The Banana Wars: United States Intervention in the Caribbean, 1898-1934

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Rowman & Littlefield, 2002 - 265 mga pahina
The Banana Wars: United States Intervention in the Caribbean, 1898-1934 offers a sweeping panorama of America's tropical empire in the age spanned by the two Roosevelts and a detailed narrative of U.S. military intervention in the Caribbean and Mexico. In this new edition, Professor Langley provides an updated introduction, placing the scholarship in current historical context.

From the perspective of the Americans involved, the empire carved out by the banana warriors was a domain of bickering Latin American politicians, warring tropical countries, and lawless societies that the American military had been dispatched to police and tutor. Beginning with the Cuban experience, Langley examines the motives and consequences of two military occupations and the impact of those interventions on a professedly antimilitaristic American government and on its colonial agents in the Caribbean, the American military. The result of the Cuban experience, Langley argues, was reinforcement of the view that the American people did not readily accept prolonged military occupation of Caribbean countries.

In Nicaragua and Mexico, from 1909 to 1915, where economic and diplomatic pressures failed to bring the results desired in Washington, the American military became the political arbiters; in Hispaniola, bluejackets and marines took on the task of civilizing the tropics. In the late 1920s, with an imperial force largely of marines, the American military waged its last banana war in Nicaragua against a guerrilla leader named Augusto C. Sandino.

Langley not only narrates the history of America's tropical empire, but fleshes out the personalities of this imperial era, including Leonard Wood and Fred Funston, U.S. Army, who left their mark on Cuba and Vera Cruz; William F. Fullam and William Banks Caperton, U.S. Navy, who carried out their missions imbued with old-school beliefs about their role as policemen in disorderly places; Smedley Butler and L.W.T. Waller, Sr., U.S.M.C., who left the most lasting imprint of A

 

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LEONARD WOOD AND THE WHITE MANS BURDEN
3
TR AND THE USE OF FORCE
13
THE SECOND CUBAN INTERVENTION 1906
27
CUBA OCCUPIED
37
TEACH THEM TO ELECT GOOD MEN
47
THE NICARAGUAN MENACE
49
THE NICARAGUAN WAR 19101912
59
THE MEXICAN CRISIS
71
THE PACIFICATION OF HISPANIOLA 1
127
THE PACIFICATION OF HISPANIOLA 2
143
THE LAST BANANA WAR
159
INTERREGNUM 19211925
161
THE SECOND NICARAGUAN CIVIL WAR 19251927
175
THE SANDING CHASE
187
THE LAST BANANA WAR
199
EPILOGUE
213

VERACRUZ
85
THE RULERS OF VERACRUZ
97
CIVILIZING THE TROPICS
109
TURBULENT HISPANIOLA
111
NOTES
221
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
249
INDEX
255
Copyright

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Tungkol sa may-akda (2002)

Lester D. Langley is the author of numerous books about the relationship of the United States with Latin America and the Caribbean. He also serves as general editor of the University of Georgia Press Series, "The United States and the Americas."

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