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6 December 1904
To the Senate and House of Representatives:
The
Nation continues to enjoy noteworthy prosperity. Such prosperity
is of course primarily due to the high individual average of our
citizenship, taken together with our great natural resources;
but an important factor therein is the working of our long-continued
governmental policies. The people have emphatically expressed
their approval of the principles underlying these policies, and
their desire that these principles be kept substantially unchanged,
although of course applied in a progressive spirit to meet changing
conditions.
....
Foreign
Policy
In treating of our foreign policy and of the attitude that this
great Nation should assume in the world at large, it is absolutely
necessary to consider the Army and the Navy, and the Congress,
through which the thought of the Nation finds its expression,
should keep ever vividly in mind the fundamental fact that it
is impossible to treat our foreign policy, whether this policy
takes shape in the effort to secure justice for others or justice
for ourselves, save as conditioned upon the attitude we are willing
to take toward our Army, and especially toward our Navy. It is
not
merely unwise, it is contemptible, for a nation, as for an
individual, to use high-sounding language to proclaim its purposes,
or to take positions which are ridiculous if unsupported by potential
force, and then to refuse to provide this force. If there is no
intention of providing and keeping the force necessary to back
up a strong attitude, then it is far better not to assume such
an attitude.
The steady aim of this Nation, as of all enlightened nations,
should be to strive to bring ever nearer the day when there shall
prevail throughout the world the peace of justice. There are kinds
of peace which are highly undesirable, which are in the long run
as destructive as any war. Tyrants and oppressors have many times
made a wilderness and called it peace. Many times peoples who
were slothful or timid or shortsighted, who had been enervated
by ease or by luxury, or misled by false teachings, have shrunk
in unmanly fashion from doing duty that was stern and that needed
self-sacrifice, and have sought to hide from their own minds their
shortcomings, their ignoble motives, by calling them love of peace.
The peace of tyrannous terror, the peace of craven weakness, the
peace of injustice, all these should be shunned as we shun unrighteous
war. The goal to set before us as a nation, the goal which should
be set before all mankind, is the attainment of the peace of justice,
of the peace which comes when each nation is not merely safe-guarded
in its own rights, but scrupulously recognizes and performs its
duty toward others. Generally peace tells for righteousness; but
if there is conflict between the two, then our fealty is due first
to the cause of righteousness. Unrighteous wars are common, and
unrighteous peace is rare; but both should be shunned. The right
of freedom and the responsibility for the exercise of that right
can not be divorced. One of our great poets has well and finely
said that freedom is not a gift that tarries long in the hands
of cowards. Neither does it tarry long in the hands of those too
slothful, too dishonest, or too unintelligent to exercise it.
The eternal vigilance which is the price of liberty must be exercised,
sometimes to guard against outside foes; although of course far
more often to guard against our own selfish or thoughtless shortcomings.
If
these self-evident truths are kept before us, and only if they
are so kept before us, we shall have a clear idea of what our
foreign policy in its larger aspects should be. It is our duty
to remember that a nation has no more right to do injustice to
another nation, strong or weak, than an individual has to do injustice
to another individual; that the same moral law applies in one
case as in the other. But we must also remember that it is as
much the duty of the Nation to guard its own rights and its own
interests as it is the duty of the individual so to do. Within
the Nation the individual has now delegated this right to the
State, that is, to the representative of all the individuals,
and it is a maxim of the law that for every wrong there is a remedy.
But in international law we have not advanced by any means as
far as we have advanced in municipal law. There is as yet no judicial
way of enforcing a right in international law. When one nation
wrongs another or wrongs many others, there is no tribunal before
which the wrongdoer can be brought. Either it is necessary supinely
to acquiesce in the wrong, and thus put a premium upon brutality
and aggression, or else it is necessary for the aggrieved nation
valiantly to stand up for its rights. Until some method is devised
by which there shall be a degree of international control over
offending nations, it would be a wicked thing for the most civilized
powers, for those with most sense of international obligations
and with keenest and most generous appreciation of the difference
between right and wrong, to disarm. If the great civilized nations
of the present day should completely disarm, the result would
mean an immediate recrudescence of barbarism in one form or another.
Under any circumstances a sufficient armament would have to be
kept up to serve the purposes of international police; and until
international cohesion and the sense of international duties and
rights are far more advanced than at present, a nation desirous
both of securing respect for itself and of doing good to others
must have a force adequate for the work which it feels is allotted
to it as its part of the general world duty. Therefore it follows
that a self-respecting, just, and far-seeing nation should on
the one hand endeavor by every means to aid in the development
of the various movements which tend to provide substitutes for
war, which tend to render nations in their actions toward one
another, and indeed toward their own peoples, more responsive
to the general sentiment of humane and civilized mankind; and
on the other hand that it should keep prepared, while scrupulously
avoiding wrongdoing itself, to repel any wrong, and in exceptional
cases to take action which in a more advanced stage of international
relations would come under the head of the exercise of the international
police. A great free people owes it to itself and to all mankind
not to sink into helplessness before the powers of evil.
Arbitration
Treaties--Second Hague Conference
We are in every way endeavoring to help on, with cordial good
will, every movement which will tend to bring us into more friendly
relations with the rest of mankind. In pursuance of this policy
I shall shortly lay before the Senate treaties of arbitration
with all powers which are willing to enter into these treaties
with us. It is not possible at this period of the world’s
development to agree to arbitrate all matters, but there are many
matters of possible difference between us and other nations which
can be thus arbitrated. Furthermore, at the request of the Interparliamentary
Union, an eminent body composed of practical statesmen from all
countries, I have asked the Powers to join with this Government
in a second Hague conference, at which it is hoped that the work
already so happily begun at The Hague may be carried some steps
further toward completion. This carries out the desire expressed
by the first Hague conference itself.
Policy
Toward Other Nations of the Western Hemisphere
It is not true that the United States feels any land hunger or
entertains any projects as regards the other nations of the Western
Hemisphere save such as are for their welfare. All that this country
desires is to see the neighboring countries stable, orderly, and
prosperous. Any country whose people conduct themselves well can
count upon our hearty friendship. If a nation shows that it knows
how to act with reasonable efficiency and decency in social and
political matters, if it keeps order and pays its obligations,
it need fear no interference from the United States. Chronic wrongdoing,
or an impotence which results in a general loosening of the ties
of civilized society, may in America, as elsewhere, ultimately
require intervention by some civilized nation, and in the Western
Hemisphere the adherence of the United States to the Monroe Doctrine
may force the United States, however reluctantly, in flagrant
cases of such wrongdoing or impotence, to the exercise of an international
police power. If every country washed by the Caribbean Sea would
show the progress in stable and just civilization which with the
aid of the Platt Amendment Cuba has shown since our troops left
the island, and which so many of the republics in both Americas
are constantly and brilliantly showing, all question of interference
by this Nation with their affairs would be at an end. Our interests
and those of our southern neighbors are in reality identical.
They have great natural riches, and if within their borders the
reign of law and justice obtains, prosperity is sure to come to
them. While they thus obey the primary laws of civilized society
they may rest assured that they will be treated by us in a spirit
of cordial and helpful sympathy. We would interfere with them
only in the last resort, and then only if it became evident that
their inability or unwillingness to do justice at home and abroad
had violated the rights of the United States or had invited foreign
aggression to the detriment of the entire body of American nations.
It is a mere truism to say that every nation, whether in America
or anywhere else, which desires to maintain its freedom, its independence,
must ultimately realize that the right of such independence can
not be separated from the responsibility of making good use of
it.
In
asserting the Monroe Doctrine, in taking such steps as we have
taken in regard to Cuba, Venezuela, and Panama, and in endeavoring
to circumscribe the theater of war in the Far East, and to secure
the open door in China, we have acted in our own interest as well
as in the interest of humanity at large. There are, however, cases
in which, while our own interests are not greatly involved, strong
appeal is made to our sympathies. Ordinarily it is very much wiser
and more useful for us to concern ourselves with striving for
our own moral and material betterment here at home than to concern
ourselves with trying to better the condition of things in other
nations. We have plenty of sins of our own to war against, and
under ordinary circumstances we can do more for the general uplifting
of humanity by striving with heart and soul to put a stop to civic
corruption, to brutal lawlessness and violent race prejudices
here at home than by passing resolutions and wrongdoing elsewhere.
Nevertheless there are occasional crimes committed on so vast
a scale and of such peculiar horror as to make us doubt whether
it is not our manifest duty to endeavor at least to show our disapproval
of the deed and our sympathy with those who have suffered by it.
The cases must be extreme in which such a course is justifiable.
There must be no effort made to remove the mote from our brother’s
eye if we refuse to remove the beam from our own. But in extreme
cases action may be justifiable and proper. What form the action
shall take must depend upon the circumstances of the case; that
is, upon the degree of the atrocity and upon our power to remedy
it. The cases in which we could interfere by force of arms as
we interfered to put a stop to intolerable conditions in Cuba
are necessarily very few. Yet it is not to be expected that a
people like ours, which in spite of certain very obvious shortcomings,
nevertheless as a whole shows by its consistent practice its belief
in the principles of civil and religious liberty and of orderly
freedom, a people among whom even the worst crime, like the crime
of lynching, is never more than sporadic, so that individuals
and not classes are molested in their fundamental rights--it is
inevitable that such a nation should desire eagerly to give expression
to its horror on an occasion like that of the massacre of the
Jews in Kishenef, or when it witnesses such systematic and long-extended
cruelty and oppression as the cruelty and oppression of which
the Armenians have been the victims, and which have won for them
the indignant pity of the civilized world.
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