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An Imperialist and the First World War: the Case of Albert J. Beveridge
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2009
Extract
A difficulty which faces students of American thought about foreign affairs is the relation between general principles and views of the world on the one hand and attitudes to specific issues of policy on the other. Since the pioneering work of Robert E. Osgood, historians have emphasized the important distinction between those whose primary concern is the protection of American national interests within the existing system of power politics, and those who seek above all to reform the international order in accordance with American liberal ideals. In recent years much attention has been paid to the influence of economic considerations, particularly the desire to promote American foreign trade. However, the relative weight attached to national security, liberal idealism and American economic interests overseas by individual Americans does not entirely account for their differing attitudes to particular questions. For in crucial debates, such as those over the Philippines and the League of Nations, each of these considerations was invoked by some on both sides of the argument. To some extent, the older and more superficial distinction between ‘isolationism’ and ‘anti-isolationism’, while concealing the variety of premises upon which either position could be founded, provides a better basis for predicting the readiness of Americans to favour particular foreign enterprises or commitments. Yet adherence even to these broad traditions has been far from consistent. Thus, while it would be natural to assume that the imperialists of 1898–1900 were more likely than their opponents to favour American intervention in the First World War, it is not clear that this was the case.
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References
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70 ‘Our business men propose to build up a power which will be our chief antagonist in the trade contests of the future’, he wrote concerning the loans to the Allies. ‘It is…so shortsighted, so foolish, and so wicked that it is difficult for my mind to comprehend it.’ Beveridge to Shaffer, 6 March 1916.
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79 Shaffer to Beveridge, 14 July 1915 (Box 280); Lorimer to Beveridge, 30 March 1916.
80 Beveridge to Shaffer, 4 May 1916 (Box 281).
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95 This was also, of course, the time of the Boer War. Like most Americans, including Roosevelt eventually, Beveridge was not impressed with either the efficiency or the justice of the British campaign in South Africa. The intensity and persistence of Beveridge's animus, however, suggests that while the Boer War provided additional justification for his Anglophobia it was not sufficient to account for it.
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