The American foreign policy statement that provided the basis for Roosevelt's military intervention in Latin America. Uncle Sam, as armed soldier, standing between European powers (Brit., France ...
In a message to Congress in December 1823, Monroe stated that the United States would not tolerate European intervention in the Western Hemisphere. This became known as the Monroe Doctrine. Legacy: ...
Its expanding claims to various land and maritime territories in the region have frequently been likened to America’s own Monroe Doctrine, which declared in 1823 that any attempt by European ...
US President James Monroe announced the doctrine in 1823 US Secretary of State John Kerry on Monday declared that a nearly 200-year-old policy which had governed Washington's relations with Latin ...
The Monroe Doctrine of 1823 said, as President Monroe issued it in that year, that Europeans should stay out of Latin America, that the Americas were essentially an American preserve. People ...
The Monroe Doctrine took form in 1823, and it remained central to American grand strategy throughout the 20th century. The Doctrine opposed European colonialism in the Western Hemisphere ...
In 1823, during his annual address to the U.S. Congress, President James Monroe proclaimed a new U.S. foreign policy initiative that became known as the "Monroe Doctrine." In 1859, abolitionist ...
Log-in to bookmark & organize content - it's free! On December 2, 1823, President James Monroe introduced The Monroe Doctrine during his seventh annual address to Congress. In the doctrine ...