The American Empire
description
Transcript of The American Empire
Written and Performatively Enacted by:
Kimberly BurroughsKimberly BurroughsChristian ChessmanChristian ChessmanJack HahneJack HahneHarrison PowellHarrison PowellAndy UnderkoflerAndy Underkofler
1763-1789
1763 Proclamation Line
Heavy war debt
Increased enforcement of taxes
Sets stage for revolution
The End of Salutary Neglect Taxes and Acts
• Stamp Acts• Sugar Acts• Townshend Acts• Intolerable Acts
Boston Tea Party Boston Massacre
First• Enacts boycott
Second• Declaration of Independence• Articles of Confederation• Revolutionary War
Emphasis on Confederation instead of Nation
Issues with taxation• Cannot maintain army/navy
Land Ordinance of 1785 Northwest Ordinance Weak Central Government Shay’s Rebellion
New Constitution• Virginia and New Jersey Plans• Three-Fifths Compromise• Strong National Government
Ratification• Federalists and Antifederalists • Only ratified with the agreement for a Bill of
Rights
French Revolution Whiskey Rebellion Precedent
• Two Terms• Cabinet
Alexander Hamilton Thomas Jefferson
John Adams• Alien and Sedition Acts• Father of the Navy
Thomas Jefferson• Revolution of 1800
Louisiana Purchase• Strict Interpretation vs. Loose Interpretation of
the Constitution.
Precursor to the Monroe Doctrine• Justifies expansion and defensive.
Louisiana Purchase and Westward Expansion • Lewis and Clark (1804-1806).
Causes: • Naval Impressments, • Trade Restrictions, • Desire to Expand into Canada, • disputes over the Oregon Territory and Northern
borders of Oregon and Maine
"I believe that in four weeks from the time a declaration of war is heard on our frontier, the whole of Upper Canada and a part of Lower Canada will be in our power." –John C. Calhoun
Jackson invades Florida• Justifies with the Monroe Doctrine
Adams-Onis Treaty cedes all of Florida to U.S. in exchange for a promise that the U.S. would no longer hold any aspirations for Texas.
The Election of Andrew Jackson Marks (1829-1837) marks a dramatic shift in American-Native American relations.
Indian Removal Act
Trail of Tears
“54’40” Or Fight!”
Treaty of 1818 established joint occupation of Oregon Territory
Monroe Doctrine and Louisiana Purchase used to rationalize claim up to 49th parallel.
Hudson Bay Company Compromise
Multiple requests for annexation by Texans are turned down for fear of War with Mexico and dispute of spread of slavery.
Tyler passes Texas Annexation in Executive Action which creates outrage in government
Dispute of Nueces Region boundary used as an excuse to incite war with Mexico because Adams-Onis Treaty did not clearly define boundary.
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ends the war - the US extends claims to CA, NM, OK, AZ, NV, and CA. • Again justified by Monroe Doctrine (proactive
defense).
The Gilded Age
• Abraham Lincoln–1861-1865–Slavery–Preservation of the Union
• Rutherford B. Hayes–1877-1881–Great Railroad Strike
• Chester A. Arthur–1881-1885–“Father of the
Steel Navy”• Grover Cleveland–1885-1889,
1893-1897–Opposed to US
imperialism–Supported big
business
• William McKinley–1897-1901–Economic expansion–Territorial expansion–Spanish-American War–Civil Rights
• William Henry Seward• Henry Cabot Lodge
• Emancipation Proclamation– 1862– Freed the majority of the slaves
• Amendments 13, 14, and 15– 13 - abolished slavery– 14 - blacks can be citizens– 15 - race, color, and previous servitude
cannot prevent voting rights• Wade-Davis Bill
– 1864• A Century of Dishonor by Helen Hunt Jackson
– 1881– Injustice towards Native Americans
• 1890 census: • “Up to and including 1880 the country had
a frontier of settlement, but at present the unsettled area has been so broken into by isolated bodies of settlement that there can hardly be said to be a frontier line. In the discussion of its extent, its westward movement, etc., it can not, therefore, any longer have a place in the census reports.”
• How the Other Half Lives by Jacob Riis–1890–Urban poverty
• New York Draft Riots– 1863– Men who could pay were exempt
• Plessy v. Ferguson– 1896– “Separate but equal”
• American Anti-Imperialist League Founded– 1898
• Government Acts– Homestead Act & Morrill Act of1862• Both encouraged westward settlement
– Alaska in1867
– Bancroft treaties begin in 1868
– Immigrants from the North German Confederation
– Burlingame Treaty with China of 1868• China attains Most Favored Nation status
– First transcontinental United States railroad completed• 1869
– Chinese Exclusion Act• 1882
– Interstate Commerce Commission• 1887
– Dawes Act• 1887
– Divided reservation land into private plots– Extra land made available to non-Native Americans
• Private Acts– Pony Express (1860)– Alexander Graham Bell invents the telephone (1875)
• Civil War– 1861-1865
• Dakota War of 1862• Sand Creek Massacre
– 1864• Red River Indian War
– 1874• Battle of Little Bighorn
– 1876• Nez Perce War
– 1877• The Battle of Wounded Knee
– 1890
• Hawaii– Queen Liliuokalani overthrown in 1893
• Newlands Resolution in 1898, Territory of Hawaii
• Spanish-American War– 1898– USS Maine sinks– Fought in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Philippines, and
Guam– Treaty of Paris
• American Samoa– 1899
• Philippine-American War– 1899-1902
• Alabama Claims–1871-1872–Treaty of Washington
• Virginius Affair–1873-1875
• Baltimore Crisis–1891
• Teller Amendment–1898
• Open Door Notes–1899
• Panic of 1873–Domestic factors• Boom after the Civil War• Railroad industry• Speculators• Jay Cooke & Company fails
– International factors• Germany abandon’s silver standard• European economic depression
• Centennial Exposition– 1876
• Reconstruction ends– 1877
• Fence Cutting War– 1883-1888– Open range v. fenced-in property
• Sherman Antitrust Act– 1890– First federal act to limit trusts
• Panic of 1893– Railroad speculation– Monetary standards
• Acquired in Spanish-American War
• “Independent” in 1902
• Platt Amendment
• Business and Colonization–Sugar, Railroads, and more!
• Acquired in Spanish-American War for $20,000,000
• Filipino Nationalism
• Greater autonomy in 1916
• Filipino migration in the 1920s
• Seen by FDR as a drain on resources–Given commonwealth status and path to independence
• Invaded by Japan
• Panama gets independence from Colombia
• Hay–Bunau-Varilla Treaty establishes Canal Zone
• Canal completed in 1914
• Becomes center of commerce and conflict between US and Panama
• Woodrow Wilson and World War One– 14 Points
• Seen as threat by Great Britain
– Wanted to create world market for US goods– Sees US motives as pure and selfless
• Treaty of Versailles• Results
• One of the last powers to officially join– Gave support to Allies
• Yalta• Potsdam• The UN, IMF and World Bank
The United States had many foreign interventions of questionable nature during the past 75 years. A pattern tends to emerge; the US dislikes a leader, and that leader is deposed by CIA black-operatives, or US-led military intervention.
In essence….
June 25 1950 – 1953
USSR was perceived as expanding sphere of influence What is sphere of influence? Why did the USSR matter?
Countering Russian expansion: war in Korea.
Operations PBFORTUNE and PBSUCCESS• Initiated to depose Guatemalan President
Jacobo Arbenz Arbenz was a Commie.
CIA succeded in deposing Arbenz, replaced with Fuentes.
Fuentes was a violent autocrat
“But he’s OUR son of a bitch” mentality.
US feared Iran would turn to Communism
Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh’s interest in nationalizing oil didn’t help
CIA operatives:• stir up rebellion, • assassinate Mossadegh, • implant a puppet government – the Shah –
favorable to the US
Castro takes power• Its called the Communist Revolution• 90 miles from US shores• “Beachhead” of Communism
CIA pays and trains Cuban exiles to re-take Cuba
“Bay of Pigs” invasion – fails miserably
1964: President Joao Goulart considers income redistribution and nationalization of agriculture
CIA covertly assists a coup d’etat in Brazil
Surprise! • The new President loves the US, free market
capitalism, and debt payment to the IMF. • Everybody* wins!
*named the United States federal government
North Vietnam is Communist South Vietnam is not
• We support them Ghosts of Tonkin: Military “Engagement”?
Gulf of Tonkin Legislation Permits US to respond to Vietnamese “Aggression”.• Except, the US had been attacking –
Vietnam’s (non-existent) response
Israel was controversial – warring with Egypt, Syria and Jordan
Egypt was uniquely valuable of Israel’s enemies. Israel served as a foothold in the MidEast for the
US – important to maintain. Thus, Jimmy Carter brokered the Camp David
Accords
People’s Revolutionary Government – Communists – seize power in 1979.
US responds with Operation Urgent Fury• (note the name tone change)
Explicit military action!
Paul Scoon
Miguel Noriega refuses to conform to US dominance• Threatens independence on the Canal• Kills a US military official
Operation….Just Cause?• Noriega is deposed• Guillermo Endara
Caved to US influence Lassez-Faire banking control Reduced unemployment
Iraq begins drilling in Kuwaiti oil fields – Rumailah
Oil Instability? Not on our watch.• Operation Desert Storm is a go.
PERMITTED Sadaam Husseinto stay in power.
Responses were outraged and shocked – but should they have been?
Was 9/11 a form of imperial “blowback” for almost a century of foreign intervention and reckless militarism? Should we have seen this coming?
Certainly the loss of life is wrong. But is it unexpected?
Operation Enduring Freedom authorizes the US military to enter Afghanistan
We depose the Taliban in under a month
We install the puppet Hamid Karzai as president.
Except…
On the justifications that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction, the War on Terrorism expands to Iraq
Two years later, The Iraq Study Group concludes that Iraq not only does not have WMD, but it hasn’t had an active WMD program since 1991.
Sadaam Hussein was deposed, but never formally linked to Al Qaeda.
The US does not have explicitly named colonies that it exploits for material wealth.
How then does it establish itself as an empire?
That entire previous section about crushing dissenting leaders.
World War II leaves almost every economy – except the US – devastated.
1943 - US Dept. of Commerce issues a now-declassified report whose title is revealing: •“Markets After the War”
June 5, 1947 – 1951• Marshall plan.
Bulwark against communism European Dependency 3rd World Markets
September 1960 •Act of Bogota – makes social reform
favorable to American Trade a requisite to aid
July 1944 – Bretton Woods Agreements Signed• Currency Regulation
“Beggar Thy Neighbor” is so 1930s…• Gave US immense leverage – the dollar was
the standard
December 27, 1945• The IMF is created formally codifying the
Bretton Woods system of economic engagement
• The IMF is the enforcement mechanism for the system and is dominated by US control
The status quo uses a pegged system of currency
For example, in 1998, one dollar was worth 115 yen.
Even without gold standard, the US remains at the core.
That was crazy, right?
Psychological dominance Domestic Power Power-projection
Nuclear bombs at Okinawa TNWs in Turkey
Often harmful to locals – September 4, 1995 – Okinawan based soldiers gang
rape a Japanese girl Destroys local environments –Guantanamo
Same old threat construction:
America v Communism• Must protect American capitalism from
Communist threats abroad or else they’ll spill over to our home shores and engulf us!
America v Terrorism • Must protect American liberalism from
Terrorist threats abroad or else they’ll spill over to our home shores and engulf us!
July 17, 1998 – US says no to an ICC
No one else has bases on foreign soil.
No one has bases on US soil.
Stealth Imperialism defined:
Imperial actions performed behind closed doors, while openly denying being an empire.
Pre-Iraq and Afghanistan
Dick Nixon: “US is only great power without a history of imperialistic claims on neighboring countries”.
Echoed by Samuel Berger, Advisor to Clinton on National Security – “We are the first global power in history that is not an imperial power.”
In 2000, Bush campaigned on the platform, “America has never been an empire. We may be the only great power in history that had the change and refused”.
After invading Iraq, Bush said “the US has no intention of determining the precise form of Iraq’s new government” and “we will remain in Iraq as long as necessary and not a day more”.
Bush in 2004 – “Other nations in history have fought in foreign lands and remained to occupy and exploit. Americans want nothing more than to return home.
Rumsfeld: “we’re not a colonial power. We’ve never been a colonial power”.
Powell – “The US does not seek a territorial empire. We have never been imperialists. We seek a world in which liberty, prosperity and peace can become the heritage of all peoples, and not just the exclusive privilege of the few.”
•Wolfowitz: US foreign policy should be to maintain primacy.
•Naval War College study “explores strategic approaches” to sustain “US predominance for the long term” and makes explicit parallels with Roman, Chinese, Ottoman and British Empires.
•Also, Iraq and Afghanistan.
American actions can be interpreted as imperialist, or non-imperial; they can be questioned as good or bad, or perhaps even necessary in an increasingly globalized world.
At the end of the day we, as deliberative democratic citizens, must decide if the United States is an empire, and if it is – is that good?
Fin.