- cessions to French and British, 238; returns to the United States and lays treaty before Senate, 242; tours, the country on behalf of League of Nations, 246; illness of, 247; letter read at Jackson day dinner propos- ing referendum on Treaty of Ver- sailles, 252, 253; awarded Nobel Peace Prize, 255; withdraw* from participation in European affairs, 259. Wood, General Leonard, 146. Yap, island of, 260-262. -14720 A 000704177 5