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#2
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The Spooner Act gave the President $40 million to purchase the New Panama
Canal Company, and the power to negotiate a treaty with Colombia. The former was easy, the latter impossible. The first treaty, the Hay-Herran treaty, gave Colombia $10 million and $250,000 annually for the duration of a 100-year lease on a six-mile wide strip of the isthmus, and was rejected by the ever-changing Colombian government. What happened next is described by Theodore Roosevelt in History of the Panama Canal by Ira Bennett as : Panama wanted to sell the land to America, but Colombia refused. Panama planned a revolution, and Roosevelt sent a battleship, the Nashville to protect "American lives in Panama", which meant that no other country was going to land on the isthmus (invasion by land was impossible because of the impenetrable Panamanian jungle). Panama declared its independence from Colombia, and America recognized their declaration, else Colombia would have reconquered the area, endangering American interests. Philippe Bunau-Varilla was made American ambassador for Panama by telegram after the independence, and consequently wrote up a treaty between Panama and America with Senator John Hay - the Hay-Bunau-Varilla treaty - which was ratified by the new Panamanian Government in 1903, and by the American Senate in early 1904. "Skipper" wrote in message ... Well worth the read: http://MondeDiplo.com/1999/08/06panama -- Skipper |
#3
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![]() Smith Smithers wrote: The Spooner Act gave the President $40 million to purchase the New Panama Canal Company, and the power to negotiate a treaty with Colombia. The former was easy, the latter impossible. The first treaty, the Hay-Herran treaty, gave Colombia $10 million and $250,000 annually for the duration of a 100-year lease on a six-mile wide strip of the isthmus, and was rejected by the ever-changing Colombian government. What happened next is described by Theodore Roosevelt in History of the Panama Canal by Ira Bennett as : Panama wanted to sell the land to America, but Colombia refused. Panama planned a revolution, and Roosevelt sent a battleship, the Nashville to protect "American lives in Panama", which meant that no other country was going to land on the isthmus (invasion by land was impossible because of the impenetrable Panamanian jungle). Panama declared its independence from Colombia, and America recognized their declaration, else Colombia would have reconquered the area, endangering American interests. Philippe Bunau-Varilla was made American ambassador for Panama by telegram after the independence, and consequently wrote up a treaty between Panama and America with Senator John Hay - the Hay-Bunau-Varilla treaty - which was ratified by the new Panamanian Government in 1903, and by the American Senate in early 1904. Stop trying to confuse the issue with history. I know for a fact that Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Jane Fonda, Michael Moore, John Kerry, and Martin Luther King all secretly conspired to cut a back-door deal with Panama.......simply to **** off the extreme right. I know that's so 'cuz I read it in rec.boats, and there are boats in the Panama Canal. :-) |
#4
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Chuck,
That was in the 2nd paragraph that I didn't cut and paste. wrote in message oups.com... Smith Smithers wrote: The Spooner Act gave the President $40 million to purchase the New Panama Canal Company, and the power to negotiate a treaty with Colombia. The former was easy, the latter impossible. The first treaty, the Hay-Herran treaty, gave Colombia $10 million and $250,000 annually for the duration of a 100-year lease on a six-mile wide strip of the isthmus, and was rejected by the ever-changing Colombian government. What happened next is described by Theodore Roosevelt in History of the Panama Canal by Ira Bennett as : Panama wanted to sell the land to America, but Colombia refused. Panama planned a revolution, and Roosevelt sent a battleship, the Nashville to protect "American lives in Panama", which meant that no other country was going to land on the isthmus (invasion by land was impossible because of the impenetrable Panamanian jungle). Panama declared its independence from Colombia, and America recognized their declaration, else Colombia would have reconquered the area, endangering American interests. Philippe Bunau-Varilla was made American ambassador for Panama by telegram after the independence, and consequently wrote up a treaty between Panama and America with Senator John Hay - the Hay-Bunau-Varilla treaty - which was ratified by the new Panamanian Government in 1903, and by the American Senate in early 1904. Stop trying to confuse the issue with history. I know for a fact that Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Jane Fonda, Michael Moore, John Kerry, and Martin Luther King all secretly conspired to cut a back-door deal with Panama.......simply to **** off the extreme right. I know that's so 'cuz I read it in rec.boats, and there are boats in the Panama Canal. :-) |
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