atpollard
Well-Known Member
The Monroe Doctrine, declared by President James Monroe in 1823, was a U.S. foreign policy stating the Americas were closed to further European colonization, that European interference in the hemisphere would be seen as hostile, and that the U.S. would not meddle in European affairs, establishing separate spheres of influence and becoming a cornerstone for U.S. involvement and dominance in Latin America. Its core principles are non-colonization, non-intervention, and separate American/European spheres, profoundly shaping U.S. expansion and global role.
Key Principles (1823)
Historical Context & Purpose
Impact on U.S. Foreign Policy
(This was nibbled at the edges in another discussion, so let’s open it up and address it head on.)
Key Principles (1823)
- Separate Spheres: The political systems of the Americas (republican) and Europe (monarchical) are fundamentally different and should remain separate.
- Non-Colonization: The Western Hemisphere is no longer open to European colonization.
- Non-Interference: The U.S. would not interfere in European wars or internal affairs, and any European attempt to control or oppress nations in the Americas would be viewed as unfriendly to the U.S..
Historical Context & Purpose
- Post-Colonial Americas: Newly independent Latin American nations faced threats from European powers (like Spain and its allies) seeking to restore colonial control.
- U.S. Security & Trade: The U.S. sought to prevent European powers from expanding influence, which threatened its own security and free trade opportunities in the region.
- British Alignment: Great Britain, also favoring free trade and opposing Spanish recolonization, initially proposed a joint declaration, but U.S. Secretary of State John Quincy Adams insisted on an independent American statement to assert U.S. sovereignty.
Impact on U.S. Foreign Policy
- Justification for Intervention: Later presidents, notably Theodore Roosevelt (Roosevelt Corollary), expanded the doctrine, justifying U.S. intervention in Latin America to maintain stability, leading to economic and political involvement.
- American Hegemony: It asserted U.S. dominance in the Western Hemisphere, becoming a guiding principle for U.S. grand strategy throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.
(This was nibbled at the edges in another discussion, so let’s open it up and address it head on.)