In 1823, a bankrupt republic with a tiny navy drew a line across the Atlantic and told the world's most powerful empires: Come no further.
When President James Monroe delivered his seventh annual message to Congress on December 2, 1823, few recognized the revolutionary declaration buried within his routine administrative report. In fewer than 1,200 words, Monroe and his Secretary of State John Quincy Adams redefined the global order, asserting that the Western Hemisphere was closed to European colonization and that any European intervention in the Americas would be considered "dangerous" to U.S. interests.
The declaration was audacious. The United States possessed neither the military power nor the diplomatic standing to enforce such sweeping claims. European politicians dismissed it as the pretentious boasting of an upstart republic. Yet the Monroe Doctrine would become the most enduring principle in American foreign policy, shaping two centuries of hemispheric relations and global power dynamics.
The Monroe Doctrine: How 1823 Divided Two Worlds tells the complete story of this transformative policy—from its origins in the secret diplomatic intrigues of post-Napoleonic Europe to its controversial applications in the 21st century.
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This meticulously researched narrative brings to life the personalities who shaped the doctrine: the aging Monroe, the last of the Revolutionary generation; the brilliant and combative John Quincy Adams; the pragmatic George Canning; and the Latin American leaders who saw the doctrine as both a protection and a threat.
Through vivid storytelling grounded in primary sources, this book reveals how a principle designed to protect Latin American independence became the primary justification for American intervention in Latin American affairs. It examines the gap between American rhetoric about freedom and self-determination and American practice of supporting dictatorships and engineering coups.
The Monroe Doctrine divided the world into two spheres. Two centuries later, we're still living with the consequences.
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"A masterful narrative that illuminates how a defensive doctrine became an offensive weapon and why that transformation matters today."
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