On September 29th 1906, the United States assumed military control of
Cuba under the Platt Amendment, following
the reelection of an American puppet government, which caused a nationalist
uprising.
By that time, the US had a long history of interest and involvement
in Cuba. In 1848 President James Polk tried to
buy Cuba for $100 million, but Spain refused. After that, southern
planters began to create and fund private militias,
called filibusters, to invade Cuba or to induce the federal government
to purchase the island from the Spanish in the
hopes of expanding their agricultural, slave sytem into the Caribbean.
One such efforts occurred in 1849, when General Narcisco Lopez attempted
to invade the island, with an army made
up primarily of veterans of the Mexican War, who were induced to join
with promises of "plunder, women, drink, and
tobacco" and offers of a $1000 bonus and 160 acres of land if the plan
were to succeed. The first attempt was foiled
when the U.S. navy blockaded his troops, but in August 1851, he launched
another invasion of Cuba with 500
mercenaries, while the federal agents stationed in New Orleans looked
the other way. However, in a preview of what
would happen in April 1961, the filibusters were routed and 50, including
Lopez, were executed.
Even after that failure, southerners still dreamed of integrating Cuba,
with its plantations and sugar trade, into their
agricultural economy. In 1854, with President Franklin Pierce adamant
about acquiring the island, the American
ministers to Spain, France and Britain met in Ostend, Belgium and issued
the so-called Ostend Manifesto, which
declared that the U.S. would be willing to pay Spain up to $120 million
to Spain for Cuba, but if Madrid refused then
Washington was justified "by every law, human and divine" to simply
take it. Word of Ostend leaked out, however,
and, amid the Kansas-Nebraska Crisis, there were howls of protest from
free-soilers and abolitionists and the plan
was scotched as critics attacked the "southern slave conspiracy." By
1860, with the ascendancy of the Republicans
and election of Lincoln, the plan was dead.
Just after the Civil War, however, Americans saw new opportunities in
Cuba. Beginning in the late 1860s, liberation
fighters opened a new battle for independence, with U.S. backing. Under
the rhetoric of anti-imperialism, American
supported the Cubans, principally because they hoped that Spain's ouster
would put them in a position to dominate
the island. Thus, when Jose Marti and the rebels intensified the fight
against Spain in the 1890s, the U.S. supported
the insurgents efforts, politically and financially.
The rebels, however, were wary of American motives. Marti had referred
to his time in the U.S. as "living in the belly of
the beast" and saw America as an aggressive and imperial nation "full
of hate" and "spiritual coarseness." Marti's
apprehension was well-founded. In 1898 the U.S. intervened in Cuba
to oust the Spanish. Instead of turning over the
country to the Cubans, however, the Americans denied the island its
independence, claiming it was not ready for or
capable of self-government and would need American supervision and
control in the interim, precisely the argument
being made today in Iraq. American intervention in 1898 was thus directed
as much against Cuban independence
as against Spanish imperialism, as the prominent historian Louis Perez
has maintained.
In truth, the U.S. had over $200 million of investments in Cuba and
feared the emergence of a nationalist
government there. Accordingly, Washington set up a protectorate over
the island, with a military governor, General
Leonard Wood, wielding summary power over Cubans. Then in 1901 the
Secretary of War, Elihu Root, and a
Connecticut Senator, Orville Platt, wrote the Platt Amendment. This
law prohibited the Cubans from making treaties
with other countries and it said that, if Cuba did not protect "life,
property, and individual liberty"–essentially meaning
American capital investments and physical plants–the US had the right
to intervene unilaterally there. Two years
later, the U.S. built a naval base at Guantanamo Bay and claimed rights
to it in perpetuity. At the same time,
American investement in sugar, tobacco, mining, transportation, utilities,
and cattle ranching grew steadily.
This economic penetration, coupled with the collaboration of Cuban puppet
leaders, caused angry Cuban
nationalists to revolt in September 1906 after the rigged reelection
and inauguration of an American puppet, Tomas
Estrada Palma, who was described as "more plattish than Platt himself."
President Teddy Roosevelt was furious at
the nationalists Cuba and wished he could "wipe its people off the
face of the earth."
Roosevelt settled for less, sending American troops to the island on
Sept. 29th , under provisions of the Platt
Amendment, to assume military control and restore "law and order."–and
above all to crush the uprising.
Cuba remained a client of the U.S. from then until January 1st 1959,
when Fidel Castro's revolution ended over a
half-century of American imperialism on the island, imperialism that
could be traced to U.S. intervention at the turn of
the century and enforced by military campaigns such as the invasion
of September 1906.
For more information on this subject, consult the works of Louis Perez,
especially Cuba Under the Platt Amendment.
Previous entries now can be found at: http://vi.uh.edu/pages/buzzmat/historythey.html