14: The Monroe Doctine and the Panama Canal
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No nation can claim rights without acknowledging the duties that go
with the rights. It is a contemptible thing for a great nation to
render itself impotent in international action, whether because of
cowardice or sloth, or sheer inability or unwillingness to look into
the future. It is a very wicked thing for a nation to do wrong to
others. But the most contemptible and most wicked course of conduct is
for a nation to use offensive language or be guilty of offensive
actions toward other people and yet fail to hold its own if the other
nation retaliates; and it is almost as bad to undertake
responsibilities and then not fulfil them. During the seven and a half
years that I was President, this Nation behaved in international
matters toward all other nations precisely as an honorable man behaves
to his fellow-men. We made no promise which we could not and did not
keep. We made no threat which we did not carry out. We never failed to
assert our rights in the face of the strong, and we never failed to
treat both strong and weak with courtesy and justice; and against the
weak when they misbehaved we were slower to assert our rights than we
were against the strong.
As a legacy of the Spanish War we were left with peculiar relations to
the Philippines, Cuba, and Porto Rico, and with an immensely added
interest in Central America and the Caribbean Sea. As regards the
Philippines my belief was that we should train them for self-
government as rapidly as possible, and then leave them free to decide
their own fate. I did not believe in setting the time-limit within
which we would give them independence, because I did not believe it
wise to try to forecast how soon they would be fit for self-
government; and once having made the promise I would have felt that it
was imperative to keep it. Within a few months of my assuming office
we had stamped out the last armed resistance in the Philippines that
was not of merely sporadic character; and as soon as peace was secured
we turned our energies to developing the islands in the interests of
the natives. We established schools everywhere; we built roads; we
administered an even-handed justice; we did everything possible to
encourage agriculture and industry; and in constantly increasing
measure we employed natives to do their own governing, and finally
provided a legislative chamber. No higher grade of public officials
ever handled the affairs of any colony than the public officials who
in succession governed the Philippines. With the possible exception of
the Sudan, and not even excepting Algiers, I know of no country ruled
and administered by men of the white race where that rule and that
administration have been exercised so emphatically with an eye single
to the welfare of the natives themselves. The English and Dutch
administrators of Malaysia have done admirable work; but the profit to
the Europeans in those States has always been one of the chief
elements considered; whereas in the Philippines our whole attention
was concentrated upon the welfare of the Filipinos themselves, if
anything to the neglect of our own interests.
I do not believe that America has any special beneficial interest in
retaining the Philippines. Our work there has benefited us only as any
efficiently done work performed for the benefit of others does
incidentally help the character of those who do it. The people of the
islands have never developed so rapidly, from every standpoint, as
during the years of the American occupation. The time will come when
it will be wise to take their own judgment as to whether they wish to
continue their association with America or not. There is, however, one
consideration upon which we should insist. Either we should retain
complete control of the islands, or absolve ourselves from all
responsibility for them. Any half and half course would be both
foolish and disastrous. We are governing and have been governing the
islands in the interests of the Filipinos themselves. If after due
time the Filipinos themselves decide that they do not wish to be thus
governed, then I trust that we will leave; but when we do leave it
must be distinctly understood that we retain no protectorate—and
above all that we take part in no joint protectorate—over the
islands, and give them no guarantee, of neutrality or otherwise; that,
in short, we are absolutely quit of responsibility for them, of every
kind and description.
The Filipinos were quite incapable of standing by themselves when we
took possession of the islands, and we had made no promise concerning
them. But we had explicitly promised to leave the island of Cuba, had
explicitly promised that Cuba should be independent. Early in my
administration that promise was redeemed. When the promise was made, I
doubt if there was a single ruler or diplomat in Europe who believed
that it would be kept. As far as I know, the United States was the
first power which, having made such a promise, kept it in letter and
spirit. England was unwise enough to make such a promise when she took
Egypt. It would have been a capital misfortune to have kept the
promise, and England has remained in Egypt for over thirty years, and
will unquestionably remain indefinitely; but though it is necessary
for her to do so, the fact of her doing so has meant the breaking of a
positive promise and has been a real evil. Japan made the same
guarantee about Korea, but as far as can be seen there was never even
any thought of keeping the promise in this case; and Korea, which had
shown herself utterly impotent either for self-government or self-
defense, was in actual fact almost immediately annexed to Japan.
We made the promise to give Cuba independence; and we kept the
promise. Leonard Wood was left in as Governor for two or three years,
and evolved order out of chaos, raising the administration of the
island to a level, moral and material, which it had never before
achieved. We also by treaty gave the Cubans substantial advantages in
our markets. Then we left the island, turning the government over to
its own people. After four or five years a revolution broke out,
during my administration, and we again had to intervene to restore
order. We promptly sent thither a small army of pacification. Under
General Barry, order was restored and kept, and absolute justice done.
The American troops were then withdrawn and the Cubans reestablished
in complete possession of their own beautiful island, and they are in
possession of it now. There are plenty of occasions in our history
when we have shown weakness or inefficiency, and some occasions when
we have not been as scrupulous as we should have been as regards the
rights of others. But I know of no action by any other government in
relation to a weaker power which showed such disinterested efficiency
in rendering service as was true in connection with our intervention
in Cuba.
In Cuba, as in the Philippines and as in Porto Rico, Santo Domingo,
and later in Panama, no small part of our success was due to the fact
that we put in the highest grade of men as public officials. This
practice was inaugurated under President McKinley. I found admirable
men in office, and I continued them and appointed men like them as
their successors. The way that the custom-houses in Santo Domingo were
administered by Colton definitely established the success of our
experiment in securing peace for that island republic; and in Porto
Rico, under the administration of affairs under such officials as
Hunt, Winthrop, Post, Ward and Grahame, more substantial progress was
achieved in a decade than in any previous century.
The Philippines, Cuba, and Porto Rico came within our own sphere of
governmental action. In addition to this we asserted certain rights in
the Western Hemisphere under the Monroe Doctrine. My endeavor was not
only to assert these rights, but frankly and fully to acknowledge the
duties that went with the rights.
The Monroe Doctrine lays down the rule that the Western Hemisphere is
not hereafter to be treated as subject to settlement and occupation by
Old World powers. It is not international law; but it is a cardinal
principle of our foreign policy. There is no difficulty at the present
day in maintaining this doctrine, save where the American power whose
interest is threatened has shown itself in international matters both
weak and delinquent. The great and prosperous civilized commonwealths,
such as the Argentine, Brazil, and Chile, in the Southern half of
South America, have advanced so far that they no longer stand in any
position of tutelage toward the United States. They occupy toward us
precisely the position that Canada occupies. Their friendship is the
friendship of equals for equals. My view was that as regards these
nations there was no more necessity for asserting the Monroe Doctrine
than there was to assert it in regard to Canada. They were competent
to assert it for themselves. Of course if one of these nations, or if
Canada, should be overcome by some Old World power, which then
proceeded to occupy its territory, we would undoubtedly, if the
American Nation needed our help, give it in order to prevent such
occupation from taking place. But the initiative would come from the
Nation itself, and the United States would merely act as a friend
whose help was invoked.
The case was (and is) widely different as regards certain—not all—of
the tropical states in the neighborhood of the Caribbean Sea. Where
these states are stable and prosperous, they stand on a footing of
absolute equality with all other communities. But some of them have
been a prey to such continuous revolutionary misrule as to have grown
impotent either to do their duties to outsiders or to enforce their
rights against outsiders. The United States has not the slightest
desire to make aggressions on any one of these states. On the
contrary, it will submit to much from them without showing resentment.
If any great civilized power, Russia or Germany, for instance, had
behaved toward us as Venezuela under Castro behaved, this country
would have gone to war at once. We did not go to war with Venezuela
merely because our people declined to be irritated by the actions of a
weak opponent, and showed a forbearance which probably went beyond the
limits of wisdom in refusing to take umbrage at what was done by the
weak; although we would certainly have resented it had it been done by
the strong. In the case of two states, however, affairs reached such a
crisis that we had to act. These two states were Santo Domingo and the
then owner of the Isthmus of Panama, Colombia.
The Santo Domingan case was the less important; and yet it possessed a
real importance, and moreover is instructive because the action there
taken should serve as a precedent for American action in all similar
cases. During the early years of my administration Santo Domingo was
in its usual condition of chronic revolution. There was always
fighting, always plundering; and the successful graspers for
governmental power were always pawning ports and custom-houses, or
trying to put them up as guarantees for loans. Of course the
foreigners who made loans under such conditions demanded exorbitant
interest, and if they were Europeans expected their governments to
stand by them. So utter was the disorder that on one occasion when
Admiral Dewey landed to pay a call of ceremony on the President, he
and his party were shot at by revolutionists in crossing the square,
and had to return to the ships, leaving the call unpaid. There was
default on the interest due to the creditors; and finally the latter
insisted upon their governments intervening. Two or three of the
European powers were endeavoring to arrange for concerted action, and
I was finally notified that these powers intended to take and hold
several of the seaports which held custom-houses.
This meant that unless I acted at once I would find foreign powers in
partial possession of Santo Domingo; in which event the very
individuals who, in the actual event deprecated the precaution taken
to prevent such action, would have advocated extreme and violent
measures to undo the effect of their own supineness. Nine-tenths of
wisdom is to be wise in time, and at the right time; and my whole
foreign policy was based on the exercise of intelligent forethought
and of decisive action sufficiently far in advance of any likely
crisis to make it improbable that we would run into serious trouble.
Santo Domingo had fallen into such chaos that once for some weeks
there were two rival governments in it, and a revolution was being
carried on against each. At one period one government was at sea in a
small gunboat, but still stoutly maintained that it was in possession
of the island and entitled to make loans and declare peace or war. The
situation had become intolerable by the time that I interfered. There
was a naval commander in the waters whom I directed to prevent any
fighting which might menace the custom-houses. He carried out his
orders, both to his and my satisfaction, in thoroughgoing fashion. On
one occasion, when an insurgent force threatened to attack a town in
which Americans had interests, he notified the commanders on both
sides that he would not permit any fighting in the town, but that he
would appoint a certain place where they could meet and fight it out,
and that the victors should have the town. They agreed to meet his
wishes, the fight came off at the appointed place, and the victors,
who if I remember rightly were the insurgents, were given the town.
It was the custom-houses that caused the trouble, for they offered the
only means of raising money, and the revolutions were carried on to
get possession of them. Accordingly I secured an agreement with the
governmental authorities, who for the moment seemed best able to speak
for the country, by which these custom-houses were placed under
American control. The arrangement was that we should keep order and
prevent any interference with the custom-houses or the places where
they stood, and should collect the revenues. Forty-five per cent of
the revenue was then turned over to the Santo Domingan Government, and
fifty-five per cent put in a sinking fund in New York for the benefit
of the creditors. The arrangement worked in capital style. On the
forty-five per cent basis the Santo Domingan Government received from
us a larger sum than it had ever received before when nominally all
the revenue went to it. The creditors were entirely satisfied with the
arrangement, and no excuse for interference by European powers
remained. Occasional disturbances occurred in the island, of course,
but on the whole there ensued a degree of peace and prosperity which
the island had not known before for at least a century.
All this was done without the loss of a life, with the assent of all
the parties in interest, and without subjecting the United States to
any charge, while practically all of the interference, after the naval
commander whom I have mentioned had taken the initial steps in
preserving order, consisted in putting a first-class man trained in
our insular service at the head of the Santo Domingan customs service.
We secured peace, we protected the people of the islands against
foreign foes, and we minimized the chance of domestic trouble. We
satisfied the creditors and the foreign nations to which the creditors
belonged; and our own part of the work was done with the utmost
efficiency and with rigid honesty, so that not a particle of scandal
was ever so much as hinted at.
Under these circumstances those who do not know the nature of the
professional international philanthropists would suppose that these
apostles of international peace would have been overjoyed with what we
had done. As a matter of fact, when they took any notice of it at all
it was to denounce it; and those American newspapers which are fondest
of proclaiming themselves the foes of war and the friends of peace
violently attacked me for averting war from, and bringing peace to,
the island. They insisted I had no power to make the agreement, and
demanded the rejection of the treaty which was to perpetuate the
agreement. They were, of course, wholly unable to advance a single
sound reason of any kind for their attitude. I suppose the real
explanation was partly their dislike of me personally, and
unwillingness to see peace come through or national honor upheld by
me; and in the next place their sheer, simple devotion to prattle and
dislike of efficiency. They liked to have people come together and
talk about peace, or even sign bits of paper with something about
peace or arbitration on them, but they took no interest whatever in
the practical achievement of a peace that told for good government and
decency and honesty. They were joined by the many moderately well-
meaning men who always demand that a thing be done, but also always
demand that it be not done in the only way in which it is, as a matter
of fact, possible to do it. The men of this kind insisted that of
course Santo Domingo must be protected and made to behave itself, and
that of course the Panama Canal must be dug; but they insisted even
more strongly that neither feat should be accomplished in the only way
in which it was possible to accomplish it at all.
The Constitution did not explicitly give me power to bring about the
necessary agreement with Santo Domingo. But the Constitution did not
forbid my doing what I did. I put the agreement into effect, and I
continued its execution for two years before the Senate acted; and I
would have continued it until the end of my term, if necessary,
without any action by Congress. But it was far preferable that there
should be action by Congress, so that we might be proceeding under a
treaty which was the law of the land and not merely by a direction of
the Chief Executive which would lapse when that particular executive
left office. I therefore did my best to get the Senate to ratify what
I had done. There was a good deal of difficulty about it. With the
exception of one or two men like Clark of Arkansas, the Democratic
Senators acted in that spirit of unworthy partisanship which
subordinates national interest to some fancied partisan advantage, and
they were cordially backed by all that portion of the press which took
its inspiration from Wall Street, and was violently hostile to the
Administration because of its attitude towards great corporations.
Most of the Republican Senators under the lead of Senator Lodge stood
by me; but some of them, of the more "conservative" or reactionary
type, who were already growing hostile to me on the trust question,
first proceeded to sneer at what had been done, and to raise all kinds
of meticulous objections, which they themselves finally abandoned, but
which furnished an excuse on which the opponents of the treaty could
hang adverse action. Unfortunately the Senators who were most apt to
speak of the dignity of the Senate, and to insist upon its importance,
were the very ones who were also most apt to try to make display of
this dignity and importance by thwarting the public business. This
case was typical. The Republicans in question spoke against certain
provisions of the proposed treaty. They then, having ingeniously
provided ammunition for the foes of the treaty, abandoned their
opposition to it, and the Democrats stepped into the position they had
abandoned. Enough Republicans were absent to prevent the securing of a
two-thirds vote for the treaty, and the Senate adjourned without any
action at all, and with a feeling of entire self-satisfaction at
having left the country in the position of assuming a responsibility
and then failing to fulfil it. Apparently the Senators in question
felt that in some way they had upheld their dignity. All that they had
really done was to shirk their duty. Somebody had to do that duty, and
accordingly I did it. I went ahead and administered the proposed
treaty anyhow, considering it as a simple agreement on the part of the
Executive which would be converted into a treaty whenever the Senate
acted. After a couple of years the Senate did act, having previously
made some utterly unimportant changes which I ratified and persuaded
Santo Domingo to ratify. In all its history Santo Domingo has had
nothing happen to it as fortunate as this treaty, and the passing of
it saved the United States from having to face serious difficulties
with one or more foreign powers.
It cannot in the long run prove possible for the United States to
protect delinquent American nations from punishment for the non-
performance of their duties unless she undertakes to make them perform
their duties. People may theorize about this as much as they wish, but
whenever a sufficiently strong outside nation becomes sufficiently
aggrieved, then either that nation will act or the United States
Government itself will have to act. We were face to face at one period
of my administration with this condition of affairs in Venezuela, when
Germany, rather feebly backed by England, undertook a blockade against
Venezuela to make Venezuela adopt the German and English view about
certain agreements. There was real danger that the blockade would
finally result in Germany's taking possession of certain cities or
custom-houses. I succeeded, however, in getting all the parties in
interest to submit their cases to the Hague Tribunal.
By far the most important action I took in foreign affairs during the
time I was President related to the Panama Canal. Here again there was
much accusation about my having acted in an "unconstitutional" manner
—a position which can be upheld only if Jefferson's action in
acquiring Louisiana be also treated as unconstitutional; and at
different stages of the affair believers in a do-nothing policy
denounced me as having "usurped authority"—which meant, that when
nobody else could or would exercise efficient authority, I exercised
it.
During the nearly four hundred years that had elapsed since Balboa
crossed the Isthmus, there had been a good deal of talk about building
an Isthmus canal, and there had been various discussions of the
subject and negotiations about it in Washington for the previous half
century. So far it had all resulted merely in conversation; and the
time had come when unless somebody was prepared to act with decision
we would have to resign ourselves to at least half a century of
further conversation. Under the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty signed shortly
after I became President, and thanks to our negotiations with the
French Panama Company, the United States at last acquired a
possession, so far as Europe was concerned, which warranted her in
immediately undertaking the task. It remained to decide where the
canal should be, whether along the line already pioneered by the
French company in Panama, or in Nicaragua. Panama belonged to the
Republic of Colombia. Nicaragua bid eagerly for the privilege of
having the United States build the canal through her territory. As
long as it was doubtful which route we would decide upon, Colombia
extended every promise of friendly cooperation; at the Pan-American
Congress in Mexico her delegate joined in the unanimous vote which
requested the United States forthwith to build the canal; and at her
eager request we negotiated the Hay-Herran Treaty with her, which gave
us the right to build the canal across Panama. A board of experts sent
to the Isthmus had reported that this route was better than the
Nicaragua route, and that it would be well to build the canal over it
provided we could purchase the rights of the French company for forty
million dollars; but that otherwise they would advise taking the
Nicaragua route. Ever since 1846 we had had a treaty with the power
then in control of the Isthmus, the Republic of New Granada, the
predecessor of the Republic of Colombia and of the present Republic of
Panama, by which treaty the United States was guaranteed free and open
right of way across the Isthmus of Panama by any mode of communication
that might be constructed, while in return our Government guaranteed
the perfect neutrality of the Isthmus with a view to the preservation
of free transit.
For nearly fifty years we had asserted the right to prevent the
closing of this highway of commerce. Secretary of State Cass in 1858
officially stated the American position as follows:
"Sovereignty has its duties as well as its rights, and none of these
local governments, even if administered with more regard to the just
demands of other nations than they have been, would be permitted, in a
spirit of Eastern isolation, to close the gates of intercourse of the
great highways of the world, and justify the act by the pretension
that these avenues of trade and travel belong to them and that they
choose to shut them, or, what is almost equivalent, to encumber them
with such unjust relations as would prevent their general use."
We had again and again been forced to intervene to protect the transit
across the Isthmus, and the intervention was frequently at the request
of Colombia herself. The effort to build a canal by private capital
had been made under De Lesseps and had resulted in lamentable failure.
Every serious proposal to build the canal in such manner had been
abandoned. The United States had repeatedly announced that we would
not permit it to be built or controlled by any old-world government.
Colombia was utterly impotent to build it herself. Under these
circumstances it had become a matter of imperative obligation that we
should build it ourselves without further delay.
I took final action in 1903. During the preceding fifty-three years
the Governments of New Granada and of its successor, Colombia, had
been in a constant state of flux; and the State of Panama had
sometimes been treated as almost independent, in a loose Federal
league, and sometimes as the mere property of the Government at
Bogota; and there had been innumerable appeals to arms, sometimes of
adequate, sometimes for inadequate, reasons. The following is a
partial list of the disturbances on the Isthmus of Panama during the
period in question, as reported to us by our consuls. It is not
possible to give a complete list, and some of the reports that speak
of "revolutions" must mean unsuccessful revolutions:
May 22, 1850.—Outbreak; two Americans killed. War vessel demanded to
quell outbreak.
October, 1850.—Revolutionary plot to bring about independence of the
Isthmus.
July 22, 1851.—Revolution in four Southern provinces.
November 14, 1851.—Outbreak at Chagres. Man-of-war requested for
Chagres.
June 27, 1853.—Insurrection at Bogota, and consequent disturbance on
Isthmus. War vessel demanded.
May 23, 1854.—Political disturbances. War vessel requested.
June 28, 1854.—Attempted revolution.
October 24, 1854.—Independence of Isthmus demanded by provincial
legislature.
April, 1856.—Riot, and massacre of Americans.
May 4, 1856.—Riot.
May 18, 1856.—Riot.
June 3, 1856.—Riot.
October 2, 1856.—Conflict between two native parties. United States
force landed.
December 18, 1858.—Attempted secession of Panama.
April, 1859.—Riots.
September, 1860.—Outbreak.
October 4, 1860.—Landing of United States forces in consequence.
May 23, 1861.—Intervention of the United States force required, by
intendente.
October 2, 1861.—Insurrection and civil war.
April 4, 1862.—Measures to prevent rebels crossing Isthmus.
June 13, 1862.—Mosquera's troops refused admittance to Panama.
March, 1865.—Revolution, and United States troops landed.
August, 1865.—Riots; unsuccessful attempt to invade Panama.
March, 1866.—Unsuccessful revolution.
April, 1867.—Attempt to overthrow Government.
August, 1867.—Attempt at revolution.
July 5, 1868.—Revolution; provisional government inaugurated.
August 29, 1868.—Revolution; provisional government overthrown.
April, 1871.—Revolution; followed apparently by counter revolution.
April, 1873.—Revolution and civil war which lasted to October, 1875.
August, 1876.—Civil war which lasted until April, 1877.
July, 1878.—Rebellion.
December, 1878.—Revolt.
April, 1879.—Revolution.
June, 1879.—Revolution.
March, 1883.—Riot.
May, 1883.—Riot.
June, 1884.—Revolutionary attempt.
December, 1884.—Revolutionary attempt.
January, 1885.—Revolutionary disturbances.
March, 1885.—Revolution.
April, 1887.—Disturbance on Panama Railroad.
November, 1887.—Disturbance on line of canal.
January, 1889.—Riot.
January, 1895.—Revolution which lasted until April.
March, 1895.—Incendiary attempt.
October, 1899.—Revolution.
February, 1900, to July, 1900.—Revolution.
January, 1901.—Revolution.
July, 1901.—Revolutionary disturbances.
September, 1901.—City of Colon taken by rebels.
March, 1902.—Revolutionary disturbances.
July, 1902.—Revolution
The above is only a partial list of the revolutions, rebellions,
insurrections, riots, and other outbreaks that occurred during the
period in question; yet they number fifty-three for the fifty-three
years, and they showed a tendency to increase, rather than decrease,
in numbers and intensity. One of them lasted for nearly three years
before it was quelled; another for nearly a year. In short, the
experience of over half a century had shown Colombia to be utterly
incapable of keeping order on the Isthmus. Only the active
interference of the United States had enabled her to preserve so much
as a semblance of sovereignty. Had it not been for the exercise by the
United States of the police power in her interest, her connection with
the Isthmus would have been sundered long before it was. In 1856, in
1860, in 1873, in 1885, in 1901, and again in 1902, sailors and
marines from United States warships were forced to land in order to
patrol the Isthmus, to protect life and property, and to see that the
transit across the Isthmus was kept open. In 1861, in 1862, in 1885,
and in 1900, the Colombian Government asked that the United States
Government would land troops to protect Colombian interests and
maintain order on the Isthmus. The people of Panama during the
preceding twenty years had three times sought to establish their
independence by revolution or secession—in 1885, in 1895, and in
1899.
The peculiar relations of the United States toward the Isthmus, and
the acquiescence by Colombia in acts which were quite incompatible
with the theory of her having an absolute and unconditioned
sovereignty on the Isthmus, are illustrated by the following three
telegrams between two of our naval officers whose ships were at the
Isthmus, and the Secretary of the Navy on the occasion of the first
outbreak that occurred on the Isthmus after I became President (a year
before Panama became independent):
September 12, 1902.
Ranger, Panama:
United States guarantees perfect neutrality of Isthmus and that a
free transit from sea to sea be not interrupted or embarrassed.
. . . Any transportation of troops which might contravene these
provisions of treaty should not be sanctioned by you, nor should
use of road be permitted which might convert the line of transit
into theater of hostility.
Moody.
Colon, September 20, 1902.
Secretary Navy, Washington:
Everything is conceded. The United States guards and guarantees
traffic and the line of transit. To-day I permitted the exchange
of Colombian troops from Panama to Colon, about 1000 men each way,
the troops without arms in trains guarded by American naval force
in the same manner as other passengers; arms and ammunition in
separate train, guarded also by naval force in the same manner as
other freight.
MCLEAN.
PANAMA, October 3, 1902.
Secretary Navy,
Washington, D.C.:
Have sent this communication to the American Consul at Panama:
"Inform Governor, while trains running under United States
protection, I must decline transportation any combatants,
ammunition, arms, which might cause interruption to traffic or
convert line of transit into theater hostilities."
CASEY.
When the Government in nominal control of the Isthmus continually
besought American interference to protect the "rights" it could not
itself protect, and permitted our Government to transport Colombian
troops unarmed, under protection of our own armed men, while the
Colombian arms and ammunition came in a separate train, it is obvious
that the Colombian "sovereignty" was of such a character as to warrant
our insisting that inasmuch as it only existed because of our
protection there should be in requital a sense of the obligations that
the acceptance of this protection implied.
Meanwhile Colombia was under a dictatorship. In 1898 M. A. Sanclamente
was elected President, and J. M. Maroquin Vice-President, of the
Republic of Colombia. On July 31, 1900, the Vice-President, Maroquin,
executed a "coup d'etat" by seizing the person of the President,
Sanclamente, and imprisoning him at a place a few miles out of Bogota.
Maroquin thereupon declared himself possessed of the executive power
because of "the absence of the President"—a delightful touch of
unconscious humor. He then issued a decree that public order was
disturbed, and, upon that ground, assumed to himself legislative power
under another provision of the constitution; that is, having himself
disturbed the public order, he alleged the disturbance as a
justification for seizing absolute power. Thenceforth Maroquin,
without the aid of any legislative body, ruled as a dictator,
combining the supreme executive, legislative, civil, and military
authorities, in the so-called Republic of Colombia. The "absence" of
Sanclamente from the capital became permanent by his death in prison
in the year 1902. When the people of Panama declared their
independence in November, 1903, no Congress had sat in Colombia since
the year 1898, except the special Congress called by Maroquin to
reject the canal treaty, and which did reject it by a unanimous vote,
and adjourned without legislating on any other subject. The
constitution of 1886 had taken away from Panama the power of self-
government and vested it in Columbia. The coup d'etat of Maroquin
took away from Colombia herself the power of government and vested it
in an irresponsible dictator.
Consideration of the above facts ought to be enough to show any human
being that we were not dealing with normal conditions on the Isthmus
and in Colombia. We were dealing with the government of an
irresponsible alien dictator, and with a condition of affairs on the
Isthmus itself which was marked by one uninterrupted series of
outbreaks and revolutions. As for the "consent of the governed"
theory, that absolutely justified our action; the people on the
Isthmus were the "governed"; they were governed by Colombia, without
their consent, and they unanimously repudiated the Colombian
government, and demanded that the United States build the canal.
I had done everything possible, personally and through Secretary Hay,
to persuade the Colombian Government to keep faith. Under the Hay-
Pauncefote Treaty, it was explicitly provided that the United States
should build the canal, should control, police and protect it, and
keep it open to the vessels of all nations on equal terms. We had
assumed the position of guarantor of the canal, including, of course,
the building of the canal, and of its peaceful use by all the world.
The enterprise was recognized everywhere as responding to an
international need. It was a mere travesty on justice to treat the
government in possession of the Isthmus as having the right—which
Secretary Cass forty-five years before had so emphatically repudiated—to close the gates of intercourse on one of the great highways of
the world. When we submitted to Colombia the Hay-Herran Treaty, it had
been settled that the time for delay, the time for permitting any
government of anti-social character, or of imperfect development, to
bar the work, had passed. The United States had assumed in connection
with the canal certain responsibilities not only to its own people but
to the civilized world, which imperatively demanded that there should
be no further delay in beginning the work. The Hay-Herran Treaty, if
it erred at all, erred in being overgenerous toward Colombia. The
people of Panama were delighted with the treaty, and the President of
Colombia, who embodied in his own person the entire government of
Colombia, had authorized the treaty to be made. But after the treaty
had been made the Colombia Government thought it had the matter in its
own hands; and the further thought, equally wicked and foolish, came
into the heads of the people in control at Bogota that they would
seize the French Company at the end of another year and take for
themselves the forty million dollars which the United States had
agreed to pay the Panama Canal Company.
President Maroquin, through his Minister, had agreed to the Hay-Herran
Treaty in January, 1903. He had the absolute power of an
unconstitutional dictator to keep his promise or break it. He
determined to break it. To furnish himself an excuse for breaking it
he devised the plan of summoning a Congress especially called to
reject the canal treaty. This the Congress—a Congress of mere puppets
—did, without a dissenting vote; and the puppets adjourned forthwith
without legislating on any other subject. The fact that this was a
mere sham, and that the President had entire power to confirm his own
treaty and act on it if he desired, was shown as soon as the
revolution took place, for on November 6 General Reyes of Colombia
addressed the American Minister at Bogota, on behalf of President
Maroquin, saying that "if the Government of the United States would
land troops and restore the Colombian sovereignty" the Colombian
President would "declare martial law; and, by virtue of vested
constitutional authority, when public order is disturbed, would
approve by decree the ratification of the canal treaty as signed; or,
if the Government of the United States prefers, would call an extra
session of the Congress—with new and friendly members—next May to
approve the treaty." This, of course, is proof positive that the
Colombian dictator had used his Congress as a mere shield, and a sham
shield at that, and it shows how utterly useless it would have been
further to trust his good faith in the matter.
When, in August, 1903, I became convinced that Colombia intended to
repudiate the treaty made the preceding January, under cover of
securing its rejection by the Colombian Legislature, I began carefully
to consider what should be done. By my direction, Secretary Hay,
personally and through the Minister at Bogota, repeatedly warned
Colombia that grave consequences might follow her rejection of the
treaty. The possibility of ratification did not wholly pass away until
the close of the session of the Colombian Congress on the last day of
October. There would then be two possibilities. One was that Panama
would remain quiet. In that case I was prepared to recommend to
Congress that we should at once occupy the Isthmus anyhow, and proceed
to dig the canal; and I had drawn out a draft of my message to this
effect.(1) But from the information I received, I deemed it likely
that there would be a revolution in Panama as soon as the Colombian
Congress adjourned without ratifying the treaty, for the entire
population of Panama felt that the immediate building of the canal was
of vital concern to their well-being. Correspondents of the different
newspapers on the Isthmus had sent to their respective papers widely
published forecasts indicating that there would be a revolution in
such event.
Moreover, on October 16, at the request of Lieutenant-General Young,
Captain Humphrey, and Lieutenant Murphy, two army officers who had
returned from the Isthmus, saw me and told me that there would
unquestionably be a revolution on the Isthmus, that the people were
unanimous in their criticism of the Bogota Government and their
disgust over the failure of that Government to ratify the treaty; and
that the revolution would probably take place immediately after the
adjournment of the Colombian Congress. They did not believe that it
would be before October 20, but they were confident that it would
certainly come at the end of October or immediately afterwards, when
the Colombian Congress had adjourned. Accordingly I directed the Navy
Department to station various ships within easy reach of the Isthmus,
to be ready to act in the event of need arising.
These ships were barely in time. On November 3 the revolution
occurred. Practically everybody on the Isthmus, including all the
Colombian troops that were already stationed there, joined in the
revolution, and there was no bloodshed. But on that same day four
hundred new Colombian troops were landed at Colon. Fortunately, the
gunboat Nashville, under Commander Hubbard, reached Colon almost
immediately afterwards, and when the commander of the Colombian forces
threatened the lives and property of the American citizens, including
women and children, in Colon, Commander Hubbard landed a few score
sailors and marines to protect them. By a mixture of firmness and tact
he not only prevented any assault on our citizens, but persuaded the
Colombian commander to reembark his troops for Cartagena. On the
Pacific side a Colombian gunboat shelled the City of Panama, with the
result of killing one Chinaman—the only life lost in the whole
affair.
No one connected with the American Government had any part in
preparing, inciting, or encouraging the revolution, and except for the
reports of our military and naval officers, which I forwarded to
Congress, no one connected with the Government had any previous
knowledge concerning the proposed revolution, except such as was
accessible to any person who read the newspapers and kept abreast of
current questions and current affairs. By the unanimous action of its
people, and without the firing of a shot, the state of Panama declared
themselves an independent republic. The time for hesitation on our
part had passed.
My belief then was, and the events that have occurred since have more
than justified it, that from the standpoint of the United States it
was imperative, not only for civil but for military reasons, that
there should be the immediate establishment of easy and speedy
communication by sea between the Atlantic and the Pacific. These
reasons were not of convenience only, but of vital necessity, and did
not admit of indefinite delay. The action of Colombia had shown not
only that the delay would be indefinite, but that she intended to
confiscate the property and rights of the French Panama Canal Company.
The report of the Panama Canal Committee of the Colombian Senate on
October 14, 1903, on the proposed treaty with the United States,
proposed that all consideration of the matter should be postponed
until October 31, 1904, when the next Colombian Congress would have
convened, because by that time the new Congress would be in condition
to determine whether through lapse of time the French company had not
forfeited its property and rights. "When that time arrives," the
report significantly declared, "the Republic, without any impediment,
will be able to contract and will be in more clear, more definite and
more advantageous possession, both legally and materially." The naked
meaning of this was that Colombia proposed to wait a year, and then
enforce a forfeiture of the rights and property of the French Panama
Company, so as to secure the forty million dollars our Government had
authorized as payment to this company. If we had sat supine, this
would doubtless have meant that France would have interfered to
protect the company, and we should then have had on the Isthmus, not
the company, but France; and the gravest international complications
might have ensued. Every consideration of international morality and
expediency, of duty to the Panama people, and of satisfaction of our
own national interests and honor, bade us take immediate action. I
recognized Panama forthwith on behalf of the United States, and
practically all the countries of the world immediately followed suit.
The State Department immediately negotiated a canal treaty with the
new Republic. One of the foremost men in securing the independence of
Panama, and the treaty which authorized the United States forthwith to
build the canal, was M. Philippe Bunau-Varilla, an eminent French
engineer formerly associated with De Lesseps and then living on the
Isthmus; his services to civilization were notable, and deserve the
fullest recognition.
From the beginning to the end our course was straightforward and in
absolute accord with the highest of standards of international
morality. Criticism of it can come only from misinformation, or else
from a sentimentality which represents both mental weakness and a
moral twist. To have acted otherwise than I did would have been on my
part betrayal of the interests of the United States, indifference to
the interests of Panama, and recreancy to the interests of the world
at large. Colombia had forfeited every claim to consideration; indeed,
this is not stating the case strongly enough: she had so acted that
yielding to her would have meant on our part that culpable form of
weakness which stands on a level with wickedness. As for me
personally, if I had hesitated to act, and had not in advance
discounted the clamor of those Americans who have made a fetish of
disloyalty to their country, I should have esteemed myself as
deserving a place in Dante's inferno beside the faint-hearted cleric
who was guilty of "il gran rifiuto." The facts I have given above are
mere bald statements from the record. They show that from the
beginning there had been acceptance of our right to insist on free
transit, in whatever form was best, across the Isthmus; and that
towards the end there had been a no less universal feeling that it was
our duty to the world to provide this transit in the shape of a canal—the resolution of the Pan-American Congress was practically a
mandate to this effect. Colombia was then under a one-man government,
a dictatorship, founded on usurpation of absolute and irresponsible
power. She eagerly pressed us to enter into an agreement with her, as
long as there was any chance of our going to the alternative route
through Nicaragua. When she thought we were committed, she refused to
fulfil the agreement, with the avowed hope of seizing the French
company's property for nothing and thereby holding us up. This was a
bit of pure bandit morality. It would have achieved its purpose had I
possessed as weak moral fiber as those of my critics who announced
that I ought to have confined my action to feeble scolding and
temporizing until the opportunity for action passed. I did not lift my
finger to incite the revolutionists. The right simile to use is
totally different. I simply ceased to stamp out the different
revolutionary fuses that were already burning. When Colombia committed
flagrant wrong against us, I considered it no part of my duty to aid
and abet her in her wrongdoing at our expense, and also at the expense
of Panama, of the French company, and of the world generally. There
had been fifty years of continuous bloodshed and civil strife in
Panama; because of my action Panama has now known ten years of such
peace and prosperity as she never before saw during the four centuries
of her existence—for in Panama, as in Cuba and Santo Domingo, it was
the action of the American people, against the outcries of the
professed apostles of peace, which alone brought peace. We gave to the
people of Panama self-government, and freed them from subjection to
alien oppressors. We did our best to get Colombia to let us treat her
with a more than generous justice; we exercised patience to beyond the
verge of proper forbearance. When we did act and recognize Panama,
Colombia at once acknowledged her own guilt by promptly offering to do
what we had demanded, and what she had protested it was not in her
power to do. But the offer came too late. What we would gladly have
done before, it had by that time become impossible for us honorably to
do; for it would have necessitated our abandoning the people of
Panama, our friends, and turning them over to their and our foes, who
would have wreaked vengeance on them precisely because they had shown
friendship to us. Colombia was solely responsible for her own
humiliation; and she had not then, and has not now, one shadow of
claim upon us, moral or legal; all the wrong that was done was done by
her. If, as representing the American people, I had not acted
precisely as I did, I would have been an unfaithful or incompetent
representative; and inaction at that crisis would have meant not only
indefinite delay in building the canal, but also practical admission
on our part that we were not fit to play the part on the Isthmus which
we had arrogated to ourselves. I acted on my own responsibility in the
Panama matter. John Hay spoke of this action as follows: "The action
of the President in the Panama matter is not only in the strictest
accordance with the principles of justice and equity, and in line with
all the best precedents of our public policy, but it was the only
course he could have taken in compliance with our treaty rights and
obligations."
I deeply regretted, and now deeply regret, the fact that the Colombian
Government rendered it imperative for me to take the action I took;
but I had no alternative, consistent with the full performance of my
duty to my own people, and to the nations of mankind. (For, be it
remembered, that certain other nations, Chile for example, will
probably benefit even more by our action than will the United States
itself.) I am well aware that the Colombian people have many fine
traits; that there is among them a circle of high-bred men and women
which would reflect honor on the social life of any country; and that
there has been an intellectual and literary development within this
small circle which partially atones for the stagnation and illiteracy
of the mass of the people; and I also know that even the illiterate
mass possesses many sterling qualities. But unfortunately in
international matters every nation must be judged by the action of its
Government. The good people in Colombia apparently made no effort,
certainly no successful effort, to cause the Government to act with
reasonable good faith towards the United States; and Colombia had to
take the consequences. If Brazil, or the Argentine, or Chile, had been
in possession of the Isthmus, doubtless the canal would have been
built under the governmental control of the nation thus controlling
the Isthmus, with the hearty acquiescence of the United States and of
all other powers. But in the actual fact the canal would not have been
built at all save for the action I took. If men choose to say that it
would have been better not to build it, than to build it as the result
of such action, their position, although foolish, is compatible with
belief in their wrongheaded sincerity. But it is hypocrisy, alike
odious and contemptible, for any man to say both that we ought to have
built the canal and that we ought not to have acted in the way we did
act.
After a sufficient period of wrangling, the Senate ratified the treaty
with Panama, and work on the canal was begun. The first thing that was
necessary was to decide the type of canal. I summoned a board of
engineering experts, foreign and native. They divided on their report.
The majority of the members, including all the foreign members,
approved a sea-level canal. The minority, including most of the
American members, approved a lock canal. Studying these conclusions, I
came to the belief that the minority was right. The two great traffic
canals of the world were the Suez and the Soo. The Suez Canal is a
sea-level canal, and it was the one best known to European engineers.
The Soo Canal, through which an even greater volume of traffic passes
every year, is a lock canal, and the American engineers were
thoroughly familiar with it; whereas, in my judgment, the European
engineers had failed to pay proper heed to the lessons taught by its
operation and management. Moreover, the engineers who were to do the
work at Panama all favored a lock canal. I came to the conclusion that
a sea-level canal would be slightly less exposed to damage in the
event of war; that the running expenses, apart from the heavy cost of
interest on the amount necessary to build it, would be less; and that
for small ships the time of transit would be less. But I also came to
the conclusion that the lock canal at the proposed level would cost
only about half as much to build and would be built in half the time,
with much less risk; that for large ships the transit would be
quicker, and that, taking into account the interest saved, the cost of
maintenance would be less. Accordingly I recommended to Congress, on
February 19, 1906, that a lock canal should be built, and my
recommendation was adopted. Congress insisted upon having it built by
a commission of several men. I tried faithfully to get good work out
of the commission, and found it quite impossible; for a many-headed
commission is an extremely poor executive instrument. At last I put
Colonel Goethals in as head of the commission. Then, when Congress
still refused to make the commission single-headed, I solved the
difficulty by an executive order of January 6, 1908, which practically
accomplished the object by enlarging the powers of the chairman,
making all the other members of the commission dependent upon him, and
thereby placing the work under one-man control. Dr. Gorgas had already
performed an inestimable service by caring for the sanitary conditions
so thoroughly as to make the Isthmus as safe as a health resort.
Colonel Goethals proved to be the man of all others to do the job. It
would be impossible to overstate what he has done. It is the greatest
task of any kind that any man in the world has accomplished during the
years that Colonel Goethals has been at work. It is the greatest task
of its own kind that has ever been performed in the world at all.
Colonel Goethals has succeeded in instilling into the men under him a
spirit which elsewhere has been found only in a few victorious armies.
It is proper and appropriate that, like the soldiers of such armies,
they should receive medals which are allotted each man who has served
for a sufficient length of time. A finer body of men has never been
gathered by any nation than the men who have done the work of building
the Panama Canal; the conditions under which they have lived and have
done their work have been better than in any similar work ever
undertaken in the tropics; they have all felt an eager pride in their
work; and they have made not only America but the whole world their
debtors by what they have accomplished.
__________
(1)See appendix at end of this chapter.
APPENDIX
Colombia: The Proposed Message to Congress
The rough draft of the message I had proposed to send Congress ran as
follows:
"The Colombian Government, through its representative here, and
directly in communication with our representative at Colombia, has
refused to come to any agreement with us, and has delayed action
so as to make it evident that it intends to make extortionate and
improper terms with us. The Isthmian Canal bill was, of course,
passed upon the assumption that whatever route was used, the
benefit to the particular section of the Isthmus through which it
passed would be so great that the country controlling this part
would be eager to facilitate the building of the canal. It is out
of the question to submit to extortion on the part of a
beneficiary of the scheme. All the labor, all the expense, all the
risk are to be assumed by us and all the skill shown by us. Those
controlling the ground through which the canal is to be put are
wholly incapable of building it.
"Yet the interest of international commerce generally and the
interest of this country generally demands that the canal should
be begun with no needless delay. The refusal of Colombia properly
to respond to our sincere and earnest efforts to come to an
agreement, or to pay heed to the many concessions we have made,
renders it in my judgment necessary that the United States should
take immediate action on one of two lines: either we should drop
the Panama canal project and immediately begin work on the
Nicaraguan canal, or else we should purchase all the rights of the
French company, and, without any further parley with Colombia,
enter upon the completion of the canal which the French company
has begun. I feel that the latter course is the one demanded by
the interests of this Nation, and I therefore bring the matter to
your attention for such action in the premises as you may deem
wise. If in your judgment it is better not to take such action,
then I shall proceed at once with the Nicaraguan canal.
"The reason that I advocate the action above outlined in regard to
the Panama canal is, in the first place, the strong testimony of
the experts that this route is the most feasible; and in the next
place, the impropriety from an international standpoint of
permitting such conduct as that to which Colombia seems to
incline. The testimony of the experts is very strong, not only
that the Panama route is feasible, but that in the Nicaragua route
we may encounter some unpleasant surprises, and that it is far
more difficult to forecast the result with any certainty as
regards this latter route. As for Colombia's attitude, it is
incomprehensible upon any theory of desire to see the canal built
upon the basis of mutual advantage alike to those building it and
to Colombia herself. All we desire to do is to take up the work
begun by the French Government and to finish it. Obviously it is
Colombia's duty to help towards such completion. We are most
anxious to come to an agreement with her in which most scrupulous
care should be taken to guard her interests and ours. But we
cannot consent to permit her to block the performance of the work
which it is so greatly to our interest immediately to begin and
carry through."
Shortly after this rough draft was dictated the Panama revolution
came, and I never thought of the rough draft again until I was accused
of having instigated the revolution. This accusation is preposterous
in the eyes of any one who knows the actual conditions at Panama. Only
the menace of action by us in the interest of Colombia kept down
revolution; as soon as Colombia's own conduct removed such menace, all
check on the various revolutionary movements (there were at least
three from entirely separate sources) ceased; and then an explosion
was inevitable, for the French company knew that all their property
would be confiscated if Colombia put through her plans, and the entire
people of Panama felt that if in disgust with Colombia's extortions
the United States turned to Nicaragua, they, the people of Panama,
would be ruined. Knowing the character of those then in charge of the
Colombian Government, I was not surprised at their bad faith; but I
was surprised at their folly. They apparently had no idea either of
the power of France or the power of the United States, and expected to
be permitted to commit wrong with impunity, just as Castro in
Venezuela had done. The difference was that, unless we acted in self-
defense, Colombia had it in her power to do us serious harm, and
Venezuela did not have such power. Colombia's wrongdoing, therefore,
recoiled on her own head. There was no new lesson taught; it ought
already to have been known to every one that wickedness, weakness, and
folly combined rarely fail to meet punishment, and that the intent to
do wrong, when joined to inability to carry the evil purpose to a
successful conclusion, inevitably reacts on the wrongdoer.
For the full history of the acquisition and building of the canal see
"The Panama Gateway," by Joseph Bucklin Bishop (Scribner's Sons). Mr.
Bishop has been for eight years secretary of the commission and is one
of the most efficient of the many efficient men to whose work on the
Isthmus America owes so much.
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