The Politics of Intervention
Restoration and Withdrawal 245 American interests that have placed the country where it is now, and which makes it feel the lack ...
246 THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION British property before the Americans withdrew.^13 Opinions in London were divided; one officia ...
Restoration and Withdrawal 247 Steinhart cabled Magoon that if the United States wanted to influence Cuban domestic affairs in t ...
248 THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION secured." The Provisional Government had enacted many laws "adapted to the government of a Repu ...
Restoration and Withdrawal 249 The Provisional Governor readily admitted that, for several reasons, neither party politics nor A ...
250 THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION get them to do it, is a question I have vainly attempted to answer for the past year. Magoon re ...
Restoration and Withdrawal 251 velt had retreated even further from the Speck von Sternbeng plan. In a letter to Elihu Root, he ...
(^252) THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION measures necessary to develop them. Then Roosevelt put the Cuban occupation in its broad his ...
Restoration and Withdrawal 253 Cubans and his old officers hoped that at the next interĀ vention Wood would return to Cuba and c ...
254 THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION to have been always negotiable. Perhaps they were selected as possible collaborators in a futur ...
Restoration and Withdrawal 255 stronger. Prominent among the Liberal victors were eight generals of the Constitutional Army: Enr ...
256 THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION To avoid being governed by others, they must prove their ability and desire to govern themselve ...
Restoration and Withdrawal 257 thanks for a job well done.^46 The Havana press was equally laudatory, though no Cuban journal su ...
258 THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION and bumboats flying the Cuban colors, and from the city's rooftops handkerchiefs waved and whis ...
Restoration and Withdrawal 259 great moral and material progress, Roosevelt had not learned that partisan politics, "good" and " ...
260 THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION one another, as if each Cuban was the natural enemy of all other Cubans."^55 Varona thought the ...
Restoration and Withdrawal 261 progressive, and dedicated to service in the cause of national regeneration," Magoon paved the wa ...
262 THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION the Provincial Government was unable to take advantage of the security given it by the Army of ...
Restoration and Withdrawal 263 the native political class as unprincipled exploiters of the people, men whose influence must be ...
264 THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION were willing to follow a more expedient course: to give the politicos the armed forces they wan ...
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