Glimpses of Wilsonianism [electronic resource] : United States involvement in Nicaragua during the Coolidge era /
Abstract (Summary)
Glimpses of Wilsonianism:
United States Involvement in Nicaragua during the Coolidge Era
Steven R. Hall
The military occupation of Nicaragua was one of the Calvin Coolidge
administration’s most unpopular foreign policies. Upon the death of President Warren G.
Harding in 1923, Coolidge inherited the White House and a Nicaraguan withdrawal plan
set up years earlier. As planned, the United States monitored the Nicaraguan national
elections in 1924, and withdrew its occupation force in 1925. When the country collapsed
into civil war a few months later, the Coolidge administration ordered the Marines back
into Nicaragua to restore order. Coolidge and his Secretary of State, Frank B. Kellogg,
argued the occupation was necessary to protect American economic interests, defend
canal rights, and hinder “Bolshevik” Mexico’s attempts to influence the outcome of the
Nicaraguan civil war. For years historians have presented many of the original arguments
as facts in various monographs of the Nicaraguan occupation. This thesis challenges the
validity of these long-held beliefs and presents the Nicaraguan occupation as a discreet
experiment in Wilsonianism instead of a mission of self-interests.
Careful study of the economics trends and the political situations within
Nicaragua and the United States during this era reveal that the public justifications for the
occupation were far less significant than Coolidge and his supporters admitted. When
compared to other Latin American nations, financial investments in Nicaragua were
small. The probability of the United States building a canal during the 1920s was also
minute given the results of engineering studies conducted by United States government in
the years before Coolidge entered the White House. The Mexican interference had no
serious Bolshevik element and was not taken seriously by critics then or now. The
question then remains: why did the United States invest so much time and effort in a
country with limited economic, strategic, or political significance?
Because of isolationist tendencies in the general American populace, the Coolidge
publicly justified involvement in Nicaragua purely in terms of American interests, yet
there was a quietly concerted effort to stabilize the country by applying the ideals of
Wilsonianism, ideals long thought missing in 1920s foreign policy. The pursuit of the
rule of law through free elections, peace talks, disarmament, and multilateral treaties
reveal that the Coolidge administration thought and acted in ideological terms, and not
just economically and strategically-driven realism. Instead of supporting the factions with
the strongest military, Coolidge and his men in the state department pursued policies that
fought to keep Nicaraguan elections free and legitimate even when it caused temporary
upheavals within Nicaragua. Long after Coolidge had left office, the United States
remained in Nicaragua. Henry Stimson, Coolidge’s trusted advisor and Nicaraguan
policymaker, was appointed Herbert Hoover’s Secretary of State and kept the United
States on the Coolidge path in that area until 1933. It was a noble and dedicated
experiment in Wilsonianism, an experiment that, even though it failed, should not be
minimized or forgotten.
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:West Virginia University
School Location:USA - West Virginia
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:coolidge calvin 1872 1933 intervention international law political science relations
ISBN:
Date of Publication: