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HARVARD COLLEGE 
LIBRARY 






FROM THE LIBRARY OF 

W. CAMERON FORBES 

CLASS OF 1892 





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ADDRESSES ON 
INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 



BY 

ELIHUROOT 



OOLLIOIBD AND BDITIID BT 

BOBEBT BACON 

AMD 

JAMES BBOWN SCOTT 




CAMBBIDGE 
HABVABD UNIVEBSITY PRESS 

LONDON: HOMFHRXT IlILKmD 
> Vtantaa 

1916 



VS 6 55?. 75 
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I LIBRARY 




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BABTABD maTBBSITT : 



CONTENTS 

PAOI 

Introdugtobt Note vii 

>r The Need of Popular Understanding of Interna- 
tional Law 8 v^ 

An Article contributed to the first issue of the American 
Journal fif IniemaHonal Law, 1907. 

The Real Questions under the Japanese Treatt and 

THE San Francisco School Board Resolxttion . . 7 
Presidential Address at the first annual meeting of the Ameri- 
can Society of International Law, Washington, D. C.» Afxil 
19, 1907. 

^N The Sanction of International Law 85 v*^ 

Presidential Address at the second annual meeting of the 
American Society of Intemati<mal Law, Washington, D. C, 
Ainil 84, 1906. 

N) The Relations between International Tribunaib of 
Arbitration and the Jurisdiction of National 

Courts 

Presidential Address at the third annual meeting of the 
American Society of International Law, Washington, D. C, 
Ainil 88, 1909. 

The Basis of Protection to Citizens Residing Abroad 43 
Presidential Address at the fourth annual meeting of the 
American Society of International Law, Washington, D. C, 
April 88, 1910. 

The Function of Private Codification in Interna- 
tional Law 57 

Presidential Address at the fifth annual meeting of the 
American Society of International Law, Washington, D. C, 
April 87, 1911. 

The Real Significance OF THE Declaration OF London . 78 
Presidential Address at the sixth annual meeting of ^e 
American Society of International Law, Washington, D. U., 
April 85, 1912. 

Francis Lieber 89 

Presidential Address at the seventh annual meeting of the 
American Society of International Law, Washington, D. C, 
AprQ 84, 1918. 






iv CONTENTS 

Th£ Real Monbob Doctrine 105 

Presidential Address at the eighth annual meeting of the 
Ammcan Society of International Law» Washington, D. C, 
April 22, 1914. 

^-^ Address at a Conference of Teachers of Interna- 
tional Law 125 

Opening Bemarks at a conference hdd in Washington, D.C., 
April 29-25, 1914, under the auspices of the Ammcan Society 
of International Law. 

^ The Hague Peace Conferences 129 

Address in the National Arbitration and Peace Congress, 
New York, April 15, 1907. 

\ vV/ The Importance of Judicial Settlebcent 145 

Opening Address at the International Conference of the 
Ammcan Society tot Judicial Settlement of International 
Disputes, Washington, D.C., December 15, 1910. 

>i^ Nobel Peace Prize Address 15S 

A Speech prepared in aoc^tance of the Nobel Peace Prize of 
1912. 

The Ethics of the Panama Question 175 

Address before the Union League Club of Chicago, February 
22,1904. 

The Obligations of the United States as to Panama 

Canal Tolls 207 

Address in the Senate of the United States, January 21, 1915. 

Panama Canal Tolls 241 

Speech in reply in the Senate of the United States, May 21, 
1914. 

The Treaty of 1832 with Russia 818 

Address in the Senate of the United States, December 19, 
1911. 

The Mexican Resolution 827 

Address in the Senate of the United States, April 21, 1914. 

The Ship Purchase Bill 887 

An Address delivered in the United States Senate, January 4, 
1915. 

Second Speech on the Ship Purchase Bill 841 

An Address delivered in the United States Senate, January 25, 
1915. 



CONTENTS V 

^Thb Outlook fob Intebnational Law 891 

Presidential Address at the ninth annual meeting of the 
American Society of International Law» Washington, D. C, 

December 28, 1915. 

» 

Should Iktkbnational Law bb Codifisd ? 405 ^ 

Address at the joint meeting of the Subsection on Interna- 
tional Law of the Second Pan-American Scientific 0>ngre88, 
Washington, D. C, December 30, 1915. 

^Thb Dbclabation of thb Riohts and Dutibb of Nations 

OFTHBAlCEBICANlNSTniJTBOFlNTBBNATIONALLAW 418 
P^residential Address at the tenth annual meeting of the 
American Society of International Law, Washington, D. C, 
April 27, 1916. 

FoBBiON Affaibs, 1918-1916 427 

Address as Temporary Chairman of the New York Republican 
State Convention, New Ycurk, February 15, 1916. 

Inbbx 449 



INTRODUCTORY NOTE 

Thb collected addresses and state papers of Elihu Root, of 
which this is one of several volumes, cover the period of his 
service as Secretary of War, as Secretary of State, and as 
Senator of the United States, during which time, to use his 
own expression, his only client was his coimtry. 

The many formal and occasional addresses and speeches, 
which will be foimd to be of a remarkably wide range, are 
followed by his state papers, such as the instructions to 
the American del^ates to the Second Hague Peace Conf eiv 
ence and other diplomatic notes and documents, prepared 
by him as Secretary of State in the performance of his duties 
as an executive officer of the United States. Although the 
official documents have been kept separate from the other 
papers, this plan has been slightly modified in the volume 
devoted to the military and colonial policy of the United 
States, which includes those portions of his official reports as 
Secretary of War throwing light upon his public addresses and 
his general military policy. 

The addresses and speeches selected for publication are 
not arranged chronologically, but are classified in such a way 
that each volume contains addresses and speeches relating 
to a general subject and a common purpose. The addresses 
as president of the American Society of International Law 
show his treatment of international questions from the 
theoretical standpoint, and in the light of his experience as 
Secretary of War and as Secretary of State, unrestrained and 
uncontrolled by the limitations of official position, whereas 
his addresses on foreign affairs, delivered while Secretary of 
State or as United States Senator, discuss these questions 
under the reserve of official responsibility. 



viii INTRODUCTORY NOTE 

Mr. Root's addresses on goyemment, citizenship, and 
l^al procedure are a masterly exposition of the principles 
of the Constitution and of the government established by 
it; of the duty of the citizen to understand the Constitu- 
tion and to conform his conduct to its requirements; and 
of the right of the people to reform or to amend the Con- 
stitution in order to make representative government more 
effective and responsive to their present and future needs. 
The. addresses on law and its administration state how l^al 
procediure should be modified and simplified in the interest 
of justice rather than in the supposed interest of the l^al 
profession. 

The addresses delivered during the trip to South America 
and Mexico in 1006, and in the United States after his return, 
with their message of good will, proclaim a new doctrine — 
the Root doctrine — of kindly consideration and of honorable 
obligation, and make dear the destiny common to the 
peoples of the Western World. 

The addresses and the reports on military and colonial 
policy made by Mr. Root as Secretary of War explain the 
reorganization of the army after the Spanish-American War, 
the creation of the General Staff, and the establishment of the 
Army War CoU^e. They trace the origin of and give the 
reason for the policy of this country in Cuba, the Philippines, 
and Porto Rico, devised and inaugurated by him. It is not 
generally known that the so-called Piatt Amendment, 
defining our relations to Cuba, was drafted by Mr. Root, and 
that the Organic Act of the Philippines was likewise the work 
of Mr. Root as Secretary of War. 

The argument before The Hague Tribunal in the North 
Atlantic Fisheries Case is a rare if not the only instance of a 
statesman appearing as chief counsel in an international 
arbitration, which, as Secretary of State, he had prepared 
and submitted. 



INTRODUCTORY NOTE ix 

The political, educational, historical, and commemoratiye 

speeches and addresses should make known to future gen^ra- 

ticms the literary, artistic, and emotional side of a statesman 

of our time, and the publication of these collected addresses 

and state papers will, it is believed, enable the American 

people better to understand the generation in which Mr. Root 

has been a commanding figure and better to appreciate 

during his lifetime the services which he has rendered to 

his country. 

RoBEBT Bacon. 

James Bbown Scott. 
Aran. 15, 1016. 



ADDRESSES ON 
INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 



THE NEED OF POPULAR UNDERSTANDING 
OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 

At tlie defventh amiiial meetmg ol tlie Lake Mohonk Coof erenoe on Inter- 
national Arbitration the advisabiUty of fonning an Amer^^ 
law was considered on June 8» 1905» by those gentlemen present niio were interested 
in international law as sodi. The idea was approved and a committee was i^^^cunted 
to take the necessary steps. On January IS; 11K)0» the American Society of Inter- 
national Law was organised in the rooms of the Bar Association of the Qty of New 
Yo^ A constitotion was adopted and oiBcers selected. Mr. Boot was dected the 
first president of the Sodety , and he has since been continued in that position. To 
the first issue of the Ammiean Journal cf IntemaUmal Law (1007), the organ 
of the Society, Mr. Boot contributed the fdlowing artide: 

THE increase of popular control over national conduct, 
which marks the political developinent of our time, i 
makes it constantly more important that the great body or 
the people in each country should have a just conception 
of their international rights and duties. 

Governments do not make war nowadays unless assured of 
gaieral and hearty support among their people; anditsome-j 
times happens that govemmaits are driven into war against 
their will by the pressure of strong popular feeling. It is not 
uncommon to see two govemmaits striving in the most con- 
ciliatory and patient way to settle some matter of difference 
peaceably, while a large part of the people in both countries 
maintain an uncompromising and belligerent attitude, in- 
sisting upon the extreme and uttermost view of their own 
rights in a way which, if it were to control national action, 
would render peaceable settlement impossible. 

One of the chief obstacles to the peaceable adjustment of 
international controversies is the fact that the n^otiator or 
arbitrator who yields any part of the extreme claims of his 
own country and concedes the reasonableness of any argu- 
ment of the other side is quite likely to be violently con- 



1 



4 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

demned by great numbers of his own countrymen who have 
never taken the pains to make themselves familiar with the 
merits of the controversy or have considered only the aigu- 
[ments on their own side. Sixty-four years have passed since 
the northeastern boundary between the United States and 
Canada was settled by the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 
1842; yet to this day there are many people on our side of the 
line who cond^nn Mr. Webster for sacrificing our rights, and 
many people on the Canadian side of the line who blame 
Lord Ashburton for sacrificing their rights, in that treaty. 
Both sets of objectors cannot be right; it seems a fair infer- 
ence that neither of them is right; yet both Mr. Webster and 
Lord Ashburton had to endure reproach and obloquy as the 
price of agreeing upon a settlemait which has been worth to 
the peace and prosperity of each country a thousand times as 
much as the value of all the territory that was in dispute. 

In the great business of settling international controversies 
without war, whether it bie by n^otiation or arbitration, 
essential conditions are reasonableness and good temper, a 
willingness to recognize facts and to weigh argumaits which 
make against one's own country as well as those which make 
for one's own country; and it is very important that in 
every country the people whom n^otiators represent and to 
whom arbitrators must return, shall be able to consider the 
controversy and judge the action of their representatives in 
this instructed and reasonable way. 

One means to bring about this desirable condition is to 
increase the gaieral public knowledge of international rights 
and duties and to promote a popular habit of reading and 
thinking about international affairs. The more clearly the 
people of a country understand their own international 
rights the less likely they are to take extreme and ^ctrava- 
gant views of their rights and the less likely they are to be 
ready to fight for something to which they are not really 



NEED OF POFDIAR UNDEBSTANDIN6 5 

entitled. The more clearly and universaUy the people of a 
country realize the international obligations and duties oi 
their country, the less likely they will be to result the just 
demands (rf other countries that those obligations and duties 
be observed. The more familiar the people of a country are 
with the rules and customs of self-restraint and courtesy 
between nations which long experience has shown to be in- 
dispensable for preserving the peace of the world, the greater 
will be the tendaicy to refrain from publicly discussing con- 
troversies with other countries in such a way as to hinder 
peaceful settlement by wounding sensibilities or arousing 
anger and prejudice on the other side. 

In every dvil community it is necessary to have courts to 
determine rights and officers to compel observance ci the law; 
yet the true basis of the peace and order in which we live is 
not fear of the policeman; it is the self-restraint of the thou- 
sands of people who make up the community and their will- 
ingness to obey the law and regard the rights of others. The 
true basis of business is not the sheriff with a writ of execu- 
tion; it is the voluntary observance (rf the rules and obliga- 
tions of business life which are universally recognized as 
essential to business success. Just so while it is highly 
important to have controversies between nations settled by 
arbitration rather than by war, and the growth of sentiment 
in favor of that peaceable method of settlemait is one of the 
great advances in civilization to the credit of this gaieration; 
yet the true basis of peace among men is to be found in a just 
and considerate spirit among the people who rule our modem 
democracies, in their r^ard for the rights of other countries^ 
and in their desire to be fair and kindly in the treatmait of 
the subjects which give rise to international controversies. 

Of course it cannot be expected that the whole body of any 
people will study international law; but a sufficient number 
can readily become sufficiently familiar with it to lead and 



6 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

form public opinion in every community in our country upon 
aU important international questions as th^ arise. 

For these reasons it seems to me that the influence of the 
new American Society of International Law and the publica- 
tion of its Quarterly will be of practical benefit to the people 
of the United States; and I commend the Association and 
the Quarterly to the support of thoughtful men and women 
who wish to help in promoting the cause of international 
justice and peace. 



THE REAL QUESTIONS UNDER THE JAPAN- 
ESE TREATY AND THE SAN FRANCISCO 
SCHOOL BOARD RESOLUTION 

FRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS AT THE FIRST ANNUAL MEETING OF 

THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 

WASHINGTON, D.C., APRIL 19, 1907 

IN opening this meeting of the American Society of In- 
ternational Law, which I hope will be the first of many 
meetings in unbroken succession to continue long alter we 
personaUy have ceased to take part in affairs, let me welcome 
you to the b^inning of your labors for a more thorough 
understanding of this important and fascinating subject. It 
is impossible that the human mind should be addressed to 
questions better worth its noblest efforts, offering a greater 
opportunity for usefulness in the exercise of its powers, or 
more full of historical and contemporary interest, than in 
the field of international rights and duties. The change in the 
theory and practice of government which has marked the 
century since the establishmait of the American Union has 
shifted the determination of great questions of domestic na- 
tional policy from a few rulers in each country to the great 
body of the people, who render the ultimate decision under 
aU modem constitutional governments. Coincidait with 
that change the practice of diplomacy has ceased to be a 
mystery confined to a few learned mai who strive to give 
effect to the wishes of personal rulers, and has become a rep- 
resentative function answering to the opinions and the will 
of the multitude of citizens, who themselves create the rela- 
tions between states and determine the issues of friendship 
and estrangement, of peace and war. Under the new system 



8 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

there are many dangers fromVhich the old system was free. 
The rules and customs which the experience of centuries had 
shown to be essential to the maintenance of peace and good 
understanding between nations have little weight with the 
new popular masters of diplomacy; the precedents and agree- 
ments of opinion which have carried so great a part of the 
rights and duties of nations toward each other beyond the 
pale of discussion are but little understood. The education of 
public opinion, which shoiild lead the sovereign people in each 
country to understand the definite limitations upon national 
rights and the full scope and responsibility of national duties, 
has only just begun. Information, understanding, leadership 
of opinion in these matters, so vital to wise judgmait and 
right action in international affairs, are much needed. This 
society may serve as a collegium, in the true sense of the word, 
in which aU who choose to seek a broader knowledge of the 
law that governs the affairs of nations may give each to the 
other the incitement of earnest and faithful study and may 
give to the great body of our countrymen a clearer view of 
their international rights and responsibilities. 

I shall detain you from the interesting program of instruc- 
tion and discussion which has been arranged for this meeting 
only by trying to illustrate the kind of service that the society 
may render, in a few remarks intended to dear away a some- 
what widespread popiilar misapprehension r^arding a 
question arising under a treaty of the United States. 

The treaty of November 22, 1894, between the United 
States and Japan provided, in the first article: 

The dticens or subjects of each of the two high contracting parties shall 
have full liberty to enter, travel, at reside in any part of the territory ot the 
other contracting party, and shall enjoy full and perfect proteoticm for 
their persons and property. . . . 

In whatever relates to rights of residence and travd; to the possession 
of goods and effects of any kind; to the succession to personal estate, by 
will or otherwise, and the disposal of property of any sort and in any man- 



THE JAPANESE TBEATY 9 

ner whatsoever wliidi th^ may lawfully acquire* the citiseiiB or subjects 
of each contracting party shall 4Tijoy in the tttrit<g«iOl the other Ihe same 
privileges, liberties, and rights, and shall be subject to no higher imposts 
or charges in these respects than native dtisens or subjects or citizens or 
subjects of the most favored nation. 

The constitution of the state of California provides, in 
artide 9: 

SscnoN 1. A general diffusion of knowledge and inteOigenoe being 
essential to the preservation of the rights and liberties of the people, the 
legislature shaH encourage by all suitable means the promotion of intel- 
lectual, scientific, moral and agricultural improvement. 

Six;. 5. The legislature shall provide for a system of common schoob, 
by which a free schod shall be kept up and su[^>OTted in each district at 
least six months in every year, after Ihe first year in whidi a schod has 
been established. 

Sbc. 6. The public sdiod system shall indude primary and grammar 
schools, and such high schools, evening schoob, normal schools and tech- 
nical schools as may be established by the legislature, or by municipal or 
district authority. The entire revenue derived from the state school fund 
and from the general state school tax shall be ai^lied ezdusively to the 
support of the primary and grammar schools. 

The statutes of California establish the public school sys- 
tem required by the constitution. They provide that the 
State Comptroller must each year 

estimate the amount necessary to raise the sum of seven dollars for each 
census child between the ages of five and seventeen years in the said state 
of California, which shall be the amount necessary to be raised by ad 
valorem tax f<» the school purposes during the year. 

The statutes f luiher provide that the Board of Education 
of San Frandsco shaU have authority y 

to establish and enforce all necessary rules and regulations for the govem- 
m^it and efficiency of the schools [in that dty] and for the carrying into 
effect the school system; to remedy truancy; and to oompd. attendance 
at school of children between the ages of six and fourteen years, who may 
be found idle in public places during school hours. 

The statutes further provide, in section 1662 of the scho(4 
law: 



10 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Every tchool, unlen oUierwiie provided by kw, mutt be open for tbe 
admission of all childreii between six and twenty-one years of age resid- 
ing in the district, and the board of school trustees, or dty board of edu- 
cation, have power to admit adults and children not residing in the district, 
whenever good reasons exist therefor. IVustees shall have the power to 
exclude children of filthy or vicious habits, or childroi suffering from con- 
tagious or infectious diseases, and also to establish separate schoob for 
Indian children and for children of Mongolian or Chinese descent. When 
such separate schools are established, Indian, Chinese, or Mongolian 
children must not be admitted into any other schooL 

On October 11, 1906, the Board of Education of San Fran- 
cisco adopted a resolution in these words: 

ResoUed: That in accordance with article X, section 1662, of the school 
law of California, i^ndpals are hereby directed to send all Chinese, Japa- 
nese, or Korean childroi to the Oriental Public School, situated on the 
south side of Clay Street, between Powell and Mason Streets, on and after 
Jdonday, Octobor 15, 1906. 

The school system thus provided school privileges for all 
resident children, whether citizen or alien; aU resident chil- 
dren were mduded in the basis for estimating the amount to 
be raised by taxation for school purposes; the fund for the 
support of the school was raised by general taxation upon all 
property of resident aliens as well as of citizens; and aU resi- 
dent children, whether of aliens or of citizens, were liable to 
be compelled to attend the schools. So that, under the reso- 
lution of the Board (rf Education, the children of resident 
aliens of aU other nationalities were freely admitted to the 
schools of the city in the neighborhood of their homes, while 
the children of Indians, Chinese and Japanese were excluded 
from those schools, and were not only deprived of education 
unless they consented to go to the special oriaital school on 
Clay Street, but were liable to be forcibly compelled to go to 
that particular schooL 

After the passage of this resolution, admission to the ordi- 
nary primary schools of San Francisco was denied to Japa- 
nese children, and thereupon the Government of Japan made 



THE JAPANESE TREATY 11 

representatioiLS to the Goveniment of the United States that 
inasmuch as the children of residaits who were citizens of all 
other fordgn countries were fredy admitted to the schools, 
the citizens of Japan residing in the United States were, by 
that exclusion, denied the same privil^^, liberties, and rights 
relating to the right of residence which were accorded to the 
citizens or subjects of the most favored nation. The ques- 
tions thus raised were promptly presented by the Grov emment 
of the United States to the federal court in California, and 
also to the state court of California, in appropriate l^al pro- 
ceedings. The matter has been happily disposed of without 
proceeding to judgment in either case; but in the meantime 
there was much excited discussion of the subject in the news- 
papers and in public meetings and in private conversation. 

It is a pleasure to be able to say that never for a moment 
was there as between the Government of the United States 
and the Crovemment of Japan, the slightest departure from 
perfect good temper, mutual confidence, and kindly con- 
sideration; and that no sooner had the views and purposes of 
the Govemmaits of the United States, the state of California, 
and the city of San Francisco been explained by each to the 
other than entire harmony and good understanding resulted, 
with a common desire to exercise the powers vested in each, 
for the common good of the whole country, of the state, and 
of the city. 

Hie excitemait has now subsided, so that it may be useful 
to consider what the question really was, not because it is 
necessary for the purposes of that particular case, but be- 
cause of its bearing upon cases which may arise in the 
future under the application of the treaty-making power 
of the United States to other matters and in other parts of 
the national domain. 

It is obvious that three distinct questicms were raised by 
the claim originating with Japan and presented by our na- 



12 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

tional govenunent to the courts in San Francbco. The first 
and second were merely questions of construction of the 
treaty. Was the right to attend the primary schools a right, 
liberty, or privil^e of residence ? and, if so, was the limita- 
tion of Japanese children to the oriental school and their 
exclusion from the ordinary schools a deprivation of that 
I right, liberty, or privil^e ? These questions of construction, 
I and especially the second, are by no means free from doubt; 
but as they concern only the meaning of a particular clause 
in a particular treaty they are not of permanent importance, 
and, the particular occasion for their consideration having 
passed, they need not now be discussed. 

The other question was whether, if the treaty had the 
meaning which the Government of Japan ascribed to it, the 
Government of the United States had the constitutional 
power to make such a treaty agreement with a foreign nation 
which should be superior to and controlling upon the laws ot 
the state of California. A correct understanding of that 
question is of the utmost importance not merely as r^ards 
the state of California, but as r^^ards all states and all 
citizens of the Union. 

There was a very general misapprehension of what this 
treaty really undertook to do. It was assumed that in mak- 
ing and asserting the validity of the treaty of 1894 the 
United States was asserting the right to compel the state of 
California to admit Japanese children to its schools. No 
such question was involved. That treaty did not, by any 
possible construction, assert the authority of the United 
! States to compel any state to maintain public schools, or to 
extend the privil^es of its public schools to Japanese chil- 
dren or to the children of any alien residents. The treaty did 
assert the right of the United States, by treaty, to assure to 
the citizens of a foreign nation residing in American territory 
equality of treatmait with the citizens (A other foreign na- 



THE JAPANESE TREATY 18 

ticmSy 80 that if any state chooses to extend privileges to alien 
residents as well as to citizen residents, the state will be for- 
bidden by the obligation of the treaty to discriminate against 
the resident citizens of the particular coontry with which the 
treaty is made and will be forbidden to deny to them the 
privil^es which it grants to the citizens of other foreign 
comitries. The effect of such a treaty, in respect of educa- 
tion, is not positive and compulsory; it is negative and pro- 
hibitory. It is not a requirement that the state shaU furnish 
education; it is a prohibition against discrimination when 
the state does choose to furnish education. It leaves every 
state free to have public schools or not, as it chooses, but it 
says to every state: ** If you provide a system of education :' 
which includes alien children, you must not exclude these 
particular alien children.*' 

It has been widely asserted or assumed that this treaty 
provision and its enforcement involved some question of 
state's rights. There was and is no question of state's rights \ 
involved, unless it be the question which was settled by the / 
adoption of the Constitution. 

This will be apparent upon considering the propositions 
which I will now state: 

1. The people of the United States, by the Constitution of 
1787, vested the whole treaty-making power in the national 
government. They provided: 

The president shall have power, by and with the advice and consent of 
the senate, to make treaties, provided two-thirds of the senators present 
concur. (Art. IE, sec. 2.) 

No state shall enter into any treaty, alliance or confederation; ... No 
state shall, without the consent of congress, . . . enter into any agreement 
or ccMnpact with another state, or with a foreign power. (Art.I,sec. 10.) 

This coQstituti<xi, and the laws of the United States which shaO be made 
in pursuance thereof, and all treaties made, or which shall be made under 
the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; 
and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the con- 
Btittttioii or laws of any state to the oHitraiy notwithstanding. (Art VL) 



14 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Legislative power is distributed: upon some subjects the 
national l^islature has authority; upon other subjects the 
state l^islature has authority. Judicial power is distributed : 
in some cases the federal courts have jurisdiction, in other 
cases the state courts have jurisdiction. Executive power is 
distributed: in some fields the national executive is to act; 
in other fields the state executive is to act. The treaty-mak- 
ing power is not distributed; it is all vested in the national 
government; no part of it is vested in or reserved to the 
states. In international affairs there are no states; there is 
but one nation, acting in direct relation to and representation 
of every citizen in every state. Every treaty made imder the 
authority of the United States is made by the national gov- 
ernment, as the direct and sole representative of every citizen 
of the United States residing in California equally with every 
citizen of the United States residing elsewhere. It is, of 
course, conceivable that, imder pretense of exercising the 
treaty-making power, the President and Senate might at- 
tempt to make provisions regarding matters which are not 
proper subjects of international agreement, and which would 
be only a colorable — not a real — exercise of the treaty- 
making power; but so far as the real exercise of the power 
goes, there can be no question of state rights, because the 
Constitution itself, in the most explicit terms, has precluded 
the existence of any such question. 

2. Although there are no express limitations upon the 
treaty-making power granted to the national government, 
there are certain implied limitations arising from, the nature 
of our government and from other provisions of the Constitu- 
tion; but those implied limitations do not in the slightest 
d^ree touch the making of treaty provisions relating to the 
treatment of aliens within our territory. 

In the case of Geofroy v. Biggs, which, in 1880, sustained 
the rights of French citizens imder the treaty of 1800 to take 



THE JAPANESE TREATY 15 

and hold real and personal pr<q[>erty in ccmtrayentkm of the 
ooninum law and the statutes of the state of Maryland, the 
Supreme Court of the United States said: 

Tluit the treaty power <rf the United States eztoidi to sD proper tub je^ 
of negotiation between our govcmmeot and the govcmmeoti 6t other 
nations is dear. . . • The treaty power* as eoqifCMed in the oooititiitioQ» 
18 in terms unlimitwl eaaxpt by those restraints whidi are found in that 
instrument against the action d the government or of its departments, and 
those arising from the nature of the government itsdf and of that of the 
states. It would not be contended that it extends so br as to authorise 
what the constitution forbids, or a diange in the character of the govern- 
ment, or in that of one <rf the states, or a cessicm of any portion of the terri- 
tory of the latter without its ccMisent. But with these excqytions it is not 
perceived that there is any limit to the questions whidi can be adjusted 
touching any matter irtiich is properly the subject of negotiation with a 
foreign country. 

S. Reciprocal agreements between nations regarding the 
treatment which the citizens of each nation shall receive in 
the territory of the other nation are among the most familiar, 
ordinary and unquestioned exercises of the treaty-making 
power. To secure the citizens of one's country against dis- 
criminatory laws and discriminatory administration in the 
foreign countries where they may travel or trade or reside is, 
and always has been, one of the chief objects of treaty mak- 
ing, and such provisions always have been reciprocal. 

During the entire history of the United States provisicms 
of this description have been included in our treaties of 
friendship, commerce and navigation with practically all the 
other nations of the world. Such provisions had been from 
time immemorial the subject of treaty agreements among 
the nations of Europe before American independence; and 
the power to make such provisions was exercised without 
question by the Continental Congress in the treaties which 
it made prior to the adoption of our Constitution. The treaty 
of 1778 with France, made between the Most Christian King 
and the thirteen United States of North America by name. 



16 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

contained such provisions. So did the treaty of 1782 between 
Their High Mightinesses the States-General of the United 
Netherlands and the thirteen United States of America by 
name. 

The treaty of 1785 with Prussia, ratified by the Conti- 
nental Congress on May 17» 1786, contained an exercise of the 
same kind of power. Mr. Bancroft Davis summarizes the pro- 
visions of this character in the Prussian treaty in these words: 

The favored nation clause put Fhissia on the best footing in the ports of 
Charleston, Boston, Philaddphia and New York, no matter what the 
legislatures of South Carolina, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, or New 
York might say. Aliens were permitted to hold personal property and dis- 
pose of it by testament, donation, or otherwise, and the exaction of state 
dues in excess of those exacted from citizens of the state in like cases were 
f orbidden« The right was secured to aliens to frequent the coasts of each 
and all the states, and to reside and trade there. Resident aliens were 
assured against state legislation to prevent the exercise of liberty of con- 
science and the performance of religious w<»ship; and when dying, they 
were guaranteed the right of decent burial and undisturbed rest for their 
bodies. 

It is not open to doubt that when the del^ates of these 
thirteen states conferred the power to make treaties upon the 
new national government in the broadest possible tains and 
without any words of limitation, the subjects about which 
they themselves had been making the treaties then in force 
were included in the power. 

The treaty of July 28, 1868, between the United States and 

China — the celebrated Burlingame Treaty — contained, 

in the sixth article, a provision in the very words of the 

Japanese treaty. That article provided: 

Citizens of the United States visiting or residing in China shall enjoy 
the same privilegeB, inununities or exemptions in respect to travdi or resi- 
dence as may there be enjoyed by the citizens or subjects of the most 
favored nation. And, reciprocally, Chinese subjects visiting or residing in 
the United States, shall enjoy the same privileges, inununities, and exemp- 
tions in respect to travd or residence, as may there be enjoyed by the 
dtisens or subjects of the most favored nation. 



THE JAPANESE TREATY 17 

In the case of Tiburicio Parrot (6 Sawyer, 808) the Circuit 

Court of the United States said, Mr. Justice Sawyer reading 

the opinion: 

/ As to the point whether the provinon in question is within the tieaty- 
makmg power, I have as little doubt as upon the point already discussed. 
Among all civilized nations^ in modem times at least* the treaty-makmg 
power has been accustomed to determine the terms and conditions upon 
which the subjects of the parties to the treaty shaO reside in the respec- 
tive countries, and the treaty-making power is omferred by the Con- 
stitution in unlimited terms. Besides, the authorities dted on the first 
point fully cover and determine this question. If the treaty-making power 
is authorised to determine what foreigners shall be permitted to come 
into and reside within the country, and who shall be exduded, it must 
have the power generally to determine and prescribe upon what terms and 
conditions such as are admitted shaO be permitted to i 



And r^arding the same treaty the Supreme Court of the 

United States remarked, in the case of Baldwin v. Franks 

(120 U.S., 679): 

That the United States have power under the G>nstitution to provide 
for the punishment of those who are guilty of depriving Chinese subjects 
of any of the rights, privileges, immunities, or ezempticms guaranteed to 
them by this treaty we do not doubt. 

4. It has been settled for more than a century that the 
fact that a treaty provision would interfere with or annul 
the laws of a state as to the aliens concerning whom the provi- 
sion is made, is no impeachment of the treaty's authority. 

The very words of the Constitution, that the judges in 
every state shaU be bound by a treaty ** anything in the con- 
stitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstand- 
ing,'' necessarily imply an expectation that some treaties will 
be made in contravention of laws of the states. Far from the 
treaty-making power being limited by state laws, its scope is 
entirely independent of those laws; and whenever it deab 
with the same subject, if inconsistent with the law, it annuls 
thelaw. This is true as to any laws of the states, whether the 
legislative authority under which they are passed is con- 



18 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

current with that of Congress, or exclusive of that of Con- 
gress* 

In the case of Ware v. Hylton the Supreme Court of the 
United States, in the year 1796, considered the eflfect under 
the Constitution of the treaty of peace with England of 1783, 
which provided that 

creditors on either side should meet with no lawful impediment to the 
recovery of the full value in Stirling money, of all bona fide debts, thereto- 
fore contracted, 

as against a law of the state of Virginia, which confiscated to 
the state of Virginia the debts due from its citizens to British 
subjects* 

The court said: 

There can be no limitation on the power of the people of the United 
States. By their authority the state constitutions were made, and by 
their authority the Constitution of the United States was established; and 
they had the power to change or abolish the state constitutions, or to 
make them yidd to the general government and to treaties made by their 
authority. A treaty cannot be the supreme law of the land — that is, of 
all the United States — if any act of a state legislature can stand in its way. 
If the constitution of a state (which is the fundamental law of the state, 
and paramount to its legislature) must give way to a treaty and fall before 
it, can it be questioned whether the less power, an act of the state legisla- 
ture, must not be prostrate ? It is the declared will of the people of the 
United States that every treaty made by the authority of the United 
States shall be superior to the constitution and laws of any individual 
state; and their will alone is to decide. . . . 

Four things are apparent on a view of this sixth article of the national 
Constitution: 1st. That it is retrospective, and is to be considered in the 
same light as if the Constitution had been established before the making of 
the treaty of 1788. 2d. That the constitution or laws of any of the states, 
so far as either of them shall be found contrary to that treaty, are by force 
of the said article prostrated before the treaty. 3d. That, consequently, 
the treaty of 1788 has superior power to the legislature of any state, be- 
cause no legislature of any state has any kind of power over the Constitu- 
tion, which was its creator. 4th. That it is the declared duty of the state 
judges to determine any constitution or laws of any state contrary to that 
treaty (or any other), made under the authority of the United States, null 
and void. National or federal judges are bound by duty and oath to the 
same conduct 



THE JAPANESE TREATY 19 

In the case of Fairfax v. Hunter, in 1812» Mr. Justice Story 
delivering the opinion, the supreme court of the United 
States sustained the title of a British subject, under the pro- 
visions of the treaty of 1704, in direct contravention of the 
laws of the state of Virginia. In the case of Chirac v. Chirac, 
in 1817, Chief Justice Marshall delivering the opinion, the 
Supreme Court of the United States sustained the title of a 
French subject to real estate in Maryland, in direct contra- 
vention of the laws of that state. A long line of cases have 
followed in the Supreme Court applying the provisions of 
various treaties and maintaining without exception the 
unvarying rule that the state statute falls before the treaty. 

It equally appears from these cases that the treaty provi- 
sions which were sustained by the Supreme Court and the 
state laws which were declared void, so far as they conflicted 
with a treaty, related to matters r^arding which Congress 
had no power to l^islate, but upon which, in the distribution 
of legislative powers under the Constitution, the states, and 
the states alone, had power to l^^ate. 

5. Since the rights, privileges, and immunities, both of per- 
son and property, to be accorded to foreigners in our country 
and to our citizens in foreign coimtries are a proper subject of 
treaty provision and within the limits of the treaty-making 
power, and since such rights, privil^es, and immunities may 
be given by treaty in contravention of the laws of any state, 
it follows of necessity that the treaty-making power alone has 
authority to determine what those rights, privil^es, and im- 
munities shall be. No state can set up its laws as against the 
grant of any particular right, privil^e, or immunity any 
more than against the grant of any other right, privil^e, or 
immunity. No state can say a treaty may grant to alien 
residents equality of treatment as to property but not as to 
education, or as to the exerdse of religion and as to burial but 
not as to education, or as to education but not as to pnqparty 



20 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Cft religkm. That would be substituting the mefe will of the 
state for the judgments of the President and Senate in exer- 
dsmg a power conunitted to them and prohibited to the 
states by the C<mstituti<m. 

There was, therefore, no real question of power arising 
under this Jiq>anese treaty aild no question of state rights. 
.There were, however, questions of policy, questions of 
national interests and of state interests, arising imder the 
administration of the treaty and regarding the application of 
its provisions to the conditions existing on the Pacific coast. 

In the distribution of powers imder our composite system 
of government the people of San Francisco had three sets of 
interests committed to three different sets of officers — their 
special interest as citizens of the principal city and commer- 
cial port of the Pacific coast represented by the city govern- 
ment of San Francisco; their interest in common with all the 
people of the state of California represented by the governor 
and legislature at Sacramento; and their interests in com- 
mon with all the people of the United States represented by 
the national government at Washington. Each one of these 
three different governmental agencies had authority to do 
certain things relating to the treatment of Japanese residents 
in San Francisco. These three interests could not be really 
in conffict; for the best interest of the whole coimtry is 
always the true interest of every state and city, and the pro- 
tection of the interests of every locality in the coimtry is 
always the true interest of the nation. There was, however, 
a supposed or apparent clashing of interests, and, to do 
away with this, conference, communication, comparison of 
views, explanation of policy and purpose were necessary. 
Many thoughtless and some mischievous perscms have 
spoken and written regarding these conferences and com- 
munications as if they were the parleying and compromise of 
enemies. On the contrary, they were an example of the way 



THE JAPANESE TREATY 21 

in wiiich the public business ought always to be conducted; 
so that the different public officers respectively charged with 
the performance of duties affecting the same subject-matter 
may work together in furtherance of the same public policy 
and with a common purpose for the good of the whole coun- 
try and every part of the country. Such a concert of action 
with such a purpose was established by the omf erences and 
communications between the national authorities and the 
authorities of California and San Francisco which followed 
the passage of the Board of Education resolution* 

There was one great and serious question underlying the 
whole subject which made all questions of construction and of 
scope and of effect of the treaty itself — all questions as to 
whether the claims of Jiqmn were well founded or not, all 
questions as to whether the resolution of the School Board 
was valid or not — seem temporary and comparatively unim- 
portant. It was not a question of war with Japan. All the 
foolish talk about war was purely s^isational and imagina- 
tive. There was never even friction between the two govern- 
ments. The question was, What state of f eeding^ would be 
qreatfd between the great body <^ the people of the United 
States andthe^freat body of the people of Japan as a result of 
the treatm^it given to the Japanese in this coimtry ? 

What was to be the effect upon that proud, sensitive, 
^.-^hly civilized people across the Pacific, of the discourtesy, 
insult, imputations of inferiority and abuse aimed at them in 
the colimms of American newspapers and from the platforms 
of American public meetings ? What would be the effect 
upon our own people of the responses that natural resait- 
ment for such treatment would elicit from the Japanese ? 

The first article of the first treaty Japan ever made with a 
western power provided : 

There shall be a perfect, pennanent, and univenal peace and a siiicere 
and cordial amity between the United States of America on the one part. 



«« INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

and the empire of Ja^pan <m the other part, and between their pec^e 
respectively, without ezoeption of persons or places. 

Under that treaty, wiiich bore the signature of Matthew 
Calbraith Perry, we introduced Japan to the world of western 
civilization. We had always been proud of her wonderful 
development — proud of the genius of the race that in a 
single generation adapted an ancient feudal system of the far 
East to the most advanced standards of modem Europe and 
America. The friendship between the two nations had been 
peculiar and dose. Wajs the declaration of that treaty to be 
set aside ? At Kurihama, in Japan, stands a monmnent to 
Commodore Perry, raised by the Japanese in grateful appre- 
ciation, upon the site where he landed and opened negotia- 
tions for the treaty. Was that monument henceforth to 
represent dislike and resentment ? Were the two peoples to 
face each other across the Pacific in future years with angry 
and resentful feelings ? All this was inevitable if the process 
which seemed to have b^un was to continue, and the govern- 
ment of the United States looked with the greatest solicitude 
upon the possibility that the process might continue. 

It is hard for democracy to learn the responsibilities of its 
power; but the people now, not governments, make friend- 
ship or dislike, sympathy or discord, peace or war, between 
nations. In this modem day, through the columns of the 
myriad press and messages flashing over countless wires, 
multitude calls to multitude across boimdaries and oceans in 
courtesy or insult, in amity or in defiance. Foreign offices 
and ambassadors and ministers no longer keep or break the 
peace, but the conduct of each people toward every other. 
The people who permit themselves to treat the people of 
other coimtries with discourtesy and insult are surely sowing 
the wind to reap the whirlwind, for a world of sullen and 
revengeful hatred can never be a world of peace. Against 
such a feeling treaties are waste papor and diplomacy the 



THE JAPAI^nBSE TREATY 23 

empty routine of idle form. The great question which over- 
shadowed all discussion of the treaty of 1804 was the ques- 
tion: Are the people of the United States about to break 
friendship with the people of Japan ? That question, I 
bdieve, has been happily answered in the nc^tive. 



THE SANCTION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 

FRESmENTIAL ADDRESS AT THE SECOND ANNUAL MEETING 

OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 

WASHINGTON* APRIL M, 1906 

ONE accustomed to the administnttion of municipal law 
who turns his attention for the first time to the dis- 
cussion of practical questions arising between nations and 
dependent upon the rules of international law, must be 
struck by a difference between the two systems which ma- 
terially affects the intellectual processes involved in every 
discussion, and which is apparently fundamental. 

The proofs and arguments adduced by the municipal 
lawyer are addressed to the object of setting in motion certain 
legal machinery which will result in a judicial judgment to be 
enforced by the entire power of the state over litigants sub- 
ject to its jurisdiction and control. Before him lies a dear, 
certain, definite conclusion of the controversy, and for the 
finaUty and effectiveness of that conclusion the sheriff and 
the policeman stand always as guarantors in the last resort. 

When the international lawyer, on the other hand, passes 
from the academic discussion in which he has no one to con- 
vince but himself, and proceeds to seek the establishment of 
rights or the redress of wrongs in a concrete case, he has ap- 
parently no objective point to which he can address his 
proofs or arguments, except the conscience and sense of jus- 
tice of the opposing party to the controversy. In only rare, 
exceptional and peculiar cases, do the conclusions of the 
international lawyer, however clearly demonstrated, have 
behind them the compulsory effect of possible war. In the 
vast majority of practical questions arising under the rule of 



«6 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

international law there does not appear on the surface to be 
any reason why either party should abandon its own con- 
tention or yield against its own interest to the arguments of 
the other side. The action of each party in yielding or refus- 
ing to yield to the arguments of the other appears to be 
entirely dependent upon its own will and pleasure. This 
apparent absence of sanction for the enforcement of the rules 
of international law has led great authority to deny that those 
rules are entitled to be called law at all; and this apparait 
hopelessness of finality carries to the mind which limits its 
consideration to the procedure in each particular case, a 
certain sense of futiUty of argument. 

Nevertheless, all the foreign offices of the civilized world 
are continually discussing with each other questions of in- 
ternational law, both public and private, cheerfuUy and 
hopefuUy marshaling facts, furnishing evidence, presenting 
arguments, and building up records, designed to show that 
the rules of international law require such and such things to 
be done or such and such things to be left undone. And in 
coimtless cases nations are yielding to such arguments and 
shaping their conduct against their own apparent interests in 
the particular cases under discussion, in obedience to the 
rules which are shown to be applicable. 

[^ Why is it that nations are thus continually yielding to 
arguments with no apparent compulsion behind them, and 
before the force of such arguments abandoning purposes, 

^jnodifying conduct, and giving redress for injuries ? A care- 
ful consideration of this question seems to lead to the con- 

, dusion that the difference between municipal and interna- 
tional law, in respect of the existence of forces compelling 
obedience, is more apparent than real, and that there are 
sanctions for the enforcement of international law no less real 
and substantial than those which secure obedience to munic- 

' q>allaw. 



SANCTION OP INTERNATIONAL LAW 27 

It is a mistake to assume that the sancticm which secures 
obedience to the laws of the state consists exclusively or 
chiefly of the pains and penalties imposed by the law itself 
for its violation. It is only in exceptional cases that men 
refrain from crime through fear of fine or imprisonment. In | 
the vast majority of cases men refrain from criminal conduct 
because they are unwilling to incur in the community in 
which th^ live the public condemnation and obloquy which 
would follow a repudiation of the standard of conduct pre- 
scribed by that community for its members. As a rule, when 
the law is broken the disgrace which follows conviction and ^ 
punishment is more terrible than the actual\physical effect of 
imprisonment or deprivation of property. Where it happens ) 
that the law and public opinion point different ways, the 
latter is invariably the stronger. I have seai a lad grown up 
amcmg New York toughs break down and weep because sent 
to a reformatory instead of being sentenced to a state's 
prison for a violation of law. The reformatory meant com- 
parative ease, comfort, and oiqx>rtunity for speedy return to 
entire freedom; the state's prison would have meant hard 
labor and long and severe confinement. Yet in his com- 
munity of habitual criminals a term in state's prison was a 
proof of manhood and a title to distinction, while consign- 
ment to a reformatory was the treatment suited to immature 
boyhood. He preferred the punishment of manhood with 
what he deemed honor to the opportunity of youth with 
what he deemed disgrace. Not only is the effectiveness of 
the punishments denounced by law against crime derived 
diiefly from the public opinion which accompanies them, but 
those punishments themselves are but one form of the expres- 
sion of pubUc opinion. Laws are capable of enforcement only 
so far as they are in agreement with the opinions of the com- 
munity in which they are to be enforced. As opinion changes 
old laws become obsolete and new standards force their way 



28 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

into the statute books. Laws passed^ as they sometimes are, 
in advance of public opinion ordinarily wait for their en- 
forcement until the progress of opinion has reached recogni- 
^ tion of their value. The force of law is in the public opinion 
^hich prescribes it. 

The impulse of conformity to the standard of the com- 
munity and the dread of its condemnation are reenf oroed by 
the practical considerations whidi determine success or 
failure in life. Conformity to the standard of business 
int^rity which obtains in the community is necessary to 
business success. It is this consideration far more frequently 
than the thought of the sheriff with a writ of execution that 
leads men to pay their debts and to keep their contracts. 
Social esteem and standing, power and high place in the pro- 
fessions, in public ofiBce, in all associated enterprise, depend 
upon conformity to the standards of conduct in the com- 
munity. Loss of these is the most terrible penalty society 
can inflict. It is only for the occasional nonconformist that 
the sheriff and policeman are kept in reserve; and it is only 
because the nonconformists are occasional and comparatively 
few in number that the sheriff and the policeman can have 
any effect at all. For the great mass of mankind laws estab- 
lished by dvil society are enforced directly by the power of 
public opinion,^ving, as the sanction for its judgments, the 
denial of nearly everything for which men strive in life. 

The rules of international law are enforced by the same 
kind of sanction, less certain and peremptory, but continually 
increasing in effectiveness of control. '^ A decent respect to 
the opinions of mankind '' did not begin or end among nations 
with the American Declaration of Independence; but it is 
interesting that the first public national act in the New 
World should be an appeal to that universal international 
public opinion, the power and effectiveness of which the New 
World has done so much to promote. 



SANCTION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 29 

In former times, each isolated nation, satisfied with its own^ 
opinion of itself and indifferoit to the opinion of others, sepa- 
rated from all others by mutual ignorance and misjudgment, 
regarded only the physical power of other nations. Gibbon 
could say of the Byzantine Empire: ** Alone in the universer 
the self-satisfied pride of the Greeks was not disturbed by 
the comparison of foreign merit; and it is no wonder if they 
fainted in the race, since they had neither competitors to 
urge their speed nor judges to crown their victory/* Now77 
however, there may be seen plainly the effects of a long- 
continued process which is breaking down the isolation of 
nations, permeating every country with better knowledge 
and understanding of every other country, spreading 
throughout the world a knowledge of each government's 
conduct to serve as a basis for criticism and judgment, and 
gradually creating a community of nations, in which stand- 
ards of conduct are being established, and a world-wide 
public opinion is holding nations to conformity or condenm- 
ing them for disr^ard of the established standards. The j 
improved facilities for travd and transportation, the enor- 
mous increase of production and commerce, the revival of 
colonization and the growth of colonies on a gigantic scale, 
the severance of the laborer from the soil, accomplished by 
dieap steamship and railway transportation and the emigra- 
tion agent, the flow and return of millions of emigrants 
across national lines, the amazing development of telegraphy 
and of the press, conveying and spreading instant informa- 
tion of every interesting event that happens in r^ons how- 
ever remote — all have played their part in this change. 

Pari passu with the breaking down of isolation, that makes 
a oomimon public opinion possible, the building up of stand- 
ards of conduct is being accomplished by the formulation 
and establishment of rules that are being gradually taken out 
of the domain of discussion into that of general acceptance. 



so INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

a process in which the recent conferences at The Hague 
have played a great and honorable part. There is no civi- 
lized country now which is not sensitive to this general 
opinion, no^e that is willing to subject itself to the discredit 
c^ standing brutally on its power to deny to other countries 

(the benefit lof recognized rules of right conduct. The 
deference shown to this international public opinion is in 
due proportion to a nation's greatness and advance in dvili- 

/zation. The nearest approach to defiance will be found 
among the most isolated and least civilized of countries, 
whose ignorance of the world prevents the effect of the 

/ world's opinion; and in every such country internal disorder, 
oppression, poverty, and wretchedness mark the penalties 
which warn mankind that the laws established by civilization 
for the guidance of national conduct cannot be ignored with 
impunity. 

National regard for international opinion is not caused by 
amour ynypre alone — not merely by desire for the approval 

vand good opinion of mankind. Underlying the desire for 
approval and the aversion to general condenmation with 
nations as with the individual, there is a deep sense of inter- 
est, based partly upon the knowledge that mankind backs its 
opinions by its conduct and that nonconformity to the stand- 
ard of nations means condemnation and isolation, and partly 
upon the knowledge that in the give and take of international 
affairs it is better for every nation to secure the protection of 
the law by complying with it than to f orf dt the law's benefits 

/by ignoring it. 

Beyond all this there is a consciousness that in the most 
important affairs of nations, in their political status, the 
success of their undertakings and their processes of develop- 

iment, there is an indefinite and almost mystarious influence 
exercised by the general opinion of the w<^d r^arding the 

[nation's diaraeter and conduct The greatest and strongest 



SANCTION OP INTEBNATIONAL LAW SI 

govenunents recognize this influence and act with reference 
to it* They dread the moral isolation created by general 
adverse opinion and the unfriendly feeling that accompanies 
it, and they desire general approval and the kindly feeling ] 
that goes with it. 

This is quite indq>endent of any calculation upon a physP] 
cal enforcement of the opinion of others. It is difficult toj 
say just why such opinion is of importance, because it is 
always difficult to analyze the action of moral forces; but itl 
remains true and is universally recognized that the nation 
which has with it the moral force of the world's approval is 
strong, and the nation which rests under the world's ccmdem- / 
nation is weak, however great its material power. 

These are the considerations which determine the course 
of national conduct regarding the vast majority of questions 
to which are to be applied the rules of international law. The 
real sanction which enforces those rules is the injury which 
inevi^tably follows nonconformity to public opinion; while, 
for the occasional and violent or persistent law-breaker, there 
always stands bdiind discussion the ultimate possibility <rf 
war, as the sheri£F and the policeman await the occasional 
and comparatively rare violators of municipal law. — . 

Of course, the force of public opinion ean be brought to I 
bear only upon comparatively simple questions and clearly 
Ascertained and understood rights. Upon complicated or 
doubtful questions, as to which judgment is difficult, each 
party to the controversy can maintiiin its position of refusing 
to yidd to the other's arguments without incurring public 
condemnation. Upon this dass of questions the growth of 
arbitratifm furnishes a new and additional opportunity for 
<^inion to act; because, however complicated the question in 
diqmte may be, the proposition that it should be submitted 
to an impartial tribunal is exceedingly simple, and the prop- 
osition that the award of such a tribunal shall be complied 



32 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 



uu 



with is equally simple, and the nation which reuses to sub- 
mit a question properly the subject of arbitration naturally 
invites condemnation. 

Manifestly, this power of international public opinion is 
exercised not so much by governments as by the people of 
each country whose opinions are interpreted in the press and 
determine the coimtry's attitude towards the nation whose 
conduct is under consideration. International opinion is the 
consensus of individual opinion in the nations. The most 
certain way to promote obedience to the law of nations and 
to substitute the power of opinion for the power of armies 
and navies is, on the one hand, to foster that " decent respect 
to the opinions of mankind '' which found place in the great 
Declaration of 1776, and, on the other hand, to spread among 
the people of every country a just appreciation of interna- 
tional rights and duties and a knowledge of the principles and 
rules of international law to which national conduct ought to 
conform; so that the general opinion, whose approval or 
condemnation supplies the sanction for the law, may be 
sound and just and worthy of respect. 



THE RELATIONS BETWEEN INTERNATIONAL 
TRIBUNALS OF ARBITRATION AND THE 
JURISDICTION OF NATIONAL COURTS 

FItESIDENTIAL ADDRESS AT THE THIBD ANNUAL MEETING OF 

THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OP INTERNATIONAL LAW 

WASHINGTON, APRIL ftS. 1909 

THE growing tendency towards international arbitration 
brings into special consideration and importance the re- 
lation between the jurisdiction of national courts of justice 
and international tribunals of arbitration* 

When one nation urges claims in behalf <rf its citizens upon 
the government of another nation and proposes arbitration^ 
how far does that other nation^s respect for its own independ- 
ent sovereignty and for the integrity of its own judicial 
system require it to insist that the claims be submitted for 
final decision to its own national courts ? 

The true basis for the consideration of this question is in 
the nature of the obligation which constrains a nation to 
submit questions to any tribunal whatever. 

That there is no l^gal obligation to make any submission^ 
that is to say, that it is not required by any rule imposed by a 
superior power, is a corollary from our conception of sover- 
eignty. Sovereignty involves the right to determine one's 
own actions — to pay or not to pay, to redress injury or not 
to redress it, at the will of the sovereign, subject only to the 
necessary conditions created by the existence of other equally 
indq>endent states. So far as questions arise out of ccmtract, 
Alexander Hamilton states the strongest view of national 
freedom from restraint in a passage often quoted in recent 
years: 



34 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Contracts between a natum and private individuab are obligatory»aooofd- 
ing to the oonaeience oi the sovereign, and may not be the object oi com- 
pdlingfoice. Tb^ confer no right <^ action contrary to the sovereign wilL 

So far as questkms arise out of alleged wrongs by one gov- 
ernment against a citizen of another^ the sovereignty of one 
nation is merely confronted by another sovereignty, which is 
itself equally supreme within its own limits. Wherever the 
true lines are to be drawn between two mutually exclusive 
sovereignties, each is supreme and subject to no compulsion 
on its own side of the line. Wh^^ver there is infringement 
by one on the other there exists the right of adverse action, 
which involves no impeachment of independent sovereignty, 
but follows necessarily from the ccmtact of two ind^>endent 
powers. Whatever modifications international lawyers urge 
to the broad statement of doctrine to which Doctor Calvo 
has given his name, so ably enforced by his successor. Dr. 
Drago, there is no effective dispute rc^garding the foundation 
of his main proposition, r^arding the essential nature of 
sovereignty. 

The conditions under whidi this sovereign power is e3f;er- 
dsed among civilized nations do, however, impose upon it 
important limitations, just as the conditions under which 
individual liberty is enjoyed in a free civil comimunity im- 
pose limitations upon individual ccmduct in matters not at 
all contrdled by law. Municipal law does not, in general, 
undertake to compel men to be virtuous, truthful, sober, fair, 
polite, and considerate of others. Yet the existence of dvil 
liberty is conditioned upon the existence of a community 
standard of ccmduct quite independent of l^gal compulsion, 
and extending far b^ond the limits touched by any statute. 
The member of a community who chooses to use his indi- 
vidual liberty to violate that standard conqucuously, meets 
severe punishment in the loss of respect, confidence, and 
esteem, and in the consequences of that loss. Another very 



ARBITRATION AND NATIONAL COURTS SS 

effective limitation upon conduct is the knowledge that cer- 
tain courses of conduct quite within one's l^al rights may 
lead some other man to use his individual freedom, to do one 
injury. The compulsion which such considerations produce 
upon individual action is no more an infring^nent upon 
individual liberty than is the effect caused by the knowledge 
that fire will bum and water will drown. The individual in 
each case regulates his own conduct in accordance with his 
own will. 

The assertion of independent sovereignty of nations is but 
another expression of the individual liberty of each nation in 
the commimity of nations. In its practical application it is 
of modem acceptance, superseding the old idea that each 
nation, tribe or group of people under whatever chieftain, 
leader, sovereign, or government, was entitled to hold such 
territory and exercise such centred over its own conduct, as it 
could maintain by force of arms, and no more. 

The theory of independent sovereignty, entitled to be re- 
spected by all mankind without regard to its power to main- 
tain itself by force, could find no place in the world except in 
coincidence with a standard of international conduct to 
which the nations generally, in the exercise of their individual 
sovereignty, conform, each without compulsion of any other 
power, but voluntarily. 

The chief principle entering into this standard of conduct 
is that every sovereign nation is willing at all times and 
under all circumstances to do what is just. That is the uni- 
versal postulate of all modem diplomatic discussion. No 
nation would for a moment permit its own conformity to the 
standard in this respect, to be questioned. The obligation 
which this willingness implies is no impeachment of sover- 
eignty. It is voluntarily assumed as an incident to the 
exercise of sovereignty because it is essential to a ccmtinu- 
ance of the conditions under which the indq>endence of 



36 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

sovereignty is possible. This obligation is by universal con- 
sent interpreted according to established and accepted rules 
as to what constitutes justice under certain known and fre- 
quently recurring conditions; and these accepted rules we call 
international law. No demand can ever be made by one 
nation upon another to give redress in any case but that the 
demand is met by an avowed readiness to do justice in that 
case, and upon that demand in accordance with the rules of 
international law. No compulsion upon sovereignty is 
needed to reach that result. 

The only question that can arise upcm such a demand is 
the question, *^ What is just in this case ? " In that neces- 
sary condition of agreement upon the underlying principle to 
be followed, a conunon duty is presented to both nations 
to ascertain and determine what is just. 

It is not usually a simple or easy thing to determine what 
is just as between a nation and either its own citizens or the 
citizens of other nations. Upon one conclusion all civilized 
nations are in accord — that the executive and adminis- 
trative officers of government cannot be depended upon to 
make such determinations. Civilized nations uniformly pro- 
vide machinery for judicial decision of such questions so 
that the views of executive and administrative officers in 
rejecting claims may be reviewed and controlled. The grant 
of jurisdiction to courts or the creation of courts to exercise 
such jurisdiction is no disparagement of the officers whose 
views of what is just are thus called in question. Sovereigns 
and presidents and ministers and department officers are not 
insulted by such provisions, or because the conunon sense of 
justice recognizes that their relation to the questions which 
arise between the government which they conduct, and 
others, is such that they cannot well be impartial. 

The whole system by which sovereign states permit them- 
selves to be sued in courts vested with jurisdiction for that 



ARBITRATION AND NATIONAL COURTS 37 

purpose is in recognition of the fundamental rule of right 
that none shall be a judge in his own case. 

That same great rule cannot be ignored when the question 
is whether the decision of a national court is to be taken as a 
final and satisfactory determination of what is just in an in- 
ternational case, to which the judge's own country is a party. 
For after all judges are but men. They are part of the gov- 
ernment that is called in question. They are subject to the 
influence of their environment. They cannot always escape 
all the influences of popular feeling and prejudice in their own 
communities. The political fortunes of the very officials who 
i^pointed them to the bench, or their own tenure of office 
may perhaps be at stake upon their action. Th^ cannot help 
bringing to the bench strong tendencies and predilections in 
favor of their own countrymen's ways of acting and think- 
ing. Th^ desire the approbation of their fellow-citizens, 
and in cases of public interest it may be much harder to 
decide against than for, their own country. It is difficult for 
a foreigner to understand and avail himself of their modes of 
reasoning, their rules of evidence and of procedure, and the 
precedents they follow. If there is a difference of languages a 
stranger is at a great disadvantage. He may often lose his 
case through not knowing how to do his part towards main- 
taining it. 

There are many circumstances varying in different coun- 
tries and in diff eroit cases which tend to strengthen or to 
weaken these obstacles to a satisfactory attainment of justice. 
The general state of feeling in the country of trial towards 
the country of the complainant and its effect upon the atmo- 
sphere of the court room, that every experienced lawyer 
knows to be so important, is one of these drcumstances. The 
relative importance of the case in proportion to the resources 
of the country — whether an adverse decision would make a 
slij^t or a great difference to the government or the pec^le, is 



38 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

another. Whether the actioii of the executive has been 
generally discussed and has assumed political importance is 
another. 

Every country is entitled to follow its own judgment and 
is not subject to criticism for following its own judgment, as 
to the degree of independence it shall give to its judiciary, 
yet it cannot well be denied that with human nature as 
it is, there is less certainty of an impartial dedsion from 
judges removable at will in a case calling in question the 
acts of the appointing and removing power, than from 
judges whose tenure of o£Sce is not dependent upon the 
executive. The decision of such a dependent court is liable 
to be affected by the same infirmities which the whole 
world recognizes as making the determination of the execu- 
tive itself an unsatisfactory method of concluding the search 
for justice. 

It shoidd not be forgotten that it is not only desirable to 
have justice done; but also to have men believe that justice 
is done. That belief is important to respect for law among 
the people within each nation and to the maintenance and 
growth of respect and friendship between the peoples of 
differoit nations. 

Of course there are many cases falling naturally into the 
ordinary routine of national judicial proceduro — cases 
plainly not presenting the elements of prejudice which would 
prevent reaching justice through that procedure. Of course 
there are many great international questions which no one 
would ever propose to lay before a national tribunal. Be- 
tween these two extremes there is a wide range of cases in 
which national courts may exercise jurisdiction, but to which 
the considerations that I have suggested apply. When such 
cases arise the international question is not one of compulsion 
or dttogation from sovereignty, but it is: How shall two 
nations desiring to ascertain what is the truth of justice in 



ARBITRATION AND NATIONAL COURTS 90 

this case readi a dedsioii ? By what procedure and before 
what tribunal can that end best be attained ? 

If recourse to arbitration is a reflection upon national 
courts, the people of the United States have been strangely 
obtuse, for nowhere in the world, surely, is greater honor 
paid to the courts of justice, yet we have embodied in the 
fundamental law which binds our states together a recogni- 
tixm of the liability of courts to be affected by local sentiment, 
prejudice, and pressure. We have provided in the third 
article of the Constitution of the United States that in con- 
troversies between states or between citizens of different 
states the determination of what is just shall not be ccmfmed 
to the courts of justice of either state, but may be brought in 
the Federal tribunals, selected and empowered by the repre- 
sentatives of both states and of all the states — true arbitral 
tribunab in the method of their creation and the office th^ 
p^^orm. 

Alexander Hamilton explains this provision in The Feder- 
aUri in these words: 

The reasonabkness of the agency of the National courts in cases in 
whidi the state tribunals cannot be supposed to be impartial, speaks f<Nr 
itself. No man ought certainly to be a judge in his own cause, ot in any 
cause in respect to which he has the slightest interest or bias. This prin- 
c^Ie has no inconsiderable weight in designating the Federal courts as the 
proper tribunals tor the detennination of controversies between different 
states and their dtixens. And it ou|^t to have the same operation in 
regard to some cases between the dtiiens of the same state. Claims to 
lands under grants of different states founded upon adverse pretension of 
boundary are of this description. The courts of neither of the granting 
states could be expected to be unbiased. The laws may have even i»e- 
judged the question and tied the courts down to decisions in tevor of the 
grant of the state to which they belonged. And where this has not been 
done it would be natural that judges as men should fed a strong predilec- 
tion to the claims of their own government. 

The whole wcndd owes too much to the Constitutifm of the 
United States to think little of its example. Especially the 



40 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

American nations, which have drawn from that great instru- 
ment their forms of government and the spirit of their free 
institutions, must r^ard with respect the lesson which it 
teaches. 

The proud independent sovereign comimonwealths like 
Virgmia and Pennsylvania and New York and Massachu- 
setts, which formed the American Union, revered their judges. 
They were prepared to give, and did give to their courts a 
degree of authority over them and over their executives 
and l^islatures without precedent in the history of free 
government; but they also revered justice; they prized 
peace and concord and friendship and brotherhood between 
the states and their citizens. A century and a half ot free 
self-government had brought to them the lessons and the 
self-restraint of experience. They knew the limitations ot 
good men and the essential conditions of doing justice. In 
that great cause they allowed no small local jealousies to bar 
the way. When the ever-recurring question arises between 
submission of controversies to international arbitration on 
the one hand and insistence upon the jurisdiction of national 
tribunab on the other, the nations who look to th^ f ramers of 
the American Constitution as an example of high construc- 
tive statesmanship and wisdom, shoidd not fail to find in 
this judgment, matter to arrest their attention and influence 
their action. 

No court in the world has greater power and independence 
and honor than the Supreme Court, established under the 
Constitution of the United States, yet our Grovemment, by 
international agreement, has submitted to international 
tribunab many cases which could have been, and many 
cases which aheady had been, decided by that great court. 
For example, the cases of the Peterhofy reported in Wallace's 
Reports, Volume 5, the Dashing Waive (5 Wallace), the 
Georgia (7 Wallace), the Isabella Thompson (S Wallace), 



ARBITRATION AND NATIONAL COURTS 41 

the Pearl (5 Wallace), the Adela (6 Wallace), had all been 
decided by the Siq[>reme Court, and they were re-submitted 
to an international tribunal, which decided them in the same 
way the court had decided them. 

The cases of the Hiawatha (2 Black), the Circasdan (2 
Wallace); the Springbock (5 Wallace), the Sir William Fed 
(5 Wallace), the VoUmt (5 Wallace), the Science (5 Wallace), 
had all been decided by the Supreme Court, and they were 
re-submitted to an international tribunal, which decided 
them adversely to the decisions of the court, and the United 
States complied with the decisions of the arbitral tribunal. 

It is true that the rule is undisputed that where there has 
been a denial of justice in national courts their decisions are 
not to be held conclusive, and arbitration or other further 
action may be called for. Unfortunately it has been neces- 
sary oft^i in the past, to invoke this rule; but it is an unsatis- 
factory rule and injurious in its effects. It involves an indict- 
ment and trial of the judicial system under which the denial 
of justice is alleged to have occurred. It involves aspav 
sions upon government, imputations upon high offidak, in- 
citement to anger and resentment, and tends to destroy 
rather than to preserve good feeling and friendship between 
the nations concerned. 

The better rule would be, to avoid the danger of denials of 
justice, and to prevent the belief that justice has not been 
done, which must always possess the parties defeated in a 
tribunal suspected of partiality, by submitting in the first 
instance to an impartial arbitral tribunal all such cases as are 
liable to be affected by the considerations I have mentioned. 

And the reason of sudi a rule would require that when such 
cases have been decided aheady by national courts, and the 
impartial justice of the decision is seriously questioned, upon 
substantial grounds, they should be re-submitted to an arbi- 
tral tribunal, not for proof that justice has been denied, but 



42 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

for rehearing upon the merits because self-respect and intelli- 
gent self-interest forbid a nation to shelter itsdf behind 
decisions of its own courts that rest under the imputatifm of 
partiality, or to be content with any but the best means and 
the most sincere effort to learn what is just in order that the 
nation may do what is just. 



THE BASIS OF PROTECTION TO CITIZENS 
RESIDING ABROAD 

FRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS AT THB FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING 

OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 

WASHINGTON, APRIL 88» 1910 

I SHALL ask you to listen for a few minutes to some re- 
marks regarding the protection which a nation should 
extend over its citizens in foreign coimtries. I do not select 
this topic because I have anything new to say about it, or 
because there is any real controversy among international 
lawyers concerning the principles involved or concerning the 
fundamental rules to be applied, but because there is a con- 
siderable d^ree of public misunderstanding about the sub- 
ject, and situations are continually arising in which a failure 
of the public in one country or another to appreciate justly 
the extent and nature of international obligation leads to 
resentment and unfriendly feding that ought to be avoided. 

The subject has grown in importance very rapidly during 
recent years. The worid policy of commercial exdusiveness 
prevailing in the early part of the last century has practically 
disappeared. The political relations on the one hand and the 
commercial and industrial relations on the other hand of dif- 
ferent parts of. the earth to each other are qxiite separate and 
distinct. It is not uncommon to find that a nation has com- 
mercial colonies which bear no political relation to her what- 
ever, and political colonies which are industrially allied most 
dosely to other countries. 

The increase in facilities for transportaticm and communi- 
cation — steamships and railroads and td^graphs and 
tdephones — has set in motion vast armies of travders who 



44 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

are making their way into the most remote comers of foreign 
comitries to a d^ree never before known. 

The general diffusion of intelligence among the people of all 
civilized, and to a considerable d^^ree of semi-civilized, 
comitries, has carried to the great mass of the people — the 
working people of the world — a knowledge of the affairs and 
the conditions of life in other lands; and this, with the cheap- 
ness and ease of transportation, has led to enormous emigra- 
tion and shifting of population. One of the salient features of 
modem political development has been the severance of the 
people from the soil of their native countries. The peasant, 
who was formerly a fixture in his native valley, tmable to 
conceive of himself as a part of any life beyond the circle of 
the surrounding hills, now moves freely to and fro, not only 
from one community to another but from one country to 
another. Labor is becoming fluid, and, like money, flows 
towards the best market without paying much attention to 
pohtical lines. The doctrine of inalienable alliance so in- 
consistent with the natural course of development of the new 
world, and so long and so stoutly contested by the United 
States, has been almost universally abandoned. It is mani- 
fest that the few nations which have not given their assent to 
the right of their citizens to 'change their citizenship and 
all^^iance as they change their residence will not long main- 
tain their position. This change has led to a new class of 
citizens traveling or residing abroad; that is, the naturalized 
citizen, who, returning to his country of origin or going to 
still other countries, claims the protection not of his native 
but of his adopted government. Among the great throngs of 
emigrants to other countries may be distinguished two some- 
what different classes — one composed of those who have 
transferred their substantial interests to the new country and 
are building up homes for themselves; the other class com- 
posed of those who still continue their principal interests in 



CITIZENS RESIDING ABROAD 45 

the country from which they have come and mider their new 
conditions are engaged in accumulating means for the better 
support of the families and friends they have I^ behind 
them, or for their own future support after the return to 
which they look forward. 

The great accumulation of capital in the mon^ centers of 
the world, far in excess of the opportunities for home invest- 
ment, has led to a great increase of international investment 
extending over the entire surface of the earth, and these 
investments have naturally been followed by citizens from 
the investing countries prosecuting and caring for the enter- 
prises in the other countries where their investments are 
made. For example, it was estimated three or four years 
ago that within the preceding ten years over seven hundred 
millions of capital had gone from the United States alone 
into Mexico for investment; and this capital had been fol- 
lowed by more than forty thousand citizens of the United 
States who had become resident in Mexico. This same 
process has been going on all over the world. 

All these forms of peaceful interpenetration among the 
nations of the earth naturally contribute their instances of 
citizens justly or unjustly dissatisfied with the treatment 
they receive in foreign countries and calling upon their own 
governments for protection. 

In two directions the process has gone so far as to justify 
and receive limitation. On the one hand, there has come to 
be a recognition of the essential difference between emigra- 
tion en masse, by meaos of which the people of one country 
may virtually take possession of considerable portions of the 
territory of another country to the practical exclusion of its 
own citizens, and the ordinary travel and residence upon 
individual initiative to which the usual conventions concern- 
ing reciprocal rights of travel and residence relate. The 
occasicm for considering this difference naturally depends 



46 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

very much upon the capacity of the emigrants for assimila- 
tion with the people of the cotmtry to which they go. The 
wider the differences in race, customs, traditi<ms, and stand- 
ards of living, the less is the probability of assimilation and 
the greater the certainty that emigraticm of large bodies of 
people will assume the character of peaceful invasicm and 
occupation of territory. After many years of discussion 
China has come to recognize the existence of such a distinc- 
tion in respect of Chinese emigration to North Amaica. 
Japan has recognized it from the first, and there has never 
been any question between the governments of Japan and the 
United States upon that subject. 

On the other hand, the United States has itself put a limit 
upon the practice, which had already reached the point ci 
serious abuse, of permitting the natives of other countries to 
become naturalized here for the purpose of returning to thdr 
homes or seeking a residence in third countries with the 
benefit of American protection. Several years ago it was 
estimated that there were in Turkey seven or eight thousand 
natives of Turkey who had in one way and another secured 
naturalization in the United States and had gone home to 
live with the advantage over their friends and neighbors of 
being able to call upon the American embassy for assistance 
whenever they were not satisfied with the treatment they 
received from their own government. At the time of the 
troubles in Morocco, which were disposed of at the Algedras 
Conference, an examination of the list of American dtiz&aa 
in Morocco showed that one half of the list consisted of 
natives of Morocco who had been naturalized in the United 
States and had left this country and gone back to Morocco 
within three months after obtaining their naturalization 
papers. We have now adopted a rule, which has been em- 
bodied in a nimiber of treaties and in the Act of Congress 
of March 2, 1907, for the purpose of diecking this abuse. 



CITIZENS RESIDING AKBOAD 47 

The new rule is, that when a naturalized citizen leaves this 
country instead oC residing in it, two years' residence in 
the country of his origin or five years' residence in any other 
country creates a presumption of renunciation of the citizen- 
ship which he had acquired here, and unless that presumpticHi 
is rebutted by showing some special and temporary reason 
for the change of residence, the obligation of protection by 
the United States is deemed to be ended. 

I have dwelt upon the magnitude and diversity of the 
causes which are resulting in the presence in each civilized 
country of great niunbers of citizens of other countries, be- 
cause conditions so univarsal plainly must be dealt with 
pursuant to fixed, definite, certain, and universally recog- 
nized rules of international action. 

The simplest form of protection is that exardsed by strong 
countries whose citizens are f otmd in parts of the earth under 
the ]urisdicti(m of governments whose control is inadequate 
for the preservation of ordar. Under such circumstances in 
times of special disturbance it is an international custom for 
the countries having the power to intervene directly for the 
protection of thehr own citizens, as in the case of the Boxer 
rebellion in China, when substantially all the Westan 
powers ware concerned in the march to Pddng and the for- 
cible capture of that city for the protection of the l^ations. 
On a smaller scale, armed forces have often been landed from 
men-of-war for the jvotection of the life and property of 
their national citizens during revolutionary disturbances, as, 
for example, in Central America and the West Indies. Such 
a course is undoubtedly often necessary, but it is always an 
impeachment of the effective sovereignty of the government 
in whose territory the armed demonstration occurs, and it 
can be justified only by unquestionable facts which leave no 
practical doubt of the incapacity of the government of the 
country to perform its international duty of protection. It 



48 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

leads to many abuses, especially in the conduct of those 
nationals who, f eding that they are backed up by a navy, 
act as if they were superior to the laws of the country in 
which they are residing and permit their sense of inmumity 
to betray them into arrogant and offensive disrespect. 

Similar in principle to the method of direct protection 
which I have mentioned is the practice of exercising extra- 
territorial jurisdiction, under conventional arrangements, in 
countries whose methods of administering justice are very 
greatly at variance with the methods to which the people of 
the great body of civilized states are accustomed, such, for 
example, as China and Turkey. 

Between countries which maintain effective government 
for the maintenance of order within thehr territories, the 
protection of one country for its nationals in foreign terri- 
tory can be exercised only by calling upon the government of 
the other cotmtry for the performance of its international 
duty, and the measure of one country's international obliga- 
tion is the measure of the other country's right. The rule of 
obligation is perfectly distinct and settled. Each country is 
botmd to give to the nationals of another country in its terri- 
tory the benefit of the same laws, the same administration, 
the same protection and the same redress for injury which it 
gives to its own citizens, and neither more nor less : provided 
the protection which the country gives to its own citizens 
conforms to the established standard of civilization. 

There is a standard of justice, very simple, very funda- 
mental, and of such general acceptance by all civilized coun- 
tries as to form a part of the international law of the world. 
The condition upon which any country is entitled to measure 
the justice due from it to an alien by the justice which it 
accords to its own citizens is that its system of law and ad- 
ministration shall conform to this general standard. If any 
country's system of law and administration does not con- 



CITIZENS RESIDING ABBOAD 49 

form to that atandard, although the people of the country 
may be content or compelled to live undar it» no other coun- 
try can be compelled to accept it as furnishing a satisf ac* 
tory measure of treatment to its citizens. In the famous 
Don Padfico case, Lord Pafanerston said, in the House of 
Commcms: 

If our subjects ahro«d have ocnnidaiiits agsinst individiuds, or against 
the govemment of a foreign country, if the courts of law of that country 
can afford them redress, then, no doubt, to those courts of justice the 
British subject ought in the first instance to i^^ly; and it is only on a 
denial of justice, or upon decisions manifestly unjust, that the British 
Government should be called upon to interfere. But there may be cases 
in which no confidence can be placed in the tribunals, those tribunab being, 
from their composition and nature, not of a character to inspire any hope 
of obtaining justice from them. It has been said: ' We do not apply this 
rule to countries whose governments are arbitrary ot despotic, because 
there the tribunals are under the control of the government, and justice 
cannot be had; and, moreover, it is not meant to be i^iplied to nominally 
constitutional governments, where the tribunals are corrupt.' 

I say, then, that our doctrine is, that, in the first instance, redress should 
be sought from the law courts of the country; but that in cases where re- 
dress cannot be so had — and those cases are many — to confine a British 
subject to that remedy only, would be to d^xrive him of the protection 
which he is entitled to receive. . . . 

We shall be told, perhi^», as we have already been told, that if the 
peofde of the country are liable to have heavy stcmes pdaoed upon their 
tweasts, and police officers to dance upon them; if they are liable to have 
their heads tied to their knees, and to be left for hours in that state; or to 
be swung hke a pendulum, and to be bastinadoed as they swing, foreigners 
have no right to be better treated than the natives, and have no business 
to complain if the same things are practised upon them. We may be told 
this, but that is not my opinion, nor do I b^eve it is the opinion of any 
reasonable man. 

Nations to which such observations i^ply must be content 
to stand in an intermediate position between those incapable 
of maintaining order, and those which conform fully to the 
international standard. With this understanding there are 
no exceptions to the rule and no variations from it. There 
may be circumstances at particular times and places such 



50 INTERNATK^AL SUBJECTS 



that the appBcstioD of tbe rale adk lor aetion ifgaiilii ig 
IbrdfD dtkens quite unlike tbe actioD ordiiiaiily taken for 
tbe benefit of native citisens, but it is always aetion wbidi 
wouM be eqoa% req ui red in case a native citigqi were iJaced 
under Uie same drcumstanoes of exigency* It is {Jain tbat 
no otber rale is practicable. Upon any otber basb every 
eu untr y would be obliged to bave two systems of law and 
administration and pdice regulations, and tbe existence of 
great numbers of foreigners in a co un tr y would be an intoler- 
able burden* Tbe standard to wbidi tbe rule applies is a 
standard of right, and not necessarily of actual performance. 
The foreigner is entitled to have the protection and redress 
idiidi Uie citizen is entitled to have, and the fact that the 
citizen may not have insisted upon his ri^its, and may be 
content with lax administration whidi fails to secure them to 
him, furnishes no reascm why the foreigner should not insist 
upon them and no excuse for denying them to him. It is a 
practical standard and has regard always to the possibilities 
of government under existing conditions. The rights of the 
foreigner vary as the rights of the citizen vary between ordi- 
nary and peaceful times and times of disturbance and tumult ; 
between settled and ordinary communities and frontier 
regions and mining camps. 

The diplomatic history of this country presents a long and 
painful series of outrages oa foreigners by mob violence. 
These have uniformly been the subject of diplomatic claims 
and long-continued discussion, and ultimatdy of the pay- 
ment of indemnity. An examination of these discussions will 
show that in every case the indemnity was in fact paid be- 
cause the United States had not done in the imrticular case 
what it would have done for its own citizens if our laws had 
been administered as our citizens were entitled to have them 
administered. Of course, no government can guarantee all 
the inhabitants of its territory against injury inflicted by 



CITIZENS RESIDING ABROAD 51 

mdiyidual crime and no govanment can guarantee the cer- 
tain punishment of crime; but every citizen is entitled to 
have police protection accorded to him commensurate with 
the exigency under which he may be placed. If he is able to 
give notice to the government of intended violence against 
him he is entitled to have due measures taken for its preven- 
tion, and he is entitled always to have such vigorous prose- 
cution and punishment of those who are guilty of criminal 
violation of his rights that it will be apparent to all the world 
that he cannot be misused with impunity and that he will 
have the benefit of the deterrent effect of punishment. 

It is a distressing fact that in one important respect the 
Government of the United States fails to comply with its 
international obligation in giving the same degree of protec- 
tion and opportunity for redress of wrong to foreigners that it 
gives to its own citizens. The difficulties which beset aliens 
in a strange land are ordinarily local difficulties. The govern- 
ment and the people of the foreign country are usually quite 
ready, in a broad and abstract way, to accord to foreigners 
the fuUest toleration, equality before the law, and protection. 
But the people of the particular community with whom the 
alien comes in contact too often fail of understanding and 
sympathy. They misimderstand and resent the foreign 
customs with which they are unfamiliar. They are aroused 
to anger by the competition to which the foreigner subjects 
them. Immediate contact is too apt at first to breed dislike 
and intolerance towards what Bret Harte describes as the 
" defective moral quality of being a foreigner." Our Con- 
stitution recognizes this natural and often inevitable preju- 
dice by giving to our national courts jurisdiction over all 
civil suits between aliens and citizens of the United States. 
We fail to recognize the same conditions, however, in respect 
of the security of the persons and propai;y of aliens. The 
Revised Statutes of the United States aim to protect citizens 



52 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

of the United States against local prejudice and injury, by 
providing in Section 5508: 

If two or more persons conspire to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimi- 
date any citizen in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege 
secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States, or be- 
cause of his having so exercised the same; or if two or more persons go in 
disguise on the highway, or on the premises of another, with intent to pre- 
vent or hinder his free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege so 
secured, they shall be fined not more than five thousand dollars and impris- 
oned not more than ten years; and shall, moreover, be thereafter ineligible 
to any oflSce, or place of honor, profit, or trust created by the Constitution 
or laws of the United States. 

This provision, however, does not apply to aliens, and no 
similar provision applies to them. Accordingly, defenseless 
Chinamen were mobbed at Denver in 1880, and at Rock 
Springs, Wyoming, in 1885; Italians were lynched in New 
Orleans in 1891, and again at Rouse, Colorado, in 1895; and 
Mexicans were lynched at Yreka, California, in 1895; and 
Italians at Tallulah, Louisiana, in 1899, and again at Erwin, 
Mississippi, in 1901. Our Government was practically de- 
fenseless against claims for indemnity because of our failure to 
extend over these aliens the same protection that we extend 
over our own citizens, and the final result of long diplomatic 
correspondence in each case was the payment of indemnity 
for the real reason that we had not performed our interna- 
tional duty. In these discussions our State Department 
from time to time undertook to shelter itself behind the dis- 
tribution of power in our constitutional system, and the fact 
that there was no law of the United States providing for any 
redress except at the hands of the State officials in the very 
locahty where prejudice led to the injury. Yet when an 
American citizen was injured by a mob in Brazil in 1875, the 
dispatch of Secretary Fish to the American Minister at Rio 
de Janeiro said: 

You represent that the facts as set forth in the memorial of the claimant 
are admitted by that Government, which, however, denies its accounta- 



CITIZENS RESIDING ABROAD 53 

bOity and says that the province where the injury to Mr. Smyth took place 
is alone answerable. Supposing, however, the case to be a im>per one for 
the interposition of this Government, the reference of the claimant to the 
authorities of the province for redress will not be acquiesced in. Those 
authorities cannot be officially known to this Government. It is the Im- 
perial Govenmient at Rio de Janeiro only which is accountable to this 
Government for any injury to the person or property of a dtisen of the 
United States committed by the authorities of a province. It is with that 
Government alone that we hold diplomatic intercourse. The same rule 
would be applicable to the case of a Brazilian subject who, in this country, 
might be wronged by the authorities of a State. 

And President Harrison, in his message to Congress of 

December 9, 1891» relating to the lynching of Italians at 

New Orleans in that year, said: 

Some suggestions growing out of this unhappy incident are worthy the 
attention of Congress. It would, I bdieve, be entirdy competent for Con- 
gress to make offenses against the treaty rights of foreigners domiciled in 
the United States cognizable in the Federal Courts. This has not, how- 
ever, been done, and the Federal officers and Courts have no power in such 
cases to intervene either (or the im>tection of a fcureign dtisen or for the 
punishment of his slayers. It seems to me to follow, in this state of the 
law, that the officers of the' State charged with police and judicial powers 
in such cases must, in the consideration of international questions growing 
out of such incidents, be regarded in such sense as Federal agents as to 
make this Government answerable for their acts in cases where it would be 
answerable if the United States had used its constitutional power to define 
and punish crimes against treaty rights. 

It is to be hoped that our Grovemment will never again 
attempt to shelter itself from responsibility for the enforce- 
ment of its treaty obligations to protect foreigners by ally- 
ing its own failure to enact the laws necessary to the discharge 
of those obligations. 

The most frequent occasions of appeal by citizens for pro- 
tection in other countries arise upon the assertion that justice 
has been denied them in the courts, and this appears, unfor- 
tunately, to be a frequent occurrence. The justification of 
such complaints does not rest upon any obligation of another 
country to furnish any better or different judicial relief or 



54 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

procedure to foreigners than is provided for the citizens of the 
country itself » but it results from the fact that in many coun- 
tries the courts are not independent; the judges are remov- 
able at will; they are not superior, as they ought to be» to 
local prejudices and passions, and their organization does not 
afford to the foreigner the same d^ree of impartiality which 
is accorded to citizens of the country, or which is required by 
the common standard of justice obtaining throughout the 
civilized world. When justice is denied for such reasons 
there is a failure on the part of the government to perform 
its international duty, and a right on the part of the govern- 
ment whose citizen has failed to secure justice to demand 
reparation. 

A large proportion of such complaints are, however, with- 
out just foundation. Citizens abroad are too apt to complain 
that justice has been denied them whenever they are beaten 
in a litigation, forgetting that, as a rule, they would complain 
just the same if they were beaten in a litigation in the courts 
of their own country. When a man goes into a foreign coun- 
try to reside or to trade he submits himself, his rights, and 
interests to the jurisdiction of the courts of that country. He 
will naturally be at a disadvantage in litigation against citi- 
zens of the country. He is less familiar than they with the 
laws, the ways of doing business, the habits of thought and 
action, the methods of procedure, the local customs and pre- 
judices, and often with the language in which the business is 
done and the proceedings carried on. It is not the duty of a 
foreign country in which such a litigant finds himself to 
make up to him for these disadvantages under which he 
labors. They are disadvantages inseparable from his pros- 
ecuting his business in a strange land. A large part of the 
dissatisfaction which aliens feel and express regarding thar 
treatment by foreign tribunals results from these causes, 
which furnish no just ground for international complaint. It 



CITIZENS RESIDING ABBOAD 55 

18 very desirable that pe<^le who go into other countries shall 
realize that th^ are not entitled to have the laws and police 
regulations and methods of judicial procedure and customs of 
business made over to suit them, or to have any other or 
different treatment than that which is accorded to the 
citizens of the country into which they have gone; so long 
as the government of that country maintains, according to 
its own ideas and for the benefit of its own dtiz^is, a sys- 
tem of law and administration which does not violate the 
common standard of justice that is a part of international 
law; and so long as, in ccmformity with that standard, the 
same rights, the same protection, and the same means of 
redress for wrong are given to them as are given to the citi- 
zens of the country where th^ are. On the other hand, 
every one who goes into a foreign country is bound to obey 
its laws, and if he disobeys them he is not entitled to be pro- 
tected against punishment under those laws. It follows, 
also, that one in a foreign country must submit to the incon- 
venience of proceedings that may be brought in accordance 
with law upon any bona fide charge that an offense has been 
committed, even though the charge may not be sustained. 
Nevertheless, no violation of law can deprive a citizen in a 
foreign country of the right to protection from the govern- 
ment of his own country. There can be no crime which leaves 
a man without l^al rights. One is always entitled to insist 
that he shall not be punished except in accordance with law, 
or without such a hearing as the universally accepted prin- 
ciples of justice demand. If that right be denied to the most 
desperate criminal in a foreign country, his own government 
can and ought to protect him against the wrong. 

Happily, the same causes which are making questions of 
alien im>tection so frequent are at the same time bringing 
about among all civilized peoples a better understanding of 
the rights and obligations created by the presence of the alien 



56 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

in a foreign country; a fuHar aoo^tanoe of the common in- 
ternational atandard of justice, and a gradual reduction of 
the local prejudices and misunderstandings which are in 
the way of the alien's getting his full rights. Discussions 
between governments upon complaints of wrong to their 
citizens tend more and more to relate to questions of fact 
upon the determination of which acc^ted and settled rules 
can be readily applied. And in all nations the wise and sound 
policy of equal protection and impartial justice to the alien is 
steadily gaining acceptance in the remotest parts and 
throughout even the least instructed communities. 



THE FUNCTION OF PRIVATE CODIFICATION 
IN INTERNATIONAL LAW* 

FBESIDENTIAL ADDRESS AT THE FIFTH ANNUAL MEETING 

OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 

WASHINGTON, APRIL 87. 1911 

THE increasing frequency of arbitration and the pressure 
for a regular Court of International Justice composed of 
p^manent judges, have given new emphasis to the demand 
for what is called the codification of international law. 

The process and the result intended to be described when 
the term codification is applied to international law involves 
something very different from the codification of mimidpal 
law. The codifier of any part of the law of a nation finds the 
law with which he is to deal already in existence and authen- 
ticated. It may be confused in form and apparently un- 
related in its parts: it may be scattered through the statu- 
tory enactments of many years and the declarations of a 
multitude of judicial decisions; the codifier may have to 
struggle with difficult questions of apparent inconsistency^ of 
doubtful repeal, of obscurities in expression calling for inter- 
pretation and construction, and with conflicts of judicial 
opinion; but the expressions which he considers all come 
from the same law-making power. Somewhere in the mass of 
material is to be found the final expression of legislative will, 
the controlling decision of the courts, and when these are 

> Hie reader's attention is called to the fact that a second address on the subject 
of the Gxlification of Inteniatioiial Law, was delivered by Mr. Root at the joint 
meeting of the Subsection on Intematioiial Law and the American Institute of 
Litemational Law at the Second Pkn-American Scientific Congress* Washington, 
D. C December SO^ 1915, which ^ipears at page 4M of this volume. 

S7 



58 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

found everything inconsistent with them may be rejected as 
repealed or overruled. The codifier's task is to find what the 
rules reaUy are; to put them in due relations to each other 
under appropriate heads in accordance with some systematic 
scheme of arrangement; to bring order out of confusion; to 
furnish a methodical statement of the results of his re- 
searches which may make the law plain to the people who 
live under it and may relieve countless lawyers from the 
necessity of going through the same wearisome process of 
inquiry in each separate case. When the work is complete, 
if it is acceptable, the legislative power of the State puts its 
stamp of approval upon it and resolves any doubts or uncer- 
tainties by its acceptance of the codifier's conclusions. It 
may indeed be that the research of the codifier and the 
clearer view presented by a systematic arrangement will 
have revealed inadequacies of expression, incongruities, and 
omissions in the existing law, but, as to these, the suggestions 
of the codifier for remedying the defects discovered will be 
accepted or rejected by the single fiat of the legislative body 
which enacts the code. 

In the main, to codify municipal law is to produce a syste- 
matic, and authoritative statement of the law already 
prescribed by a sovereign. 

An attempt to codify international law must deal with 
entirely different material and must involve a very different 
process. Lord Mansfield has described the law oi nations as 
" founded upon justice, equity, convenience, the reason of 
the thing and confirmed by long usage." 

When any one undertakes to produce a systematic state- 
ment of the rules of international law, having no statutes 
embodying it, no binding judicial decisions declaring it, no 
deliverance of any law-making power establishing it, he must 
have recourse to a vast mass of conflicting opinion expressed 
by a multitude of text-writers, of publicists, of the authors of 



FDNCnON OP PRIVATE CODIPICATION 59 

diplomatic correspondence, as to what is just, what is equi- 
table, reasonable, convenient, with very defective and partial 
evidence of acceptance by the civilized nations oi opinions 
one way or another upon these questions. He will find it 
possible by research to secure evidence of the acceptance of 
certain very general rules of conduct, of certain ethical 
principles, oi many partial and a few general usages and pre- 
cedents, and the conventional acceptance of a few specific 
rules designed to make certain the practical application oi 
general principles. A very great part, however, of the so- 
called rules of international law, the relevancy of which to the 
practical affairs of life has been perceived, and which have 
been the subject of discussion among international lawyers, 
he will find to be (tf such doubtful authority, to rest upon 
such uncertain and partial acceptance by governmental 
authority, or upon such vague and unsatisfactory evidence 
of usage, that they wiU certainly be open to dispute when- 
ever cases involving diverse interests arise; and any proper 
statement of them must be, not that this is the law, but that 
this ought to be the law, or this is the better opinion, or this 
is more generally received as being the rule which should 
govern. The substantial work of international codification is, 
not merely to state rules but to secure agreement as to what 
the rules are, by the nations whose usage must confirm them. 
Except as ameans to this end, any codification of international 
law can be of littie value except as a topical index and guide 
to the student. As a means to this end, to be properly used 
and followed out, it is of very great importance to press for- 
ward the work of codifying international law. 

To codify municipal law is to state in systematic form the 
results of the law-making process already carried on by a 
nation through its established institutional forms. To codify 
international law is primarily to set in motion and promote 
the law-making process itself in the community of nations in 



60 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

which the institutional f onns appropriate for the carrying on 
of such a process have been so vague, indistinct, uncertain, 
and irregular that they coidd hardly be said to exist at all. 

The nations are a law-making power. When by their 
confirmation of a rule of justice they make it a law of nations, 
it is truly a law and cannot be violated without punishment. 
But no government ever has been or can be conducted suc- 
cessfully except through the creation of institutions by the 
orderly working of which the wiU of the governing power 
becomes transmuted into specific rules of action made effec- 
tive and applied to the affairs of life. In the absence of 
institutional forms through which the process of international 
law-making may be carried on with r^^arity, the process is 
very slow and difiicult. It is hindered by two facts resting 
in human nature. The first is, that while international law 
can be made only by the assent of governments, governments 
ordinarily concentrate their attention on propositions of 
international law affecting any given subject only when there 
is some practical, concrete case arising in their own interna- 
tional relations and requiring the application of a rule. 
Governments are practical organizations dealing with actual 
conditions, continually pressed by immediate difficulties, and 
the men engaged in them ordinarily have but little time and 
strength to devote to questions which for practical purposes, 
so far as they themselves are concerned, seem academic 
because they have not yet arisen or may possibly never arise. 

Every foreign office is fully occupied with questions that it 
must decide, and, as a rule, foreign offices will not concern 
themselves with any other question unless they are moved 
by some special impulse of external pressure or by the 
promptings of exceptionally far-sighted policy. 

On the other hand, it is a matter of common observation 
that the only way to secure a general agreement upon a rule 
of action is to secure consideration of it at a time when there 



FUNCTION OP PRIVATE CXM)IPICATION 61 

is no concrete case calling for its application; when there 
are no diverse interests tending to produce different views 
as to what the rule shoidd be. 

This is very wdl iUustrated by the experience oi all the 
States which live under written constitutions. For example, 
in all the States of our American union there is a substantial 
similarity in a series of constitutional provisions not merely 
expressing general principles of justice but stating specific 
rights designed practically to insure the benefit of those 
principles to the individual citizen, such as the prohibition 
against taking private property for public use without com- 
pensation; against depriving one of life, liberty, or prop- 
erty, without due process of law; against being put twice in 
jeopardy for the same offense; against being compelled to 
testify against one's self; against unreasonable searches and 
seizures; against excessive bail and cruel and unusual 
punishment; against State action impairing the obligation 
of contracts, etc. These rules are adopted through a process 
which does not deal at all with concrete cases. They are 
agreed upon by the people of the States as rules of abstract 
justice. There is no American State in which the people 
would xmder any condition abandon them; yet it woidd be 
difficult to find any State in which there are not attempts 
made every year on the part of the officers of government to 
evade and override these very rules in concrete cases. In- 
deed the reason why our people put such provisions into our 
constitutions is that they feel that if they do not make such 
rules of action binding when there is no practical question at 
issue, they themselves wiD not observe the rules when a prac- 
tical question is presented. They know that the time for 
agreeing upon a just rule of action and the occasion for 
applying a rule of action must be separate and distinct, or 
the interest of the particular occasion will override and con- 
trol the law-maker's sense of justice. Of course these con- 



62 DW'ERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

siderations apply much more strongly in the making of an 
international law; because the particular occasion for the 
application of an international rule ordinarily is created by 
the existence of diverse interests which make very difficult 
any agreement as to what the rule of justice b. 

It thus appears that in the ordinary course of international 
a£Fairs the only occasions when it is possible to secure the 
attention of a law-making power to questions as to what the 
rules of law are or ought to be, are the very occasions when it 
b most difficult for the law-making powers to agree upon 
such rules, that b, the most difficult for them to establbh a 
rule as law. The movement for codification of international 
law b an expression of a natural impulse on the part of those 
who are interested in international relations to remedy thb 
failure oi national governments to fxmction as an interna- 
tional law-making power. The movement has proceeded 
along several apparently distinct lines. The first has been 
the line of individual codification by temperamental succes- 
sors to Jeremy Bentham — men whose natures moved them 
to evoke order out of confusion and to give system and 
definiteness to the subject-matter contained in the vast mass 
of writings by publicbts upon international law, often vague 
and indefinite, often repetitious and prolix, often contentious 
and prejudiced. The forty-five years which have passed 
since, at the instance of Mr. David Dudley Field, the British 
Association for the Promotion oi Social Science appointed a 
committee to prepare and report the outline of an interna- 
tional code have been a period not of stagnation but of 
extraordinary growth in the direction of international law- 
making. Although Mr. Field alone did anything under the 
committeeappointment, he produced hb own admirable draft 
outlines of an international code in 1872. In the meantime 
the codification by Professor Blxmtschli of Heidelberg, had 
been published in 1868. The code of Pasquale Fiore, of the 



FUNCTION OP PRIVATE CODIFICATION 68 

University oi Naples, was published in 1888, and in 1906 the 
project for a code of public international law by M. Duplessix 
was published at Paris and crowned by the Bureau of Interna- 
tional Peace. A comprehensive draft of a statute has thus 
been made in four different coxmtries from four different 
national points of view at different times and upon independ- 
ent, individual initiative. 

In the meantime also another process has been going on 
much like the discussion to which the provisions of proposed 
laws are subject in committee under ordinary methods of 
legislative procedure. That process has been carried on by 
voluntary international associations of great dignity and 
consequence. 

The Institute of International Law established at Ghent 
in 187S has devoted itself to the scientific study and discus- 
sion of the law. Closely limited in number, composed entirely 
oi CTunent experts whose qualifications have akeady been 
demonstrated by their individual writings, filling the vacan- 
cies in its numb^ by its own selection, it has rendered very 
great services in the systematic development of the science 
of international law. It has drafted and adopted, after full 
discussion and mature deliberation, model codes upon a great 
number oi subjects and has bestowed great benefits upon 
mankind by leading the way in the study of international 
law from the philosophical and historical point of view. 

The Association for the Reform and Codification oi the 
Law of Nations, organized at Brussels in the same year, 
187S, under the initiative of James B. Miles, the Secretary 
oi the American Peace Society, and with the cooperation of 
David Dudley Field, Theodore Dwight Woolsey, William 
Beach Lawrence, Emory Washburn, Elihu Burritt, and 
many other distinguished Americans, is still active under its 
new title oi the International Law Association. Unlimited 
in number, welcoming to its lists all competent persons. 



64 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

induding not merely scientific students of the law from all 
countries, but merchants, men of a£Fairs, underwriters, ship 
owna*s, economists, municipal lawya*s, politicians, repre- 
sentatives of chambers oi commerce and peace societies, it has 
discussed questions of international law from many practical 
and popular points of view and has dealt with the application 
of scientific principles to the actual conditions of international 
trade and intercourse. 

In the meantime also a great number and variety of inter- 
national societies for specific purposes have arisen, associa- 
tions devoted to political economy; to the promotion of 
commerce and industry; to navigation and railroads; to 
penology and criminal anthropology; to the legal protection 
of travellers and of children and of animals; to the protection 
of industrial property and of artistic and literary property; 
to reforming the abuse of alcoholic drinks and the suppression 
of immoral literature; to libraries and bibliography; to 
education and insurance; to sanitation and hygiene and 
demography; to universal peace, and a universal language; 
to engineering and architecture and agricultiu*e; to more 
separate sciences and more different reforms than one can 
well recall without a memorandum. The recently established 
Central Office of International Institutions at Brussels in- 
vited a congress of representatives of such associations to 
meet at Brussels in the year 1910, and representatives of one 
hundred and thirty-four international associations attended 
the congress. The investigation of the Central Office devel- 
ops the fact that there are about three hundred such inter- 
national associations, a large part of them quite ignorant of 
the others' existence. 

Most of them are not consciously endeavoring to develop 
international law, but they are building up customs of private 
international action. They are establishing precedents, 
formulating rules for their own guidance, many of them press- 



FDNCnON OP PRIVATE CODIPICATION 66 

ing for uniformity of national I^gidation and many of them 
uq^ing treaties and conventions for the furtherance of their 
common purposes. A great part of them rq[>resent a midti- 
tude of national associations oi which the international 
association is a federation. Their activity is making a midti- 
tude of leaders of thought in almost every department of 
human effort familiar with a field which transcends the 
limits of any national law and in which, if regulation be 
needed at all, it must be found in international agreement. 

I have not endeavored to make an exhaustive enumera- 
tion, but merely to give instances indicating the existence 
during the last half -century of widespread, continuous, and 
intense private, unofficial acti<Hi tending in the direction of 
international law-making. 

But all of this private activity did not of itself make inter- 
national law. However plainly founded upon justice, equity, 
convenience, and the reason of the thing a rule might be, in 
order to be law it must be confirmed by the nations. And 
until the Peace Conference at The Hague in 1809, govern- 
ments, that is to say, the only powers that could really make 
international law, had responded but indifferently and within 
narrow limits to the steadily growing unofficial pressure. 

There were, it is true, a number of treaties by which na- 
tions undertook to regulate their future conduct in specific 
directions, such as, the Slave-Trade Treaty, in 1890; the 
establishment oi the International Bureau of Weights and 
Measiu^, in 1875; the Convention for the International 
Protection of Industrial Property, in 1888; for the Protection 
of Submarine Cables, in 1884; for the Exchange of Official 
Documents, in 1886; for the Publication of Customs Tariffs, 
in 1890; the agreement made at Saint Petersburg for the Pro- 
hibition of the Use of Explosive Bullets, in 1868; and the Ge- 
neva Convention relating to the Treatment of the Wounded 
id Armies in the Field, in 1864. But mere agreements by 



66 DW'ERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

which nations stipulate as to their future conduct do not ci 
themselves make international law. They are binding only 
as contracts generally are binding. It is true also that the 
results of private formulation and discussion of rules of inter- 
national law, well known to the foreign oflSces of the world, 
produced an effect upon the conduct of nations tending to 
bring about that usage which in the long course of time 
woidd ultimately be capable of proof as amounting to a 
confirmation. 

There were also during the same period a few exceptional 
instances of a new departure in the way of making interna- 
tional law by substituting a formal governmental declaration 
of the law for the proof of conduct in specific instances nec- 
essary to establish confirmation by long usage. 

The difficulties esperienced in the Crimean War led the 
negotiators of the Treaty of Peace in 1856 to embody in the 
Declaration of Paris a statement of four rules affecting cap- 
tures at sea, three of which received general adherence. The 
requirements of a great volunteer army, not very familiar 
with the history and customs of warfare, in 1863, led to the 
formulation by Doctor Francis lieber of his famous instruc- 
tions for the government of the armies of the United States 
in the field — a code of one hundred and fifty-seven articles, 
which was approved by President Lincoln as ** General 
Order No. 100 of 186S.'' This codification produced among 
the European publicists of that day an impression which 
time has not weakened. Its intrinsic merit and its practical 
application on a large scale, although by a single govern- 
ment, gave it a distinction and authority in the opinions of 
mankind which it has never lost. 

When Great Britain and the United States were about to 
submit the Alabama claims to arbitration in 1871 they 
agreed so far as they coidd upon the law r^arding the rights 
and duties of neutrals which shoidd govern the arbitrators. 



FUNCTION OP PRIVATE CODIFICATION 67 

and formulated their agreement in the three rules of the 
Treaty of WashingUm. The success of the Geneva arbitra- 
tion and the great impression produced by that illustration 
of the practicability of peaceable judicial settlement gave 
great credit to the steps by which the result was attained; 
but of course the agreement oi two nations did not make the 
three rules of the treaty international law any more than 
President Uncofai's approval of Doctor Lieber's code made 
that international law. 

The year 1899 found two bodies of actors in the fidd of 
international law development — the private persons who 
had been discussing and formulating and codifying on the 
one hand, and the governments, who alone had power to 
make law, on the other hand, quite separate and distinct; 
the codifiers apparently pure theorists engaged in academic 
discussion; the governments apparently stolid and indif- 
ferent to all but the specific difficulties with which they 
were called upon to deal from day to day. Then a very great 
event was brought about. It was unpremeditated, unin- 
tended, and unforeseen. The Czar of Russia, by his note of 
August 12-24, 1898, inspired by a noble humanitarian senti- 
ment, had called an international conference for the specific 
purpose of considering the limitation of armaments. In 
that note Count Mouravieff said: 

To put an end to these inoessant aimaments and to seek tbe means of 
warding ofiF the calamities which are threatening the whole worid, — such 
is the supreme duty which is today imposed on all States. 

Filled with this idea. His Majesty has been pleased to order me to pro- 
pose to all the Governments whose representatives are accredited to the 
Imperial Court, th^ meeting of a conference which would have to occupy 
itsdf with this grave jwoblem. 

The powers assented to the Russian proposal, but before 
the conference met it had become evident that there was no 
possibility whatever oi securing an agreement upon any plan 
to accomplish the purpose for which the conference was 



68 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

called. If public failure was to be avoided it was necessaiy 
to find something for the conference to do, and for the con- 
ference to do something quite apart from its original purpose. 
What the conference did was to bridge the chasm between 
individual opinion and government action; between the 
codifiers of international law and the makers of international 
law. Then was inaugurated for the first time an institution 
through which instructed, deliberate, and mature opinion 
might find the method and machinery for its direct and effec- 
tive development into law through the concerted action in 
prescribed and orderly procedure, of the law-making powers 
constituting the community of nations. The Second Hague 
Conference in 1907, in its broader and progressive results 
and its provision for still a third conference, made certain the 
continued life of the institution. In these great assemblies 
the work of the codifiers bore fruit. lieber's epoch-making 
code of rules for the conduct of armies in the field became 
law. The three rules of theTreaty of Washington became law. 
Much of the painstaking and public-spirited work of the 
Institute of International Law, and notably that contained 
in its codification of the laws of war on land, adopted at 
its meeting of 1880, became law. The patient thought 
which had evoked from the wilderness of precedent and 
philosophical discussion, and had tested and codified and 
f ormidated in systematic statement the rules that ought to 
govern nations, had prepared material, directed thought, 
and created opinion which made it possible for The Hague 
conferences to act. The instructed thought of the world, the 
sentiment of the world in favor of effective law, the belief of 
the world in the possibility of effective law, had been led to 
such a condition that the atmosphere of the conferences dis- 
couraged factious opposition, gave heart to the friends of 
progressive development, and disappointed the cynical 
disbelief of hide-bound reactionaries. 



PDNCnON OP PRIVATE CODIPICATION 69 

The success (tf The Hague coiiferences was poflsihle because 
in the fuUness of time the world was ready for them; and the 
world was made ready by the voluntary service of a multitude 
of private, unoflSdal workers in the fidd of intematimial law 
working out just conclusions by scientific methods in practical 
form and urging upon the attention of mankind the need 
and the possibility of ertending the control over nations of 
universally accepted law. While mankind has looked with 
iq>proval upon the specific results attained by the two Hague 
conferences, it does not yet appreciate the tremendous sig- 
nificance of the institution which has been created, or fully 
discern the fact that a new era in the law of nations has been 
inaugurated; and very few men appreciate the great part 
which has been played by the unofficial international lawyer 
in this great movement of civilization. 

The final act oi the Second Hague Conference declared: 

I1iiaIIy» tbe Coof eienoe reocmunendi to the powers the ■mifniMins of a 
Third Peace Conf eienoe, which might be hdd within a period correspond- 
ing to that which has elapsed since the preceding conference, at a date to 
be fixed by common agreement between the powers, and it calls their at- 
tention to the necessity of prq[>aring the programme of this Third Con- 
ference a sufficient time in advance to ensure its ddiberations being 
conducted with the necessary authority and expedition. 

In order to attain this object the Conference considers that it would be 
very desirable that, some two years before the probable date of the meet- 
ing, a preparatory committee should be charged by the goYemments with 
the task of collecting the various ptopoetia to be submitted to the con- 
ference, of ascertaining what subjects are ripe for embodiment in an inter- 
national regulation, and of preparing a programme which the governments 
diouid decide upon in sufficient time to enable it to be carefully examined 
by the countries interested. This committee should further be intrusted 
with the task of pnpoaikg a system of organisation and procedure for the 
conference itsdf . 

Here lies the pressing duty of the international lawyer. 
What subjects shall be ** ripe for embodiment in international 
regulation '' when the next great law-making coimdl of the 
nations convenes; where lies the greatest need; in what 



72 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

It is cause for satisfaction that this Association has under- 
taken and is proceeding in so practical a way to do its share in 
this great work of prq[>aration. It is to be hoped that we may 
work usefuUy in the spirit of those Americans who played 
such an honorable part in the banning of this great move- 
ment by idiich, in the last half -century, the devdc^ment of 
international law has been carried so far. 



THE REAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE 
DECLARATION OF LONDON 

FBESIDENTIAL ADDBBSS AT THE SIXTH ANNUAL BIEBTING 

OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 

WASHINGTON* APRIL 95, 191t 



The ttgumaiti for tlie efUfalkhment ci an istcrnfttioiiftl prbe oovrt are wt 
forth in the f oDomig addreM» in idiicfa are alao stated the reaions for the meetinf 
of the Naval Co nfe rence of London, December % 1908, particqiated in 1^ ten lead- 
ing maritiniepoweri. The docmnent called the Decbration of London waa adopted 
1^ thia coafcfcnce Febmaiy M, ItNW. 

Throng Mr. Root'a intervention as aenator* the Dedaiation of London waa 
adviMd and ooneented to by the United States Senate on April U, 1912. The 
legislation necessary to cany it into effect waa passed by the British House of Com- 
mons, but was rejected by the House of Lords on December 16, 1911. This failure, 
and the failure of Great Britain to ratify the Declaration, prevented that ooontiy 
from fixing a date for the deposit of ratifications at London, as contemplated by 
Artide 07 of the Declaration. 

The provisions of the Dedaration were incorporated in the German Priie Ordi- 
nanoe of September 80^ 1909, and issued on August 9» 1914; and in the Fkenck 
/fij*ni0fioiw mr rmpfUpaUm du dnH ini $ rm a li oma i motmdt fMsrrs of December 19, 
1912. 

l^wn the outbreak of the war in 1914, the United Statea suggested to the belfi- 
gerent powers that the Dedaration of London Aould be observed as a rule of eon- 
duct during the continuanre of the war. This proposition did not meet with the 
ap proval of all the belligerents, and was withdrawn. The Declaration of London 
cannot therdote be o o nd de r ed as international law, altiioagh its moral effect haa 
becnoonsideraUe. 

THE principal adiievemeiit of The Hague Conference (tf 
1907 was the Convention for an Intemational Prize 
Court. That Convention provided for a real and permanent 
court conqxMed of judges who were to be i^pointed by the 
contracting powers for terms of six years, were required to be 
^ judges (tf known proficiency in questions kA international 
maritime law and of the highest mmal rq[nitation," and were 
to be paid a stated compensation from a fund contributed by 
all the powers. 

7% 



74 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Jurisdicticxi was ooof erred upon the caurt to review oo 
appeal all judgments of national prize courts. By a subse- 
quent agreement^ for the purpose of avoiding difficulties 
presented by the constitutions of some of the signatory 
powers, an alternative procedure was authorized under 
which the new court might pass upon the question involved 
in the case of prize de novo^ and notwithstanding any judg- 
ment of the national prize court, instead oi passing upon it 
by way of appeal from that judgment. Article 7 of the 
Convention provides: 

11 a question of law to be decided is covered by a treaty in force between 
the belligerent capt<n' and a power which is itsdf or whose sub ject or citisen 
is a party to the proce^ings, the court is governed by the [wovisions of the 
said treaty. 

In the absence of such provisions the court shall tapply the rule of inter- 
national law. If no genially recognized rule exists the court shall give 
judgment in accordance with the general principles of justice and equity. 

In estimating the value of such an agreement among the 
civilized powers it is worth while even for a student of inter- 
national law to recall the wide range and critical importance 
of the questions to be included within the jurisdiction of the 
new court. 

When war breaks out between two considerable maritime 
powers the conmierce of the whole world is immediately 
affected. Each belligerent nation undertakes, so far as it 
can, to cripple its enemy both by direct military and naval 
operations and by cutting off supplies, interfering with 
sources of income, and generally weakening the enemy's 
national power to maintain an army and navy. 

The liability of enemy merchant ships to capture tends to 
throw the commerce formerly carried on by the belligerent 
nations into the hands of neutrals while the necessary policy 
of each belligerent urges it to circumscribe and prevent so 
far as it can the neutral conmierce with the other belligerent. 
Blockades and searches and seizures for carrying contraband 



DECLARATION OP LONDON 75 

goods are familiar methods of giving effect to this poli<7. 
Added to this is the necessity of ccmstant watchfulness by 
belligerents to prevent neutral vessds from rendering direct 
service to the enemy's forces, such as the transportation of 
officers and troc^ or messengers, or the transmission of in- 
telligence. Li this way bdligerents fall into an attitude of 
suspicion toward neutral vessels and unfriendliness toward 
neutral commerce, and the peaceable commerce of the 
world falls into an attitude of resenting what it regards as 
unwarranted interference. The most striking illustration of 
this tenden<7 is to be found in the tremendous conflicts 
of the Napoleonic wars, when Pitt and Napoleon waged war 
not merely with armies and navies but with British Orders 
in Council and Continental Decrees. The Prussian Decree 
which hegsji the series at the instance of Napoleon, on 
March 28, 1806, declared the coast of the North Sea dosed 
against Great Britain. On April 8, 1806, Great Britain retali- 
ated for that Decree by the first Order in Council, which de- 
clared the blockade of the Ems, the Weser, the Elbe, and the 
Trave. On May 16, 1806, came the second Order in Council 
declaring a blockade of the whole coast of the Continent 
from the Elbe to Brest. On October 14, 1806, Napoleon 
retaliated with the famous Berlin Decree, which prohibited 
all commerce with England. On January 7, 1807, another 
British Order in CouncQ declared all neutral trading with 
France, or from port to port with any possession of Prance, 
or with any of the allies of Prance anywhere, to be ground for 
condemnation. On December 17, 1807, Napoleon's Milan 
Decree declared a sentence of outlawry upon England and 
all English ships. It was impossible that such a process 
should not involve all Europe in a universal war; and an 
aftermath of England's ^orcement of her policy upon the 
neutral shipping of the United States was the War of 1812. 
The Civfl War in the United States gave rise to a multitude 



76 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

of controversies between the United States and Great Brit- 
ain, arising on one side from the seizure by the United 
States of numerous vessels charged with directly or indirectly 
attempting to violate the blockade of the southern coasts or 
with carrying contraband, and arising on the other side from 
the fitting out of Confederate cruisers in the neutral ports of 
Great Britain. The n^otiations which led to the settlement 
of both classes of these daims by arbitration under the 
Treaty of Washington involved no slight strain upon the 
temper and good sense of both nations^ and the result was 
reached against most violent protest on the part of many 
who preferred war to concession. In the rec^it war between 
Russia and Japan a feeling of strong resentment was created 
in England by Russia's course in sinking the British mer- 
chantmen» the Knight Commander^ the Saint Kilda^ the 
Hipsang^ and the AUenUm, and in the capture of the Ma- 
lacca by Russian vessels which had passed the Dardanelles 
and the Suez Canal as merchantmen and then converted 
themselves into cruisers. 

There is no more fruitful source of international contro- 
versy, of international resentment and dislike, than in the 
great multitude of questions relating to the rights and 
wrongs of neutrals and of belligerents in a war between 
maritime powers. The tendency always is for the war 
to spread through these controversies and exasperated f ed- 
ings, and the adjudication of questions by national prize 
courts naturally fails to allay the irritation. Provision for 
the international judicial determination of such questions 
is adapted not only to preserve the substantial rights of 
neutral commerce and of bdligerents, but also to prevent 
the spread of war much as municipal ordinances are framed 
to check the spread of fire, and sanitary regulations to pre- 
vent the communication of infectious disease. Considered 
by itself, the concurrence of the major part of the civilized 



DECLABATION OP LONDON 77 

world in the project of this conventi<m was an event of 
the first importance in the development of international 
peace. 

TVhai Great Britain, however, came to consider the ratifi- 
cation of the Prize Court Convention she f omid hersdf con- 
fronted by practical considerations arising from her insular 
position, her dependaice upon foreign food supplies, the wide 
extension of her colcmial empire, her enormous merchant 
marine, and the relation between the effectiveness of her 
great navy and her national existence. The effect of these 
considerations upon the Government of Great Britain is best 
stated in the words of a communication which that Govern- 
ment addressed on February 27, 1008, to the other principal 
maritime powers. In that communicati<m Sir Edward Grey 



Article 7 of the ocmvention provides that» in the absence of treaty 
stipulations apidicable to the case, the Court is to decide the appeals that 
come before it, in accordance with the rules oi international law, or if no 
generally recognized rules exist, in accordance with the genend principles 
of justice and equity. 

The discussions whidi fock jdaoe at The Hague during the recent ccm- 
ference showed that on various questiiHis connected with maritime war 
divergent views and practices prevailed among the nations oi the world. 
Upon some of these subjects an agreement was reached, but on others it 
was not found possible within the period for which the conference as- 
sembled, to arrive at an understanding. The impression was gained that 
the establishment of the Intematicmal Prise Court would not meet with 
general acceptance so long as vagueness and uncertainty exist as to the 
principles which the Court, in dealing with appeals brought before it, 
would apply to questions of hr-reaching importance affecUng naval 
pc^icy and practice. 

Wb Majesty's Government therefore propose that another conference 
should assemble during the autumn of the present year, with the object of 
arriving at an agreement as to what are the generally recognised principles 
ci intematiaDal law, within the meaning of paragraph ft of article 7 erf the 
convention, as to those matters wherein the practice of nations has varied, 
and ol then formulating the rules which, in the absence erf special treaty 
I»t>visions applicable to a particular case, the Court should observe in 
dealing with appeals brought before it for dedsion. 



78 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

That is to say> the realization ol the International Prize 
Court must be postponed until an agreement can be reached 
upon the rules of law and the principles of justice and equity 
whidi the Court is to apply to international controversies. 
No dissent from this view appears to have been expressed and 
pursuant to the British invitation, Austria-Himgary, France, 
Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, Spain, the Netherlands, and 
the United States, sent their delegates to the proposed con- 
ference in London. The conference met on December 4, 
1008, and continued to February 26, 1909. 

The task of the conference was delicate and difficult. The 
Declaration of Paris in 1856 had, it is true, furnished four 
rules as a pointof departure: 

(1) Privateeriiig is and remains abdiahed. 

(2) The neutral flag covers enemy's merchandise with tlie excqyta^ 
contraband of war. 

(S) Neutral merchandise, with the exception of contraband of war, is 
not capturable under the enemy's flag. 

(4) Blodcades, in order to be obligatory, must be effective; that is to 
say, maintained by a force sufficient to really prevent access to the coast 
<rf the enemy. 

But the half -century which had elapsed since the Declara- 
tion of Paris had shown that these rules left uncovered a 
great field of controversy and that they had themselves given 
rise to numerous questions for whidi they afforded no solu- 
tion. The divei^ent views upon these subjects of contro- 
versy had become intrenched in many traditional ideas of 
diff er^it nations as to the requirements of their national 
interests either as possible belligerents or possible neutrals, 
and these ideas made concessions difficult, so difficult that at 
the Second EEague Conference it had been found quite im- 
practicable to reach any conclusions upon questions of this 
character having real importance. 

The members of the London Conference addressed them- 
selves to their work with ability, knowledge, and good 



DECLARATION OP LONDON 70 

temper, and they agreed upon a code of rules which they 
called a ^'Declaration concerning the Laws of Naval War"', 
and which is known as the Declaration of London. The first 
diapter of the Declarati<m> containing twenty-<Hie articles, 
deals with the law of blockade in time of war. The second 
chapter covers the law of contraband, in twenty-three arti- 
cles. The third diapter contains three articles upon the law of 
unneutral service. The fourth diapter, seven artides, on the 
destruction of neutral prizes. The fifth diapter, two artides, 
on transfer of fiag. The sixth chapter, foiur artides, on enemy 
character. The seventh diapter, two artides regarding con- 
voy. The e^th diapter, one artide concerning resistance 
to search. The ninth diapter, an artide upon compensation. 
Then follow seven final artides. The preamble of the Dec- 
laration declares the Powers (naming them) — 

ConsideriDg tlie invitatioii whidi the British Govemment has givoi to 
Tarious Powers to meet in conf erenoe in <»der to determine together as to 
what are the generally recognized rules of international law within the 
meaning ci Article 7 of the Convention d October 18» 1907, relative to the 
establishment of an International Prize Court; 

Recognising aU the advantages whidi in the unfortunate event ot a 
naval war an agreenoent as to the said rules would present, both as regards 
peaceful commerce, and as regards the bdligerents and as regards their 
political relations with neutral Governments; 

Considering that the general principles of international law are often in 
their practical application the subject of divergent procedure; 

Animated by the desire to insure hoicef orward a greater uniformity in 
this respect; 

Hoping that a work so inq;>Qrtant to the common wdbre will meet with 
general i4>I»oval: 

Have appointed as their Plenipotentiaries, that is to say: (names of 
plenipotentiaries) 

Who, after having communicated their full powers, found in good and 
due form, have agreed to make the present Declaration: — 

PRBTJIITNABT FBOVISION 

The Sgnatory Powers are agreed in dedaring that the rules ccmtained 
in the f dlowing Chiq>ter8 ovrespond in substance with the generally 
recognised principles of international law. 



80 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

It is interestiQg to observe that in the rules regarding con- 
traband, the doctrine of continuous voyages, with which the 
Americans were so much concerned during the Civil War, is 
applied to absolute contraband but not to conditional contra- 
band; that the great extension of the list of contraband 
articles, which, in the war between Russia and Japan, 
caused such g^ieral dissatisfaction among neutrals and 
threatened to nullify the doctrine that free ships make free 
goods, has been checked by a definite list of articles which 
are not under any circumstances to be considered contra- 
band, and by carefully framed provisions requiring affirma- 
tive proof that goods are destined for the use of the armed 
forces or a govemm^it department of the enemy as a condi- 
tion upon the right to seize conditional contraband. It is also 
interesting that the question so much discussed at the time of 
the Trent affair between England and the United States has 
been disposed of by the provision of Article 47 that " any 
individual embodied in the armed forces of the enemy who is 
found on board a neutral merchant vessel may be made a 
prisoner of war even though there may be no ground for the 
capture of the vessel." 

This by implication excludes dvil ag^its such as Mason 
and Slidell from capture but approves the method followed 
by Captain Wilkes in taking persons assumed to be liable to 
capture from the vessel and releasing the vessel. 

It is not, however, my purpose to discuss the specific 
provisions of these rules. 

The Declaration was accompanied by a very ludd and 
illimiinating report prepared by M. Renault, which was pre- 
sented to the Conference upon behalf of the Drafting Com- 
mittee and whidi, under Continental usage, is to be treated 
as an authoritative explanation of the text. The report says 
of the Declaration: 



DECLARATION OF LONDON 81 

The body of nJes contained in the Dfirla>»tk)n,whfch^ 
ddibenkti(»is of the Naval Gmfcfence, and whidi 18 to be entitled Declara- 
tion ooDoenung the Laws of Naval War»answenwdl to the denre expressed 
by the British Government in its invitation dl February, 1906. The ques- 
tions ol the programme are aU settled except two» concerning which ez- 
phnations wili be given later. The solutions have been deduced 6xHn the 
various views or different practices and correq>ond to what may be called 
the media seniemtia. They do not always harmonise absolutely with the 
views peculiar to each country, but they do not shock the essential ideas of 
any. Th^r should not be examined sqwratdy, but as a whole, otherwise 
one runs the risk d the most serious misunderstandingB. In fact, if one 
ccmsiders one or more iscdated rules either frran the bdligerent or the neu- 
tral point (rf view, he may find the interests with which he is especially 
concerned have been disregarded by the adoption of these rules, but the^ 
rules have their other side. The work is one oi compr<Mnise and a mutual 
ccmcession. Is it, as a whde, a good work ? 

We confidently hope that those who study it seriously will answer 
aflbrmativdy. The Dedaraticm substitutes unifcnrmity and certainty for 
the diversity and the obscurity from which international relations have too 
long suffered. The Conference has tried to reconcile in an equitable and 
practical way the rights d bdligerents and those oi neutral commerce; it 
is made up of Powers i^aced in very unlike conditions, frcnn the pditical, 
economic, and geognqihical points of view. There is on this account 
reason to suppose that the rules on which these Powers are in accord take 
sufficient account of the different interests invdved, and hence may be 
accepted without disadvantage by aU the others. 

Two questions proposed by Great Britain to the Confer- 
ence remain unanswered: one, relating to the transforma- 
tion of merchant vessels into warships on the high seas, and 
the other, the question whether the nationality or the domi- 
cile of the owner should be adopted in determining whether 
property is enemy property. Upon these questions the 
divergence of views remains unsettled. But throughout the 
great field of controversy in this branch of international law 
all existing differences have been settled by fair agreement 
upon just and reasonable rules. 

Professor Westlake said, in the Nineteenth Century, for 
March, 1910: 



8« INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

That the ten greatest naval powers of the -woAd should have met in 
conference on the laws of naval war as affecting neutrals, and that after 
careful consideration they should have agreed upon a code so conq>reheQ- 
sive as that contained in the Declaration of London, would alone suffice to 
make the year nineteen hundred and nine meuKwable to aU who are inter- 
ested in the improvement erf international relaticms. It remains for the 
year nineteen hundred and ten to make that code binding on the parties by 
ratification, after which the natural course ci events will speedily make it 
the binding code d the world. 

It appeared to many of us> indeed, when the agreement was 
reached and the Conference dissolved, that a great thing had 
been done and that the way had been cleared to carry into 
effect the Prize Court Convention and to establish upon a 
perman^it basis the judicial settl^nent of this class of inter- 
national controversies through the application of an accepted 
code of law. 

Unfortunately, that belief has not been justified. An 
excited controversy immediately arose regarding the effect of 
the rules contained in the Declaration of London upon the 
interests of Great Britain. One set of objectors declared 
that the rules sacrificed the interests of Great Britain as a 
belligerent. Another set asserted that the rules destroyed 
the interests of Great Britain as a neutral. Both could not 
be true, yet each set of objectors continued strenuously to 
oppose the Declaration upon its own grounds. 

An examination of the arguments on both sides in Great 

Britain leads to the conclusion that Mr. Norman Bent- 

wich sums up the controversy fairly when he says, in the 

Fortnightly Review: 

Great Britain should now be in a position to ratify The Hague Prise 
Court Convention, when at least she has made the necessary changes in her 
national prize law. She has come out very well indeed from the interna- 
tional bargaining: she had most to lose by the i»evious uncertainty; she 
has gained most by the settlement. At Paris, in 1856, she gave up one of 
her most powerful belligerent rights — the right to capture enemy prop- 
erty in neutral ships. Now in London she has not given up a single estab- 
lished bdOigerent right of value, her sole c(»icessi<m being on the question 



DECLARATION OF LONDON 83 

of convoy whkh is iimhv iqyparent than real; and, on the other hand, she 
has gained a number erf safe-guards for her neutral commerce, and a num- 
ber of limitations of the alleged belligerent rights of other powers. There 
is indeed a naval schod which is bitterly hostile to the ratification erf the 
Declaration, oa the ground that by it England gives up obtain national 
daims ci long standing and concedes certain rights against whidi she has 
long struggled. But the claims we give up have not been effectively exer- 
cised by us, the rights we concede have regularly been practised against us. 

Neverthdess the Prize Court Bill> introduced in Parlia- 
ment to give effect to the Convention and the Declaration, 
passed the House of Conunons but was rejected by the House 
of Lords, and so the matter stands. 

This is unfortunate not merely because the rules of law 
contained in the Declaration are wise and just and would be 
beneficial to the world, but because the most promising for- 
ward movement toward the peaceable settlement of inter- 
national disputes is frustrated by the kind of treatm^it 
which, if persisted in, must apparently prevent all forward 
movement in the same line. The Prize Court Convention is 
representative of the general movement for judicial settle- 
ment. The Declaration of London is representative of the 
agreement upon the rules of international law which is essen- 
tial to the establishment of the practice of judicial settlement 
in all other branches of international controversy. 

For some time past there has been a growing impression 
among men familiar with international affairs that the 
obstacles to the development of any real system for the sub- 
mission of international disputes to impartial decision are to 
be found not so much in the unwillingness of nations to sub- 
mit their disputes to such a decision, but in the lack of 
adequate machinery through which such decisions may be 
secured. The tendency of arbitrations in which representa- 
tives of the disputing countries are joined with eminent 
publicists from other coimtries for the determination of 
international controversies is not to decide questions of fact 



84 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

and law, but it is to n^otiate a settlemait. Arbitrators as 
a rule act as diplomatists imder the diplomatic sense of hon- 
orable obligation rather than as judges under the judicial 
sense of honorable obligation. Their tend^icy is to do 
what they think is wise and for the best interests of 
all concerned and to get the controversy disposed of in 
some way without too much ill feeling upon either side. 
In this process the frequent failure of international law 
to furnish any certain or undisputed guide for action 
affords free opportunity for the personal predilections of 
the arbitrator, often colored or determined by the pre- 
vailing opinions in the country from which he comes; 
and these opinions are often quite unlike those whidi pre- 
vail among the people of either of the disputing countries. 
It often happens, therefore, that the selection of the arbitra- 
tors is the most critical and decisive step in the arbitration. 
It is very di£Scult to apply to such a proceeding the analogy 
of a judicial proceeding under municipal law for the trial and 
decision of cases between private litigants. It may well be 
that countries are unwilling to have their interests disposed 
of in that way, although they would be perfectly ready to 
submit their cases to the decision of judges acting under the 
judicial sense of responsibility. Many of us are convinced 
that the true line of developm^it for the peaceable settle- 
mait of international controversies is to be found in the 
establishment of a real international court which shall hear 
and determine questions instead of n^otiating a settlement 
of them. This question was much discussed in The Hague 
Conference of 1907, which approved and recommended to 
the Powers the adoption of a draft convention for the creation 
of a Judicial Arbitral Court to be composed of judges ap- 
pointed for fixed periods with stated compensation and 
chosen from persons " fulfilling the conditions qualifying 
them in their respective countries to occupy high Iqgal posts. 



DECLARATION OF LONDON 85 

or to be jurists of recognised competence in mattes of inter- 
national law." The procedure, powers, and jurisdiction of 
the court were all provided for and the draft convention as 
approved by the Conference was defective only in not deter- 
mining how the judges should be appointed. The determina- 
tion upon this matter was prevented by difference of opinion 
between the larger and the smaller powers represented in the 
Conference. The provision for a general judicial court with 
jurisdiction to hear and determine all matters of international 
dispute was thus carried within one step of the completeness 
which was reached in the convention for the Litemational 
Prize Court The Prize Court thus became the advance 
guard of the proposed judicial system, the eiqperiment upon 
which the success of the whole plainly depends. Presidait 
Roosevelt, in his message to Congress of December 8, 1907, 
said truly: 

Not only will the LitomstioDal Pruse Court be the mesns of protecting 
the interest of Deutrab, but it is in itsdf a step toward the creation d the 
most general court for the hearing of international controversies, to which 
reference has just been made. The organisation and action of such a Priae 
Court cannot fafl to accustom the different countries to the submission of 
international questions to the decision of an international tribunal, and we 
may confidently expect the results of such submission to bring about a 
general agreement upon the enlargement d the practice. 

The reUtions between the project tor the Prize Court and 
the project for the general Judicial Arbitral Court are so 
manifest that the United States has already proposed to the 
other Powers an enlargement of the jurisdi^on of the Prize 
Court so that any question between the signatory Powers 
can be heard and determined by the judges of the Prize 
Court This was done by instructions to the delegates of the 
United States at the London Conference, dated February 6, 
1909, by an identic circular note to the Powers represented 
at that Conference dated March 5, 1909, and by a formal 
conmiunication from the Dq[>artment of State to the Powers, 



86 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

dated October 18, 1909. The form given to the proposal in 
the last m^itioned communication from the American State 
Department was that there should be — 

a further agreement that the Internaticmal Court of Prise established by 
the Convention signed at The Hague, October 18, 1907, and the judges 
thereof shall be competent to entertain and decide any case of arbitration 
presented to it by a signatory of the International Court of Prize, and that 
when sitting as a Court of Arbitral Justice the said International Court of 
Prize shall conduct its proceedings in accordance with the draft convention 
fo^ the establishment of a Court of Arbitral Justice, approved and recom- 
mended by the Second Hague Peace Conference, gd. October 18, 1907. 

I am advised that this proposal was favorably received and 
that action to give it effect in some practicable form only 
awaits the ratification of the Prize Court Convention. This 
line of advance also is thus blocked by the failure to confirm 
the Declaration of London. 

This review of the origin and nature of the Declaration of 
London and 'of the attendant conditions exhibits the true 
significance of the Declaration. It is not merely a code of 
useful rules. It is necessary to the existence of the Interna- 
tional Prize Court and therefore to the existence of any 
Judicial Arbitral Court. It is the one indispensable forward 
step without which no practical progress can now be made in 
the further developm^it of a system of peaceable settlem^it 
of international disputes. It is to be hoped that a fuller 
realization of its far-reaching importance will soon lead to its 
acceptance. I cannot avoid the conviction that a broad- 
minded and statesmanlike treatment of this c<mstructive 
measure for practical progress in international relations, is of 
greater value than merely benevolent but academic declara- 
tions in favor of peace which are to be found in general 
treaties of arbitration and in diplomatic correspondence and 
in public speeches. 

Indeed the whole practice of making general treaties of 
arbitration cannot fail to be discredited by the failure, if 



DECLARATION OP LONDON 87 

there is to be a f aflure, of the Prize Court Conyention» for 
the cynical are sure to question the sincerity of general trea- 
ties of arbitration covering the whole field of international 
relations between nations which refuse to assent to this 
convention covering but a small part of the same field. 



FRANCIS UEBER 

FBESIDENTIAL ADDRESS AT THE SEVENTH ANNUAL MEETING 

OP THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OP INTERNATIONAL LAW 

WASHINGTON, APRIL U, 1018 

THIS year, 1918, is the fiftieth anniveraary of a very 
important event m the history of mtemational law — 
the adoption and enforcement by the American Government 
of the code of rules governing the conduct of armies in the 
field, which is known to the American army as General 
Orders No. 100, of 1868. It happens that without any mten- 
tion to create a coincidence the seventh annual meeting of 
the American Society of International Law is appcnnted and 
we are met here, exactly fifty years after the twenty-fourth 
day of April, 1868, when Firesident Lmcoln promulgated 
that famous order. It seems appropriate for this Society at 
this time to celebrate the event by pajring honor to Francis 
Lieber, the author of the instructions embodied in the order. 
In the early stages of the American Civil War both parties 
put into the field immense armies, commanded for the most 
part by volunteer officers drawn from the ordinary occupa- 
tions of dvil life and quite ignorant of the laws and usages of 
war. The sources of information were to be found only in 
scattered text-books and treatises, most of them in foreign 
languages, few of them readily accessible, and requiring the 
painstaking and diligent labor of the student to search out 
rules which were at the best subject to doubt and dispute. 
It was manifest that the officers of the Union and Confeder- 
ate armies had neither time nor opportunity to enteriipon an 
extended study of the international laws of war, and that 
unless some one indicated to these uninstructed and un- 
trained combatants what was and what was not permissible 



90 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

in warf are» the conflict would be waged without those re- 
straints upon the savage side of human nature, by which 
modem civilization has somewhat mitigated and confined 
the barbarous cruelties of war. Fortunately, General Hal- 
leck, who was put in chief command of the Union army in 
July, 1862, was an accomplished student of international law. 
He had already published an excellent book on that subject. 
While the duties of commanding general during an active 
conflict left him no time for research and codification himself, 
he knew what ought to be done and how it ought to be done; 
and he called Francis lieber, then a professor in Columbia 
CoU^e, and already a publicist distinguished upon both 
sides of the Atlantic, to the assistance of the Government. 
The first service which Lieber rendered was the preparation 
in 1862 of a statement or essay upon Guerilla Parties Con- 
Meted with Reference to the Laws and Usages of War. One 
cannot read this paper now, with its definite and lucid state- 
ments based upon groimds of reason and supported by his- 
torical reference, without feeling that it must have been a real 
satisfaction to the burdened and harassed Union authorities 
at Washington to have such a guide in dealing with the mul- 
titude of cases continually arising in that debatable land 
which intervenes between disciplined and responsible warfare 
on the one hand and simple robbery and murder on the other. 
On the seventeenth of December, 1862, by order of Secre- 
tary Stanton, a board was created "" to propose amendments 
or dianges in the rules and articles of war and a code of regu- 
lations for the government of armies in the field as authorized 
by the laws and usages of war,'' and this board was made up 
of Francis Lieber, LL.D., and four volimteer officers. Gen- 
erals Hitchcock, Cadwalader, Hartsuff and Martindale. 
That part of the board's work which consisted of preparing 
the code of regulaticms i^pears to have been comoaiitted to 
Dr. Lieber. The nature of the field upon whidi he entered 



FRANCIS LIEBER 91 

tffkd the spirit in which he did his work are indicated by 
IAAer*8 letter transmitting the result to General HaUeck, 
<m Fdbruary 20, 1868: 

Here is the i»t>ject of the code I was diarged with drmwing up. I am 
gcHog to send fifty copies to General EGtdicodc for distributioii» and I 
earnestly ask for suggestions and amendments. I am going to send for 
that purpose a copy to General Scott, and another to Honorable Horace 
Binney. ... I have earnestly endeavored to treat of these grave topics 
conscientiously and comprehensively; and you» well-read in the literature 
of this brandi of international law, know that nothing of the kind exists in 
any language. I had no guide, no ground-work, no text-book Icanassure 
you, as a friend, that no counselor of Justinian sat down to his task of the 
Digest with a deeper feding of the gravity of his labor, than filled my 
breast in the laying down for the first time such a code, where nearly 
everything was floating. Usage, history, reason, and conscientiousness, 
a sincere k>ve of truth, justice and civilisation have been my guides; but 
of course the whole must be still very imperfect. • • . 

lieber^s estimate of the work and of the occasion for it is 
shown in a letter from him to General HaUeck of May 20» 
1868: 

I have the copy of General Orders 100 which you sent me. Thegenerab 
of the board have added wxne valuable parts; but there have also been a 
few things omitted, which I regret As the order now stands, I think that 
No. 100 win do honor to our country. It will be adopted as a basis for 
similar works by the Engfish, French, and Germans. It is a contribution 
by the United States to the stock of common civilisation. I feel almott 
sad in dosing this business. Let me hope it will not put a stop to our cor- 
respcmdence. I regret that your name is not visibly ccmnected with this 
Oxle. You do not regret it, because you are void of ambition, — to a 
faulty degree, as it seems to me . . . I believe it is now time tor you to 
issue a $irong order, directing attenticm to those paragnq^ in the Code 
which prohibit devastation, demolition of private property » etc I know 
by letters from the West and the South, written by men on our side, that 
the wanton destruction of property by our men is alarming. It does in- 
calculable injury. It demoralises our troops; it annihUat^w wealth irre- 
coverably, and makes a return to a state of peace more and more difficult. 
Your order, though impressive and even sharp, might be written with 
reference to the Code, and pointing out the disastrous consequences of 
reckless devastaticm, in such a manner as not to furnish our reckless 
enemy with new arguments for his savagery. 



92 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

The instructioiis ocymprue one hundred and fifty-seven 
articles. The scope of the work can be indicated briefly by 
stating the titles of the ten sections in which the artides are 
grouped: 

Martial Law; Military Jurisdiction; Military Necessity; Retaliation. 

Public and Private Property of the Enemy; Protection of Prisoners, 
and espedaDy Women; of Bdigion, the Arts and Sdenoes — Punishment 
of Crimes Against the Inhabitants of Hostile Giuntries. 

X>eserters; Prisoners of War; Hostages; Booty on the Battlefield. 

Partisans; Armed Enemies not Belonging to Hostile Armies; Scouts; 
Armed Prowlers; WarBd)eb. 

Safe C^onduct; Spies; War Traitors; Captured Messengers; Abuse of 
the Flag of Truce. 

Exchange of Prisoners; Flags of Truce; Flags of Protection. 

The Parole. 

Armistice — Capitulation. 

Assassination. 

Insurrection; Civil War; B^)dl](m. 

The provisions on these subjects give evidence of great learn- 
ing and careful consideration. They cover the entire his- 
torical field of questions which had arisen and the possibilities 
of questions likely to arise, calling for instruction and direc- 
tion. The definitions are dear, the injunctions and prohi- 
bitions distinct and unambiguous, and, while the instrument 
was a practical presentation of what the laws and usages 
of war were, and not a technical discussion of what the 
writer thought they ought to be, in all its parts may be 
discerned an instinctive selection of the best and most hu- 
mane practice and an assertion of the control of morals to 
the limit permitted by the dreadful business in which the 
rules were to be applied. 

These instructions directed the action of the Union officers 
and controlled the conduct of the Union ft>rces during that 
great war which ended in the triumph of the armies on which 
their limitations were imposed. No one can say how far it 
was due to the instructions, but in honoring the memory of 



FRANCIS LIEBER 93 

Francb Lieber we should not forget that aft^ the surrender 
and the triumph came reconciliation, friendship, the restora- 
tion of a united coimtry, and, beyond all human experience, 
even within the lifetime of the generation which had waged 
the conflict, freedom from the bitterness of spirit that time 
cannot soften. 

Although the instructions were prepared for use in a civil 
war, a great part of them were of general application, and 
they were adopted by the German Government for the con- 
duct of its armies in the field in the war of 1870 with France. 
It is interesting that this work of a simple private citizen 
should become the law controlling the mightiest forces of 
both the coxmtry of his adoption and the coimtry of his birth. 
The sanction of two powerful governments for these rules and 
their successful employment in two of the greatest wars of 
modem times gave to them an authority never b^ore ac- 
quired by any codification or statement of any considerable 
number of rules intended for international application. The 
prediction of Lieber that General Orders No. 100 would do 
honor to our coimtry, that it would be adopted as a basis for 
similar works by the English, Ftench, and Germans, and 
that it would be a contribution by the United States to the 
stock of common civilization, was justified. In the Brussels 
Confarence of 1874, convened at the instance of the Emperor 
of Russia for the purpose of codifying the laws and customs of 
war, the Russian del^ate. Baron Jomini, as president of the 
ccmf erence, declared that the project of an international con- 
vention then presented had its origin in the rules of President 
Lincoln. The convention agreed upon at Brusseb was not 
ratified, but in 1880 the Institute of International Law made 
the work of the Brussels Conf eraice and the work of Lieber, 
which so far as it was of general application was incorporated 
in that convention, the basis of a manual of the laws of war 
upon land; and finally, in The Hague Confarences of 1890 



94 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

and 1907, the conventions with respect to the laws and cus- 
toms of war on land gave the adherence of the whole civilized 
world in substance and effect to those international rules 
which President Lincoln made binding upon the American 
armies fifty years ago. Writing of lieber's work, Sheldon 
Amos says in his book on PoliUcal and Legal Remedies for 
War: 

The instructions were, in fact, the first attempt to make a ocnnprehen- 
sive sunrey of all the exigencies to which a war of invasion is likely to give 
rise; and it is said on good authority that, with one exception (that of 
concealing in an occupied district arms or provisions for the enemy), no 
case (resented itself during the Franco-German War of 1870 which had 
not been provided for in the American instructions. 

Frederic de Martens, after describing the way in which 

Lieber's work came to be done, says: 

So it is to the United States of North America and to President Lincoln 
that belongs the honor of having taken the initiative in defining with pre- 
cision the customs and laws of war. This first official attempt to codify 
the customs of war and to collect in a code the rules binding upon military 
forces has notably contributed to impress the character of humanity upon 
the conduct of the mvthem states in the eourse of that war. 

Blimtschli says, in his article on IAeber*8 Service to Political 

Science and IniemaJtional Law: 

The Instructions lot the Government of Armies of the United States in 
the Fidd were drawn up by Lieber at the instance of President Lincoln, 
and formed the first codification of Liiemational Artides of War. Thb 
was a deed of great moment in the history of international law and dvili- 
sation. Throughout this wc»*k also we see the stamp of Lid)er's peculiar 
genius. BKs legal injunctions rest upon the foundation of moral precepts. 
The former are mot always sharply distinguished from moral injunctions, 
but neverthdess, through a union with the same, are ennobled and exalted. 
Everywhere reigns in this body of law the spirit of humanity, which spirit 
recognises as f dlow-bdngs, with lawful rights, our very enemies, and which 
forbids our visiting upon them unnecessary injury, crudty, or destruction. 
But at the same time, our legislator remains fully aware that, in time of 
war, it is absolutely necessary to provide fc»* the safety of armies and lot 
the successful conduct of a campaign; that, to those engaged in it, the 
harshest measures and most reckless exactions cannot be denied; and that 



FRANCIS UEBEB 95 

tender-hearted aentimfrntditykhtteaU the mote out of place, be^ 
greater the eaaagy employed in carrying on the war, the sooner will it be 
brought to an end, and the normal condition of peace rest<Mred. 

Then fdlows a very interestiiig statement by Bluntschli 
which points out a consequence of the instructions not the 
least in vahie to the student of international law and to the 
development of that science upon which the hoped-for peace 
of the world so largely depends. It appears that Bluntschli 
found in lieber's wwk the inspiration of his celebrated 
codification of international law, for he says: 

Theae instmctiona prepared by Lieber, i^ompted me to draw up, after 
his modd, first, the laws of war, and then, in geiraral, the law of nations, in 
the form of a code, or law book, which should express the present state of 
the legal ccmsdousness of civilised pec^les. 

Professor Ernest Nys sums up the far-reaching effect of 
lieber's codification by the statemeat: 

The ideas of the American puMidst have penetrated not only the scien- 
tific world through the works of Bluntschli, but by the work of the Ccm- 
ference of Brussds, in 1874, and The Hague in 181MI and 1907, they have 
penetrated international politics. 

When we recall the frightful cruelties upon combatants^ 
upon prisoners, upon citizens, the overturning of all human 
rights to life and liberty and property, the fiendish malignity 
of oppression by brutal force, which have characterized the 
history of war, we cannot fail to set a high estimate upon the 
service of the man who gave form and direction and effective- 
ness to the civilizing movement by which man at his best, 
through the concurrence of nations, imposes the restraint of 
rules of right conduct, upon man at his worst, in the esrtxeme 
exercise of force. 

Let me say something about the man himself. He was 
bom in Berlin on March 18, 1800. His childhood was passed 
in those distressful times when the declaration of the rights of 
man and the great upheaval of the French Revolution had 



96 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

inspired throughout the oontmeiit of Europe a conception of 
popular liberty and awakened a strong desire to attain it, 
while the people of Prussia were held in the strictest subjec- 
tion to an autocratic government of inveterate and uncom- 
promising traditicms. In the meantime foreign conquest, 
with the object lessons of Jena and Friedland and the Confed- 
eration of the Rhine, threatened the destruction of national 
independence; and love of coxmtry urged Germans to the 
support of a government which the love of liberty urged 
them to condemn. It was one of the rare periods in which 
political ideas force themselves into the thought and feeling 
of every intelligent life, and, alongside with the struggle for 
subsistence, the average man finds himself driven by a sense 
of necessity into a struggle for liberty, opportimity, peace, 
order, security for life and property — things which in ordi- 
nary times he vaguely assumes to come by nature like the air 
he breathes. So the early ideas of the child were filled with 
deep impressions of the public life of the time. He remem- 
bered the entry of Napoleon into Berlin after Jena. He 
remembered the humiliation of the peace of Tilsit. He re- 
membered Schill, the defender of Colberg, and Stein, and 
Schamhorst. He was a disciple of Dr. Jahn, the manual- 
trainer of German patriotism. At fifteen, after the escape 
from Elba, he enlisted in the Colberg regiment and fought 
imder Bliicher at Waterloo. He was seriously woimded in 
the Battle of Namur and had the strange and vital discipline 
of lying long on the battlefield in expectation of death. He 
was a member of patriotic societies and was arrested in his 
nineteenth year, and imprisoned four months on suspicion of 
daogerous political designs. He was excluded from member- 
ship in the German universities, except Jena, where he re- 
ceived his degree of Doctor of Philosophy in 1820. At 
twenty-one he made his way to Greece with a company of 
other young Germans, inspired, by a generous enthusiasm 



FRANCIS LIEBER 97 

fcNT liberty, to an unavailing attempt to aid in the Gredc War 
(rf Indq[>end«ice. Returning penniless from Greece he found 
his way to Rome, became a tutor in the family of Barthold 
Georg Niebuhr, then Prussian Ambassador, and there he 
won the confidence and lifelong friendship of that great his- 
torian whose influence in familiar intercoiurse both increased 
the learning and calmed and sobered the judgment of the 
impetuous youth. Returning to Prussia, he was again 
arrested and impriscmed for nearly a year upon charges of 
disaffection to the government. Rdeased through the inter- 
cession of Niebuhr, he went to England, and after a year's 
hard struggle thare, he came, in 1827, to the United States 
and to Boston. Seeing employment he foimd it in taking 
charge of the Boston Gymnasium. Through Niebuhr's good 
offices he became the American correspondent of a group of 
German newspapers. He devised a plan for the publication 
of an encydopedia, and for this he secured a distinguished 
list of contributors and associates. He became its editor, 
and in 1829 the publication of the EncydopcBdia Americana 
was begun. It was a distinct success. Lieber's connection 
with it not only forced him to a broad and accurate knowl- 
edge of American life, but brought him in contact with a 
great range of leaders of Amaican thought and opinion, and 
this association gave him an intimate knowledge of American 
social conditions and public affairs. Bancroft, and Hilliard, 
and Everett, and Story, and Nicholas Biddle, and Charles 
Sumner were among his friends. In Jime, 1836, he was made 
Professor of History and Political Economy in South Caro- 
lina CoU^e, and for twenty-two years he held that chair, 
until, in 1857, he was called to Columbia CoU^e to be Pro- 
fessor of Modem History, Political Science, International 
Law, Civil and Common Law. His connection with Colum- 
bia and his residence in New York continued until his death 
in October, 1872. In the meantime, to the service as adviser 



98 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

to the Grovemmenty whichi have already described, he added 
the classification and arrangement of the Confederate archives 
in the office of the War Department, and long served as um- 
pire under the Mexican Claims Commission of July 4, 1888. 
lieber himself has said that his life had been made up of 
many geological layers. The transition from his adventurous 
youth to the life of an American eoU^e professor did indeed 
carry him from igneous to sedimentary conditions. Under 
the new conditions, however, his surpassing energy and 
capacity for application found exercise in authorship. His 
work on Political Ethics, published in 1888, and that on Civil 
Liberty and Sdf Oavemment, published in 1858, gave him high 
rank among writers upon the philosophy of government. 
Judge Story said of the former: 

It ocHitaiiis by lar the fullest and most correct devdc^Hnent of the true 
theory of what ccmstitutes the state that I have ever seen. It abounds with 
I^ofound views of government which are iDustrated with various learning. 
To me many of the thoughts are new, and striking as they are new. I do 
not hesitate to say that it constitutes one of the best theoretical treatises 
on the true nature and objects of government which has been produced in 
modem times, ccmtaining much tot instruction, much for admonition, and 
much for deep meditation, addressing itsdf to the wise and virtuous of all 
countries. 

And in an introduction to the latter work, Theodore Dwight 
Woobey said: 

It would be a grateful task to speak at length hereof the service Doctor 
UifbeT rendered to political science in this country. ... He was indeed 
the founder of this sdenoe in this country in so far as by his method, his 
fulness of historical illustration, his noble, ethical f eding, his sound {Mtusti- 
cal judgment, which was of the English rather than of the German type, 
he secured readers among the. first men of the land, influenced pcditical 
thought more than any one of his contemporaries in the United States, and 
made I think, a lasting impression on many students who were forming 
themselves for the work of life. 

By a great variety of miscellaneous essays, addresses, and 
magazine artides on subjects of education, penology, history. 



FRANCIS UEBEB 99 

biography, ocmstitutioiial, and international law» he exercised 
a powerful influence upon the development of American 
thought. By voluminous correspondence with many fore- 
most Americans who were engaged in public affairs he made 
his influence felt upon the solution of specific questions in the 
conduct of government. A correspondence of many years 
with Charles Sumner is especially rich in matter of this 
description. 

The philosophical habit of the German, the practical habit 
of the Englishman, the freedom from traditional limitations 
upon thought of the American, the breadth of view of his 
cosmopolitan experience, the intensity of his enthusiasm at 
once for liberty and for order, and the strength of his genuine 
sympathy for all mankind combined to set him in advance of 
his time in his views upon international law and his proposab 
for its development. We find him writing to Sumner on 
December 27, 1861, aft» the Trent Affair — more than fifty 
years ago: 

lUs would be a fair oocasioii to propose a ccmgrefls of all maritime 
Datioii8» European and American, to settle some more canons of the law 
of nations tlian were settled at the Peace of Paris, — canons chiefly or 
exdusiyely relating to the rights and duties of belligerents and neutrals on 
theaea; f(Nr there lies the chief difficulty. The sea belongs to all; henoethe 
difficulty of the sea police, because there all are equals. I mean no codi- 
fication of international law; I mean that such a congress, avowedly con- 
vened tar such a purpose, should take some more canons out of the doudy 
realm of precedents than the Peace of Paris did almost inddentally. Sup- 
pose Russia, Austria, and other nations (naming them) could be induced 
to send, each power, two jurists (with naval advisers if they chose), does 
any one, who knows how swelling dvilisation courses in our history, doubt 
that their debates and resolutions would remain usdess, — even though the 
whole should lead, this time, to no more than an experiment ? All those 
ideas that are now great and large blessings of our race, having wrought 
themsdves into constitutions or lawisystems, bebnged once to Utopia. 

On April 16, 1866» he writes to Blimtschli in Heidelberg: 

Tour intention to write a brief code on the Bights of Nations, in the 
middle of the nineteenth century, is a noble and daring one. For a long 



100 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

time it was a {avorite project of mine that four or five of the most distin- 
guished jurists should hold a congress in order to decide on several impor- 
tant but still unsettled questions of national equity, and perhi^ draw up a 
code. First I proposed that it should be an official congress under the 
government, and oraresponded with Senator Sumner on the subject. But 
after a while it became dear to me that it would be much better if a private 
congress were established, whose wc»*k would stand as an authwity by its 
excellence, truthfulness, justice, and superiwity in every respect. 

June 18, 1866, to his wife: 

Have you read the noble declaration of Prussia, that she will not capture 
enemies' property at sea during war ? Such things warm one like a glass 
of Burgundy. . . • 

December 15, 1866, to Andrew D. White: 

I fancy sometimes — but only fancy — how fine a thing it would be for 
one of the Peabodies, or some such gdd vessd, to give, say twenty-five 
thousand dollars gcAd, for the holding of a private — L e., not diplomatic, 
although international — congress of some eight or ten jurists, to concen- 
trate international authwity and combined weight on certain great points, 
on which we have now only individual autlumties. I have spoken about 
this years ago to Mr. Fidd. 

On June 11, 1868, to Sumner: 

What an advance it would be — though requiring neariy twenty-two 
centuries — from the time when Thucydides said that private property 
was not acknowledged at sea as on land, to the middle of the nineteenth 
century, when private property — even of the enemy — should be de- 
clared to be protected, even floating without defence, on the wide sea. . . . 
I say that civilisation would hardly have made <»* be able to make a greater 
stride in our century, than by the United States and North Germany 
agreeing on the great prindide and thus inducing others to follow. 

On May 7, 1869, to Judge Thayer: 

The strength, autlu»ity, and grandeur of the law of nations rests on, 
and ccmsists in, the very fact that reason, justice, equity, speak through 
men ' greater than he who takes a dty ' — sin^ men, plain Grotius; 
and that nations, and even Omgresses of Vienna, cannot avoid hearing, 
acknowledging, and quoting th^n. But it has ever been, and is still, a 
favorite idea of mine that there should be a ocmgress of from five to ten 
acknowledged jurists to. settle a dosen or two of important yet unsettled 
points — a private and boldly self-iqq[K>inted congress, whose whole auth(w- 
ity should rest on the inherent truth and energy of their own jirtMfaima. 



FRANCIS UEBEB 101 

On April 10, 1872 to General Diifour, hcmorary president 

of the International Committee of Greneva: 

One of far the most effectual and beneficent things that, at this very 
juncture, could be done for the pnnnotion of the intercourse of nations in 
peace or war (and there is wterwntr$e in war, since man cannot meet man 
without intercourse) — one of the mott promising things in matters of 
internationalism, would be the meeting of the most prominent jurists of 
the law of nations, of our Cis-Caucasian race — one from each country in 
their individual and not in any public capacity — to settle among thorn- 
selves certain great questions of the law of nations as yet unsettled, such 
as neutrality, or the aid of barbarians, or the duration of the claims of 
obligations, of citizenship. I mean Mtfb as Grotius Mftbi, — by the 
strength of the great argument of justice. A code of prodamation, as it 
were, of such a body, would soon acquire far greater authority than the 
book of the greatest single jurist. I hope such a meeting may be brought 
about in 1874. 

On May 26, 1872» to Von Holtzendorff : 

In 1840, in one of my writings, I recalled the fact that under Adrian, 
pnrfessors were appointed to lecture in different {daces, and Polonon of 
Laodicea instructed in oratory at Bome, Laodicea, Smyrna, and Alex- 
andria. The traveling prof essor had a free passage on the emperor's ships, 
or on the vesseb laden with grain. In our days of steamboats and railroads 
the traveling i»of essor should be reinstated. Why could not the same 
person teadi in New York and in Strasburg ? 

You wiU perceive that here was a proposal of the exchange 

professorship, which we are putting in practice forty years 

after. Here was another proposal which was realized by the 

formation of the Institute of International Law. Of this 

Professor Bluntschli says: 

lieber had great influence, I may add, in founding the ImHhd de 
Drcii InUmaUonalt which was started in Ghent, in 1878, and forms a per- 
manent alliance of leading international jurists from all civilised nations, 
tar the purpose of working harmoniously together, and thus serving as an 
organ for the l^gal consciousness of the civilised worid. UAet was the 
first to propose and to eneousage the idea of professicnial jurists of all 
nations thus coming together tar consultation, and seddng to establish a 
common understanding. From this impulse proceeded Bolin-Jaequemyns' 
circular letter, drawn up in Ghent, calling together a number of men emi- 
nent for their learning. This Utter pr«^x)sal to found a jMrmoNSftfaaMbfiiif 



10« INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

for IfUemational Law met with general aeoeptanoe, but this was merely a 
further devdopment of the origiiial idea of Ii^)er, which was at the bottom 
of the whole scheme. 

Here also was the proposal for a meeting of official rq>re- 
sentatives which was the precursor of the conferences at The 
Hague. It is interesting to observe that while lieber con- 
sidered the unofficial meeting to be an alternative for the 
official one, both have been realized, and in practice the work 
of the unofficial members of the Institute of International 
Law has made possible the success of the official conferences 
at The Hague, by preparing their work beforehand and 
agreeing upon conclusions which the official conferences 
could accept. 

The important characteristic which marshaled all lieber's 

forces for leadership of opinion and gave his work its chief 

and permanent value was an elevation of spirit, a pervading 

moral quality which was refined by adversity and trial 

throughoutrthe formative period of his life; and this quality 

was well expressed by two maxims which he made his guides. 

He says, in writing to Judge Thayer: 

From early times I observed that in the French Bevolution jieofAe had 
always damored for rights and never thought of duty; that more or less 
this is the case in all periods of agitation, and almost universally so in our 
own times and in our country . . . right and dufy; both together, and all 
is wdl; right alone, despotism, — duty alone, slavery. 

And, writing to Sumner, he says: 

Let me now give you what I consider my chief law maxim: NvOumjui 
$ine qfficiOf nuUum qfficium nne jure^ — forgotten by despot and Rcntge 
(th^ want nothing.but rights), forgotten by the slave who thinks he has 
nothing but duty ot obligation. 

And this he condensed into the maxim: ** Droit Mige.^* 

The other maxim he kept displayed on the walls of his 
lecture room: ** Pabria Cora: Carior Libertaa: Veritas 
Carisdma.** And these maxims he exemplified in his life 
and in his service to mankind. 



FRANCIS UEBER 108 

He was no dry student delving for knowledge he cotdd not 
use; but a living soul instinct with human sympathy and 
love of liberty and justice, sdzing eagerly the weapons of 
learning to strike blows in the struggle for nobler and happier 
life among men. He was no vi^id theorist who ' argued 
about it and about, but evermore came out by the same 
door where in he went,' but a sagacious, practical man among 
men, dealing with human nature as it was, with all its weak- 
ness and folly and error, all its nobility and power; and seek- 
ing to shape the human material upon which he wrought to 
its best uses acceding to its real capacity and strength. 

It was a wonderful career. It was a great thing to be the 
author of the Instructions. It was a great thing to give the 
impetus which produced the Instihd de Droit International 
and made possible the success of the Hague Conferences. It 
was a great thing to be the man he was and to live a long life, 
loving learning and law, and liberty, and ooimtry, and kind, 
and blessed by consciousness of distinguished service to them 
all. It stirs the imagination that the boy who lay woimded 
on the battlefield of Namur for his country's sake and who 
languished in prison for liberty's sake and who left his native 
land that he might be free, should build his life into the 
structure of American self-govemment and leave a name 
honored by scholars and patriots the world over. 

If our Society, at once national and international, were 
about to choosea patron saint, and the roll were to be called, 
my voice for one would answer '' Francis Lieber." 



THE REAL MONROE DOCTRINE 

PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS AT THE EIGHTH ANNUAL MEETING 

OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERN ATIONAL LAW 

WASHINGTON. APRIL M; 1014 

1ASK your attention for a few minutes to some observa- 
tions upon the Monroe Doctrine. If I am justified in 
taking your time it will be not because I say anything novd, 
but because there is occasion for restating well-settled mat- 
ters which seem to have been overlooked in some recent 
writings on the subject. 

We are all familiar with President Monroe's famous 
message of December 2, 182S: 

The occasion has been judged proper tor asserting as a principle in 
whidi the rights and interests of the United States are invdved, that the 
American Continents, by the free and independent condition which they 
have assumed and maintain, are hencef <Nrth not to be considered as 
subjects for future ooloniaation by any European Powers. • • • 

Li the wars of the European Powers in matters rdating to themsdves 
we have never takak any part, not does it comport with our policy to do 
so. It is only when our rights are invaded or seriously menaced that we 
resent injuries or make iweparation tor our defense, yfiik the move- 
ments in this hemiiq>here we are of necessity more inunediatdy connected 
and by causes which must be obvious to all enlightened and impartial 
observers. 

We owe it, therefore, to CBndor, and to the amicable rdaticms existing 
between the United States and those Powers, to declare that we should 
consider any attenq>t on their part to extend their system to any portion 
ci this hemisphere as dangerous to our peace and safety. Vfiik the exist- 
ing colonies or dependencies of any Eun^pean Power we have not inter- 
fered and shaD not interfere. But with the governments who have de- 
dared their independence and maintained it, and whose independence we 
have on great omsideration and on just prindples, adcnowledged, we could 
not view any interposition for the purpose of oppress i ng them, or control- 
ling in any other manner, their destiny, by any European Power, in any 
other light than as the manifestation of an unfriendly disposition toward 

100 



106 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

the United States. In the war between these new govemments mnd ^Mkin 
we declared our neutrality at the time of their recognition, and to this we 
have adhered and shall continue to adhere, provided no change shall occur 
which, in the judgment of the competent authorities of this government, 
shall make a corresponding change on the part of the United States 
indispensable to their security. . • . 

It is impossible that the allied Powers should extend their political 
Bystem to any pcnrtion of either continent without endangering our peace 
sold hi^ypiness; nor can any one bdieve that our southern brethren, if left 
to themsdves, would adopt it (rf their own accord. It is equally impossible, 
therelcHe, that we should behold such interposition, in any form, with 
indifference. 

The occasion for these declarations is a familiar story — 
the revolt of the Spanish provinces in America which Spain, 
unaided, was plainly unable to reduce to their former condi- 
tion of dependence; the reaction against liberalism in Europe 
which followed the downfall of Napoleon and the restoration 
of the Bourbons to the throne of France; the formation of 
the Holy Alliance; the agreement of its members at the Con- 
ferences of Aix-la-Chapelle and Laybach and Verona for the 
insurance of monarchy against revolution; the restoration of 
Ferdinand the Seventh to the throne of Spain by the armed 
power of France pursuant to this agreement; the purpose of 
the Alliance to follow the restoration of monarchy in Spain 
by the restoration of that monarchy's control over its colonies 
in the New World; the claims both of Russia and of Great 
Britain to rights of colonization on the northwest coast; the 
proposals of Mr. Canning to Richard Rush for a joint 
declaration of principles by England and the United States 
adverse to the interference of any other European Power in 
the contest between Spain and her former colonies; the 
serious question raised by this proposal as to the effect of a 
joint declaration upon the American policy of avoiding 
entangling alliances* 

The form and phrasing of President Monroe's message 
were adapted to meet these conditions. The statements 



THE REAL MONROE DOCTRINE 107 

made were intended to carry specific inf <Hrmation to the 
members of the Holy Alliance that an attempt by any of 
them to coerce the new states of South America would be 
not a simple expedition against weak and disunited colonies, 
but the much more difficult and expensive task of dealing 
with the formidable maritime power of the United States as 
well as the opposition of England, and they were intended 
to carry to Russia and incidentally to England the idea that 
rights to territory in the New World must thenceforth rest 
upon then CTisting titles, and that the United States would 
dispute any attempt to create rights to territory by future 
occupation. 

It is undoubtedly true that the specific occasions for the 
dedaraticm of Monroe no longer exist. The Holy Alliance 
long ago disappeared. The nations of Europe no longer 
contemplate the vindication of monarchical principles in 
the territory of the New World. France, the most active of 
the Allies, is herself a republic. No nation longer asserts the 
right of colonization in America. The general establishment 
of diplomatic rdations between the Powers of Europe and 
the American republics, if not already universal, became so 
when, pursuant to the formal assent of the Powers, all the 
American republics were received into the Second Conference 
at The Hague and joined in the conventions there made, 
upon the footing of equal sovereignty, entitled to have their 
territory and indq>endence respected under that law of 
nations which formerly existed for Europe alone. 

The declaration, however, did more than deal with the 
specific occasion which called it forth. It was intended to 
declare a general principle for the future, and this is plain not 
merely from the generality of the terms used but from the 
discussions out of which they arose and from the understand- 
ing of the men who took part in the making and of their 
successors. 



108 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

When Jefferson was consulted by President Monroe bef we 
the message was sent he replied: 

The qaestian presented by the letters you have sent me is the most 
momentous which has ever been offered to my oontemplaticMi since that 
ci independence. That made us a nation; this sets our compass and 
points the course which we are to steer through the ocean oi time (^)ening 
on us. And never could we embari^ upon it under circumstances more 
auspicious. Our first and fundamental nuudm should be, never to en- 
tangle oursdves in the brmb (rf Europe; our second, never to suffer Europe 
to intermeddle with ds-atlantic affairs. 

Three years later Daniel Webster declared that the doc- 
trine involved the honor of the country. He said in the 
House of Representatives: 

I look upon it as a part ci its treasures ol rqmtation; and, for one, I 
intend to guard it. . . . I will neither help to erase it or tear it out; nor 
shall it be, by any act ci mine, blurred or blotted. It did honor to the 
sagacity of the government, and wiU not diminish that honw. 

Mr. Cleveland said in his message of December 17» 1895: 

The doctrine upon whidi we stand is strong and sound because its en- 
bNTcement is inq)ortant to our peace and safety as a nation, and is essential 
to the integrity of our free institutions and the tranquil maint^mance ci our 
distinctive form of government. It was intended to apply to every stage of 
our national life and cannot become obsolete while our republic endures. 

As the particular occasions which called it forth have 
slipped back into history, the declaration itself, instead of 
bemg handed over to the historian, has grown continually a 
more vital and insistent rule of conduct for each succeeding 
generation of Americans. Never for a moment have the 
responsible and ivstructed statesmen in charge of the tortign 
affairs of the United States failed to consider themselves 
bound to insist upon its policy. Never once has the public 
opinion of the people of the United States failed to suppwt 
every just application of it as new occasion has arisen. 
Almost every President and Secretary of State has restated 
the doctrine with vigor and emphasis in the discussion of the 



THE REAL MONROE DOCTRINE 109 

diplomatic affairs of his day. The governments ol Europe 
have gradually come to realize that the existence ol the 
policy which Monroe declared is a stubborn and continuing 
fact to be recognized in their controversies with American 
countries. We have seen Spain, France, England, Germany, 
with admirable good sense and good temper, explaining 
beforehand to the United States that \hey intended no per- 
manent occupation of territory, in the controversy with 
Mexico forty years after the declaration, and in the contro- 
versy with Venezuela eighty years after. In 1908 the Duke 
of Devonshire declared "' Great Britain accepts the Monroe 
Doctrine imreservedly.'* Mr. Hay coupled the Monroe 
Doctrine and the Golden Rule as cardinal guides of American 
diplomacy. Twice within very recent years the whole 
treaty-making power of the United States has given its for- 
mal approval to the policy by the reservations in the signa- 
turo and in the ratification of the arbitration conventions of 
The Hague Conferences, expressed in these words by the 
Senate resdution agreeing to ratification ci the convention 
of 1907: 

Nothiog contained in tbis convention shall be so construed as to require 
the United States of America to depart from its traditional policy of not 
intruding upon, interfering with, or entangling itself in the political ques- 
tions of policy or internal administration of any foreign state, nor shall 
anything contained in the said convention be construed to imply a re- 
linquishment by the United States of its traditional attitude towards 
purely American questions. 

It seems fair to assume that a poli<7 with such a history 
as this has some continuing and substantial reason under- 
lying it; that it is not outworn or meaningless or a purely 
formal relic of the past» and it seems worth while to consider 
carefully what the doctrine is and what it is not. 

No one ever pretended that Mr. Monroe was declaring a 
rule of international law or that the doctrine which he de- 
clared has become international law. It is a declaration of 



110 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

the United States that certain acts-would be injurious to the 
peace and safety of the United States and that the United 
States would r^^ard them as unfriendly. The declaration 
does not say what the course of the United States will be in 
case such acts are done. That is left to be determined in 
each particular instance. Mr. Calhoun said, in the Senate 
debate on the Yucatan Bill, in 1848: 

"Whether you will resist or not and the measure (d your resistance — 
whether it shall be by n^otiation, remonstrance, or some intermediate 
measure, or by a resort to arms; all this must be determined and decided 
on the merits of the question itself. This is the only wise course. • . • 
There are cases of interposition where I would resort to the hazard of war 
with all its calamities. Am I asked f <v one ? I will answer. I designate 
the case ci Cuba. 

In particular instances indeed the course which the United 
States would follow has been very distinctly declared, as 
when Mr. Seward said, in 1865: 

It has been the President's purpose that France should be respect- 
fully informed upon two points; namely, first, that the United States 
earnestly desire to continue and to cultivate sincere iriendshq> with 
France. Secondly, that this pcdicy would be brought in imminent je(q;)ardy 
unless France could deem it consistent with her honor to desist from the 
prosecution of armed intervention in Mexico to overthrow the domestic 
republican government existing there and to establish upon its ruins the 
foreign monarchy which has been attempted to be inaugurated in the 
capital oi that country. 

So Secretary Buchanan said> in 1848: 

The highest and first duty of every independent nation is to provide tor 
its own safety; and acting upon this principle, we should be compelled to 
resist the acquisition of Cuba by any powerful maritime state, with all 
means which Providence has placed at our ooomuuid. 

And Secretary Clayton said> in 1849 : 

The news ci the cession of Cuba to any foreign Power would in the 
United States be the instant signal for war. No foreign Power would 
attempt to take it that did not expect a hostile cdUrion with us as an 
inevitaUe consequence. 



THE BEAL MONROE DOCTRINE 111 

The doctrine is not international law but it rests upon the 
right of self -protection and that right is recognized by inter- 
national law. The right is a necessary corollary <rf independ- 
ent sovereignly. It is wdl imderstood that the exercise of 
the right of self -protection may and frequently does extend 
in its effect beyond the limits of the tentorial jurisdiction of 
the state exercising it. The strongest example probably 
would be the mobilization of an army by another Power 
immediatdy across the fronti^ . Every act done by the 
other Powtf may be within its own t^ritory. Yet the coun- 
try threatened by the state of facts is justified in protecting 
itself by immediate war. The most common exercise of the 
right of self -protection outside ci a state's own territory and 
in time of peace is the interposition ci objection to the occu- 
pation of territory, of points of strat^c military or maritime 
advantage, or to indirect accomplishment of this effect by 
dynastic arrangement. For example, the objection of Eng- 
land in 1911 to the occupation of a naval station by Germany 
on the Atlantic coast of MoroQco; the objection of the Euro- 
I>ean Powers generally to the vast force of Russia extending 
its territory to the Mediterranean; the revision of the Treaty 
of San Stefano by the Treaty of Berlin; the establishment of 
buffer states; the objection to the succession oi a German 
prince to the throne of Spain; the many forms of the Eastern 
question; the centuries of struggle to preserve the balance of 
power in Europe; all depend upon the very same principle 
which underlies the Monroe Doctrine; that is to say, upon 
the right of every sovereign state to protect itself by prevent- 
ing a condition of affairs in which it will be too late to protect 
itself. Of course each state must judge for itself when a 
threatened act will create such a situation. If any state 
objects to a threatened act and the reasonableness of its 
objection is not assented to, the efficacy of the objection will 
depend upon the power behind it. 



11« INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

It is doubtless true that in the adherence of the American 
people to the original declaration there was a great dem^it of 
sentunent and of sympathy for the people of South America 
who were struggling for freedom^ and it has been a source oi 
great satisfaction to the United States that the course which 
it took in 1823 concurrently with the action of Great Britain 
played so great a part in assuring the right of self-govern- 
ment to the countries of South America. Yet it is to be 
observed that in reference to the South American govern- 
ments, as in all other respects, the international right upon 
which the declaration expressly rests is not sentiment or 
sympathy or a claim to dictate what kind of government any 
other country shall have, but the safety of the United States. 
It is because the new governments cannot be overthrown by 
the alfied Powers ** without endangaring our peace and 
happiness ", that ** the United States cannot behold such 
interposition in any form with indifference.'' 

We frequently see statements that the doctrine has been 
changed or enlarged; that there is a new or different doctrine 
since Monroe's time. They are mistaken. There has been 
no change. One apparent eictension of the statement of 
Monroe was made by President Polk in his messages of 1845 
and 1848, when he included the acquisition of territory by a 
European Power through cession as dangerous to the safely 
of the United States. It was really but stating a corollary to 
the doctrine of 182S and asserting the same right of self- 
protection against the other American states as well as 
against Europe. 

This corollary has been so l<»ig and uniformly agreed to by 
the Government and the people of the United States that it 
may fairly be r^^arded as being now a part of the doctrine. 

But, all assertions to the contrary notwithstanding, there 
has been no other change or enlargement of the Monroe 
Doctrine since it was first promulgated. It must be remem- 



THE REAL MONROE DOCTRINE US 

bered that not everything said or written by Secretaries of 
State or even by Presidents constitutes a national policy or 
can enlarge or modify or diminish a national pohcy. It is 
the substance of the thing to which the nation holds, and 
that is and always has been that the safety of the United 
States demands that American t^ritory shall remain 
American. 

The Monroe Doctrine does not assert or imply or involve 
any right on the part of the United States to impair or con- 
trol the independent sovereignty of any American state. In 
the lives of nations as of individuals, there are many rights 
unquestioned and universally conceded. The assertion of 
any particular right must be considered, not as excluding all 
others but as coincident with all others which are not incon- 
sistent. The fundamental principle of international law is 
the principle of independent sovereignty. Upon that all 
othtf rules of international law rest. That is the chief and 
necessary protection of the weak against the power of the 
strong. Observance of that is the necessary condition to the 
peace and ord» of the civilized world. By the declaration of 
that principle the common judgment of civilization awards 
to the smallest and weakest state the liberty to control its 
own affairs without interference from any other Fewer, 
however great. 

The Monroe Doctrine does not infringe upon that right. 
It asserts the right. Thededarationof Monroe was that the 
rights and interests of the United States were involved in 
maintaining a condition, and the condition to be maintained 
was the independence of all the American countries. It is 
** the free and independent condition which they have as- 
sumed and maintained " which is declared to render them 
not subject to future colonization. It is ** the governments 
who have declared their independence and maintained it and 
whose indq[>endence we have on great consideration and on 



114 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

just principles acknowledged " that are not to be interfered 

with. When Mr. Canning's proposals for a joint declaration 

were under consideration by the Cabinet in the month before 

the famous message was sent, John Quincy Adams, who 

played the major part in forming the policy, declared the 

basis of it in these words: 

Considering the South Americans as independent nations, they ihem- 
sdves and no other nation had the right to dispose of their condition. We 
have no right to dispose of them either alone or in conjunction with other 
nations. Neither have any other nations the right of disposing oi them 
without their omsent. 

In the most critical and momentous application of the 

doctrine Mr. Seward wrote to the French Minister: 

France need not for a moment delay her promised withdrawal of mili- 
tary forces from Mexico and her putting the principle of non-ii^tervention 
into full and complete practice in regard to Mexico through any appre- 
hension that the United States will prove unfaithful to the principles and 
policy in that respect which on their behalf it has been my duty to main- 
tain in this now very lengthened correspondence. The practice oi this 
govenmient from its beginning is a guarantee to all natimis oi the respect 
of the American people tot the free sovereignty of the people in every 
other state. We received the instruction from Washington. We iq^lied 
it sternly in our early intercourse even with France. The same principle 
and practice have been uniformly inculcated by all our statesmen, inter- 
preted by all our jurists, maintained by all our Congresses, and acquiesced 
in without practical dissent on all occasions by the American pec^e. It 
is in reality the chief element of foreign intercourse in our histcnry. 

In his message to Congress of December 8, 1906, President 
Roosevelt said: 

In many parts of South America there has been nrach misunderstanding 
of the attitude and purposes of the United States toward the other Ameri- 
can republics. An idea had become prevalent that our assertion of the 
Monroe Doctrine implied or carried with it an assumption oi superiOTity 
and oi a right to exercise some kind of protectorate over the countries to 
whose territ<M7 that doctrine i^ypUes. Nothing could be farther frcnn the 
truth. 

He quoted the words of the Secretary of State thai in 
office to the recent Pan-American Conference at Rio Janaro: 



THE REAL MONBOE DOCTRINE 115 

We deem the independeiioe and equal rights (d the smallest and weak- 
est member d the family oi natimis entitled to as much respect as those oi 
the greatest empire and we deem the observance of that respect the chief 
guaranty of the weak against the oppression of the strong. We neither 
daim nor desire any rights or fMiyileges or powers that we do not fredy 
concede to every) American republic 

And the President then proceeded to say oi these statements: 

They have my hearty approval, as I am sure they will have yours, and 
I cannot be wrong yi the conviction that they correctly represent the senti- 
ments oi the whole American peoi^ I cannot better characterize the 
true attitude of the United States in its assertion of the Monroe Doctrine 
than in the words of the distinguished former Minister of Foreign Affairs 
€i Argentina, Doctor Drago ... *^ the traditicmal policy ci the United 
States without accentuating supericxity or seeking preponderance con- 
demned the oppression oi the nations of this part of the world and the 
control of their destinies by the great Powers oi Eun^/' 

Curiously enough, many incidents and consequences of 
that independent condition itself which the United States 
asserted in the Monroe Doctrine have been r^arded in some 
quarters as infringements upon independence resulting from 
the Monroe Doctrine. Just as the personal rights of each 
individual free citizen in the state are limited by the equal 
rights of every other free individual in the same state, so the 
sovereign rights of each independent state are limited by the 
equal sovereign rights of every other independent state. 
These limitations are not impairments of independent sov- 
ereignty. They are the necessary conditions to the existence 
of independent sovereignty. If the Monroe Doctrine had 
never been declared or thought of, the sovereign rights of 
each American republic woidd have been limited by the equal 
sovereign rights of every other American republic, including 
the United States. The United States woidd have had a 
right to demand from every other American state observance 
of treaty obligations and of the rules of international law. 
It would have had the right to insist upon due protection for 
the lives and property of its citizens within the territory of 



116 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

every other American state, and upon the treatment of its 
citizens in that territory according to the rules of interna- 
tional law. The United States would have had the right as 
against every other American state to object to acts which 
the United States might deem injurious to its peace and 
safety just as it had the right to object to such acts as against 
any European Power and just as all European and American 
Powers have the right to object to such acts as against each 
other. All these rights which the United States would have 
had as against other American states it has now. They are 
not in the slightest degree a£Fected by the Monroe Doctrine. 
They exist now just as they would have existed if there had 
been no Monroe Doctrine. They are neither greater nor less 
because of that doctrine. They are not rights of superiority, 
they are rights ci equality. They are the rights which all 
equal independent states have as against each oth». And 
they cover the whole range of peace and war. 

It happens, however, that the United States is very much 
bigger and more powerful than most of the other American 
republics. And when a very great and powerful state makes 
demands upon a very smaU and weak state it is difficult to 
avoid a feeling that there is an assumption of superior au- 
thority involved in the assertion of superior power, even 
though the demand be based solely upon the right of equal 
against equal. An examination oi the various controversies 
which the United States has had with other American Powers 
wiU disclose the fact that in every case the rights asserted 
were rights not of superiority but of equality. Of course it 
cannot be claimed that great and powerful states shall iarego 
their just rights against smaU^ and less powerful states. 
The responsibilities of sovereignty attach to the weak as well 
as to the strong, and a daim to exemption from those respon- 
sibilities would imply not equality but inferiority. The most 
that can be said oonceming a question between a powerful 



THE BEAL MONROE DOCTRINE 117 

state and a weak one is that the great state ought to be espe- 
cially considerate and gentle in the assertion and mainten- 
ance of its position; ought always to base its acts not upon a 
superiority of force, but upon reason and law; and ought to 
assert no rights against a small state because of its weakness 
which it would not assert against a great state notwithstand- 
ing its powtf . But in all this the Monroe Doctrine is not 
concerned at all. 

The scope of the doctrine is strictly limited. It concerns 
itself only with the occupation of territory in the New World 
to the subversion or exclusion of a pre-existing American 
government. It has not otherwise any relation to the a£Fairs 
of either American or European states. In good conduct or 
bad, observance of rights or violations of them, agreem^it 
or controversy, injury or reprisal, coercion or war, the United 
States finds no warrant in the Monroe Doctrine for inter- 
ference. So Secretary Cass wrote, in 1858: 

With respect to the causes of war between Sptin and Mexico, the 
United States have no concern* and do not undertake to judge them. Nor 
do they daim to interpose in any hostilities which may take place. Their 
policy of observation and interference is limited to the permanent subju- 
gation of any portion of the territory oi Mexico, or of any other American 
state, to any £ur<^>ean Power whatever. 

And Mr. Seward wrote, in 1861, concerning the allied opera- 
tion against Mexico: 

As the undersigned has heretofore had the honor to inform each of the 
plenipotentiaries now addressed, the President does not feel at liberty to 
question, and does not question, that the sovereigns represented have 
undoubted right to decide for themselves the fact whether they have 
sustained grievances, and to resort to war against Mexico for the redress 
thereof, and have a right ^Iso to levy the war severally or jointly. 

So when Germany, Great Britain and Italy united to compel 
by naval force a response to thdr demands on the part of 
Venezuda and the German Government advised the United 
States that it proposed to take coax^e measures to eof oroe 



118 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

its daims for damages and for money against Venezuela, 
adding, ** We declare especially that under no circumstances 
do we consider in our proceedings the acquisition or perma- 
nent occupation of Venezuelan t^ritory," Mr. Hay replied 
that the Government of the United States, although it 

regretted that European Powers should use force against Central and 
South American oountrie8» could not object to their taking steps to obtain 
redress for injuries suffered by their subjects, provided that no acquisition 
of territ<M7 was contemplated. 

Quite independent of the Monroe Doctrine, however, there 
is a rule of conduct among nations under which each nation 
is deemed bound to render the good offices of friendship 
to the others when they are in trouble. The rule has been 
crystallized in the provisions of The Hague Convention 
for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes. Under 
the head of *' The Maintenance of General Peace '* in that 
convention substantially all the Powers of the world have 
agreed: 

With a view to obviating as far as possible recourse to force in the rda- 
tions between states, the contracting Powers agree to use their best efforts 
to ensure the pacific settlement of international differences. 

In case of serious disagreement or dispute, before an appeal to arms, the 
contracting Powers agree to have recourse, as far as circumstances allow, 
to the good offices or mediation of one or more friendly Powers. 

Independently of this recourse, the contracting Powers deem it expedi- 
ent and desirable that one or more Powers, strangers to the dispute* 
should, on their own initiative and as far as circumstances may aUow, offer 
their good offices or mediation to the states at variance. . . • The exercise 
of this right can never be regarded by either of the parties in dispute as an 
unfriendly act. 

The part of the mediator consists in reconciling the opposing claims and 
i^peasing the f edings of resentment which may have arisen between the 
states at variance. 

The United States has frequently performed this duty in 
controversies between American republics among themselves 
and between American republics and European states. So 
in the controversy last referred to, the United States used 



THE REAL MONROE DOCTRINE 119 

its good offices to bring about a series oi arbitrations whkdi 
suparseded the resort to force determined upon by the allied 
Powers against Venezuela. It did this upon the request of 
Venezuela. It did it in the performance of no duty and the 
exercise of no right whatever except the duty and the right 
of friendship between equal sovereign states. The Monroe 
Doctrine has nothing whatev^ to do with acts of this descrip- 
tion; yet many times censorious critics^ unfamiliar with the 
facts and uninstructed in the customs and rules of action of 
the international world, have accused the United States in 
such cases of playing the role oi school master, <rf assimiing 
the superiority of guardianship, of aiming at a protectorate. 

As the Monroe Doctrine neither asserts nor involves any 
right of control by the United States cfvet any American 
nation, it imposes upon the United States no duty towards 
£un^>ean Powers to exercise such a omtroL It does not call 
upon the United States to collect debts or coerce conduct or 
redress wrongs or revoige injuries. If matters ever come to a 
point where in any American country the United States inters 
venes by force to prevent or end an occupation of territory 
to the subversion or exclusion of an American govemmentt 
doubtless new rights and obligations will arise as a result of 
the acts dcme in the course ci the intervention* Unless such 
a situation shall have arisen there can be no duty on the part 
of the United States b^<Mid the exercise oi good offices as 
between equal and indq[>endent nations. 

There are indeed q>ecial reasons why the United States 
should perform that duty of equal friendship to the full 
Umit oi international custom and international ethics as 
declared in The Hague Convention^ whenever occasion arises 
in controversy between American and European Powers* 
There is a motive for that in the q>ecial sympathy and friend- 
sliq> for the gradually devdoping rqrablics of the south 
wfaidi the Amfrican peofJe have always iA met the days 



120 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

of Monroe and John Quincy Adams and Richard Ruah and 
Henry Clay. Tha!e is a motive in the strong desire d our 
government that no ccmtroversy between a European and an 
American state shall ever come to the point where the United 
States may be obliged to assert by force the rule of national 
safety declared by Monroe. And iheare is a motive in the 
proper desire of the United States that no friendly nation of 
Europe or America shall be injured or hindered in the prose- 
cution of its rights in any way or to any extent that can pos- 
sibly be avoided because that nation respects the rule of 
safely which Mr. Monroe dedared and we maintain. None 
of these reasons for the exercise of the good offices of equality 
justifies nor do all of them together justify the United States 
in infringing upon the independence or ignoring the equal 
rights of the smallest American state. 

Nor has the United States ever in any instance during 
the period of almost a century whidi has elapsed, made the 
Monroe Doctrine or the motives whidi lead us to support it> 
the ground or excuse for overstepping the limits which the 
rights of equal sovereignty set between equal sovereign states. 

Since the Monroe Doctrine is a declaration based upon this 
nation's right of self-protection, it cannot be transmuted 
into a joint or common declaration by American states or any 
number of them. If Chile or Argentina or Brazil were to 
contribute the weight of its influence toward a similar end, 
the right upon whidi that nation would rest its declaration 
would be its own safety, not the safely of the United States. 
Chile would declare what was necessary for the safety of 
Chile. Argentina would declare what was necessary for the 
safety of Argentina. Brazil, what was necessary for the 
safety of Brazil. Each nation would act for itsdf and in its 
own right and it would be impossible to go bqrond that 
except by more or less offensive and defensive alliances. Of 
course sudi alliances are not to be oxisidefed. 



THE REAL MONROE DOCTRINE 121 

It 18 plain that the building d the Panama Canal greatly 
accentuates the practical necessity of the Monroe Doctrine 
as it applies to all the territory surrounding the Caribbean or 
near the Bay of Panama. The i^ainest lessons of history and 
the universal judgment of all responsible students of the sub- 
ject concur in t^'iaching that the potential command of the 
route to and from the Canal must rest with the United States 
and that the vital interests of the nation forbid that sudi 
command shall pass into other hands. Certainly no nation 
which has acquiesced in the British occupation of Egypt will 
dispute this proposition. Undoubtedly as one passes to the 
south and the distance from the Caribbean increases, the 
necessity of maintaining the rule of Monroe becomes less 
immediate and apparent. But who is competent to draw the 
line ? Who will say, ** To this point the rule of Monroe 
should apply; beyond this point, it should not *' ? Who will 
say that a new national force created beyond any line that he 
can draw will stay beyond it and will not in the long course 
of time extend itsdf indefinitdy ? 

The danger to be apprehended from the immediate proxim- 
ity of hostile forces was not the sole consideration leading to 
the declaration. The need to s^arate the influences deta^ 
mining the development and relation of states in the New 
World from the influences operating in Europe played an 
even greater part. The familiar paragraphs of Washington's 
Farewdl Address upon this subject wete not rhetoric. Th^ 
were intensely practical rules of conduct for the future 
guidance of the country. 

Europe has a set of primary interests, which to us have none, or a very 
remote, rdation. Hence, she nnist be engaged in frequent controversies, 
the causes of which are essentially foreign to our concerns. Hence, thoe- 
foce, it must be unwise in us to imi^icate oursdves, by artificial ties, in 
the ordinary vicissitudes of her pditics, at the ordinary combinations 
and collisions of her friendships or enmities. Our detached and distant 
situation invites and enaUes us to pursue a diSennt course. 



122 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

It was the same instinct which led Jefferson, in the letter 

to Monroe already quoted, to say: 

Our fint and fundamental maxim should be, never to entang^ our- 
selves in the broils of Europe; our second, never to suffer Europe to 
intermeddle with cis-atlantic affairs. 

The concurrence of Washington and Hamilton and Jeffer- 
son in the declaration of this principle of action entitles it to 
great respect. They recalled the long period during which 
every war waged in Europe between European Powers and 
arising from European causes of quarrel was waged also in 
the New World. English and French and Spanish and 
Dutch killed and harried each other in America, not because 
of quarrels between the settlers in America but because of 
quarrels between the European Powers having dominion 
over them. Separation of influences as absolute and com- 
plete as possible was the remedy which the wisest of Ameri- 
cans agreed upon. It was one of the primary purposes of 
Monroe's declaration to insist upon this separation, and to 
accomplish it he drew the line at the water's edge. The prob- 
lem of national protection in the distant future is one not to 
be solved by the first impressions of the casual observer, but 
only by profound study of the forces which, in the long life of 
nations, work out results. In this case the results of such a 
study by the best men of the formative period of the United 
States are supported by the instincts of the American de- 
mocracy holding steadily in one direction for almost a cen- 
tury. The problem has not changed essentially. If the 
declaration of Monroe was right when the message was sent, 
it is right now. South America is no more distant today 
than it was then. The tremendous armaments and inter- 
national jealousies of Europe afford little assurance to those 
who think we may now abandon the separatist policy of 
Washington. That South American states have become too 
strong for colonisation or occupation is cause for satisf ac- 



THE REAL MONROE DOCTRINE 123 

tion. That Europe has no purpose or wish to colonize Amer- 
ican territory is most gratifying. These facts may make it 
improbable that it will be necessary to apply the Monroe 
Doctrine in the southern parts of South America; but they 
furnish no reason whatever for retracting or denying or 
abandoning a declaration of public policy, just and reason- 
able when it was made, and which, if occasion for its ap- 
plication shall arise in the future, will still be just and 
reasonable. 

A false conception of what the Monroe Doctrine is, of 
what it demands and what it justifies, of its scope and of its 
limits, has invaded tiie public press and affected public 
opinion within the past few years. Grandiose schemes of 
national expansion invoke the Monroe Doctrine. Interested 
motives to compd Central or South American countries to 
do or refrain from doing something by whidi individual 
Americans may profit invoke the Monroe Doctrine. Clamors 
for national glory from minds too shallow to grasp at the 
same time a sense of national duty invoke the Monroe Doc- 
trine. The intolerance whidi demands that control over the 
conduct and the opinions of other peoples which is the essence 
of tyranny invokes the Monroe Doctrine. Thoughtless 
people who see no difference between lawful right and physi- 
cal power assume that the Monroe Doctrine is a warrant for 
interference in the internal affairs of all weaker nations in the 
New World. Against this supposititious doctrine, many 
protests both in the United States and in South America 
have been made, and justly made. To the real Monroe 
Doctrine these protests have no application. 



CONFERENCE OF TEACHERS OF 
INTERNATIONAL LAW 

A<Mi rf «Mic e olteaghewof mtgiiiAtMmalUwwMMHMiftli^ffi^ 
April 98r^, 1914» under the auspicet of the Americui Society of Intenatioiial Iaw, 
** in ofder to connder what meafuref, if any* could properiy be taken to aronee a 
greater intereet in international law where taught in American inititutioni of learn- 
ing; to secure its introduction in American institutions of learmng where it is not 
tau^^t; to caU attention to its importance to lawyers in the practice of theb pro- 
fession; and to suggest the advisabflity of a knowledge of its principles for admis- 
sion to the bar; and to show» finally, the necessity of an understanding of the subject 
by the public at larger which in a democracy such as ours determines in the ultimate 
resort the foreign policy of the United SUtes." 

The Conf etenoe unanimously adopted a series of resolutions and these resolu- 
tions, in so far as th^ are of a general nature, were approved on January 8, 1910» by 
the Second FSsn- American Scientific Congress, and form artides 88-88 of its Final 
Act 

For the prooeedingB and the text of resolutions of the Teachers' Conf erenoe, see 
Proeeedingi qf the Ammean Soeietif cf Intematiomd Law (1914), pp. 860-884. 

For the recommendations of the Second Pan-American Scientific Congress, see 
its Final Act and interpret ati ve commentary thereon by James Brown Soott (1918), 
pp. 98-110. 

As president of the Society, Mr. Boot called the Co nf erence together, and made 
the following opening remarks: 

IT gives me very great pleasure to welcome you to partici- 
pation in this, the Conference of Teachers of International 
Law and Related Subjects, held in connection with the 
Eighth Annual Meeting of the American Society of Interna- 
tional Law, and to express the grateful appreciation of the 
officers and members of the Society to the instructors in 
international law who have left their customary duties, to 
come here for the purpose of taldng part in this conference. 
The invitation which led to this meeting had its origin in a 
resolution whidi was offered by that honored and admired 
leader in American education, Mr. Andrew D. White, at a 
meeting of the Trustees of the Cam^e Endowment for In- 
ternational Peace. One of the divisions of work established 



126 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

under that trust is the Division of Intemational Law, of 
whidi Dr. James Brown Soott is the head; and Mr. White, 
responding to the double impulse of his old enthusiasm as a 
teacher and organizer of education and as a diplomatist, as 
the representative of his country at the court of Germany, 
and as the first del^ate of his country to the First Hague 
Conference, offered this resolution: 

Re9oU>ed: That the Executive Committee be directed to ptopoae and 
carry out, subject to the approval of this Board, a plan fOT the i^opagation, 
development, maintenance and increase of sound, progressive and fruitful 
ideas on the subject of arbitration and intematicmal law and history as 
ocmnected with arbitration, especially through addresses or courses of 
lectures deliv^ed before the leading universities, colleges and law schools 
of the United States, and to report on the same at the next regular meeting 
of the Board, or, should the Committee think best, at a speaal meeting to 
be called for that purpose. 

In taking the first steps in compliance with this resolution, 
the Executive Committee f oimd it desirable to ascertain, as a 
basis of action, what was already being done in the United 
States along the lines indicated by the resolution; and, ac- 
cordingly, an inquiry was set on foot and prosecuted, in whidi 
was developed the state of education upon this subject in all 
the leading coU^es and universities and law schools of the 
country, and a very full report was made upon that subject. 

The consideration of the facts developed by that report led 
to the conclusion that the program, the method of procedure, 
the scope of enterprise and activity in the spirit of Mr. 
White's resolution, were something that no individual and no 
committee organized for any other piupose, as was the Exec- 
utive Conunittee of the Peace Endowment, could properly 
handle, could adequately deal with; and, accordingly, the 
suggestion was made that the American Society of Interna- 
tional Law, whidi deab specifically with the subject-matter 
of the resolution, should take it up, and that the men who 
know best what is needed and how that shall be done and can 



CONFERENCE OP TEACHERS 127 

be done, should come together and confer upon the subject. 
So you see that the initial impulse whidi brings you here is a 
source whidi must be respected by every American educator, 
and has a purpose whidi is certified to by the highest ability 
and the broadest experience. 

I will detain you from the practical work whidi lies before 
you in organizing the conference, by only a single suggestion. 
The putting of instruction in international law in American 
educational institutions on a broader basis, giving it a wider 
scope and greater effidency, is not a meare matter of book 
learning. It is not a mere matter of sdence. It is a matter of 
piktriotic duty. 

More and more, as the years follow one another with the 
swiftness of our modem life, democracy is coming to its own. 
More and more the people, the men on the farms and in the 
shops, the men with the pick and shovd in their hands, are 
assuming the direction of the operations of government, both 
internal and external. More and more they are directly 
responsible for the op^ations of government. Presidents and 
Congresses more and more look for immediate response from 
constituendes upon the most difficult and intricate questions 
in the foreign relations of the country, questions the right 
solution of which requires broad knowledge, whidi cannot be 
solved by the impressions of the moment, which cannot 
be solved by emotional response to oratory. 

I think no one can study the movement of the times with- 
out realizing that the democracy of the world — for it is not 
alone in this coimtry — is realizing its rights in advance of its 
realization of its duties. And that way lies disaster. That 
way lies hideous wrong. That way lies the exercise of the 
mighty powers of modem democrades to destroy themsdves, 
to destroy the vitality of the principles upon whidi th^ de- 
pend. And there is no duty more incumbent today upon the 
men whose good fortune has made it possible for them to 



128 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

acquire a broader knowledge upon the subjects with whidi 
democracy deals, than to become themsdves leaders ci 
opinion and teadiers of their people. Unless the popular wiU 
responds to the instructed and competent leadership of 
opinion upon the vital questions of our foreign relations* the 
worst impulses of democracy will control. At the bottom of 
wise and just action lies an understanding of national rights 
and national duties. Half the wars d history have come 
because d mistaken c^inions as to national rights and 
national obligations, have come from the unthinking assump- 
tion that all the right is on the side of one's own country, all 
the duty on the side of some other coimtry. Now I say the 
thing most necessary for the good ci our country in the 
foreign relations which are growing every year more and more 
intricate and critical, is that there shall be intelligent leader- 
ship d opinicm as to national rights and national obligations; 
and nobody can bring that about as the educators of America 
can bring it about. It is in the hope that you will be able to 
organise, to give direction and wise guidance to a ^stematic 
movement to accomplish this good service for our country, 
that I take the deepest interest in this conference, and bid 
you God-speed in your labors. 



THE HAGUE PEACE CONFERENCES 

ADDRESS IN OPENING THE NATIONAL ARBITRATION AND 

PEACE CONGRESS IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK, 

APRIL 15, 1907 

Ik submittiiig the Hague Conventkms of 1907 to the Senate* Bfr. Boot, 
as Secretary of State, said: 

Let me go beyond the limits of the customary formal letter of 
transmittal and say that I think the woric of the Second Hague 
Conference, which is mainly embodied in these Conventions, presents 
the greatest advance ever made at any single time toward the reason- 
able and peaceful r^ulation of international conduct, unless it be 
the advance made at The Hague Conference of 1800. 

The most valuaUe result ci the Conference of 1800 was that it 
made the work of the Conference of 1007 possible. The achievements 
of the Conferences justify the belief that the wcnJd has entered upon 
an orderly process through whidi, st^ by step, in successive Con- 
ferences, each taking the work of its i»edeoessor as its point ol 
departure, there may be continual progress toward making the 
practice of civilised nati<ms conform to their peaceful professions. 
At a later date, Mr. Boot furnished a prefatcMry note to Scott's Texts qf 
ihe Peace Conferences ai the Hague, from which the f dlowing paragraph 
is quoted as further iUustiating his views as to the importance of the 
international conference and the process by which it aooomidishes its 
results: 

The question about each international conference is not merely 
what it has acoonqilished, but also what it has begun, and what it 
has moved forward. Not only the conventions tagoai, and ratified, 
but the steps taken toward conclusions which may not reach practical 
and effective form for many years to come, are of value. S(Mne of 
the resolutions adopted by the last conference do not seem to amount 
to very much by themselves, but each one marks on some line of 
IMX)gress the farthest point to which the world is yet willing to go. 
Th^ are like caUe ends buoyed in mid-ocean, to be picked up here- 
after by some other steamer, spliced, and omtinued to shore. The 
greater the reform proposed, the longer must be the process required 
to bring many nations differing widely in their laws, customs, tradi- 
tions, interests, prejudices, into agreement. Each necessary step in 
the process is as useful as the final act which crowns thew<vk and is 
received with public celebration. 

vm 



180 mTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

' In order fully to appreciate Mr. Boot's deep interest in The Hague Con- 
ferences and the importance he attached to them as an agency in the devd- 
opment of international law and in reaching agreements upon international 
conduct, the reader is referred to Mr. Boot's instructions, as Secretary 
of State, to the American ddegates to the SeccHid Hague Peace Conference. 
These instructions will be found in the odlectioii of state ^a;pen in this 
series. 

IN every oountxy whidi has reached a high stage of civi- 
lization may be seen the working of two distinct and ap- 
parently inconsistent motives or principles of national 
conduct. On the one hand, there is the narrowly and imme- 
diately utilitarian motive, and there is the competitive 
attitude fashioned upon the habits of self-preservation and 
self-assertion enjoined by the necessities of the struggle for 
existence. With this motive each coimtry pursues specific 
national advantages meeting in a hard, dry, business-like 
way, without sympathy or sentiment, the facts of a world in 
which there is mudi selfishness and greed, in whidi every 
nation is primarily looking out for itself, and in which there 
is ordinarily some aggressor ready to take advantage of the 
over-trusting and defenseless. 

On the other hand, there is the ethical, altruistic, humane 
impulse that presses forward constantly toward ideab. Its 
possessors, loving liberty and justice and peace, long to 
make all men free and safe and secure in their rights; their 
eyes are fixed upon the ultimate goal toward whidi civiliza- 
tion tends; th^ are striving that better things shall replace 
the cynicism and selfishness and cruelty whidi have always 
so widely characterized mankind; they assert principles and 
set up standards of action, whidi they call upon mankind to 
adopt, and mankind too often gives theoretical assent but 
denies practical conformity. 

In every man's nature there are manifestations or traces of 
each of these impulses; and in every nation there are many 
citizens in whom one, and many in whom the other, impulse 



THE HAGUE PEACE CONFERENCES 131 

strongly predominates. As circumstances bring one class of 
motives or another into control of national conduct in dif- 
ferent fields of national action, strangely variant and incon- 
sistent national action results. The same nation may be 
seen hard and practical, and at another time, or perhaps in 
another field at the same time, exhibiting the highest degree 
of unselfishness and htmianity. Under the predominance of 
one motive, national power has been built up; administra- 
tion has been made effective; commerce has been extended; 
material wealth, the matrix of civilization, has been created 
and protected; the citizens of each coimtry have been se- 
cured against aggression from without; and, in the slow 
process of centuries, the code of practical niles convenient 
and necessary to the peaceable intercourse of nations has 
been elaborated. Under the predominance of the other 
motive, the conception of individual charity and htmianity, 
which found its highest expression in the Christian revelation, 
has slowly impressed itself upon the conception of national 
duty and responsibility. In its development the idea of 
national conscience and national ethics has been forced into 
the international system, which formerly acknowledged the 
undisputed sway of selfishness and cruelty, long condemned 
as immoral in the relations between individuals. 

It is natural that the hard and practical motive shall be 
uppermost in the men engaged in the conduct of government; 
they are endowed with limited and definite powers and 
charged with specific trusts for the benefit of their own 
people; their duties are to protect and advance the interests 
of their own coimtry, and those duties relate, in the main, to 
the material interest of their coimtrymen; their specific 
powers are given to them for that specific purpose; they 
have no warrant of attorney to express or give effect to the 
benevolent or humanitarian impulses of their constituents; 
imder constitutional government, as a rule, sudi expression 



132 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

is not committed by law to public officers, but is reserved to 
the people. In the discharge of their international duties 
governmental offices have to deal with a world of selfish 
competition and ever-present possibility of aggression and 
injury, which compd them to think first and chiefly of the 
interest of their own coimtry as a lawyer argues the case of 
his own client. They are constrained by the rules of conduct 
between nations which the experience of centiuies has shown 
to be necessary to the peace of the world. Among the first of 
these is, that the government of each nation shall attend to 
its own business and respect the sovereignty and refrain 
from interfering with the internal affairs of every other 
nation. This rule is the chief protection of the liberty of 
small and weak nations against the aggression of the strong. 
To break it down whenever the officers of one government 
disapprove the conduct of another government within its 
own jurisdiction, would be to break down the barriers which 
civilization has erected for the protection of the weak, with 
results as fatal as if the executive were allowed to make 
orders and the judge to issue decrees according to their own 
kindly impulses, without r^ard to the limitations of law. 

It is natural that the altruistic and htmianitarian view, 
broader and less immediately practical, shall be taken by 
students and thinkers, by teachers and philosophers, by men 
who, not burdened by the necessity of putting theories into 
practice, are at liberty to look upon the world as it ought to 
be and to lurge mankind on toward acceptance of their ideals. 
These men are masters of their own power; they have a war- 
rant from all whom their eloquence, their persuasion, their 
reasoning, or the inherent soundness of their ideas bring into 
agreement with them, ta press their views upon the world 
and insist upon conformity. In every civilized land their 
numbers, their power, and their following have increased, 
most of all in lands ^ere freedom is most perfect and justice 



THE HAGUE PEACE CONFERENCES 133 

most pure, until the voices of the few visionaries, long ago 
crying in the wfldemess, have become the soimd of a multi- 
tude; and a public opinion of the world, ingigfiTig upon right- 
eousness and peace among nations as among individuals, is 
beginning to be perceived and to affect the national purposes 
which governments represent. 

It is inevitable that the men who are directed by these two 
widely differing impulses should sometimes be impatient of 
each other. The humanitarian is rq)elled by the hardness of 
the practical man, who seems unsympathetic in his failure to 
act upon views that are certainly sound in the abstract and 
which ought to be accepted by all the world. The practical 
administrator is distressed by the lurgency of the theorist, 
who, ignorant of real conditions, urges him to a course of 
action which he knows cannot possibly be taken, or, if it 
were taken under existing conditions, would result only in 
evil. One tends to think lightly of the other as an impracti- 
cable theorist, and in return is condemned by the other as 
unfeeling and cynical. Both judgments are probably often, 
to some extent, true, but both are generally, and to a 
mudi greater extent, wrong. Each dass plays its necessary 
part in the great work of advancing civilization. It can- 
not be doubted that the supreme results for humanity are 
secured by the combination, the union, the blending of the 
two impulses, to the end that national selfishness may be most 
broadly intelligent and humanitarian idealism most effec- 
tively practical. 

Your invitation to take part in the opening of this Peace I 
Congress has come to me as an occasion to declare the alliance 
and sympathy of the American Grovemment with that other 
power — the sentiment of humanity — which in all lands, 
and most strongly in our generation, without fleets or armies 
or titles or dignities or compulsion of force, is leading man- 
kind continually to a nobler life. The American people are 



134 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

practical, material, strenuous in business, eager for wealth, 
energetic in production and venturous in commerce, insistent 
upon their rights, proud of their coimtry, jealous of its power 
and its prestige; but there is a strain of idealism in the 
American nature which saves our nation from the grossness 
of sordid materialism and makes it responsive to every appeal 
in behalf of liberty and righteousness, of peace with justice, 
and of human brotherhood the world over. No American 
Grovemment could truly represent its people if it did not 
sympathize heartily with the purposes which this Congress 
meets to promote, and the American Grovernment of today 
I does sympikthize heartily with those purposes. In behalf 
of the Grovemment I give you the kindly and appreciative 
greeting of the people of the United States and welcome you 
as spiritual kindred of those Americans of great heart and 
dear intelligence who in times past, striving for ordered lib- 
erty and the peace of justice in this land, have conferred 
inestimable benefits upon all mankind, and whose memory 
and example are our most precious possessions. 

He is mistaken who depreciates the value of sudi a meet- 
ing as this, or regards its discussions as merely academic, 
because its members have not the power themselves to give 
effect to their resolutions. The open, public declaration of a 
principle in sudi a way as to carry evidence that it has the 
support of a great body of men entitled to respect has a won- 
derfully compelling effect upon mankind. The adoption of a 
new standard of human action is never the result of force or 
the threat of force; it is always the result of a moral process, 
and to the initiation and continuance of that process public 
assertion and advocacy of the principle are essential. When 
that process has been worked out and the multitude of men 
whom governments represent have reached the point of 
genuine and not perfunctory accq>tance of the new standard, 
governments conform themselves to it. 



THE HAGUE PEACE CONFERENCES 185 

It is a oomnum saying that the world is ruled by force — 
that the ultimate sanction for the rules of right conduct be- 
tween nations is the possibility of war. That is less than a 
half truth. There was a time when the official intercourse 
between nations which we call diplomacy consisted chiefly of 
bargaining and largely of cheating in the bargain. Diplo- 
macy now consists chiefly in making national conduct con- 
form or appear to conform to the rules which codify, embody, 
and apply certain moral standards evolved and accepted in 
the slow development of civilization. The continual and 
unceasing process of diplomatic intercourse by which these 
standards are pressed upon the government of every nation, 
backed by the tremendous power of the opinion of the civi- 
lized world, enforced by the desire for the good opinion and 
apprehension of the disfavor of mankind, forms a strong 
external restraint upon national conduct; and these stand- 
ards have been created by the evolution of moral as opposed 
to physical forces. 

The value of declaring a principle may be illustrated by the 
effect of the arbitration convention agreed upon in the Inter- 
national Peace Conference at The Hague in 1899. That 
convention did little more than to declare principles; it pro- 
vided machinery by which there might be arbitration, but it 
boimd nobody to arbitrate, or to mediate, or to accept media- 
tion. The machinery provided has been but little used; the 
arbitrations at The Hague have been few and not of the first 
order of importance; yet no one can for a moment question 
the enormous impetus given to the principle of arbitration of 
international controversies in lieu of war by that open and 
public declaration that such controversies ought to be 
arbitrated. 

The thoughts of all men who hope for the peace of the 
world are now turned toward the Second Peace Conference 
so soon to meet at The Hague* It is cheering to note the 



136 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

diflFerence between the attitude of the world toward this Con- 
ference about to meet and the way in which the world looked 
upon the First Conference at The Hague eight years ago. 
The generous impulse and noble sentiment of the Emperor of 
Russia which dictated the call for that Conference, sup- 
ported by his great power and commanding position, com- 
pelled respect, or the appearance of respect, from all the 
great Powers; yet it is safe to say that the prevailing senti- 
ment among the Powers as to the practical value of the 
Conference was one of polite incredulity, and that the dele- 
gates whom he had called together met amid an almost 
universal belief that nothing would or could be accomplished. 
The primary object of the call for the First Conference — the 
accomplishment of the great design which Henry IV of 
France conceived three c^ituries ago for the limitation of 
armaments in Europe — failed for the time; yet the Con- 
ference accomplished other things of the highest value to 
hmnanity, and it demonstrated for the first time in the 
world's history the potent and epoch-making fact that a con- 
gress of the worid's powers convened, not to deal with some 
concrete question demanding inmiediate solution, but con- 
vened to consider and discuss the application of the general 
and fundamental principles of justice and humanity under all 
circumstances and to all international questions, can be 
made a practical and efiFective agen(*y in the government of 
the world; it developed a new method and a new power for 
the betterment of international conduct, far superior to the 
ordinary rules of diplomatic intercourse, far broader in its 
scope, far nobler in its purpose. Upon the eve of the Second 
Conference, whose very possibility demonstrates the success 
and approves the wisdom of the first, it seems to me that all 
men who love their feUow-men and who hope for the rule of 
righteousness and peace on earth should feel a deep sentiment 
of gratitude toward that sovereign whose noble character led 



THE HAGUE PEACE CONFERENCES 137 

him to call together the First Conference and an equally deep 
sympathy with him in the hard and difficult task in which he 
is now engaged of establishing constitutional government in 
his own dcmiinions. 

The Second Conference is about to meet amid universal 
recognition that it is of practical significance. It commands 
respect; its possibilities are the object of solicitude; the 
resolutions which it may reach are anticipated as of probable 
pot^i(*y in the a£Fairs of nations; it is not r^arded as an oc* 
casion for mere academic discussion, but it finds its place 
among the agencies by which the world is governed. I cannot 
doubt that it wiU accomplish much for the benefit of man- 
kind; that in many things it wiU bring the practice of nations 
into closer conformity with those great principles of conduct 
to which nations have accorded such ready assent in theory 
but such reluctant compliance when their particular interests 
are involved. 

The First Conference relegated to a future conference the 
consideration of three broad, general questicms a£Fecting the 
conduct of nations toward each other: first, the rights and 
duties of neutrals; second, the inviolability of private prop- 
erty in naval warfare; and, third, the bombardment of towns, 
villages, and ports by a naval force. It is understood that all 
these subjects shall be considered at the Second Conference. 

The First C(mf erence also adopted two resolutions relating 
to naval and military armament. The first was: 

The Conferenoe is of opmion that the restriction of military diarges, 
which are at present a heavy burdea on the world, is extremdy desirable 
for the increase of the material and moanl wel&re of mankind. 

The second was: 

The Conferenoe expresses the wish that the governments, taking into 
consideration the proposals made at the Conferenoe, may examine the 
possibiHty of an agreement as to the limitation of armed forces by land and 
sea and of war budgets. 



138 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

The Grovemment of the United States has been of the 
(pinion that the subject-matter of these resolutions ought to 
be further considered and discussed in the Second Confer- 
ence; that the subject is in the nature of unfinished business 
and cannot be ignored, but must be dealt with; that there 
ought to be at least an earnest effort to reach, or to make 
progress toward reaching, some agreement under which the 
enormous expenditure of money and the enormous with- 
drawal of men from productive industry for warlike purposes 
may be reduced or arrested or retarded. We have not been 
unmindful of the fact that the question is one which primarily 
and in its present stage concerns Europe rather than America; 
that the conditions which have led to the great armaments of 
the present day are mainly Eiuropean conditions, and that it 
would ill become us to be forward or dogmatic in a matter 
which is so much more vital to the nations of Europe than to 
ourselves. It sometimes happens, however, that a state 
having little or no special material interest in a proposal can, 
for that very reason, advance the proposal with the more 
advantage and the less prejudice. The American Grovem- 
ment accordingly, at an early stage of the discussion r^ard- 
ing the program, reserved the right to present this subject for 
the consideration of the Conference. Several European 
Powers have also given notice of their intention to present 
the subject. It may be that the discussion wiU not bring the 
Second Conference to any definite and practical conclusion; 
certainly no such conclusion can be effective unless it meet 
with practically universal assent, for there can be no effective 
agreement which binds some of the Great Powers and leaves 
others free. There are serious difiSculties in formulating any 
definite proposal which would not be objectionable to some of 
the Powers, and upon the question whether any specific pro- 
posal is unfair and injurious to its interests each Power must 
be, and is entitled to be, its own judge. 



THE HAGUE PEACE CONFERENCES 189 

Nevartlidess, the effort can be made; it may fail in this 
Conference, as it failed in the first, but even if it fails one 
more step will have been taken toward ultimate success. 
Long-continued and persistent effort is always necessary to 
bring mankind into conformity with great ideals; every 
great advance that civilization has made on its road from 
savagery has been upon stepping-stones of failure, and a good 
fight bravely lost for a sound principle is always a victory. 

The Government of the United States has also considered 
that the Second Hague Conference might well agree in put- 
ting some limitation upon the use of force for the collection 
of ordinary contract debts due by one government to the 
citizens of another. 

It has long been the established poli(«y of the United States 
not to use its army and navy for the collection of such 
debts. We have not considered the use of force for such a 
purpose consistent with that respect for the independent 
sovereignty of other members of the family of nations which 
is the most important principle of international law and the 
chief protection of weak nations against oppression. It 
seems to us that the practice is injurious in its general effect 
upon relations of nations and upon the welfare of weak and 
disordered states, whose development ought to be en- 
couraged in the interests of civilization, and that it offers 
frequent temptation to bullying and oppression and to un- 
necessary and unjustifiable warfare. It may be that the 
non-payment of public debts may be accompanied by such 
circumstances of fraud and wrongdoing or violation of 
treaties as to justify the use of force as a last resort; but we 
hope to see an international consideration of the subject 
which shall discriminate between such cases and the simple 
non^perf ormance of a contract with a private person, and to 
see a resdution in favor of reliance exclusively upon peace- 
ful means in cases of the latter dass. It may weQ be that 



140 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

the principle of arbitration can be so extended in its appli- 
cation that the class of adventurers who have long been 
in the habit of trading upon the necessities of weak and 
distressed governments may be required to submit their 
often exorbitant and unconscionable demands to an impar- 
tial tribunal, before which both parties may be heard both 
as to the validity and the amount of their claims and the 
time and manner of payment to which they are entitled. 
The record of the cases which have been submitted to arbi- 
tration during recent years shows that the total awards of 
the arbitral tribunals have amounted to a very small per- 
caitage of the demands submitted. It is diflScult to resist 
the inference that the claims of private citizens who seek the 
good offices of their own governments to obtain payment 
from other countries generally need investigation by fair tri- 
bunals rather than immediate and peremptory enforcement. 
In the general field of arbitration we are surely justified in 
hoping for a substantial advance both as to scope and effec- 
tiveness. It has seemed to me that the great obstacle to the 
universal adoption of arbitration is not the unwillingness of 
civilized nations to submit their disputes to the decision of an 
impartial tribxmal; it is rather an apprehension that the 
tribxmal selected wiU not be impartial. In a dispatch to Sir 
Julian Pauncefote dated March 5, 1896, Lord Salisbury 
stated the difficulty. He said that — 

U the matter in controveray is important, so that defeat is a serious 
blow to the credit or the power of the Utigant who is worsted, that mterest 
becomes a more or less keen partisanship. According to their sympathies, 
men wish for the victory of one side or another. Such conflicting sym- 
pathies interfere most formidably with the choice of an impartial arbitra- 
tor. It would be too invidious to specify the various forms of bias by 
which, in any important controveray between two great powers, the other 
members of the commonwealth of nations are visibly a£Fected. In the 
existing condition of intemati<mal sentiment each great power could point 
to naticms whose admission to any jury by whom its interests were to be 
tried it would be bound to challeoge; and in a litigatioQ between two great 



THE HAGUE PEACE CONFERENCES 141 

powers the rival challenges would in«tty well exhaust the catalogue of the 
nations from which competent and suitable arbiters could be drawn. It 
would be easy, but scarcely decorous, to illustrate this statement by ex- 
amples. They will occur to anyone's mind who attempts to omstruct a 
pand of nations capable of i»t>viding competent arbitrators, and will 
consider how many of them would conmuuid equal omfidence from any 
two litigating powers. 

This is the difficulty which stands in the way of unrestricted arbitration. 
By whatever {dan the tribunal is selected, the end of it must be that issues 
in whidi the litigant states are most deeply interested will be decided by 
the vote of one man, and that man a foreigner. He has no jury to find his 
hcts; he has no court of appeal to correct his law; and he is sure to be 
credited, justly or not, with a leaning to one litigant or the other. 

The feeling which Lord Salisbury so well expressed is» I 
think, the great stumbling-block in the way of arbitration. 
The essential fact which supports that feeling is that arbi- 
trators too oft^i act diplomatically rather than judicially; 
they consider themselves as belonging to diplomacy rather 
than to jurisprudence; they measure their responsibility and 
their duty by the traditions, the sentiments, and the sense of 
honorable obligation which have grown up in centiuries of 
diplomatic intercourse, rather than by the traditions, the 
sentiments, and the sense of honorable obligation which 
characterize the judicial departments of civilized nations. 
Instead of the sense of responsibility for impartial judgment 
which weighs upon the judicial officers of every civilized 
coimtry, and which is enforced by the honor and self-respect 
of every upright judge, an international arbitration is often 
r^arded as an occasion for diplomatic adjustment. Grant- 
ing that the diplomats who are engaged in an arbitration 
have the purest motives; that they act in accordance with 
the Tpohcy they deem to be best for the nations concerned in 
the controversy; assuming that they thrust aside entirely 
in their consideration any interests which their own countries 
may have in the controversy or in securing the favor or avert- 
ing the displeasure of the parties before them — nevertheless 



142 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

it remains that in such an arbitration the litigant nations find 
that questions of poli(*y, and not simple questions of fact and 
law, are submitted to alien determination, and an appreciable 
part of that sovereignty which it is the function of every 
nation to exercise for itself in determining its own polipy is 
transferred to the arbitrators. 

An illustration of this view is to be found in the fact that 
one of the features of the extraordinary advance made by the 
nations of South America in the arts of peace is the develop- 
ment of arbitration for the settlement of disputes, and espe- 
cially boundary disputes, to a greater degree than in any 
other part of the world. This has been facilitated by the 
almost complete detachment of South American politics from 
the national politics of Europe; so that it has been easy for the 
South American states to find arbitrators who neither knew 
nor cared for any political question in South America, and 
who, therefore, have been able to determine the questions 
before them with sole reference to the merits of the question, 
as a trained and upright judge decides a case submitted to 
his court. 

What we need for the further development of arbitration 
is the substitution of judicial action for diplomatic action, 
the substitution of judicial sense of responsibility for diplo- 
matic sense of responsibility. We need for arbitrators, not 
distinguished public men concerned in all the international 
questions of the day, but judges who wiU be interested only 
in the question appearing upon the record before them. 
Plainly, this end is to be attained by the establishment of a 
coiui: of permanent judges, who wiU have no other occupation 
and no other interest but the exercise of the judicial faculty 
under the sanction of that high sense of responsibility which 
has made the courts of justice in the civilized nations of the 
world the exponents of all that is best and noblest in modem 
civilization. 



THE HAGUE PEACE CONFERENCES 143 

Let me add a few words of wamiDg concerning your anti- ( 
dpations of what the Second Peace Conference is to do. Do 
not expect too much from it. 

It is an essential characteristic of such a conference that it 
shall deal, not with matters upon which the nations di£Fer> but 
with matters upon which the nations agree. Immaterial 
differences may be smoothed away; misunderstandings may 
be explained; consideration and discussion along lines that 
do not run coimter to any immediate and specific interest 
may work out methods of applying general principles in such 
a way as to prevent future differences; progress may be 
made toward agreement upon matters which are not yet 
ripe for complete adjustment; but the moment an attempt is 
made to give such a conference any coercive effect, the mo- 
ment any number of nations endeavor to use the conference 
for the piupose of compelling any other nation to do what it 
deems inconsistent with its interests, that moment the J 
conference fails. 

Such a conference is an agen(*y of peace; not the peace of 
conquest, but the peace of agreement; not enforced agree- 
ment, but willing and cheerful agreement. So far as the 
nations can go together in such an agreement the confer- 
ence can go, and no farther. 

Many lovers of their kind, certain that the principles 
which they see so clearly ought to be accepted of all men, are 
unmindful of the many differences Vhich divide the nations 
in the competition for trade and wealth, for honor and pres- 
tige; unmindful that the selfishness and greed and willing- 
ness to do injustice which have marked all human history 
still exist in the world; unmindful that because of these the 
instinct of self-protection engenders distrust and suspicion 
among the nations; and they wiU be sadly disappointed 
because The Hague Conference of 1907 does not realize their 
dreams and usher in the parliament of man — the federation 



144 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

of the world. But let them take heart. A forward atep will 
betaken; an advance wiU be made toward the reign of peace 
and justice and righteousness among men, and that advance 
wiU go just so far as the character of the great mass of civi- 
lized men permits. There lies the true measure of possibility 
and the true origin of reforming force. Arbitrations and 
mediations, treaties and conventions, peace resolutions, 
declarations of principle, speeches and writings, are as naught 
unless they truly represent and find a response in the hearts 
and minds of the multitude of the men who make up the 
nations of the earth, whose desires and impulses determine 
the issues of peace and war. The end toward which this 
assemblage strives — the peace of the world — wiD be 
attained just as rapidly as the millions of the earth's peoples 
learn to love peace and abhor war; to love justice and hate 
wrongdoing; to be considerate in judgment and kindly in 
feeling toward aliens as toward their own friends and neigh- 
bors; and to desire that their own countries shaU regard the 
rights of others rather than be grasping and overreaching. 
The path to universal peace is not through reascm or intellec- 
tual appreciation, but through the development of peace- 
loving and peace-keeping character among men; and that 
this development, slow though it be as measured by our 
short lives, is proceeding with steady and unremitting ad- 
vance from generation to generation no student of history 
can question. The greatest benefit of the Peace Conference 
<rf 1907 wiU be, as was that of the Peace Conference of 1899, 
in the fact of the conference itself; in its powerful infiuence 
moulding the characters ef men; in the spectacle of aU the 
great powars of the earth meeting in the name of peace, and 
exalting, as worthy of honor and desire, national self-control 
and considerate judgment and willingness to do justice. 



THE IMPORTANCE OF JUDICIAL 
SETTLEMENT 

OPENING ADDRESS AT THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 

OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT 

OF INTERNATIONAL DISPUTES^ WASHINGTON, D.C. 

DECEMBER IS, 1910 

In introducing tbe speaket tbe preiiding oflBoer, Jamet Brown Soott, and: 
For centuries it was tbe plan of the i^ulosopher and tbe hope of tbe philan- 
thropist that some means mi^t be found by which international ocmflicts should be 
settled peacefully without a resort to arms, and the dreamers of dreams, phfl- 
osof^iers and philanthropists, proposed that the questions at issue be t ween nations 
should be settled ather in conference, in difdomatic assemblies or by temporary 
tribunals of arbitration created for the express purpose. That which the dreamers 
of dreams have dreamed, and the philosophers have planned, that which the pbS^ 
anthropists saw before them as if in a vision, took definite form and shi^ in the 
year 1907, when our acoomfJished Secretary of State, the Honorable Elihu Root, 
instructed the American delegation to the Seocmd Hague F^aoe Conference to pro- 
pose a permanent court to be composed of judges idio shoukl act under a sense of 
judicial responsibiiity, and which court should r epre sent the various judicial systems 
of the world. Pursuant to these instructions the delegation, under the leaderahip of 
the Honorable Josq>h H. Choate, introduced such a proposition, and after wedss 
of discussion and debate the Conference adopted a draft convention consisting of 
thirty-five articles for the organisation, the jurisdiction and the procedure of a 
permanent court of arbitral justice, leaving it, however, to the naiions to constitute 
the court, throu^ diplomatic channels, iH^ an agreement diould be reached iqK)n 
the iqypointment of the judges. 

T ^ TE all of US agree, and a very large part of the worid 
V V agrees, that there oiight to be an end to war, that it is 
brutal, wasteful and stupid. We have been talking about it 
for a great many years. The volume of sound has swelled 
and grown into a great chorus of universal acclaim for the 
principles of peace with justice. 

But all great movements have a definite development. 
Th^ pass from stage to stage. The declaration of principles 
in the b^^inning is but the first step, and the method of de- 
velopment is from the general to the particular, from the 

14f 



146 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

theoretical to the practical from the prcq[)06al to the aocom- 
plishment. 

Now, the movement for peace, for the settlement <rf the 
disputes of mankind by peaceful means, is, it seems to me, 
passing from one stage to another in these wonderful years 
in which we live. Having accumulated enough momentum, 
by means of the missionary work that has been done, by 
means of the propaganda which has been prosecuted, we are 
beginning now to pass into the stage of careful, thoughtful, 
definite, certain inquiry into the specific causes of war and 
the specific remedies to be applied. So only can progress be 
made towards a practical conclusion. 

The organization of this Society is one of the great steps 
forward in this second stage of development of the world- 
wide peace movement. 

The causes of war may be roughly, and of course super- 
ficially and generally distributed into three cat^ories. First, 
there are the real differences between nations as to their 
respective rights. One natflbn claims territory and another 
claims the same territory. One nation claims the right to 
trade in a particular way, at a particular place, and another 
nation claims an exclusive right. There are a myriad ways 
in which nations may come into dispute r^^arding real rights, 
each nation believing that its side of the controversy is 
based upon justice. 

A second cat^ory is what I might call that of policy. The 
polipy of a coimtry may be to push its trade, to acquire terri- 
tory, to obtain a dominant influence, to insist upon a certain 
course of action by other coimtries for its own protection 
asserting that a different course of conduct would be danger- 
ous to its safety. All those questions of polipy, however, are 
to a considerable d^ree, and very frequently, dependent 
upon the determination of certain facts and the decision of 
certain questions of international law. 



JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT 147 

A third cat^ory of causes of war may be described as being 
matters of feeling. Deep and bitter feeling is often awakened 
between peoples of different countries. We have got away 
from the time when the pique or whim of an individual mon- 
arch might plunge his subjects into a bloody and devastating 
war, but we remain in the time when great masses of people 
in different countries may become indignant over some slight 
or insult, or a course of conduct which they deem to be injuri- 
ous and unfair. These matters of f eding, which are the most 
dangerous of all causes of war because they make the peoples 
of two different countries want to fight, — these matters of 
feeling ordinarily depend in the beginning upon different 
views regarding the specific rights of the two countries. 

Now, as to the first kind of causes of war, the real contro- 
versies about rights, it is plain that they ought to be decided, 
and that all war based upon them may easily be obviated by 
having ihem decided, in accordance with the rules of right 
reason. 

As to the two other classes of reasons for war, it is plain 
that the little b^innings out of which they arise, the excuses 
upon which they depend, may also be disposed of if taken in 
time, and disposed of by reason and kindly consideration. So 
that while it does not cover the whole ground, while it does 
not by any means solve the whole question, yet at the bottom 
of all the attempts practically to dispose of the causes of war, 
lies the peaceable decision of questions of fact and law in 
accordance with the rules of justice. 

Now we have been for a good many years more and more 
seeking to accomplish that by means of arbitration, and the 
machinery for arbitration has been carefully devised and 
agreed upon by the nations of the earth at the two isuccessive 
Hague conferences, so that it is comparatively easy for 
nations to have recourse to that method of settling their 
disputes. 



148 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

I But there are some diflSculties about arbitration, practical 
difficulties in the way of settling questions. I have said many 
times and in many places that I do not tliink the difficulty 
that stands in the way of arbitration today is an unwiDing^ 
ness on the part of the dvilized nations of the earth to submit 
their disputes to impartial decision. I think the difficulty is 
a doubt on the part of civilized nations as to getting an im- 
partial decision. And that doubt arises from some character- 
istics of arbitral tribimals which are very difficult to avoid. 

In the first place, these tribunals are ordinarily made up by 
selecting publicists, men of public afiFairs, great dvil servants, 
members of the foreign offices, men trained to diplomacy; 
and the inevitable tendenpy is, and the result oft^i has been, 
in the majority of cases has been, that the arbitral tribunal 
simply substitutes itself for the n^otiators of the two parties, 
and n^otiates a settlement. Well, that is quite a different 
thing from submitting your views of right and wrong, your 
views of the facts and the law on which you base your claims 
to right, to the decision of a tribunal, of a court. It is merely 
handing over your interests to somebody to n^otiate for 
you; and there is a very widespread reluctance to do that in 
r^ard to many cases; and the nearer the question at issue 
approaches the verge of the field of policy, the stronger the 

/objection to doing that. 

Another difficulty ^ that the arbitral tribunals, of course 
being made up largely of members from other countries, the 
real decision ordinarily being made by arbiters who come 
from other coimtries and not from the countries concerned, 
questions have to be presented to men trained under dif- 
ferent systems of law, with different ways of thinking and of 

(looking at matters. There is a very wide difference between 
the way in which a dvil lawyer and a common-law lawyer 
wiU approach a subject, and it is sometimes pretty hard for 
them to understand each other even though they speak the 



JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT 149 

same language, while if they speak different languages it is 
still more difficult. 

Another difficulty is that a large part of the rules of inter- 
national law are still quite vague and undetermined, and 
upon many of them, and especially upon those out of which 
controversy is most likely to arise, different coimtries take 
diffa^it views as to what the law is and ought to be. And 
no one can tell how one of these extemporized tribunals, 
picked at haphazard, or upon the best information the nego- 
tiators of two countries can get, — no one can tell what views 
th^ are going to take about questions of international law, 
or how they are going to approach subjects and deal with 
them. 

Now, it has seemed to me very dear that in view of these 
practical difficulties standing in the way of our present sys- 
tem of arbitration, the next step by which the system of^ 
peaceable settlement of international disputes can be ad- 
vanced, the pathway along which it can be pressed f orwarjj 
to universal acceptance and use, is to substitute for the kind^ 
of arbitration we have now, in which the arbitrators procee(|_ 
according to their ideas of diplomatic obligation, real courts'! 
where judges, acting under the sanctity of the judicial oath, 
pass upon the rights of countries, as judges pass upon the 
rights of individuals, in accordance with the facts as found 
and the law as established. With such tribunals, which are 
continuous, and composed of judges who make it their 
business, you will soon develop a bench composed of men 
who have become familiar with the ways in which the people 
of every country do their business and do their thinking, and 
you wiU have a gradual growth of definite rules, of fixed inter- 
pretation, and of established precedents, according to which 
you may know your case wiU be decided. It is with that view 
that I have felt grateful to the gentlemen who have been 
giving their time and efforts to the organization and estab- 




L r\n 



160 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

lishment of this Society. I am sure that it is a step along the 
scientific and practical method of putting into operation all 
the principles that we have been preaching and listening to 
for so many years. It is practical, and I believe it will be 
effective. 

There is a great deal of work for the Society to do. Our 
people here in the United States are probably more ready to 
assent to such a view as this than the people of any other 
country in the world, because we have been long accustomed 
to the existence of a great tribunal, a part of whose duty it is 
to sit in judgment upon the question whether the govern- 
ments of the sovereign states and the government of our own 
nation, in their acts, conform to the great principles of justice 
and right conduct embodied in our Constitution. That ar- 
rangement, of embodying the eternal principles of justice in 
a written instrument, investing a court with the power to 
declare all acts of congresses, and legislatiures, and presi- 
dents and governors, void and of no effect when they fail to 
conform to those principles, is, it seems to me, the greatest 
contribution of America to the political science of the world. 
We are accustomed to seeing the actions of the men who hold 
the power, the actions of the legislative bodies that hold the 
purse strings, submitted to the adjudication of the court 
which has no power to enforce its decrees, except the confi- 
dence of the whole people behind it. We are accustomed to 
that, and it seems natural to us that nations, however great, 
and rulers, however powerful, shoiild go before a court and 
submit the question whether their actions and their views 
accord with the principles of justice. But it does not seem 
so to most of the world. It is rather a new idea, and it will 
take time and argument and exposition to bring the world in 
/gen eral to the acceptance of that view. And upon that long 
journey this Society has entered. A prosperous voyage to 
it, and a safe arrival! 



JUDICIAL SETTLEMENT 151 

I have said that the time has come for practical dealing 
with specific causes and specific remedies. Do not mider- 
stand me as believing that this is to be substituted for the 
omtinuous and unwearied assertion and reassertion of the 
great principles upon which the movement for peace and 
justice must depend in all parts and in every phase. For, 
however great may be the material wealth and power of these 
great nations, after all, what rules the world, the one thing 
that is eternal and all-powerful, is the intangible and the 
sentimental. 

To the first meeting of the American Society for Judicial Settlement of 
International Disputes, Bir. Boot sent a letter, from which the following 
IS an extract: 

I beg to say to your guests that I sympathize very strongly with 
thdr object and bdieve that the proposed organization is adi4[>ted to 
render a great public service. I assume that the new organisation is 
to have a definite, specific object which may be indicated by em- 
phasizing the word ** judicial " in its title to indicate a distinction 
between that kind of settlement of international disputes and the 
ordinary arbitration as it has been understood in the past and is 
generally understood now. 

I assume that you are going to urge that disputes between nations 
shall be settled by judges acting under the judicial sense of honorable 
obligation, with a judicial idea of impartiality, rather than by diplo- 
mats acting under the dii^omatic ideas of honorable obligation and 
feeling bound to negotiate a settlement rather than to pass without 
fear or fav<Nr up<m questions of fact and law. 

It seems to me that such a change in the fundamental idea of what 
an arbitration should be is essential to any very great further exten- 
sion of the idea of arbitration. I have been much surprised, however, 
to see how many people there are oi ability and force who do not 
agree with this idea at all, particularly people on the other side of 
the Atlantic. The extraordinary scope of judicial power in this 
country has accustomed us to see the <^>erations of government and 
questions arising between sovereign states submitted to judges who 
ai^ly the test of conformity to established principles and rules of 
conduct embodied in our constitutions. 

It seems natural and proper to us that the ocmduct of government 
affecting substantial ri^ts, and not depending upon questions of 



152 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

poBcy» should be passed upon by the courts when oocaskm arises. 
It is easy, therefore, for Americans to grasp the idea that the same 
method of settlement should be applied to questions growing out of 
the conduct of nations and not involving questions of policy. 

In countries, however, where the courts ezerdse no sudi power, 
the idea is quite a new <Hie to most people, and, if it is to prevail* 
there must be a process of education. Such a process will naturally 
reodve its chief impulse in the United States, and I hope your new 
society will give such an impulse with vigor and accurate directicHi. 



NOBEL PEACE PRIZE ADDRESS 

BEQUIBED BY THE STATUTES OP THE NOBEL FOUNDATION 

UPON THE AWABD OP THE PEACE PRIZE 

FOR THE YEAR 1912 

The Swedish acieiitist, Alfred Nobd, inventor of dynamite^ died December 10, 
1806, and established by his will a fund oi i^yproximately nine million doUan, the 
interest of whieh should every year be distributed to those Who had contributed 
most to ** the good ol humanity." The interest thus provided for was to be divided 
into five equal shares and distributed " one to the person who in the domain of 
phyaics has made the most important discovery or invention, one to the person who 
has made the most important chemical discovery or inveBtion» one to the person 
who has made the most important discovery in the domain of medicine or physi- 
ology, one to the person who in literature has provided the most acdQent work of 
an idealistic tendency, and one to the pereon who hae worked mat cr beet for the 
fraternisuxtion of naUone, mtd the aboUlum or reiuetum of eUmding amdei^ &nd the 
ealUng and propagating of peace eongreseee,** 

The fund becameavadable in the year 1001,and the indiiodual priie, amounting to 
about $40,000^ is awarded annually on the anniversary of Mr. Nobel's death. 

The Nobd Peace Prise for 1012, reserved, in confonnity with artide 5 <rf the 
statutes, for the year 1018, was conferred upon Elihu Boot. The committee made 
its decisions known to the public on December 10, 1018, the anniversaiy of Mr. 
Nobd*s death, in the hall of the Nobd Institute at Christiania. Mr. Lttvland* 
president of the conunittee, i»esided at the ceremony. The secretary of the com- 
mittee, Mr. Moe, delivered an address on Mr. Boot's political career, from whidi 
the following is an extract: 

In August, 1800, he [Mi, Boot] was appointed Secretary of War by Presi- 
dent McKinl^ and remained in office during Mr. Boosevdt's administration 
until February, 1004. Upon the death of Secretary of State J<^ Hay, in July, 
' 1005, Mr. Root succeeded to that office and directed the foreign affairs of the 
United States up to the expiration oi Mr. Roosevdt's term, in Bdardi, 1000. 
It was his task, as Secretary iA War, to lay the bases of the plan for the re- 
organisation of Cuba and the Philippines in their relation to the United States 
after the Spanish-American war. 

As Secretary oi State, he made a notable journey to South America* during 
which he visited the Third Pan-American Congress at Rbde Janeiro. In 1007, 
he visited Mexico. The object of these visits was to remove the long-standing 
diitrust of their An^o-Saxon sister on the part of the Latin Republics, and to 
further the efforts made in the interest of Pan-Americanism. In 1008 there 
was founded at Washington the Pan-American Bureau, under the direction 
of the Secretary oi State of the United States, m ooaperatioii with the 
Ministers of the American Republics accredited to Washington, Mr. Boot 
Uxk the initiative in calling a Central American Peace Congress at Washington 

15S 



154 DJTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

in 1907. TliefoUowiiig year a pennanent court for the CentrdAnie^^ 
was created at Cartago» Costa Rka. 

The most difficult task that fell to Mr. Boot as Secretaiy of SUte was the 
settlement oi the dispute between the United States and Ji^mui on the question 
of Ji^Minese immigrants in Califomiap in 10(NH)7. It is impossible to give here 
the history of this great question, which assumed a threatening a^>ect in the 
winterof 1907. It will suffice to say that the peaceful settlement of the di^mte» 
clinched by the action of the Congress at Washington in passing the inunigra- 
ticm act of March 19, 1907, foUowed by the identic note of November, 1908^ 
was due to the efforts of Mr. Boot. 

Long alone among American statesmen in his stand on the question, he 
vigoioudy attadtod the act of August, 1912, providing for the free passage of 
American coastwise vessds through the Panama Canal. His eloquent speech 
in the Senate on January 21, 1918, was distributed among the friends of peace 
throui^ut the entire worid. Since his retirement Mr. Boot has been recog- 
nised as the leader of the peace movement in the United States. He is President 
of the American Society of International Law and of the great Carnegie 
Endowment for International Peaoe.^ 
In acccwdance with the statutes of the Nobel Foundation, the laureate iA the 

Peace Prise is required to deliver an address in person at Christiania, Norway. The 

date for the delivery of Mr. Boot's address was set for September 8, 1914, but 

ddivery was prevented by the outbreak of the £ur(^>ean war. 

The address prepared by Mr. Boot for that occasion is here printed exactly as it 

was prepared for ddivery before the outbreak iA the war, without the change of a 

word or syllable. 

THE humaiiitarian purpose of Alfred Nobel in establish- 
ing the peace prize which bears his name was doubtless 
not merely to reward those who should promote peace among 
nations, but to stimulate thought upon the means and 
methods best adapted, under the changing conditions of 
future years, to approach and ultimately attain the end he 
so much desired. 

The apparent simplicity of the subject is misleading. 
Recognition of the horrors of war and the blessings of peace, 
acceptance of the dogma "" War is wrong and to keep the 
peace a duty,'' are so universal that upon the surface it 
seems only necessary to state a few incontrovertible truths 
and to press them upon the attention of mankind, in order 
to have war end and peace reign perpetually. 

1 Translated from Lea Prix Nobd sn 191S, Stoddiolm (1914), pp. 64-6ff. 



NOBEL PRIZE ADDRESS 155 

Yet the continual recurrence of war and the universally 
increasing preparations for war based upon expectation of it 
among nations all of whom declare themselves in favor of 
peace, indicate that intellectual acceptance of peace doctrine 
is not sufficient to control conduct, and that a general feeling 
in favor of peace, however sincere, does not furnish a strong 
enough motive to withstand the passions which lead to war 
when a cause of quarrel has arisen. The methods of peace 
propaganda which aim at establishing peace doctrine by 
argument and by creating a feeling favorable to peace in 
general, seem to fall short of reaching the springs of human 
action and of dealing with the causes of the conduct which 
th^ seek to modify. It is much like treating the i^ymptoms 
of disease instead of ascartaining and dealing with the cause 
of the symptoms. The mere assemblage of peace-loving 
people to interchange convincing reasons for their common 
faith; mere exhortation and argument to the public in favor 
of peace in general fall short of the mark. 

They are useful, they serve to strengthen the faith of the 
participants, they tend very gradually to create a new stand- 
ard of conduct, just as exhortations to be good and demon- 
strations that honesty is the best policy have a certain utility 
by way of suggestion. But they do not, as a rule, reach or 
extirpate or modify the causes of war. 

Occasionally some man with exceptional power of state- 
ment or of feeling, and possessed by the true missionary 
spirit, will deliver a message to the world, putting old truths 
in such a way as to bite into the consciousness of civilized 
peoples and move mankind forward a little, with a gain 
never to be altogether lost. But the mere repetition of the 
obvious by good people of average intelligence, while not 
without utility and not by any means to be despised as an 
agaicy for peace, nevertheless is subject to the drawback 
that the unregenerate world grows weary of iteration and 



156 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

reacts in the wrong direction. The limitation upon this 
mode of promoting peace lies in the fact that it consists in an 
appeal to the civilized side of man, while war is the product of 
forces proceeding from man's original savage nature. To 
deal with the true causes of war one must begin by recogniz- 
ing as of prime relevancy to the solution of the problem the 
familiar fact that civilization is a partial, incomplete, and, 
to a great extent, superficial modification of barbarism. The 
point of departure of the process to which we wish to con- 
tribute is the fact that war is the natural reaction of human 
nature in the savage state, while peace is the result of ac- 
quired diaracteristics. War was forced upon mankind in his 
original dvil and social condition. The law of the survival 
of the fittest led inevitably to the survival and predominance 
of the men who were effective in war and who loved it 
because they were effective. War was the av^iue to all that 
mankind desired. Food, wives, a place in the sun, freedom 
from restraint and oppression, wealth of comfort, wealth of 
luxury, respect, honor, power, control over others, were sought 
and attained by fighting. Nobody knows through how many 
thousand of years fighting men have made a place for them- 
selves while the weak and peaceable have gone to the wall. 
Loveof fighting was bred in the blood of the race, because those 
who did not love fighting were not suited to their environ- 
m«it and perished. Grotius himsdf acts war first in the title 
of his great work, De Jure Belli ac Po/cis, as if , in his mind, 
war was the general and usual condition with which he was to 
deal, and peace the occasional and incidental field of inter- 
national relation. And indeed the work itsdf deals chiefly 
with war, and only incidentally with peaceful relations. 

In attempting to bring mankind to a condition of per- 
manent peace in which war will be regarded as criminal con- 
duct, just as civilized communities have been brought to a 
condition of permanent order, broken only by criminals who 



NOBEL FBIZB ADDBESS 157 

war against sodefty, we have to deal with innate ideas, im- 
pulses and habits, which became a part of the cave man's 
nature by necessity from the conditions under which he 
liyed; and these ideas and impulses stiU survive more or less 
dormant under the v^ieer of civilization, ready to be excited 
to action by events often of the most trifling diaracter. As 
Lord Bacon says ** Nature is often hidden, sometimes over- 
come, sddom extinguished/* To eradicate or modify or curb 
the tendencies which thus survive among civilized moi is not 
a matter of intellectual conviction or training. It is a matter 
primarily of developmoit of diaracter and the shifting of 
standards of conduct — a long, slow process in which ad- 
vance is to be measured, not by days and years but by 
generations and centuries in the life of nations. 

The attractive idea that we can now have a parliament of 
man with authority to control the ccmduct of nations by 
l^islation or an intamational pdice force with power to 
enforce national conformity to rules of right omduct is a 
counsel of perfection. The world is not ready for any such 
thing, and it cannot be made ready except by the practical 
surrender of the independence of nations, which lies at the 
basis of the present social (organization of the dvilized world. 
Such a system would mean that each nation was liable to be 
lawfully controlled and coerced by a majority of alien powers. 
That majority alone could determine when and for what 
causes and to what ends the control and coerdon should be 
exercised. Human nature must have come much nearer 
perfection than it is now, or will be in many generations, to 
exdude from such a control prejudice, selfishness, ambition 
and injustice. An attempt to prevent war in this way would 
l»eed war, for it would destroy local self-government and 
drive nations to war for liberty. There is no nation in the 
world which would seriously consider a propositi so shocking 
to the national pride and patriotism of its pe(^le. 



158 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

To hdp in the most practical and efficient way towards 
making peace permanent, it is needful to inquire with some 
analysis what are the specific motives and impulses, the 
proximate causes which, under the present conditions of the 
civilized world, urge nations to the point where the war 
passion seizes upon them. And then we should inquire what 
are the influences which naturally tend or may be made to 
tend towards checking the impulse, destroying the motive, 
preventing the proximate cause, before passion has become 
supreme and it is too late. 

It is to be observed that every case of war averted is a gain 
in general, for it helps to form a habit of peace, and com- 
munity habits long continued become standards of conduct. 
The life of the community conforms to an expectation of their 
continuance, and there comes to be an instinctive opposition 
to any departure from them. 

The first and most obvious cause for international contro- 
versy which suggests itself is in the field of international 
rights and obligations. Claims of right and insistence upon 
obligations may depend upon treaty stipulations or upon 
the rules of international law or upon the sense of natural 
justice applied to the circumstances of a particular case, or 
upon disputed facts. Upon all these there are continually 
arising controversies as to what are the true facts; what is 
the rule of international law applicable to the case; what 
is the true interpretation of the treaty; what is just and fair 
under the circumstances. This category does not by any 
means cover the entire field out of which causes of war arise, 
but no one shoiild underestimate its importance. Small 
differences often grow into great quarrels, and honest dif- 
ferences of opinion frequently produce controversies in 
which national amour ynyprt is involved and national honor, 
dignity and prestige are supposed to be at stake. Rival 
claimants to an almost worthless strq> of land along a dis- 



NOBEL PRIZE ADDBESS 150 

puted boundary, a few poor fishermen contesting each others' 
rights to set nets in disputed waters, may break into violence 
which will set whole nations aflame with partisanship upon 
either side. Reparation demanded for injury to a citizen or 
an insult to a flag in foreign t^ritory may symbolize in the 
feeling of a great people their national right to independence, 
to respect, and to an equal place in the community of nations. 
I'he people of a country, wholly mistaken as to thehr national 
rights, honestly ignorant of their international obligations, 
may become possessed of a real sense of injustice, of deep 
resentment, and of a sincere belief that the supreme sacrifice 
of war is demanded by love of country, its liberty and 
independence, when in fact thdr bdief has no just founda- 
tion whatever. 

In this field the greatest advance is being made towards 
reducing and preventing in a practical and effective way the 
causes of war, and this advance is proceeding along several 
different lines. First, by providing for the peaceable settle- 
ment of such controversies by submission to an impartial 
tribunal. Up to this time that provision has taken the form 
of arbitration, with which we are all familiar. There have 
been occasional international arbitrations from very early 
times, but arbitration as a system, a recognized and custom- 
ary method of diplomatic procedure rather than an excq>- 
tional ^cpedient, had its origin in The Hague Conference of 
1899. It is interesting to recall the rather contemptous re- 
cq>tion accorded to the Convention for the Pacific Settlemait 
of International Disputes conduded at that conference, and 
to the Permanent Court at The Hague which it created. The 
convention was not obligatory. No power was bound to 
comply with it. The cynicism with which the practical 
diplomatist naturally r^^ards the idealist pnmounced it a 
dead letter. But the ccmvention expressed, and, by express- 
ing, established, a new standard of international conduct 



160 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

which practical idealism had long been gradually approach- 
ing, for which thoughtful mai and women in all civilized 
lands had been vaguely gn^ing» which the more advanced 
nations welcomed and the more backward nations were 
ashamed to reject Let me quote the redtak with which the 
delegates prefaced their work: 

ADimated by a strong desire to oonoert for the maintenance ci the 
general peace; 

Resolved to sec(»id by thdr best efforts the friendly settlement of 
international disputes; 

Eeoognizing the solidarity which unites the members of the society of 
civilized nations; 

Desirous of extending the empire of law» and of strengthening the 
appredaticm of international justice; 

G}nvinced that the permanent institution of a Court oi Arbitration, 
accessible to all, in the midst of the independent Powers, will contribute 
effectively to this result; 

Having regard to the advantages attending the general and regular 
organization of arbitral procedure; 

Sharing the opinion of the august initiator of the International Peace 
Conference that it is expedient to record in an international agreement the 
princii^es of equity and right, on which are based the security of states 
and the welfare of peoples, etc. 

These declarations, although enforced by no binding stipu- 
lation, nevertheless have become principles of action in 
international affairs, because, through the progress of civili- 
zation and the influence of many generations of devoted 
spirits in the cause of humanity, the world had become ready 
for the setting up of the standard. The convention would 
have been a dead letter if the world had not been made ready 
for it, and, because the world was ready, conformity to the 
standard year by year has become more universal and com- 
plete. Since this convention, which was binding upon no 
state, one hundred and thirteen obligatory general treaties of 
arbitration have been made between powers who have taken 
part in The Hague Conferences, and sixteen international 
controversies have been heard and decided, or are pending 



NOBEL PRIZE ADDBESS 161 

before that tribunal according to the last report of the 
Administrative Council of the Court. 

Quite apart from the statistics of cases actually heard or 
poDiding) it is inq)ossible to estimate the effect produced by 
the existence of this court, for the fact that there is a court 
to which appeal may be made always leads to the settlement 
of far more controversies than are brought to judgment. Nor 
can we estimate the value of having this system a part of the 
common stock of knowledge of civilized men» so that, when 
an international controversy arises, the first reaction is, not 
to consider war but to consider peaceful litigation. 

Plainly, the next advance to be urged along this line is to 
pass on from an arbitral tribunal, the members of which are 
specifically sdected from the genaral list of the court for each 
case, and whose service is but an incident in the career of a 
diplomatist or a publicist, to a permanent court composed 
of judges who devote their entire time to the performance of 
judicial duties and proceed in accordance with a sense of judi- 
cial obligation, not to adjust or compromise differences, but 
to decide upon rights in accordance with the facts and the law. 

Long steps in this direction were made in the Second Hague 
Conference by the convention for the establishment of a 
permanent international prize court and by the formulation 
and adoption of a draft convention relative to the creation of 
a general judicial arbitration court. This draft convention 
lacked nothing of conipletion except an agreement upon the 
method by which the judges were to be selected. Towards 
the creation of such a court the best efforts of those who wish 
to promote peace shoiild be directed. 

The second line of advance in this same field of interna- 
tional controversy is in pressing forward the development of 
international law and the agreement of nations upon its rules. 
Lord Mansfield described the law of nations as ** founded 
upon justice, equity, convenience, the reason of the thing. 



162 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

and confirmed by long usage." There are miiltitudes of 
events liable to occur frequently in the intercourse of nations, 
r^arding which there has never been any agreement as to 
what is just, equitable, or convenient, and, as to many of the 
classes of controversy, different views are held by different 
nations, so that in a large part of the field with which an 
arbitral tribunal or international court should deal there is 
really no law to be applied. Where there is no law, a sub- 
mission to arbitration or to judicial decision is an appeal, not 
to the rule of law but to the unknown opinions or predilec- 
tions of the men who happen to be selected to decide. The 
development of the peaceable settlement of international dis- 
putes by the decision of impartial tribunals waits therefore 
upon the further development of international law by a more 
complete establishment of known and accepted rules for the 
government of international conduct. 

In this direction also great progress has been made within 
recent years. The ordinary process of reaching rules of inter- 
national law through the universal assent of nations, ex- 
pressed as particular cases arise from time to time in the 
ordinary course of international affairs, is so slow that, 
instead of making progress towards a comprehensive law of 
nations by such a method, the progress of the law has been 
outstripped by the changes of condition in international 
affairs, so that the law has been growing less and less ade- 
quate to settle the questions continually arising. The 
Declaration of Paris, in 1856, by a few simple rules dealing, 
not with particular cases, but looking to the future through 
an agreement of the powers signing the convention, was a new 
departiu^ in the method of forming international law. That 
method has developed into the action of the two Hague Con- 
ferences of 1899 and 1907, which were really law-making 
bodies, establishing, by the unanimous vote of the powers, 
rules of conduct for the future, covering extensive portions 



NOBEL PRIZE ADDRESS 163 

of the field of international conduct. The action of The 
Hague Conferences would have been impossible if it had not 
been for the long continued and devoted labors of the Instihd 
de Droit International, which» in its annual meetings for forty 
years, has brought together the leaders of thought in the 
science of the law of nations in all the countries of the civi- 
lized world to discuss unofficially, with a free and full expres- 
sion of personal opinion, the unsettled problems as to what 
the law is and ought to be. The conclusions o^ that body 
furnished to the successive Hague Conferences the matured 
results of years of well directed labor and bore the same rela- 
tion to the deliberations of the conferences as the report of a 
conunittee of a legislative body in furnishing the basis for 
deliberation and action. Their work shoiild be encouraged 
and their example should be followed. 

Further Hague Conferences shoiild be insisted upon. They 
should be made to reciu* at r^^ar periods without requiring 
the special initiative of any country. The process of formu- 
lating and securing agreement upon rules of intamational 
law should be pressed forward in every direction. 

There is a third line of progress, little, if any, less important 
than the two already mentioned, and that is, the instruction 
of students and of the great bodies of the people of civilized 
countries in the knowledge of international law. Under the 
modem development of constitutional governments, with 
varying d^rees of extension of suffrage, more and more the 
people who cast the ballots determine the issues of peace and 
war. No government now embarks in war without the as- 
surance of popular support. It is not uncommon in modem 
times to see governments straining every nerve to keep the 
peace, and the people whom they represent, with patriotic 
enthusiasm and resentment over real or fancied wrongs 
urging them forward to war. Nothing is more important in 
the preservation of peace than to secure among the great 



164 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

mass of the people living under constitutional government a 
just conception of the rights which their nation has against 
others and of the duties their nation owes to others. The 
popular tendency is to listen approvingly to the most extreme 
statements and claims of politicians and orators who seek 
popularity by declaring their own country right in every- 
thing and other countries wrong in everything. Honest 
people, mistakenly believing in the justice of their cause, are 
led to support injustice. To meet this tendency there should 
be not merely definite standards of law to be applied to 
international relations, but ihere shoiild be general public 
understanding of what those standards are. Of course it is 
not possible that all the people of any country can become 
familiar with international law, but there may be such knowl- 
edge and leadership of opinion in every country on the pari 
of the most intelligent and best educated men that in every 
community mistaken conceptions can be corrected and a 
true view of rights and obligations inculcated. To attain 
this end much has been done and much is in contemplation. 
Societies of international law have been formed in many 
countries for the discussion of international questions and 
the publication and distribution of the results. Many 
journals of international law have been established and are 
rapidly increasing their circulation and influence. More and 
niore colleges and universities are establishing chairs and 
giving instruction in international law to their students. A 
further step is about to be taken at The EEague by the estab- 
lishment there of an international school of international law 
to which scholars from all over the civilized world wiU come 
and in which the great masters of the science have under- 
taken to give instruction. There can be no better augury for 
the success of the new institution than the fact that it found 
its origin in the general enthusiasm of Ludwig von Bar of 
Gtfttingen, of Otfried Nippold of Frankfort, of Demetrius 



NOBEL PRIZE ADDRESS 165 

Stimlsa ol Boimuima, and ol TJ!d.C. ABser of HoDimd; and 
that it has for its president Louis Renault of fiance. The 
distinctive feature of this new departure is that it will bring 
together teachers and students from many countries; so 
that their intercourse and instruction will tend towards the 
unification of rules and the establishment of a general stand- 
ard of law instead of perpetuating the differing and often 
antagonistic concq>tions which obtain within the limits of 
different nations. 

Along all these lines of practical effort for peace in the 
development of arbitration and judicial decision in the de- 
vdopment of a definite system of law determining the rights 
and obligations of nations, and in the enlightenment of the 
civilized nations as to what their rights and obligations are, 
the present generation has rendered a service in the cause of 
peace surpassing that of many centuries gone before, and in 
further development along these same lines the present gen- 
eration has before it a golden opportunity for further service. 

There is, however, another class of substantive causes cl 
war which the agencies I have described do not reach directly. 
Tlds comprises acts done ot demanded in pursuance of na- 
tional policy, and ordinarily either for the enlargement (nt 
protection of territory or for trade <Nr industrial advantage. 
The conduct of a nation under such a policy is often r^arded 
by other nations as unwarranted aggression or as threatening 
their safety (nt thehr rights. Elustrations of this kind of 
question are to be found in the protean forms of the Eastern 
question and of the balance of power in Europe, in the asser- 
tion of the Monroe Doctrine by the United States; in the 
position of Germany regarding the settlement of Morocco, 
before the Conference of Algedras; in the attitude cl Great 
Britain regarding Agadir, after that conference. It is plain 
that, under the present organization of civilizatK>n in inde- 
pendent nationalities, questions of public policy supposed to 



166 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

be vital cannot be submitted to arbitration, because that 
would be an abdication of independence and the placing ot 
government pro tanto in the hands of others. The indepen- 
dence of a state involves that state's right to determine its 
own domestic policy and to decide what is essential to its own 
safety. 

It does not follow, however, that we are without oppor- 
tunity to promote and strengthen specific influences tending 
to d^iniaTi or prevent causes of war of this description. In 
the first place, when thare is a policy of intentional aggres- 
sion, inspired by a desire to get possession of the territory ot 
the trade of another country, right or wrong, a pretext is 
always sought. No nation now sets forth to despoil another 
upon the avowed ground that it desires the spoils. Some 
ground of justification is always allc^ged. The wolf always 
chaiges the lamb with muddying the stream. The frank and 
simple days of the Roman proconsul and of the robber baron 
have passed, and three things have happened: First, there 
has come to be a public opinion of the world; second, that 
opinion has set iip a new standard of national conduct which 
condemns unjustified aggression; and third, the public 
opinion of the world punishes the violation of its standard. 
It has not been very long since the people of each country 
were concerned almost exdusivdy with their own affairs, 
and, with but few individual exceptions, neither knew nor 
cared what was going on outside their own boundaries. AU 
that has changed. The spread of popular education; the 
enormous increase in the production and circulation of news- 
papers and periodicals and cheap books; the competition of 
the press, which ranges the world for news; the tel^^aph, 
which carries instantly knowledge of all important events 
everywhere to all parts of the world; the new mobility of 
mankind, whidi availing itself cl the new means of travd by 
steamslup and railroad, with its new freedom under the 



NOBEL FBIZE ADDRESS 167 

recently recognised right ol eqMitriation and the recently 
established right of free travel, moves to and fro by the 
million across the boundaries of the nations; the vast exten- 
sion of international commoce; the recognition of inter- 
dependence of the peoples of different nations engendered by 
this commerce and this intercom'se; their dependence upon 
each other for the supply of their needs and for the profitable 
diq>06al 6t their products^ for the preservation of healthy for 
the promotion of morab and for the increase of knowledge 
and the advance of thought; — all these are creating an in- 
ternational community of knowledge and interest, of thought 
and feeling. In the hundreds of international associations 
reported by Senator LaFoHtaine's L'Ojffice Central at Brus- 
sds, men of all nations are learning to think internationally 
about science and morals and hygiene and rdigion and 
society and business. Gradually, everything that happens 
in the world is coming to be of interest everywhere in the 
world, and, gradually, thoughtful men and women evay- 
where are sitting in judgment upon the conduct of all na- 
tions. Some very crass and indefaudble things have been 
done by nations within the past few years, but no one can 
read the discussions about those national acts without see- 
ing that the general judgment of mankind has sunk deep 
into the hearts of the people of the countries responsible; 
that a great new force is at work in intanational affairs; 
that the desire for approval and the fear of condemnation by 
the contemporary opinion of the civilized world is becoming 
a powerful influence to control national conduct. True, we 
are but at the beginning, but it is the beginning of a great 
new era in which the public opinion of mankind renders 
judgment, not upon peace and war, for a vast majority of 
mankind is in favor of war when that is necessary for the 
preservation of liberty and justice, but upon the just and 
unjust conduct of nations, as the public i^inion of each 



168 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

oommunity passes upon the just and unjust conduct of its 
individual m^nbers. The chief force which makes for peace 
and order in the community of individuals is not the p<dice 
officer, with his dub» but it is the praise and bhune, the honor 
and shame, which follow observance or violation of the com- 
munity's standards of right conduct. In the new era that is 
dawning of the world's public opinion we need not wait for 
the international policeman, with his artilleiy, for, when any 
people feels that its government has done a shameful thing 
and has brought them into disgrace in the opinion of the 
world, theirs will be the vengeance and th^ will inffict the 
punishment. 

Two condusions from all these considerations are quite 
obvious: First, that the development and understanding 6t 
international law and the habit of submitting international 
controversies to judicial decision wiU continually tend to 
hinder wanton aggression, because it will tend to make it 
more difficult to find pretexts, excuses, or justification. 
Second, that quite apart from aigum^it and exhortation 
concerning war and peace, there is a specific line of effort 
along which those who seek to promote peace may most 
usefully proceed; by insisting upon a willingness to do justice 
among nations, and this, not justice according to the pos- 
sibly exdted and warped opinion of the particular nation, 
but according to the general public judgment of the dvilized 
world; by condemning injustice on the part of nations as we 
condemn injustice on the part of individuals; by pressing 
upon the peoples of the earth a consdousness that if they are 
arrogant and grasping and overbearing and use thdr power 
to oppress and despoil the weak, they will be disgraced in the 
estimation df mankind. Such an effort is not a denial ol 
the innate impulses of the race, but is an appeal to them. It 
accords with the line of historic development. The taboo 
of savage tribes is nothing dse. Tlie social penalties of 



NOBEL PRIZE ADDRESS 169 

civilised oommunities aie the same thing. The theoretical 
postulate of all diplomatic discussion between nations is the 
assumed willingness ol every nation to do justice. The line 
of least resistance in the progress of civilization is to make 
that theoretical postulate real by the continually increasing 
force of the world's public c^nnion. 

Yet thare are other influences tending in the same direction 
which may be usefully promoted. The sdf-interest whidi so 
often prompts nations to unjust aggression can no long^ 
safely assume that its apparent profit is real; for a nation 
which has been buQt up by the industry and entaprise of its 
people, which depends upon its products and the marketing 
of them, upon its commerce and the peaceful intercourse ol 
commerce for its prosperity, the prise of aggression must be 
rich indeed to counterbalance the injury sustained by the 
interference of war with both production and commerce. 
At the same time, freedom of trade regardless of political 
control is diminishing the comparative value of extension of 
territory. The old system of exploitation of colonies and the 
mon<^>olization of their trade for the benefit of the mother 
country has practically disappeared. The best informed men 
are coming to understand that, under modem conditions, 
the prosperity of each nation is enhanced by the proi^>erity 
of all other nations; and that the government which acquires 
political control over new territory may gratify pride and 
minister to ambition, but can have only a slight effect to 
advance the welfare of its people. 

The support of these statements rests upon the facts of 
economic science. If they are true, as I am sure we all be- 
lieve them to be, th^ should be forced upon the attention of 
the peojdes, not by mare assertion, which avails but little, 
but by proof drawn from the rich stores of evidaice to be 
found in the history df mankind. Fcnt the accomplishment of 
this purpose a meeting of eminent eccmomists and publicists 



170 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

was held three years ago at Berne. They came from Den- 
mark, Holland, Belgium, Great Britain, France, Germany, 
Switzerland, Italy, Austria-Hungary, the United States and 
Japan. For some weeks they devoted themselves to the 
preparation of a program for systematic, scientific investiga- 
tion into the historical and economic causes ai^d effects of 
war. For the three years which have ^isued they have been 
engaged, with ample and competent assistance, in pursuing 
their investigations. The first installments of their work are 
ready for publication, and they reconvened last month to 
review what has been done and to lay down the lines of 
further work. The results of their labors, when made 
available, should be eagerly sought by every lover of peace 
who is competent by tongue or pen to be a teacher of his 
fellow-men, for we may be confident th^ will show that 
while the sacrifice of war may be demanded for justice, for 
liberty, for national life, yet war is always a sacrifice, and 
never is a rational mode of promoting material prosperity. 

There yet remain certain disposing causes, which, quite 
apart from real substantive questions in controversy, operate 
upon national feeling and give injurious effect to trifling or 
fancied occasions for offense. Thare is no international con- 
troversy so serious that it cannot be settled if both parties 
really wish to settle it. There are few controversies so trifling 
that they cannot be made the occasion for war if the parties 
really wish to fight. Among these disposing causes which 
create an atmosphere of belligerency are: 

Race and local prejudice, breeding dislike and hatred 
between the peoples of different countries. 

Exaggerated national amour "propre^ which causes exces- 
sive sensitiveness and excessive resentment of foreign 
criticism or opposition. 

With these go the popular assumption, often arrogant, 
often ignorant, that the extreme claims of one's country are 



NOBEL FBIZE ADDRESS 171 

always right and are to be rigidly insisted upon as a point of 
national hcmor. With them go intolerance of temperate dis- 
cussicm, of kindly consideration, and of reascmable concession. 

Under these feelings insulting words and conduct towards 
foreign governments and people become popular, and brag- 
gart defiance is deemed patriotic Under them the ambi- 
tious aspirants of domestic pditics seek preferment through 
avenues of military success. 

And under them deep and real suspicions of the sinister 
purpose of other nations readily take possession of a people, 
who become ready to believe that an attack by their own 
country is the only recourse to guard effectually against an 
attack upon their country by others, and that patriotism 
requires them to outstrip other countries in armament and 
preparation for war. 

Prejudice and passion and suspicion are more dangerous 
than the incitement of sdf -interest or the most stubborn 
adherence to real differences of opinion r^^arding rights. In 
private life more quarreb arise, more implacable resentment 
is caused, more lives are sacrificed, because of insult than 
because of substantial injury. And it is so with nations. 

The remedy is the same. When friends quarrel we try to 
dissqMtte their misunderstandings, to soften their mutual 
feelings, and to bring them together in such a way that their 
friendship may be renewed. Misunderstanding and preju- 
dice and dislike are, as a rule, the fruits of isolation. There 
is so much of good in human nature that men grow to like 
each other upon better acquaintance, and this points to 
another way in which we may strive to promote the peace of 
the world. That is, by international conciliation through 
intercourse, not the formal intercourse of the traveller or the 
merchant, but the intercourse of real acquaintance, of per- 
sonal knowledge, of little courtesies and kindly consideration; 
by the exchange of professors between universities, by the 



17« INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

exchange of students between oomitries; 1^ the visits to 
other countries on the part 6t leaders ol i^inion, to be re- 
ceived m private hospitality and in public omference; by 
the spreading of correct information through the press; by 
circulating and attracting attention to expressions of praise 
and hcmor rather than the reverse; by giving public credit 
where credit is due and taking pains to e]q>ose and publii^ 
our good opinions of other pec^les; by coi^>«tition in the 
multitude of causes which are world-wide in their interest; by 
urging upon our countrymen the duty of international 
civility and kindly consideration; and by constant pressure 
in the right direction in a multitude of ways — a slow 
process, but one which counts little by little if persisted in. 

Each separate act will seem of no effect but all together 
they will establish and maintain a tendency towards the goal 
of international knowledge and broad human sympathy. 
There is a homely English saying, '' Leg over leg the dog 
went to Dover/' That states the method 6t our true prog- 
ress. We cannot arrive at our goal per aattum. Not by 
invoking an immediate millenium, but by the accumulated 
effects of a multitude of efforts, each insignificant in itself, 
but steadily and persistently continued, we must win our 
way along the road to better knowledge and kindbness 
among the peoples of the earth which the will of Alfred Nobd 
describes as " the fraternity of nations.*' 

There are many reasons to believe that progress toward 
the permanent prevalence of peace may be more rapid in the 
future than in the past. 

Standards of conduct are changing in many ways unfavor- 
able to war. 

Civilized man is becoming less cruel. Crudty to mei and 
to the lower animals as well, which would have passed un- 
noticed a century ago, now shocks the sensibilities and is 
regarded as wicked and degrading. The severity of punish- 



NOBEL PRIZE ADDBESS 173 

ments f <Nr minor offenses which f onnerly prevailed now seems 
to us revolting. The torture of witnesses or of criminals has 
become unthinkable. Human life is hdd in much higher 
esteem and the taking of it, whether in private quarrel or by 
judicial procedure, is looked upon much more seriously than 
it was formerly. The social reaction from the theories of the 
individualistic economists of the last century has brought 
with it a vay wide-spread sense that men have some sort of 
responsibility to cause affairs to be so cnrdered in civilized 
communities that their fellow-men have a chance to live. 
The Hague Conventions to regulate the conduct of war and 
the (xeneva Conventions to ameliorate its horrors have a 
significance which goes beyond their professions. They mark 
the changing attitude of the world towards the subject to 
which they relate; and they introduce into the business of 
warfare obligatory considerations of himoianity and respect 
for human rights which tend to destroy the spirit upon which 
alone the business itself can continue. No one can read those 
conventions closely without being struck by the similarity 
of the process of regulation and limitation which they exhibit 
with the historic process by which private war was ultimately 
regulated out of eidstence in the greater part of the civilized 
world. The growth of modem constitutional government 
compels for its successful practice the exercise of reason and 
consideraite judgment by the individual citizens who con- 
stitute the electorate. The qualities thus evoked in the train- 
ing schools of domestic affairs are the qualities which make 
for national self-restraint and peace in international affairs. 
History is being rewritten, and the progress of popular 
education is making men familiar with it; and as the world, 
which worships strength and has most applauded military 
glory, grows in knowledge, the great commanding figures 
rising far above the common mass of mere fighters, the men 
who win the most imperishable fame have come to be the 



174 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

strong, patient, great-hearted ernes like Washington, and 
Lincohi, and William the Silent, and Cavour, whose genius 
inspired by love of country and their kind urges them to 
build up and not to destroy. The sweetest incense offered to 
the memory of the soldier is not to the brutal qualities of war 
but to the serene courage ennobled by sympathy and cour- 
tesy of a Bayard or a Sidney. The hero-worshipper is grad- 
ually changing from the savage to the civilized conception 
of his divinities. Taken all in all the dear and persistent 
tendencies of a slowly developing civilization justify cheerful 
hope. 

We may well turn from Tripoli and Mexico and the 
Balkans with the apocryphal exclamation of Galileo, *' And 
still the world moves.** 



THE ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESTION 

AN ADDBES3 BETOBB THE UNION LEAGUE CLUB OF 
CHICAGO. FEBRUARY M. 1904 

Af Secretary ol Staler Mr. Boot was fnffwxtingiy amdoiif to aecure the reoog- 
nitioii by Colombia ol the independeooe ol Paoamat and to restore the friendly 
relations idiidi had existed between Cdombia and the United States but which 
were unfortunately strained to the bfeaking^wint by the rerolutioii ki Panama, 
and the recognition ol its independence by the United States. He» therefore, 
negotiated a tripartite agreement* onnsisting ol three separate treaties, each ol 
whidi was to be ratified in order that the trq>artite agreement should be Innding 
1900 the contracting parties. Theagreement entitled *" The Shqi Canal Treaty", 
was signed at Washington, January 9, 1900. 

The first treaty was between Colombia and the United States, and its rattficap 
tkm was advised and ccmsented to by the Senate <m February M, 1900; the second 
treaty was between Puiama and the United States, and its ratification was ad- 
vised and ccmsented to by the Senate on Mardi S, 1909; the third treaty was 
between Cdombia and Panama. Thefaflure ol CokMnbia to ratify these treaties, 
or any of them, prevented the adjustment of the difficulty between Colombia and 
the United States during Mr. Boot's tenure of office. 

The text of the three treaties forming the tripartite agreement is to be found in 
** Treaties, Conventions, International Acts* Ftotocols and Agreements between 
the United States and Other Powers^ omipiled by Gaif&eld Chaiki^ voL 8» pp. 
S85-047, Washington, 1918. 

ON November S, 190S the people 6t Panama revolted 
against the government of Colombia^ and proclaimed 
their independence. On the thirteenth of November the 
United States recognized the independence 6t thie rq[>ublic 
of Panama, by receiving a minister from the new Govern- 
ment, and at the opening of the regular session of Congress 
in December the President asked the consent of the Senate 
to a treaty negotiated between our Secretary of State, Mr. 
Hay, and the minister of Panama, Mr. Varilla, providing for 
the construction by the United States of a ship canal across 
the Isthmus, to be kept by us open, neutral, and free upon 
equal terms for the use 6t all mankind. After long and ez- 

17S 



176 INTEENATIONAL SUBJECTS 

haufltive discussion that treaty is about to be oonfinned. In 
the meantime the Senate by a great majority has approved 
the recognition of independence by confirming the nomina- 
tion of William I. Buchanan as minister from the United 
States to Panama. The revolutionary leaders have sub- 
mitted their action to the people of Panama, who have» by a 
popular vote, given it thebr unanimous approval, and have 
elected a constitutional convention, framed and adopted a 
constitution, chosen a president and congress, and established 
a republican government according to the forms which find 
their model in the constitutions of our own country. In the 
meantime, also, many other governments have followed the 
United States in receiving the new republic into the family of 
nations. On the eighteenth of November, five days after our 
recognition, France recognized the republic of Panama; on 
the twenty-second, China; on the twenty-seventh, Austria; 
on the thirtieth, Grermany; and following them Denmark, 
Russia, Sweden and Norway, Belgium, Nicaragua, Peru, 
Cuba, Great Britain, Italy, Switzerland, Costa Bica, Japan, 
Guatemala, Netherlands, Venezuela, Portugal, in the order 
named. 

The independence of Panama, the grant to the United 
States of the right to construct the canal across the Isthmus, 
and the assumption by the United States of the duty to con- 
struct the canal and to maintain it for the equal benefit cl 
mankind, are accomplished facts. Nothing can do away 
with them, unless it be some future war of conquest waged 
against the liberties of Panama, and at the same time against 
the rights of the United States held in trust for the commerce 
of the world. 

The conduct of the United States Government in recogniz- 
ing the independence of Panama, in making the treaty, and 
in exercising police power over territory traversed by the 
Panama Railroad and the partly-constructed canal, during 



ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESTION 177 

the period of the revolution, has been severely criticised 
by some of our own dticens, who have said, in substance, 
that in this business our Government has violated the 
rules of international law, has been grasping and unfair, 
and has, by the exercise of brute force, trampled down the 
rights of a weaker nation, in violation of those principles cl 
justice which should control the conduct of nations as of men. 

In considering these charges we may well thrust aside as 
carrying no weight of authority, the expressions of those who 
whfle th^ condemn the conduct of our Grovemment, are in 
favor of the treaty. They curiously reverse the divine rule, 
and seem to hate the sinner whfle they love the sin; and their 
adverse criticism may fairly be ascribed to the exigencies of 
the pending presidential campaign. Some of them may be 
sincere, but upon that question th^ naturally invite the 
comment made upon Lady Macbeth, that ** she might be a 
lady, but she did not show it by her conduct.'' 

We need not pay very much heed, either, to that class of 
temperamental and perennial faultfinders whom we have 
and always will have with us, as an incident of free institu- 
tions, who are against every government of which they do 
not personally form a part, and in whose eyes everything 
done by others is wrong. This class of our citizens, with 
slight changes in personnel, would have condemned any 
course of conduct by our Government, whatever it was, and 
their condemnation of the particular course followed merdy 
announces their existence. 

Nevertheless, there remain good and sincere men and 
women who have thought our course to be wrong, and many 
others, whose character and patriotism entitle them to the 
highest respect, are troubled in spirit. They would be glad 
to be sure that our country is not justly chargeable with dis- 
honorable conduct May the time never come when such 
men and women are wanting, or are constrained to remain 



178 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

silent, in America. May the time never oome when the am- 
science of America shall cease to apply the rules of upright 
conduct to national as well as to personal life; when our 
Government feels absolved from the obligation to answer in 
that forum for conformity to the rules of right or when 
material advantage shall be held to excuse injustice. For if 
such a time ever does come the banning of the end of our 
free institutions will have come also. 

I wish to present some of the fundamental facts bearing 
upon the question of right in the Panama business, although 
they have been stated already better than I can state them, 
with the hope that they may thus reach the attention of some 
of the good and sincere citizens who are troubled about the 
matter. 

I am not going to discuss technical rules or precedents or 
questions whether what was done should have been done a 
little eariier or a little later, but the broad question whether 
the thing we have done was just and fair. 

It frequently happens in affairs of government that most 
important rights are created, modified, or practically de- 
stroyed by gradual processes, and by the indirect effect of 
events; and that only an intimate knowledge of the process 
enables one to realize the change until some practical ques- 
tion arises which requires every one interested to study the 
subject. If the typical New Zealander, ignorant of our poli- 
tical history, were to read our Constitution and laws, he 
would suppose that a presidential elector in the United 
States is entitled to exerdse freedom of choice in his vote for 
President, and he would be quite certain that we were guilty 
of gross injustice in the treatment which we should certainly 
accord to an elector who voted for any one but the candidate 
of his own party. In forming this judgment, he would be 
misled by the form and appearance of things which he found 
upon the statute book, and would misjudge a people who 



ETHICS OF THE PANABfA QUESTION 179 

ware actmg in accordance with the substance and reality of 
things as th^ knew them to be. In the same way, they are 
in error who assmne that the relations of Colombia to the 
other nations of the earth as r^ards the Isthmus of Panama 
were, in truth, of unqualified sovereignty and right of do- 
mestic control according to her own will, governed and pro- 
tected by the rules of international law, which describe the 
attributes of complete sovereignty; that the relations of 
Colombia to the people of Panama were, in truth, those ap- 
pearing in the written instrument called the Constitution of 
.Colombia; or that the rights and duties cl the United 
States in regard to the Isthmus were confined to the simple 
duty of aiding Colombia to maintain her control over the 
Isthmus, and the simple right to ask from Colombia privi- 
l^es which that country was entitled to grant or withhold 
at her own pleasure. 

The stupendous fact that has dominated the history and 
must control the future of the Isthmus of Panama is the 
possibility of communication between the two oceans. It is 
possible for hiunan hands to pierce the narrow forty miles 
of solid earth which separate the Caribbean from the Bay of 
Panama, to realize the dreams of the early navigators, 
to make the pathway to the Orient they vainly sought, to 
relieve commerce from the toils and perils of its nine thou- 
sand miles of navigation around Cape Horn through stormy 
seas and along dangerous coasts with its constant burden of 
wasted effort and shipwreck and loss of life, and to push 
forward by a mighty impulse that intercommunication be- 
tween the distant nations of the earth which is doing away 
with misunderstanding, with race prejudice and bigotry, with 
ignorance of hiunan rights and opportunity for oppression, 
and making all the world kin. 

Throughout the centuries since FhiUp 11 sat upcm the 
throne of Spain, merchants and statesmen and humanitarians 



180 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

and the intelligeiit masses of the civilized world have looked 
forward to this consumination with just anticipations of 
benefit to mankinds No savage tribes who happened to dwell 
upon the Isthmus would have been permitted to bar this 
pathway of civilization. By the universal practice and con- 
sent of mankind they would have been swept aside without 
hesitation. No Spanish sovereign could» by discovery or 
conquest or occupation, preSmpt for himself the exclusive 
use of this little spot upon the surface of the earth dedicated 
by nature to the use of all mankind. No dvil society or- 
ganized upon the ruins of Spanish dominion could justly 
arrogate to itself over this tract of land sovereignty unquali- 
fied by the world's easement and aU the rights necessary to 
make that easement effective. The formal rules of internal 
tional law are but declarations of what is just and right in the 
generality of cases. But where the application of such a 
general rule would impair the just rights or imperil the exis- 
tence of neighboring states or would unduly threaten the 
peace of a continent or would injuriously affect the general 
interests of mankind, it has always been the practice of 
civilized nations to deny the application of the formal rule 
and compel conformity to the principles of justice upon which 
all rules dq>end. The Danubian principalities and Greece 
and Crete, and Egypt, the passage of the Dardanelles, and 
the neutralization of the Black Sea are familiar examples of 
limitations in derogation of those general rules of inter- 
national law which describe the sovereignty of nations. 

The Monroe Doctrine itself , upon which we stand so firmly, 
is an assertion of our right for our own interest to interfere 
with the action of every other nation in those parts of this 
hemisphere where others are sovereign and where we have no 
sovereignty or daim of sovereignty, and to say if you do 
thus and so, even by the consent of the soverdgn, we shall 
regard it as an unfriendly act because it wSl affect us in- 



ETHICS OP THE PANAMA QUESTION 181 

juriously. It is said that the Monroe Doctrine is not a rule of 
international law. It is not a rule at aU. It is an assertion of 
a right und^ the universal rule that aU sovereignty is held 
subject to limitations in its exercise arising from the just 
interests of other nations. 

By the rules of right and justice universally recognized 
among men and which are the law of nations, the sovereignty 
of Colombia over the Isthmus of Panama was qualified and 
limited by the right of the other civilized nations of the 
earth to have the canal constructed across the Isthmus 
and to have it maintained for their free and unobstructed 
passage. 

Colombia and h^ predecessor, New Granada, have not 
failed at times to recognize their position. In 1846 New 
Granada, through her secretary of foreign relations, Mr. Mal- 
larino, applied to the Government of the United States to 
enter into a treaty which should protect that country against 
the seizure of the Isthmus by other foreign powers. In 
e£Fect, she acknowledged the right of way and asked the 
United States to become the trustee of that right which 
qualified her sovereignty, to maintain it for the equal benefit 
of all nations, and at the same time to protect her against its 
exercise by them in such a manner as to destroy her sov- 
ereignty altogether. After describing acts which he con- 
ceived to be undue encroachments by Great Britain in 
South America, Mallarino said: 

And if the usurpation of the Isthmus in its channelizable pcvtion should 
be added to these encroachments, the empire of American commerce in its 
strictly useful or mercantile sense would fall into the hands of the only 
nation that the United States can consider as a badly disposed rival. It 
would be perfectly superfluous to mention the pditical consequences that 
would be entailed upon America. This dominion or ascendancy would be 
equally ruinous to the conmieroe of the United States and to the nation- 
ality of the ^[Mtnish-American republics, most direful for the causes of 
democracy in the New WotM, and a constant cause of disturbance of the 
public peace in this our continent. 



182 INTERNATIONAL SXJBJECTS 

From these facts and general considerations may be infenwl the urgent 
necessity in which the United States are of interposing their monl in- 
fluence, and even their material strength, between the weakness of the new 
republics and the ambitious views of the commercial nations of Europe. 
. . . This end is simply and naturally to be obtained by stipulating in 
fatvor of the United States a total rq>eal of the differential duties as a com- 
pensation f OT the obligati<m they imposed upon themselves of guaranteeing 
the legitimate and complete or integral poflpcssicm of those portions of 
territory that the universal mercantile interests require to be free and opea 
to all nations. . . . When a treaty containing such a stipulation shall 
exist between New Granada and the United States and it could be com- 
pleted and perfected by a subsequent and supplementary convention, in 
which the transit of tli^ interoceanic passage dbioukl be arranged and its 
permanent neutrality confirmed, half the plans of Great Britain would of 
themsdves fail and it would no longer be possible for her to encroadi 
upon the Isthmus. 

He said he assumed that the United States would in the 
proposed treaty — 

guarantee to New Granada the Isthmus or at least as much of it as was 
required for the construction of a canal or railroad upcm the most ttkyanhle 
route; and m<»eover that it was important that this guaranty should 
appear in the treaty as a conditi<m for the right of way and the abolition 
of the discriminating differential duties, otherwise New Granada would be 
obliged to grant the same privileges unconditionally to England. 

And he appealed to the declaration of the Monroe Doctrine, 
reiterated by President Polk to the Congress of 1845-46, as 
the basis of his request. 

Upon this appeal, the treaty of December 12, 1846, be- 
tween the United States and New Granada, was made and 
signed in behalf of Colombia by the secretary, Mallarino, 
whose words I have quoted. The thirty-fifth article of the 
treaty contained the following provision: 

The Government of New Granada guarantees to the Government of 
the United States that the right of way or transit across the Isthmus of 
Panama upon any modes of communication that now exist, or that may be 
hereafter constructed, shall be open and free to the Govemmoit and dti- 
eens of the United States. . . . And in order to secure to themselves the 
tranquil and constant enjoyment of these advantages, and as an espedai 



ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESTION 183 

oompeDoatioii for the said advantages and for the f avon they have ac- 
quired by the fourth, fifth, and sixth articles of this treaty, the United 
States guarantee positivdy and efficaciously to New Granada by the 
present stipulation the perfect neutrality of the bef cnre-mentioned Isthmus 
with the view that the free transit from the one to the other sea may not be 
interrupted or embarrassed in any future time while this treaty exists, and 
in consequence the United States also guarantee in the same manner the 
rights of sovereignty and property whidi New Granada has and possesses 
over the said territory. 

In transmitting this treaty to the Senate cm February 10, 
1847» President Pdk made these observations: 

1. The treaty does Hot propose to guarantee a territory to a foreign 
nation in which the United States wiD have no common interest with that 
nation. On the contrary, we are more deeply and directly interested in the 
subject of this guaranty than New Granada bersdf or any other country. 

2. The guaranty does not extend to the territories of New Granada 
generallyy but is omfined to the sin|^ i»ovince of the Isthmus of Panama» 
where we shall acquire, by the treaty, a common and coextensive right of 
passage with hersdf . 

8. It wiD constitute no alliance fcM' any pditical object, but for a purdy 
commercial purpose in which all the navigating nations of the w(»ld have 
a common interest. 

You vdll perceive that in this transaction New Granada 
recognized the subordination of h^ sovereignty to the world's 
easement of passage by railroad or by canal, and, apprehend- 
ing that other nations might sedc to exercise that right 
through the destruction of her sovereignty and the appro- 
priation of her territory, she procured the United States to 
assume the responsibility of protecting her against such 
treatment. The United States assumed that burden and by 
way of consideration — 

First. The United States received an express grant of the 
right of way which President Folk described as constituting 
a ^^ common and coextaisive right of passage with New. 
Granada herself,'' and as making the United States '' more 
deeply and directly interested in the subject of this guaranty 
than New Granada herself or any oth^ country." 



184 INTESNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Second. The United States received a grant of power and 
assumed a duty hersdf to keep the transit free and uninter- 
rupted and unembarrassed* and to keep the territory of the 
transit neutral. 

The duties assumed by the United States to maintain 
neutrality and free passage were undertaken for the benefit 
of all the world. The right to maintain free passage was» 
however, not merely for the general benefit, but was specifi- 
cally declared to be "" in ord^ to secure to themsdves (the 
United States) the tranquil and constant enjoyment " of the 
right of way. The United States assumed the burden of 
protecting New Granada against an unjust exercise of the 
world's right of passage. She assumed the correlative duty 
of safeguarding the just exercise of the world's right of pas- 
sage, and she acquired for herself a specific grant of the right 
of way and the power to exercise for h^ own benefit in that 
. territory the functions of sovereignty which were necessary fcHr 
the peaceable enjoyment of the interest thus acquired by her. 

Both countries have agreed in the construction that this 
treaty imposed upon the United States no duty toward Col- 
ombia to help h^ put down domestic insurrection, ^th 
that form of assault upon the sovereignty of Colombia the 
United States has had no concern, except when it tended 
to interfere with free transit, and then the action of the 
United States has been, not in the exercise of a duty toward 
Colombia, but in protection of h^ own rights. 

Throughout the half-century past since the treat;^ was 
made, the United States has been faithful to her obligations. 
The distinct announcement of her protection and her con- 
stantly increasing powa* have been an adequate barrier 
against foreign aggression upon the Isthmus. In'aU the long 
and monotonous series of revolutions and rebellions in which 
Colombia from the beginning showed herself wholly incap- 
able of maintaining order. United States sailors and marines 



ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESnON 185 

have poEced the railroad, its tenninaldties and its hai^ — 
sometimes by Colombia's request and sometimes without 
it — prohibiting action sometimes by the f oroes of the party 
in power and sometimes by the forces of the party out of 
power, but always enforcing peace upon the line of transit. 
In a long and unbroken series of formal binding official 
declarations by nearly every administration for more than 
half a century, we have committed our country as a matter 
of traditional poKcy to the execution of the trust to protect 
and control the passage of the Isthmus for the equal uses of 
all nations. 

It will be observed that one effect of the treaty of 1846 was 
that foreign powers were to be excluded from the opportunity 
to construct the canal themselves. It followed from this 
that if private enterprise should fail to build the canal, the 
United States assumed the obligation to build it herself. We 
could not play dog in the manger on the Isthmus. We could 
not refuse to permit the work to be done by any one else com- 
petent to do it and refuse the burden ourselves. The obliga- 
tion of the United States to build the canal and the obligation 
of Colombia to permit her to build it, both followed neces- 
sarily from the relations and obligations assumed by them in 
the treaty of 1846. 

Private enterprise has failed to build the canal. The great 
French company organized by DeLesseps, after spending and 
wasting an incredible amount of treasure and after the 
sacrifice of thousands of lives, has abandoned hope of com- 
pleting the undertaking. No private company again will 
grapple with the colossal enterprise. Other nations are ex- 
cluded from the attempt by the force of our agreement with 
Colombia. If the canal is to be built, we must build it. 

T&e United States has answered to that obligation. Again 
upon the request of Colombia, she entered upon the negotia- 
tion of the furth^ treaty described by the Granadian secre- 



186 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

tary, MaUarino, in 1846 as ^^ a subsequent and supplementary 
convention, in which the transit of the interoceanic passage 
should be arranged and its permanent neutrality confirmed/' 

Colombia stood to profit more by the building of that canal 
than any other nation upon earth. H^ territory stretching 
across the northwestern end of South America was without 
internal communication or unity. Her principal towns upon 
her Atlantic and her Pacific coasts were separated by ranges 
of lofty mountains not traversed by any railroad, and for the 
most part without roads of any kind. The building of a canal 
would, for the first time, establish practical and easy com- 
munication between her different provinces. The work of 
construction would bring enormous sums to be expended in 
her territory, and the operation of the canal would set Colom- 
bia upon a great highway of the world's commerce with 
incalculable opportunities for development and wealth. She 
had acknowledged the world's right to the canal. She had 
specifically granted the right of way to the United States. 
She had induced the United States to assume the moral 
obligation for its construction by excluding all other nations 
from the Isthmus for her protection. When she came to 
settle the terms of this ** supplementary convention," the 
detailed arrangements under which this enormous benefit 
might be conferred upon mankind, and especially upon 
herself, she demanded to be paid. 

Reluctantly, and with a sense that it was an unjust exac- 
tion, the United States agreed to pay ten million dollars 
down and two hundred and fifty thousand dollars par annum 
in perpetuity — substantially the entire amount exacted by 
Colombia. We were not going into the enterprise to make 
money, but for the common good. We did not expect the 
revenues of the canal to repay its cost, or to receive any 
benefit from it, except that which Colombia would share to a 
higher d^pree than ourselves. Against the hundreds of mil- 



ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESTION 187 

lions which we were obligating ourselves to expend, Colombia 
was expected only to permit the use of a small tract of other- 
wise worthless land already, in substance, devoted to that 
purpose. We were not seeking a privilege which Colombia 
was entitled to withhold but settling the method in which the 
acknowledged right of mankind over a portion of h^ soil 
should be exercised, with due regard to her special interests. 
It was not JTist that we should pay anything, but it was better 
to pay than to coerce a weak^ nation. The treaty was rati- 
fied by the Senate, and forwarded to Bogota. At the same 
time we arranged that upon the final ratification of the treaty 
we should pay to the Panama Canal Company, forty million 
dollars, the entire appraised value of its work upon the canal» 
in which it had expended nearly two hundred million dollars. 
The concessions made in the treaty to the Government of 
Colombia, however, seemed merely to inspire in that Govern- 
ment a belief that there was no limit to the exactions which 
ihey could successfully impose. Th^r demanded a further 
ten million dollars from the Panama Canal Company, and 
upon its refusal, they rejected the treaty. 

This rejection was a substantial refusal to permit the canal 
to be built. It appears that the refusal contemplated not 
merely further exactions from us but the spoliation of the 
canal company. That company's current franchise was 
limited by its terms to October 31, 1904. There was an ex- 
tension for six years granted by the President and for which 
the company had paid five million francs. These patriots 
proposed to declare the extension void and the franchise 
ended and to confiscate the forty million dollars worth of 
property of the company and take from the United States 
for themselves, in payment for it, the forty million dollars we 
had agreed to pay the company. The report of the com- 
mittee on which the Colombian senate acted, contained the 
following: 



188 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

By the thirty-fint of October of next year — tbat is to my, when the 
next congress shall have met in ordinary session — the extensioo will have 
e]q>ired, and everjr privilege with it. In that case, the rqmblic wiD be- 
come the possessor and owner, without any need of a previous judicial 
decision and without any indenmity, of the canal itself, and of the adjuncts 
that bdong to it, according to the contracts of 1878 and 1900. 

When that time arrives the rq[>ublic, without any impediment, wiD be 
able to contract and will be in more dear, mare definite, and more advan- 
tageous possession, both legally and materially. The authori2ati<»is which 
would then be given by the next congress would be very different from 
those that would be given by the present one. 

By becoming a party to this scheme, we might indeed have 
looked forward to the time when the appetite of Colombia 
being satisfied at the expense of the unfortunate stockholders 
of the French Company, we could proceed with the work; 
but such a course was too repugnant to the sense of jxistice 
that obtains in every civilized community to be for a moment 
contemplated. We had yielded to the last point, beyond 
reason and justice, in agreeing to pay for a privilege to which 
we were already entitled and we could not, with self-respect, 
submit to be mulcted further. We could negotiate no further. 
Rejection of the treaty was practically a veto of the canal. 
Every e£Fort was made to bring Colombia to a realization of 
what it was that she was doing; the e£Fort was in vain, and on 
the thirty-first of October, when the Colombian Congress 
adjoiuned, the inchoate treaty had expired by limitation. 

The questions presented to the United States by this 
rejection were of the gravest importance. Lewis Cass, 
Secretary of State, said in 1858: 

The progress of events has rendered the interoceanie route across the 
narrow portion of Central America vastly important to the commercial 
world, and especially to the United States, whose possessions extend along 
the Atlantic and the Pacific coasts, and demand the speediest and easiest 
modes of communication. While the rights of sovereignty of the States 
occupying this region should always be respected, we shall e^>ect that 
these rights be exercised in a spirit befitting the occasion and the wants and 
circumstances that have arisen. Sovereignty has its duties as weD as its 



ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESTION 189 

rights, and mme of these local governments, even it administered with 
more regard to the just demands of other nations than they have been, 
would be permitted in a spirit of Eastern isolation to dose the gates of 
intercourse on the great highways of the world and justify the act by the 
ivetentionthattheseavenuesof trade and travel bdong to them and that 
they choose to shut them, or what is almost equivalent, to encumber 
them with such unjust rdati<»is as would i^event their general use. 

The time had apparently oome to stand upon this declara- 
tion or abandon the canal. The question was, should we sub- 
mit to be deprived of the canal at the will of Colombia, whose 
sovereignty was justly subject to the world's right of passage? 
Should we continue to maintain upon the Isthmxis that 
feeble sovereignty whose existence had depended for half a 
century upon our protection, in order that it might still bar 
the way of the world's progress and the exercise of our just 
rights ? Should we prepare to protect that sovereignty in its 
scheme of spoliation, against the justly indignant protests of 
France surely coming to the support of the stockholders of 
the French Canal Company ? Or, should we say to Colom- 
bia, you have no right to prevent the construction of this 
canal; you are boimd to consent to it upon reasonable 
terms; by your request we have assumed a position in which 
we are bound to build it for the us^ of the nations and 
in which we are entitled to build it for our ovm interest; 
and we shall now proceed to build it vnth due regard for 
your interests, whether you agree upon the terms and con- 
ditions or not. 

I think that Secretary Cass answered the question forty- 
five years ago. In Europe a concert of the Powers would 
have made short work of the question. In Central America 
they would have made short work of it but for the Monroe 
Doctrine, to which New Granada appealed, and the pro- 
tection which we guaranteed to her under the treaty of 
1846. By the assertion of that doctrine and the engage- 
ments of that treaty we took the responsibility upon 



190 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

ourselves alone, to do for civilization what otherwise all the 
maritime powers would have united in requiring; it was 
for us alone to act; and I have no question that our right 
and duty were to build the canal, with or without the consent 
of Colombia. 

These were the conditions existing when the revolution of 
the third of November happened. To an understanding of 
that revolution a knowledge of the character and history 
of Panama is essential. Some uninformed persons have as- 
sumed that it was merely a number of individual citizens of 
Colombia living in the neighborhood of the proposed canal 
who combined to take possession of that part of Colombian 
territory and set up a government of their own. No con- 
ception could be more inadequate. The sovereign state of 
Panama was an organized dvil society possessed of a terri- 
tory extending over four hundred miles in length from Costa 
Rica on the west to the mainland of South America on the 
east. It had a population of over three hundred thousand 
the greater part of whom lived in the western part of the 
country, toward Costa Rica, and farthest removed from 
South America. Between the inhabited part of this territory 
and the inhabited part of Colombia, stretched hundreds of 
miles of tropical forest so dense as to be impassable by the 
ordinary traveler, so that there was no communication by 
land between the two countries. The only intercourse was 
by long sea voyages, as if Panama were a distant island; and 
the journey from the Isthmus to the capital of Colombia was 
longer in time than from the Isthmus to Washington. 

Panama was not an original part of Colombia, or of New 
Granada, but obtained its own independence from Spain and 
established its own government in November, 1821, and 
thereafter voluntarily entered the Granadian Confederation. 
When that confederation was broken up into Venezuela, 
Ecuador, and New Granada in 18S2, Panama remained with 



ETHICS OP THE PANAMA QUESTION 191 

New Granada, and so continued until the year 1840, when 
she again became indq>endent and remained a separate 
soverdgnty until 1842. She then returned to New Granada 
and remained a part of that country until 1855, when by 
amendment to the constitution these provisions went into 
effect: 

AbuclbI. Tlietenitorywhi(^comprifle8 the provinces of the Isthmus 
of Panama, to wit, Panama, £suero» VeraguaSy and Chiriqui» form a 
sovereign, federal integral part of New Granada under the name of the 
State of Panama. 

Art. 8. The State of Panama is subject to that of New Granada in the 
matters which are here mentioned: 

1. M matters concerning foreign rdatioos; 

2. Organisation and service of the regular army and of the marines; 
8. Federal finances; 

4. Naturalisation of foreigners; 

5. Official weights, balances, and measures. 

Art. 4. In all other matters of legislation and administration, the State 
of Panama shall legislate tredy in the manner it considers propet in accord- 
ance with the rules of practice of its own constituticm. 

Since that time, now nearly fifty years ago, the state of 
Panama has never voluntarily surrendered her sovereignty. 
In 1858, in 1860 and 1861, new confederations were formed 
in which Panama became a 'contracting party. In 1863 a 
new constitution was formed, the first two articles of which 
were as follows: 

AbuclbI. The sovereign States of Antioquia, Bolivar, Boyaca, Cauca, 
Cundinamarca, Magdalena, Panama, Santander, and Tolima, created, 
reflectively, by the acts of February 27, 1855, June 11, 1856, May 18, 
1857, June 15 of the same year,-April 12, 1861, and September 8 ol the 
same year, unite and confederate forever, consulting their external security 
and reciprocal aid, and form a free, sovereign, and independent nation 
under tl^ name of the *' United States of Cdombia." 

Art. 2. The said States engage to aid and defend themsdves mutually 
against all violence that may injure the sovereignty of the Union or that of 
the States* 

This constitution undertook to distribute general and local 
powers between the federal and the state governments upon 



192 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

the principles followed in tlie Constitution of the United 

States. But it provided: 

Abt. 25. Every act of the National Congress or of the executive power 
of the United States, which shall violate the rights warranted in the 
fifteenth article, or attack the sovereignty of the States, shall be liable to 
abrogation by the vote of the latter expressed by the majority of their 
respective legislatures. 

And it provided that it could be amended only in the fol- 
lowing manner: 

1. That the amendments be solicited by the majority of the legislatures 
of the States; 

2. That the amendments be discussed and approved in both houses, 
according to what has been established for the enactment of laws; and 

S. That the amendments be ratified by the imanimous votes of the 
senate of plenipotentiaries, each State having one vote. 

It may also be amended by a convention called therefor by the Congress 
on the application of the whole of the legislatures of the States and com- 
posed of an equal number of deputies from each State. 

Under this constitution Mr. King, the American minister 

at Bogota, reported to the Secretary of State at Washington: 

The States comprising the Union were vested with absolute and un- 
qualified sovereignty. From them emanated all authority, and without 
their assent none could be exercised by the Federal functionaries of the 
nation. 

Under that constitution the sovereign state of Panama 
lived in confederation with the other states of Colombia for 
twenty-three years, until the year 1886. She never legally 
lost her rights under that constitution, but she was deprived 
of them in fact by force in the manner which I shall now 
describe. 

In the year 1885 Rafael Nunez, having been elected 
President of the Confederation of Colombia under the Con- 
stitution of 1863, undertook to govern in disregard of con- 
stitutional limitations, and was resisted in many parts of 
Colombia, including Panama. The resistance was over- 
come, and when that was accomplished Nunez declared ** the 



ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESTION 193 

omstitution of 1863 no longer exists/' He put Panama under 
martial law» not during the dvil war, but after its dose, and 
appointed a governor of the state. He also appointed gover- 
nors for the other states in the confederation. He then 
directed these governors to appoint ddegates to a constitu- 
tional convention; and the delegates thus appointed framed 
what is known as the constitution of 1886. The two delegates 
appointed to represent Panama in this convention were 
residents of Bogota. Neither of them had ever resided in 
Panama, and one of them never had set foot in Panama. The 
pretended constitution thus framed by the appointees of 
Nunez was declared to be adopted without compliance with 
a single one of the requisites prescribed by the constitution of 
1863 for its amendment. It robbed the people of Panama 
of every vestige of sdf-govemment. It gave them a governor 
to be appointed by the president at Bogota, and he, in turn, 
appointed all the administrative officers of the department. 
It left to the other states their legislatures, but it took away 
from Panama its l^islature and subjected the Isthmus 
directly in all things to the l^islative authority of the Con- 
gress at Bogota. It provided that the president might at any 
time, in case of dvil commotion, dedare the public order to 
be disturbed, and that he should thereupon have authority 
to issue decrees having the force of legislative enactments. 
It gave him absolute power over the press and power to 
imprison or expatriate any dtizen at will. It took away the 
property, the powers, the corporate existence, the dvil 
organization of the state, and placed the property and the 
lives of its people absolutdy under the authority and power 
of a single dictator in a distant capital with which there was 
no communication by land, and which it required longer to 
reach than it did to reach the dty of Washington. This 
pretended constitution was never submitted to the people 
of Panama for their approval or rejection. It was never 



194 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

consented to by them. Our minister at Bogota, Mr. King, 
closed his dispatch describing the new instrmnent with these 
words: 

No genoGUfl mind can contemplate the disastera which have befallen 
this people, or meditate on the iDs that may flow from their reckless experi- 
ment of violent political change, without feding a deep sorrow for the 
pains endured by a weak and long-suffering race, who mourn the destruc- 
tion of their chartered rights as the loss of a cheridied freedom that must be 
recovered at the cost of every periL 

In an address made by President Nunez to this convention 

of his own appointees he indicated clearly the way in which 

he proposed to make the new constitution effective in 

Panama. He said: 

To what has been stated is added the necessity of maintaining for some 
time a strong army which shall serve as a material sui^xirt to the aodimi- 
tization of peace which cannot be produced instantaneously by a system of 
government little in harmony with the defective habits acquired in so 
many years of error. The state of Panama alone requires a laige and well- 
paid garrison, in order that acts may not again occur endangering our 
sovereignty; without such precaution excluding the most certain (me, 
which is the prudent cultivation of our rdations with the N(Nrth American 
Government, which has just given us dear evidence of its good faith. 

The evidence of good faith to which he referred was that our 
armed forces had just turned the Isthmus over from the con- 
trol of the troops of Panama to the control of the troops of 
Nunez; and the meaning was that he intended to hold the 
people of Panama subject by force of arms and the aid of 
the United States. 

In May, 1886, our consul at Panama rqwrted to the State 
Department: 

The people ci the Isthmus are ground down by excessive taxation, and 
they fear to acquire i»c^>erty lest they shall not only be robbed by the tax 
gatherov but also imprisoned to doak the robbery under a false diaige. 
At the present time the revenue derived from the cities of Panama and 
Cdon and intermediary villages is at the rate of $1,000,000 a year. Not 
one tenth of this revenue is spent tar the benefit of the people. It is used 
to keep the forces to keep them in subjection. 



ETHICS OF THE PANAB£A QUESTION 195 

On December 24, 1886, four months after the promulgation 

of the constitution, he reported: 

Thiee fourths ci the pec^ ct this Isthmus desire sepaiatiop and 
the indepeudenoe ci the ertmguished state ci Panama. 11i^ fed but 
little more affection for the Governs at Panama than the Pdes did 
forty years ago for their masters at St. Petersburg. They would revolt 
if they could get arms and if they f dt that the United States would not 
interfere. 

A signed article published in December last m the news- 
pai>er El Relator of Bogota sums up the story of oppression 
and spoliation under which the people of Panama have 
suffered during these recent years. The facts which the 
writer states appear also spread at large in numerous reports 
upon the files of our State Department. He says: 

When the Isthmus in 1821 had sealed its indq)endeooe and had in- 
corporated itsdf spontaneously to great Colombia, undoubtedly it had the 
omviction that we would not annul its rights and its liberty as a naticm; 
it thought that we would always respect the integrity ci its own govern- 
ment. Whether we have betrayed or not the confidence that the Isth- 
mians had in our country* the history of the last twenty years and the 
work of inequity and spoiling realised in Panama will answer. 

We have omverted the kmb and masters of that territory into pariahs 
of their native soils. We have cut off their rights and suppressed all their 
liberties unexpectedly. We have robbed them of the most i»ecious 
faculty of a free people — that ci decting their mandataries; their 
legislators, their judges. 

We have restricted for them the right of suffrage; we have falsified the 
count of votes; we have made i»«valent over the popular will the will of a 
mercenary soldiery and that of a series of employees entirdy strange to the 
interests of the department; we have taken away from, them the right of 
law-making, and as a compensation we have put them under the iron yoke 
ci exceptional laws; state, provinces, and municipalities have lost entirely 
the autcmomy which they were enjoying fOTmerly. . . • 

In towns of a cosmopolitan character on the Isthmus, we did not found 
any national schools where children could learn our religion, our language, 
our history, and how to love their country. In the face of the wc^d, we 
have punished with imprisonment, with ei[pulsion, with fines, and wfaip- 
IHngs the writers for the innocent expression ci their thought. From 
December, 1884, to October, 1908, the presidents, governors, secretaries, 
prefects, mayws, diieb of police, military diieb, <dkials, and sddiers. 



196 INTBRNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

inspectors ci polioe, the pdice itsdf » captains and surgeons of harbors, 
magistrates, judges of all descriptions, state attorneys — everybody came 
from the high plains of the Andes and from other parts of the republic to 
impose on the Isthmus the will, the law, or the whims of the more power- 
ful, to seU justice or speculate with the treasury. This series oi employees, 
similar to an octopus with its multiple arms, was sucking the blood of an 
oppressed people and was devouring what only the Panamans had right to 
devour. We have made of the Isthmus a real military province, and when 
this nation of three hundred and fifty thousand souk had men of conti- 
nental reputation like Justo Arosemana; legislators of the first order and 
of an irresistible popularity like Pablo Arosemana and like Gil Colunje; 
men of talent like Ardila; brilliant diplomats like Hurtado; and scientific 
celebrities of European rqmtation like Sosa, we leave them aside, we 
rdegate them in ccmtempt and in f orgetfulness instead of putting them at 
the head of the Isthmus, in order to quench the thirst of equity and justice 
and satisfy the legitimate aspirations of all the Panamans. Such a way of 
proceeding has wounded the pride, the dignity, and the patriotism of all 
the intellectual people of the Isthmus, and has provdced and developed the 
hatred and the anger of the pc^pular mass. 

The people of Panama fought to exhaustion in 1885 to 
prevent the loss of their liberty and they were defeated 
through the action of the naval forces of the United States. 
Three times since then they have risen in rebellion against 
their oppressors. 

In 1895 they arose and were suppressed by force; in 1899 
they arose again and for three years maintained a war for 
liberation, which ended in 1902 through the interposition of 
the United States by armed force. The rising of November, 
1908, was the fourth attempt of this people to regain the 
rights of which they had been deprived by the usurpation of 
Nunez. The rejection of the canal treaty by the Bogota 
Congress was the final and overwhelming injury to the in- 
terests of Panama; the conclusive evidence of indifference 
to her welfare and disr^ard of her wishes; and it also created 
the opportunity for success in her persistent purpose to r^;ain 
civil liberty ; for it was plain that under the strained relations 
created by that rejection, the United States naturally would 



ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESTION 197 

not exercise her authority agam upon the Isthmus, as she 
had exercised it before, to aid the troops of Colombia. She 
was under no obligation to do so, and she could not do so 
without aiding in the denial of her own rights and the destruc- 
tion of her own interests. Upon that the people of Panama 
reUed in their last attempt, and they relied upoh it with 
reason. 

In the meantime there had been a curious grafting of 
usurpation upon usurpation at Bogota. In 1898 M. A. San- 
damente was elected president, and J. M. Maroquin, vice- 
president, of the republic of Colombia. It is true that there 
was no freedom of election. Our minister had reported of a 
preceding election: "" None but the soldiers, police, and em- 
ployees of the Grovemment voted, thus making the victory 
of the Grovemment complete"; but there was a form of 
election, and Sandamente became the only president there 
was, and Maroquin the vice-president. Article twenty-four 
of the constitution of 1886 provided: 

Hie vioe-presideiit of the republic shaD perfonn the duties of the eimN 
utive office during the temporary absence of the president. In case ct the 
pennanent absence of the president, the vice-president shall occupy the 
office (A the president during the balance of the time for which he was 
dected. 

On July Sit 1900, the vice-president, Maroquin, executed 
a coup d^etat by seizing the person of the president, Sanda- 
mente, and imprisoning him at a place a few miles outside of 
Bogota* Maroquin thereupon declared himself possessed of 
the executive power because of the absence of the president. 
He then issued a decree that public order was disturbed, and, 
upon that ground, assumed to himself legislative power under 
another provision of the constitution which I have already 
cited. Thenceforth, Maroquin, without the aid of any 1^^- 
lative body, ruled as the supreme executive, Ic^lative, civil, 
and military authority in the so-called republic of Colombia. 



198 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

The absence of Sandamente from the capital became perma- 
nent by his death in prison in the year 1902. When the 
people of Panama declared their independence in November 
last, no Congress had sat in Colombia since the year 1898, 
except the special Congress called by Maroquin to reject the 
canal treaty, and which did reject it by a unanimous vote, 
and adjourned without legislating on any other subject. The 
constitution of 1886 had taken away from Panama the power 
of self-government and vested it in Colombia. The coup 
cTetat of Maroquin took away from Colombia herself the 
power of government and vested it in an irresponsible 
dictator. 

The true nature of the government against which Panama 
rebelled is plainly shown by the proposals to the United 
States by the Bogota government upon receipt of the first 
news of the revolution. On the sixth of November the United 
States minister at Bogota, Mr. Beaupre, tel^^phed to 
Mr. Hay: 

Knowing that the revoluti<xi has already oommenoed in Panama, Gen- 
eral Reyes says that if the Government oi the United States will land 
troops to preserve Colombian sovereignty and the transit of the Isthmus, 
if requested by the charge d'affaires of Colombia, this Government will 
dedare martial law and by virtue of vested constitutional autlumty, when 
public order is disturbed, will approve by decree the ratification of the 
canal treaty as agned; or, if the Government <rf the United States prefers, 
win call an extra sessicm of Congress with new and friendly members next 
May, to Improve the treaty. 

On the seventh of November Mr. Beaupre telegraphed to 
Mr. Hay: 

General Beyes leaves next Monday for Panama invested with full 
powers. He has telegraphed chiefs ct the insurrecti<xi that his mission is to 
the interests of Isthmus. He wishes answer from you befcNre leaving, to the 
inquiry in my telegram of yesterday, and wishes to know if the American 
oonmiander will be ordered to codperate with him and with new Panama 
government to arrange peace and the approval ci Canal Treaty, which 
win be accepted on condition that the integrity ci CoIomlHa be pieserved. 



ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESTION 199 

He has td^graplied Preakknt of Mezioo to ask the Govenunent ct the 
United States and all the coimtries represented at the Pan-American C<»i- 
ference to aid C<^mbia to preserve her integrity. The question of the 
approval of the treaty mentioned in my telegram yesterday will be ar- 
ranged in Panama; he asks that before taking definite acti<n you will 
await his arrival there, and that the Government ot the United States in 
the meantime preserve the neutrality and transit of the Isthmus, and do 
not recognize die new Government. 

The General Reyes of these dispatches is now the presi- 
dent-elect of Colombia. Upon reading them, who can fail to 
see that there was no constitutional government in Colombia; 
that no government of law protected the people of Panama 
and their interests against the will of an arbitrary and foreign 
power; that the deliberations and unanimous action of the 
special Congress at Bogota had been a sham and a pretense; 
that Panama's rights, that the rights of the United States, 
that the world's rights to the passage of the Isthmus, had 
been the subject of disingenuous juggling at the hands of 
successful adventurers, and not of the fair expression of, a 
free nation's will. 

When these dispatches were received the die was not cast 
on the Isthmus; the United States had not recognized the 
new republic of Panama; she had assumed no obligations 
toward the leaders of the new movement or toward their 
followers; Colombia and Panama then both held out to us 
the o£Fer of the right and opportunity to build the canal. 
Colombia said, " We will ratify the treaty — we will ratify 
it by decree, or we will call a Congress selected for the pur- 
pose of ratifying the treaty, as the preceding Congress was 
selected for the purpose of rejecting it — if you will preserve 
our int^rity." Panama said, *^ Recognize our independence, 
and the treaty follows of course, for the building of the canal 
is our dearest hope." There was no question of interest on 
the part of the United States; the treaty was secure; the 
canal was secure; but there was a question of right, a ques- 



«00 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

tion of justice, a question of national conscience to be dealt 
with. What was the duty of the United States toward the 
people of Panama and the dictator at Bogota ? 

The people of Panama were the real owners of the canal 
route; it was because thdr fathers dwelt in the land, be- 
cause they won their independence from Spain, because they 
organized a civil society there that it was not to be treated as 
one of the waste places of the earth. They owned that part 
of the earth's surface just as much as the state of New York 
owns the Erie Canal. When the sovereign state of Panama 
confederated itself with the other states of Colombia under 
the constitution of 1868, it did not part with its titie or its 
substantial rights, but constituted the Federal Government 
its trustee for the representation of its rights in all foreign 
relations, and imposed upon that Grovemment the duty of 
protecting them. The trustee was faithless to its trust; it 
repudiated its obligations without the consent of the true 
owner; it seized by the strong hand of military power the 
rights which it was bound to protect; Colombia herself broke 
the bonds of union and destroyed the compact upon which 
alone depended her right to represent the owner of the soil. 
The question for the United States was: Shall we take this 
treaty from the true owner or shall we take it from the faith- 
less trustee, and for that purpose a third time put back the 
yoke of foreign domination upon the neck of Panama, by the 
request of that Government which has tried to play toward 
us the part of the highwayman ? There was no provision of 
our treaty with Colombia whidi required us to answer to her 
call, for our guaranty of her sovereignty in that treaty relates 
solely to foreign aggression. There was no rule of interna- 
tional law which required us to recognize the wrongs of 
Panama or the justice of her cause, for international law does 
not concern itself with the internal affairs of states. But I 
put it to the conscience of the Amaican people who are pass- 



ETHICS OF THE PANAB£A QUESTION 901 

ing judgment upon the action of their Gov^nment, whether 
the decision of our President and Secretary of State and the 
Senate was not a righteous decision. 

By all the principles of justice among men and among 
nations that we have learned from our fathers, and that all 
peoples and all governments should maintain, the revolu- 
tionists in Panama were right, the people of Panama were 
entitled to be free again, the Isthmus was theirs and they 
were entitled to govern it; and it would have been a shame- 
ful thing for the Grovemment of the United States to return 
them again to s^vitude. 

It is hardly necessary to say now that our Government had 
no part in devising, fomenting, or bringing about the revolu- 
tion on the Isthmus of Panama. President Roosevelt said in 
his message to Congress of January 4, 1904: 

I hesitate to refer to the injuriouB insmuatkuis which have been made 
of complicity by this Government in the revdutionaiy movement in 
Panama. Th^ are as destitute oi foundation as oi propriety. The only 
excuse for my mentioning them is the fear lest unthinking persons might 
mistake for acquiescence the silence of mere self-respect. I think prqper to 
say, therefore, that no one connected with this Government had any part 
in preparing, inciting, or encouraging the late revdution on the Isthmus of 
Panama, and that save from the reports of our naval and military cheers, 
given above, no one connected with this Government had any previous 
knowledge (A the revdution except such as was acoessiUe to any person of 
ordinary inteUigeoee who read the newspapers and kept up a cuiieot 
acquaintance with public affairs. 

The people of the United States, without distinction of 
party, will give to that statement their unquestioning belief. 
All the world knew that there would be a rising by the 
people of Panama, if the Colombian Congress adjourned 
without approving the treaty, as it did adjourn on the thirty- 
first of October. The newspapers of the United States were 
fiUed with statements to that effect, and our State and Navy 
Departments could not fail to be aware of it. They took the 
same stq^Mi they had always taken under similar drcum- 



202 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

stances to have naval vessels present to keep the transit open 
and protect American life and property. If any criticism is 
to be made upon their course, it is that there was too little 
rather than too much prevision and preparation. There was 
no naval vessel of the United States at the city of Panama, 
and there were no armed forces of the United States there 
when the rising occurred. There was one small vessel at 
Colon which was able to land a force of forty-two marines 
and blue-jackets; that was the entire force which the United 
States had on the Isthmus at the time of the revolution. 
They were landed at Colon as our troops had many times 
before been landed, and they were landed under these dr- 
cumstanoes: On the morning of November third, the day of 
the rising at Panama, about four hundred and fifty Colom- 
bian troops landed at Colon and their two generals proceeded 
by rail to the city of Panama, where they were arrested and 
placed in confinement by the insurgents, who had been 
joined by all the Colombian troops on the Isthmus except the 
four hundred and fifty just landed, and who had a force of 
fifteen hundred men under arms. On the morning of the 
next day, the fourth of November, the remaining com- 
mander of this body of Colombian troops in Colon sent a 
notice to the American consul that if the officers who had 
been arrested by the insurgents in Panama the evening 
before were not released by two o'clock in the afternoon, he 
would open fire on the town of Colon and kill every United 
States citizen in the place. There was then no American 
armed force of any description on the soil of the Isthmus. 
The NashviUe was in the harbor. The American consul ap- 
pealed to the commander of the Nashville for protection, and 
he landed the forty-two marines and blue-jackets. They took 
possession of the shed of the Panama Railroad Company, a 
stone building capable of defense, collected there the Ameri- 
can men residing in Colon, sent the American women and 



ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESTION 203 

duktren on board a Panama Railroad steamer and a Ger- 
man steamer which were lying at the dock, and prqmred to 
receive the threatened attach. The building was surrounded 
by the Colombian troops» and for an hour and a half this 
little force stood to its arms ready to fire and expecting to 
receive the threatened and apparently intended attack of ten 
times their number, llien cooler judgment prevailed with 
the Colombian officers, and the tension was relieved. On 
the following day a renewal of the threatening attitude of the 
Colombian troops led to a reoccupation of the railroad shed 
and a return of the women and children to the steamers; but 
again the dangor passed without conflict; and on the evening 
of the second day, the fifth of November, after conferences 
with the insurgent leaders, in which the American officers 
took no part, the Colombian troops boarded a Colombian 
ship and sailed away from the harbor of Colon, leaving no 
Colombian force on the Isthmus. The commander of the 
Nashville closes his report of these occurrences in these 
words: 

I b^ to assuie the DepartineQt tbat I had no part whatever in the nego^ 
tiations that were carried oa between C<^nel Torres and the r^resenta- 
tives of the provisumal government; that I landed an armed force only 
when the lives of American citizens were threatened, and withdrew this 
force as soon as there seemed to be no ground tar further i^prehension of 
injury to American lives and pn^>erty; that I relanded an armed force 
because of the failure of Col<uid Torres to cany out his agreement to with- 
draw and announced intention to return ; and that my attitude throughout 
was strictly neutral as between the two parties, my only purpose being to 
protect the lives and property of American dtisens and to preserve the 
free and uninterrupted transit of the Isthmus. 

Objection has been made that owing to American direc- 
tion the Panama Railroad Company refused to transport the 
four hundred and fifty Colombian soldiers to Panama to 
attach the fifteen hundred insurgents in arms there, and 
that the officers of the American Government were directed 
to prevent any troops of either party from making the 



204 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

line of the railroad the theatre of hostilities; but this was no 
new policy devised or applied for this occasion; and it was 
impartial as to both parties to the controversy. The insur- 
gents were anxious that the transportation should be given, 
for they outnumbered the Colombians more than three to 
one, and when it was refused they asked for transportation 
for themselves to attack the Colombians in Colon, and that 
was refused. The year before a communication had been 
sent to the Commander of the Colombian forces and the 
commander of the insurgent forces on the Isthmus in these 

words: 

U. S. S. Cincinnati, September 19, 1902. 
Deab Sm: — I have the honor to inform you that the United States 
naval forces are guarding the railway trains and the line of transit across 
the Isthmus of Panama from sea to sea» and that no persons whatever will 
be allowed to obstruct, embarrass, or interfere in any manner with the 
trains or the route of transit. No armed men except forces of the United 
States will be allowed to come on or use the line. 

All of this is without prejudice or any desire to interfere in domestic 
contentions of the Colombians. 

Please acknowledge receipt of this conmiunication. 
With assurances of high esteem and consideration, I remain. 
Very respectfully, 

T. C. McLean, 
Commander, United States Navy, Commanding. 

The policy embodied in this official notice of 1902 was the 
same policy followed in November, 1903, and none other; it 
was the outcome of the experience gained during the long 
course of warfare and the painful experience of property 
destroyed and traffic suspended, which showed that if the 
rights of the United States on the Isthmus of Panama were 
to be protected they must be protected by the United States 
itself insisting that its right of way should not be made the 
field of battle, as it had been in 1885, when Colon was burned 
with the railroad terminals and wharves, when Panama was 
captured, track was torn up, cars were broken open, telegraph 
wires were cut and armored trains were a necessity. The 



ETHICS OF THE PANAMA QUESTION 205 

warrant for the execution of that policy is the right of self- 
protection. The things done by our officers might not have 
been permissible in the territory of a country of strong and 
orderly government possessing and exercising the power to 
prevent lawless violence and to protect the lives and property 
of citizens and foreigners alike; but action of this character 
is» according to the universal rules obtaining among civilized 
nations, not only permissible, but a duty of the highest obli- 
gation in countries whose feeble governments exercise im- 
perfect control in their own territory and fail to perform the 
duties of sovereignty for the protection of life and property. 
The armed force of American sailors who during the past few 
weeks have been protecting American life and property in the 
friendly capital of Korea have not been making war upon 
that power. The expeditionary force which marched to 
Peking under Chaffee in the summer of 1900, and carrying 
the capital of China by assault, rescued the residents of the 
American l^ation, was not making war upon that nation, 
which relies with just confidence upon our constant friend- 
ship. In that cat^ory of incapacity to protect the rights 
of others, Colombia has placed herself as to the Isthmus of 
Panama by the record of the past years. She could not main- 
tain order upon the Isthmus because she did not seek to 
maintain justice; she could not command respect for her 
laws because she had abandoned the rule of law and sub- 
mitted to the control of an arbitrary dictator. The right of 
self -protection for American interests rested upon these facts 
emphasized and enforced by the grant of power in the treaty 
of 1846, and by Colombia's own appeals to the American 
Government to intervene for the maintenance of order. 

It was not the neutral force of forty-two marines and blue- 
jackets, or anything that the American Government or 
American officers said or did, that led the four hundred and 
fifty Colombians to retire from Colon; it was the fact that 



206 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

ihey found themselves alone among a hostile and unanimous 
people with an overwhebning insurgent force in arms against 
them which left no alternative but capture or retreat. The 
recognition of independence and the treaty with Panama are 
the real grounds of Colombia's complaint, and upon the 
justice of those acts America stands, fairly, openly, with full 
disclosure of every step taken and every object sought. 

Upon the firm foundation of that righteous action, with the 
willing authority of the lawful owners of the soil, we will dig 
the canal, not for selfish reasons, not for greed of gain, but 
for the world's commerce, benefiting Colombia most of all. 
We shall not get back the money we spend upon the canal 
any more than we shall get back the money we have expended 
to make Cuba a free and independent r^ublic, or the money 
we have expended to set the people of the Philippines on the 
path of ordered liberty and competency for self-government. 
But we shall promote our commerce, we shall unite our At- 
lantic and Fadfic coasts, we shall render inestimable service 
to mankind, and we shall grow in greatness and honor and in 
the strength that comes from difficult tasks accomplished 
and from the exercise of the power that strives in the nature 
of a great constructive people. 



THE OBLIGATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES 
AS TO PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 

ADDRESS IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES 
JANUARY 81, 1018 

Chapter 890 of the lawi of 1912, entitled " An Act to provide for the opening; 
maintenance, protection, and operation of the Fknama Canal, and the sanitaticm 
and government of the Canal Zcme," passed the Senate, August 9, 1912, and became 
a law August 24, 1912. When the bill was before the Senate for final action, Mr. 
Root moved to strike out the line in Section 5 providing that " no tolls shall be 
levied upon vesseb engaged in the coastwise trade of the United States." This 
amendment was rejected without roD call, and the bill passed as originaUy reputed : 
yeas, 47; nays, 15; not voting, 82. 

On December 11, 1912, % Edward Gr^, Principal Secretary for Foreign Affairs 
of Great Britain, formally protested to the United States against this provision of the 
Flsnama law, as a violation of the terms of the Hay-Faunoefote IVeaty between 
Great Britain and the United States signed November 18, 1901, and proclaimed 
February 22, 1902. 

On January 14, 1918, Mr. Root introduced Senate Bill No. 8114, being in identi- 
eal terms with his motion above referred to. On the same date he announced his 
intention to speak upon the subject on January 21. 

On March 5, 1914, Ftaident Wilson ddivered a message to Congress in person 
in iriiich he said: 

I have come to ask you for the repeal of that provincm of the Fanama Canal 
Act of August 24, 1912, which exempts vessds engaged in the coastwise trade of 
the United States from payment of tolls and to urge upon you the justice, the 
wisdom, and the large poUcy of such a repeal with the utmost earnestness of 
which I am capable. 

In my own judgment, very fully considered and maturdy formed, that 
exemption constitutes a mirfAlrim economic policy from every point of view, 
and is, moreover, in plain contrav e ntion of the treaty with Groat Britain con- 
cerning the canal concluded on November 18, 1901. But I have not come to 
urge upon you my personal views. I have come to state to you a fact and a 
situation. Whatever may be our own differences of opinion concerning this 
much-debated measure, its meaning is not ddiMtted outside the United States. 
Everywhere dse the language of the treaty is given but one interpretation, and 
that interpretation precludes the exemption I am asking you to repeal. We 
consented to the treaty; its language we accepted, if we did not originate; and 
we are too big; too powerful, too sdf-req>ecting a nation to interpret with too 
strained or refined a reading the words of our own promises just because we 
have power enou^ to give us leave to read them as we please.^ The large thing 
to do is the only thing that we can afford to do» a voluntary withdrawal from 
a position everywhere questioned and misunderstood. We ought to reverse oar 



208 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

acdoa without nitiiig tiie question whether we were rif^t or wrong, and ao 

ODoe more deserve our reputation for generosity and for the redemption of 

every obligation without quibble or hesitation. I ask this of you in siqqiort 

of the foreign policy of the Administration. 

The repefding bifl was debated at length m both Houses of Congress and on 

Blay 21, 1914» Mr. Root delivered his address entitled: ** Ftoama Canal Tolls: 

%>eech in Reply/' idiidi is printed immediatdy following the address below. 

Mr. T. W. ^ms, of Tennessee, had mean^diile introduced in the House of Repre- 
sentatives a bin to repeal the dause exempting American coastwise shipping horn 
the payment of tolls on the Fknama Canal, which passed the House, Biarch 81, 1914, 
and passed the Senate, June 11, 1914, by the following vote: yeas, 50; nays, 85; 
not voting, 10. It was approved June 15, 1914. 

This repefding act is Public 1181, Sixty-third Congress, Second t 



MB. PRESIDENT, in the late days of last summer, after 
nearly nine months of continuous session. Congress 
enacted, in the bill to provide for the administration of the 
Panama Canal, a provision making a discrimination between 
the tolls to be charged upon foreign vessels and the tolls to be 
charged upon American vessels engaged in coastwise trade. 
We all must realize, as we look back, that when that provi- 
sion was adopted the members of both Houses were much ex- 
hausted; our minds were not working with their full vigor; 
we were weary physically and mentally. Such discussion as 
there was was to empty seats. In neither House of Congress, 
during the period that this provision was under discussion, 
could there be found more than a scant dozen or two of mem- 
bers. The provision has been the cause of great regret to a 
multitude of our fellow-citizens, whose good opinion we all 
desire and whose leadership of opinion in the country makes 
their approval of the course of our Congress an important 
element in maintaining that confidence in government which 
is so essential to its success. The pro vision has caused a pain- 
ful impression throughout the world that the United States 
has departed from its often-announced rule of equality of 
opportunity in the use of the Panama Canal, and is seeking a 
special advantage for itself in what is believed to be a viola- 
tion of the obligations of a treaty. Mr. President, that 



PANAMA CANAL TOLI£ 209 

opinkm of the civilized world is something which we may not 
lightly disregard. "" A decent respect to the opinions of man- 
kind ** was one of the motives stated for the people of these 
colonies in the great Declaration of American Independence. 

The effect of the provision has thus been doubly unfortu- 
nate, and I ask the Senate to listen to me while I endeavor to 
state the situation in which we find ourselves; to state the 
case which is made against the action that we have taken, in 
order that I may present to the Senate the question whether 
we should not either submit to an impartial tribunal the 
question whether we are right, so that if we are right, we may 
be vindicated in the eyes of all the world; or whether we 
should not, by a repeal of the provision, retire from the 
position which we have taken. 

In the year 1850, Mr. President, there were two great 
powers in possession of the North American Continent to the 
north of the Rio Grande. The United States had but just 
come to its full stature. By the Webster-Ashburton Treaty 
of 1842 our northeastern boundary had been settled, leaving 
to Great Britain that tremendous stretch of seacoast includ- 
ing Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Labrador, 
and the shores of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, now forming the 
Province of Quebec In 1846 the Oregon boundary had been 
settled, assuring to the United States a title to that vast 
r^on which now constitutes the states of Washington, 
Qr^on, and Idaho. In 1848 the treaty of Guadalupe- 
Hidalgo had given to us that great empire wrested from 
Mexico as a result of the Mexican War, which now spreads 
along the coast of the Pacific as the state of California and 
the great r^on between California and Texas. 

Inspired by the manifest requirements of this new empire, 
the United States turned its attention to the possibiUty of 
realizing the dream of centuries and connecting its two coasts 
— its old coast upon the Atlantic and its new coast upon the 



210 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Pacific — by a ship canal through the Isthmus; but when it 
turned its attention in that direction it found the other em- 
pire holding the place of advantage. Great Britain had also 
her coast upcm the Atlantic and her coast upon the Pacific, 
to be joined by a canal. Further than that. Great Britain 
was a Caribbean power. She had Bermuda and the Baha^ 
mas; she had Jamaica and Trinidad; she had the Windward 
Islands and the Leeward Islands; she had British Guiana 
and British Honduras; she had, moreover, a protectorate 
over the Mosquito Coast, a great stretch of territory upon the 
eastern shore of C^tral America which included the river 
San Juan and the valley and harbor of San Juan de Nica- 
ragua, or Greytown. All men's minds then were concen- 
trated upon the Nicaragua Canal route, as th^ were until 
alter the treaty of 1901 was made. 

And thus when the United States turned its attention to- 
ward joining these two coasts by a canal through the Isthmus 
it found Great Britain in possession of the eastern end of the 
route which men generally believed would be the most avail- 
able route for the canal. Accordingly, the United States 
sought a treaty with Great Britain by which Great Britain 
should renounce the advantage which she had and admit the 
United States to equal participation with her in the ccmtrol 
and the protection of a canal across the Isthmus. From that 
came the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. 

Let me repeat that this treaty was sought not by England 
but by the United States. Mr. Clayton, who was Secretary 
of State at the time, sent our minister to France, Mr. Rives, 
to London for the purpose of urging upon Lord Palmerston 
the making of the treaty. The treaty was made by Great 
Britain as a OHioession to the urgent demands of the United 
States. 

I should have said, in speaking about the uigeoicy with 
which the United States sought the Ckyton-Bulwer Trealy , 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 211 

that there were two treaties made with Nicaragua, one by 
Mr. Heis and one by Mr. Squire, both representatives of the 
United States. Each gave, so far as Nicaragua could, great 
powers to the United States in regard to the construction of a 
canal, but they were made without authorization from the 
United States, and they were not approved by the Govern- 
ment of the United States and were never sent to the Senate. 
Mr. Clayton, however, held those treaties in abeyance as a 
means of inducing Great Britain to enter into the Clayton- 
Bulwer Treaty. Heheldthempracticallyasa whip over the 
British n^^tiators, and having accomplished the purpose 
they were thrown into the waste basket. 

By that treaty Great Britain agreed with the United States 
that neither Grovemment should ** ever obtain or maintain 
for itself any exclusive control over the ship canal **; that 
neither would " make use of any protection '' which either 
afforded to a canal ** or any alliance which either '* might 
have ** with any State or people for the purpose of erecting or 
maintaining any fortifications, or of occupying, fortifying, 
or colonizing Nicaragua, Costa Rica, the Mosquito Coast, or 
any part of Central America, or of assuming or exercising 
dominion over the same,'* and that neither would ** take 
advantage of any intimacy, or use any alliance, connection 
or influence that either *' might ** possess with any State or 
Grovemment through whose territory the said canal may 
pass, for the purpose of acquiring or holding, directly or in- 
directly, for the citizens or subjects of the one, any rights or 
advantages in r^ard to commerce or navigation through the 
said canal which shall not be offered on the same terms to 
the citizens or subjects of the other.'* 

You will observe, Mr. President, that under these provi- 
sions the United States gave up nothing that it then had. Its 
obligations were entirely looking to the future; and Great 
Britain gave up its rights under the protectorate over the 



212 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Mosquito Coast, gave up its rights to what was supposed to 
be the eastern terminus of the canal. And, let me say with- 
out recurring to it again, under this treaty, alter much dis- 
cussion which ensued as to the meaning of its terms. Great 
Britain did surrender her rights to the Mosquito Coast, so 
that the position of the United States and Great Britain be- 
came a position of absolute equality. Under this treaty also 
both parties agreed that each should **eAter into treaty 
stipulations with such of the Central American States as 
they ** might " deem advisable for the purpose " — I now 
quote the words of the treaty — " for the purpose of more 
eflfectually carrying out the great design of this convention, 
namely, that of constructing and maintaining the said canal as 
a ship communication between the two oceans for the benefit 
of mankind, on equal terms to all, and of protecting the same.'' 
That declaration, Mr. President, is the comer stone of the 
rights of the United States upon the Isthmus of Panama, 
rights having their origin in a solemn declaration that there 
should be constructed and maintained a ship canal *^ be- 
tween the two oceans for the benefit of mankind, on equal 
terms to all." 
In the eighth article of that treaty the parties agreed: 
The Governments ct the United States and Great Britain having not 
only desired, in entering into this oonventicm, to acoomi^ish a particular 
object, but also to establish a general principle, they hereby agree to 
extend their protection, by treaty stipulations, to any other practicable 
communications, whether by canal or railway, across the isthmus which 
connects North and South America, and especially to the interooeanic 
oonununications, should the same prove to be practicable, whether by 
canal or railway, which are now proposed to be established by the way of 
Tehuantepec or Panama. In granting, however, their joint protection to 
any such canals or railways as are by this article specified, it is always 
understood by the United States and Great Britain that the parties con- 
structing or owning the same shall impose no other charges or oonditi<m8 
of traffic thereupon than the aforesaid Governments shall approve ci as 
just and equitable; and that the same canals or railways, bdng open to 
the citiJEens and subjects of the United States and Great Britain on equal 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 218 

terms, shall also be c^pea on like tenns to the citiseiis and subjects oi every 
other State which is willing to grant thereto such pcotectioQ as the United 
States and Great Britain engage to afford. 

There, Mr. President, is the explicit agreement for equality 
of treatment of the citizens of the United States and of the 
citizens of Great Britain in any canal, wherever it may be 
constructed, across the Isthmus. That was the fundamental 
principle embodied in the treaty of 1850. And we are not 
without an authoritative construction as to the scope and 
requirements of an agreement of that description, because 
we have another treaty with Great Britain — a treaty which 
formed one of the great landmarks in the diplomatic history 
of the world, and one of the great steps in the progress of 
civilization — the Treaty of Washington of 1871, under which 
the Alabama Claims were submitted to arbitration. Under 
that treaty there were provisions for the use of the American 
canals along the waterway of the Great Lakes, and the Cana- 
dian canals along the same line of communication, upon 
equal terms to the citizens of the two coimtries. 

Some years after the treaty, Canada imdertook to do some- 
thing quite similar to what we have undertaken to do in this 
law about the Panama Canal. It provided that while 
nominally a toll of twenty cents a ton should be charged 
upon the merchandise both of Canada and of the United 
States there should be a rebate of eighteen cents for all mer- 
chandise which went to Montreal or beyond, leaving a toll of 
but two cents a ton for that merchandise. The United States 
objected; and I b^ your indulgence while I read from the 
message of President Cleveland upon that subject, sent to 
the Congress, August 23, 1888. He says: 

By Article 97 of the Treaty oi 1871 provision was made to secure to 
the citizens of the United States the use of the Welland, St. Lawrence, and 
other canals in the Dominion of Canada on terms of equality with the 
inhabitants ct the D(»ninion, and also to secure to the subjects of Great 
Britain the use of the St. Clair Flats Canal on terms of equality with the 
inhabitants of the United States. 



214 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

The equality with the inhabitants ci the Dominioii which we were 
promised in the use of the canals of Canada did not secure to us freedom 
from tolls in their navigation, but we had a right to expect that we, being 
Americans and interested in American oonuneroe, would be no more 
burdened in regard to the same than Canadians engaged in their own 
trade; and the whole spirit of the concession made was, or should have 
been, that merchandise and property transported to an American market 
through these canals should not be enhanced in its cost by tolls many 
times higher than such as were carried to an adjoining Canadian market. 
All our citizens, producers and consumers as well as vessel owners, were 
to enjoy the equality promised. 

And yet evidence has for some time been befwe the Congress, furnished 
by the Secretary ci the Treasury, showing that while the tolls charged in 
the first instance are the same to all, such vessds and cargoes as are 
destined to certain Canadian ports — 

their coastwise trade — 

are allowed a refund of nearly the entire tdls, while those bound f <^ 

American ports are not allowed any sudi advantage. 

To promise equality and then in practice make it conditional upon our 
vesseb doing Canadian business instead ct thdr own, is to fulfill a promise 
with the shadow of performance. 

Upon the representations of the United States ^nbodying 
that view, Canada retired from the position which she had 
taken, rescinded the provision for differential tolls, and put 
American trade going to American markets on the same basis 
of tolls as Canadian trade going to Canadian markets. She 
did not base her action upon any idea that there was no com- 
petition between trade to American ports and trade to Cana- 
dian ports, but she recognized the law of equality in good 
faith and honor; and to this day that law is being accorded 
to us and by each great nation to the other. 

I have said, Mr. President, that the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty 
was sought by us. In seeking it, we declared to Great Britain 
what it was that we sought. I ask the Senate to listen to the 
declaration that we made to induce Great Britain to enter 
into that treaty, — to listen to it because it is the declaration 
by which we are in honor bound as truly as if it were signed 
and sealed. 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 215 

Here I will read from the T^^ont made to the Senate on 
April 5, 1900» by Senator Cushman K. Davis, then chairman 
of the Committee on Foreign Relations. So you will perceive 
that this is no new matter to the Senate of the United States, 
and that I am not proceeding upon my own authority in 
thinking it worthy of your attention. 

Mr. Rives was instructed to say and did say to Lord Pal-* 
merston, in urging upon him the making of the Clayton- 
Bulwer Treaty, thia: 

The United States sought no exchisiTe privilege or pfeferential right 
of any kind in regard to the jHroposed crwnmunicfttion, and their sincere 
wish, if it should be found practicable, was to see it d e dica t ed to the 
common use of all nations on the most liberal terms and a footing ci 
perfect equality for alL 

That the United States would not» if they could» obtain any exclusive 
right or privilege in a great hi^way which naturally belonged to all 
mankind. 

That, sir» was the spirit of the Clayton-Bulwer convention. 
That was what the United States asked Great Britain to 
agree upon. That self-denying declaration underlay and 
permeated and found expression in the terms of the Clayton- 
Bulwer convention. And upon that rq)resentation, Great 
Britain in that convention relinquished her coign of vantage 
which she herself had for the benefit of her great North 
American ^npire for the control of the canal across the 
Isthmus. 

Mr. CxTMifiNS. Mr. President — 

The President pro tempore. Does the Senator from New 
York yield to the Senator from Iowa ? 

Mr. Root. I do, but — 

Mr. CxTiooNB. I win ask the Senator from New York 
whether he prefers that there shall be no interruptions ? If 
he does, I shaU not ask any question. 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, I should prefer it, because 
what I have to say involves establishing the relation between 



216 DTTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

a considerable number 6t acts and instniments, and inter- 
ruptions naturally would destroy the continuity 6t my 
statement. 

Mr. Cummins. The question I was about to ask was purdy 
a historic one. 

Mr. Root. I shall be very glad to answer the Senator. 

Mr. Cummins. The Senator has stated that at the time of 
the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty we were excluded from the Mos- 
quito Coast by the protectorate exercised by Great Britain 
over that coast. My question is this: Had we not at that 
time a treaty with New Granada that gave us equal or greater 
rights upon the Isthmus of Panama than were claimed even 
by Great Britain over the Mosquito Coast f 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, we had the treaty of 1846 with 
New Granada, under which we undertook to protect any 
railway or canal across the Isthmus. But that did not apply 
to the Nicaragua route, which was then supposed to be the 
most available route for a canal. 

Mr. Cummins. I quite agree with the Senator about that. 
I only wanted it to appear in the course of the argument that 
we were then under no disabiUty so far as concerned building 
a canal across the Isthmus of Panama. 

Mr. Root. We were under a disability so far as concerned 
building a canal by the Nicaragua route, which was regarded 
as the available route until the discussion in the Senate after 
1901, in which Senator Spooner and Senator Hanna practi- 
cally changed the judgment of the Senate with r^ard to 
what was the proper route to take. And in the treaty of 
1850, so anxious were we to secure freedom from the claims 
of Great Britain on the eastern end ci the Nicaragua route 
that, as I have read, we agreed that the same contract should 
apply not merely to the Nicaragua route but to the whole of 
the Isthmus. So that from that time on the whole Isthmus 
was impressed by the same obligations which were impressed 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 217 

upon the Nicaragua route, and whatever rights we had under 
our treaty of 1846 with New Granada, we were thenceforth 
bound to exercise with due regard and subordination to the 
provisions of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. 

Mr. President, alter the lapse of some thirty years, during 
the early part of which we were strenuously inaiafing upcm 
the observance by Great Britain of her obligations under the 
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty and during the latter part of which 
we were b^inning to be restive under our obligations by rea- 
son of that treaty, we undertook to secure a modification of 
it from Great Britain. In the course of that undertaking, 
there was much discussion and some difference of opinion as 
to the continued obligations of the treaty. But I think that 
was finally put at rest by the decision of Secretary Olney in 
the m^norandum upon the subject made by him in the year 
1806. In that m^norandum he said: 

Under these draimstances, upon every princi]de which governs the 
relation to each other> either »f nations or of individuals, the United 
States is oompletdy estopped from denying that the treaty is in full force 
and vigOT. 

n changed conditicms now make stipulations, which were once deemed 
advantageous, either inapplicable or injurious, the true remedy is not in 
ingenious attempts to deny the existence of the treaty or to explain away 
its provisions, but in a direct and straightf<vward i4>plication to Great 
Britain for a reconsideration of the whole matter. 

We did apply to Great Britain for a reconsideration of the 
whole matter, and the result of the application was the Hay- 
Pauncefote Treaty. That treaty came before the Senate in 
two forms: first, in the form of an instrument signed on 
February 5, 1900, which was amended by the Senate; and, 
second, in the form of an instrument signed on November 18, 
1901, which contained the greater part of the provisions of 
the earlier instrument, but somewhat modified or varied the 
amendments which had been made by the Senate to that 
earUer instrument. 



218 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

It 18 really but one process by which the paper sent to the 
Senate in February, 1900» passed through a course of amend- 
ment; first, at the hands of the Senate, and then at the hands 
of the n^^tiators between Great Britain and the United 
States, with the subsequent approval of the Senate. In both 
the first form and the last of this treaty, the preamble pro- 
vides for preserving the provisions of article eight of the 
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. Both forms provide for the con- 
struction of the canal under the auspices of the United 
States alone, instead of its construction under the auspices 
of both countries. 

Both forms of that treaty provide that the canal might 
be — 

ocmstnicted under the auspices ct the Govenunent ct the United States, 
either directly at its own cost or by gift or loan of money to individuals or 
corporations or through subscripticHi to or purchase oi stock or shares — 

that being substituted for the provisions of the Clayton- 
Bulwer Treaty under which both countries were to be 
patrons of the enterprise. 
Under both forms it was further provided that — 

Subject to the provisions of the present' conventicHi, the said Govern- 
ment ^ 

the United States — 

shall have and enjoy all the rights incident to such construction, as weD 
as the exclusive right of providing for the r^gulaticm and management of 
thecanaL 

That provision, however, for the exclusive patronage of the 
United States was subject to the initial provision that the 
modification or change from the Qayton-Bulwer Treaty was 
to be for the construction of such canal under the auspices of 
the Government of the United States, without impairing the 
general principle of neutralization established in article eight 
of that convention. 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 210 

Ilien the treaty as it was finally agreed to provides that the 
United States ** adopt, as the basis of such neutralization of 
such ship canal/* the foUowing rules, substantially as em- 
bodied in the convention ** of Constantinople, signed October 
28, 1888," for the free navigation of the Suez Maritime 
Canal; that is to say: 

First. The canal shall be free and open • • • tothevessek 
of commerce and of war of all nations ** observing these rules 
on terms of entire equality, so that there shall be no discrimi- 
nation against any nation or its citizens or subjects in respect 
to the conditions or charges of traffic, or otherwise/* Such 
conditions and charges of traffic shall be just and equitable. 

Then f oUow rules relating to blockade and vesseb of war, 
the ^nbarkation and disembarkation of troops, and the ex- 
tension of the provisions to the waters adjacent to the canal. 

Now, Mr. President, that rule must, of course, be read in 
ccxmection with the provision for the preservation of the 
principle of neutralization established in article eight of the 
Clayton-Bulwer convention. 

Let me take your minds back again to article eight of the 
Clayton-Bulwer convention, consistently with which we are 
bound to construe the rule established by the Hay-Paunce- 
fote convention. The principle of neutralization provided 
for by the eighth article is neutralization upon terms of 
absolute equality both between the United States and Great 
Britain and between the United States and all other powers. 

It ia always understood — 
says the eighth article — 

by the United States and Great Britain that the parties constructing or 
owning the same — 

that is, the canal — 

shall inqxMe no other charges or conditions ct traffic thereupon than the 
aforesaid Governments shall approve ci as just and equitaUe, and that 
the same canals or railways, being open to the dtiaens and subjects of the 



220 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

United States and Great Britain an equal terms, shall also be open on 
like terms to the citizens and subjects of every other State which is willing 
to grant thereto such protection as the United States and Great Britain 
engage to afford. 

Now, we axe not at liberty to put any construction upon 
the Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty which violates that controlling 
declaration of absolute equality between the citizens and 
subjects of Great Britain and the United States. 

Mr. President, when the Hay-Pauncefote convention was 
ratified by the Senate, it was in full view of this controlling 
principle, in accordance with which their act must be con- 
strued; for Senator Davis, in his report from the Committee 
on Foreign Relations, to which I have already referred — 

Mr. McCuMBER. On the treaty in its first form. 

Mr. Root. Yes; the report on the treaty in its first form. 
Mr. Davis said, after referring to the Suez convention of 
1888: 

The United States cannot take an attitude of opposition to the prin- 
ciples of the great act of October 9S, 1888» without discrediting the official 
declarations of our Government for fifty years on the neutrality of an 
isthmian canal and its equal use by all nations without discrimination. 

To set up the selfish motive of gain by establishing a mcmopoly of a 
highway that must derive its income from the patronage of all maritime 
countries would be unworthy of the United States if we owned the country 
through which the canal is to be built. 

But the location of the canal belongs to other governments, from whom 
we must obtain any right to ccMOstruct a canal on their territory, and it is 
not unreasonable, if the question was new and was not invdved in a sub- 
nsting treaty with Great Britain, that she should question the right of 
even Nicaragua and Costa Rica to grant to our ships of commerce and ct 
war extraordinary privileges of transit through the canaL 

I shall revert to that principle declared by Senator Davis. I 
continue the quotation: 

It is not reasonable to suppose that fflcaragua and Costa Rica would 
grant to the United States the exclusive contrd of a canal through those 
States on terms less generous to the other maritime nations than those 
prescribed in the great act of October 28, 1888, or if we oould compel 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 221 

them to give us audi advantages over other natioiis it would not be 
creditable to our country to accept them. 

That our Government or our people will furnish the money to build 
the canal presents the single question whether it is profitable to do so. 
If the canal» as property, is worth more than its cost, we are not called 
on to divide the profits with other nations. If it is wOTth less and we are 
compelled by national necessities to build the canal, we have no right to 
call on other nations to make up the loss to us. In any view, it is a ven- 
ture that we will enter upon if it is to our interest, and if it is otherwise 
we will withdraw from its further consideration. 

The Suez Gmal makes no discrimination in its tolls in favor of its stock- 
holders, and, taking its profits or the half of them as our basis of calcula- 
tion, we will never find it necessary to differentiate our rates of toll in 
favor of our own people in order to secure a very great pn^t on the invest- 
ment. 

Mr. President, in view of tliat declaration of principle, in 
the face of that declaration, the United States cannot afford 
to take a position at variance with the rule of universal 
equality established in the Suez Canal convention — equality 
as to every stockholder and all non-stockholders, equality as 
to every nation whether in possession or out of possession. 
In the face of that declaration, the United States cannot 
afford to take any other position than upon the rule of uni- 
versal equality of the Suez Canal convention, and upon the 
further declaration that the country owning the territory 
through which this canal was to be built would not and 
ought not to give any special advantage or preference to the 
United States as compared with all the other nations of the 
earth. In view of that report, the Senate rejected the amend- 
ment which was offered by Senator Bard, of Califomia, 
providing for preference to the coastwise trade of the United 
States. This is the amendment which was proposed: 

The United States reserves the right in the regulation and management 
of the canal to discriminate in respect of the charges of traffic in f avOT of 
vessels of its own citizens engaged in the coastwise trade. 

I say, the Senate rejected that amendment upon this re- 
port, which declared the rule of universal equality without 



222 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

any preference or discrimination in favor of the United States 
as being the meaning of the treaty and the necessary meaning 
of the treaty. 

There was still more before the Senate, there was still more 
before the country, to fix the meaning of the treaty. I have 
read the representations that were made, the solemn declara- 
tions made by the United States to Great Britain establishing 
the rule of absolute equality without discrimination in favor 
of the United States or its citizens, to induce Great Britain to 
enter into the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. 

Now let me read the declaration made to Great Britain to 
induce her to modify the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty and give up 
her right to joint control of the canal and put in our hands the 
sole power to construct it or patronize it or control it. 

Mr. Blaine said in his instructions to Mr. Lowell on June 
24, 1881, directing Mr. Lowdl to propose to Great Britain 
the modification of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty — I read his 
words: 



The United States recognises a pix^>er guarantee of neutrality as i 
tial to tlie ccmstruction and successful operaticm oi any highway < 
the Isthmus of Panama, and in the last generaticm every step was taken 
by this Government that it deemed requisite in the jwemises. The neces- 
sity was foreseen and abundantly provided for long in advance of any 
possible call for the actual ezerdse of power. . . . Nar^ in tms cf TpeacSt 
does the United States seek to June any exclusive pnoUeges accorded to Ameri- 
can skips in respect to precedence or tolls through an interoceanic canal an^ 
more than it has sought like privileges for American goods in transit offer the 
Panama Railway^ under the exdusiee control cf an American corporation. 
The extent ot the privileges of American citizens and ships is measureaUe 
under the treaty oi 1S46 by those ci Colombian dtisens and ships. It 
would he OUT earnest desire and expectation to see the worUTs peacrful eom- 
merce enjoy the same just^ liberal, and rational treatment. 

Secretary Cass had already said to Great Britain in 1857: 

The United States, as I have before had occasion to assure your Lord- 
ship» demand no exdusim privileges in these passages, but will always exert 
thdr influence to secure their free and unrestricted benefits, hath m peace and 
war, to the commerce rf the world. 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 223 

Mr. President, it was upon that declaration, upoa that self- 
denying declaration, upon that solemn assurance, that the 
United States sought not and would not have any pref eraice 
for her own citizens over the subjects and citizens of other 
countries, that Great Britain abandoned her rights under the 
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty and entered into the Hay-Pauncef gte 
Treaty, with the clause continuing the principles of clause 
eight, which embodied these same declarations, and the 
clause establishing the rule of equality, taken from the Suez 
Canal convention. We are not at liberty to give any other 
construction to the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty than the ccm- 
struction which is consistent with that declaration. 

Mr. President, these declarations, made specifically and 
directly to secure the making of these treaties, do not stand 
alone. For a longer period than the oldest Senator has lived, 
the United States has been from time to time making open 
and public declarations of her disinterestedness, her altruism, 
her purposes for the benefit of mankind, her freedom from 
desire or willingness to secure q>ecial and peculiar advantage 
in respect of transit across the Isthmus. In 1826, Mr. Clay, 
then Secretary of State in the Cabinet of John Quincy Adams, 
said, in his instructions to the delegates to the Panama 
Congress of that year: 

If a canal across the Isthmus be opened so as to admit of the passage 
of sea vessds from ocean to ocean, Uie benefit of it ought not to be exclu- 
sively appropriated to any cme nation, but should be extended to all parts 
of the c^obeupcm the payment (rf a just compensation for reasonable toUs. < 

Mr. Cleveland, in his annual message of 1885, said: 

The li^pse oi years has abundantly confirmed the wisdcnn and fbresi^t 
of those eariier administraticMis which, kmg before the conditions of mari- 
time intercourse were changed and enlarged by the progress ct the age, 
jmidaimed the vital need oi interoceanic transit across the A^immr^^ 
Isthmus and consecrated it in advance to the commcm use of mankind 
by their positive dedaraticms and through the formal obligations of 
treaties. Towardsudirealisaticm the efforts of iny administration will be 



224 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

applied, ever bearing in mind the principles cm which it must rest and which 
were declared in no uncertain tones by Mr. Cass, who, while Secretary of 
State in 1858, announced that ** What the United States want in Central 
America nert to the happiness of its people is the security and neutrality 
of the interoceanic routes which lead through it.*' 

By public dedarationsy by the solemn asseverations of our 
treaties with Colombia in 1846, with Great Britain in 1850, 
our treaties with Nicaragua, our treaty with Great Britain in 
1901, our treaty with Panama in 1903, we have presented to 
the world the most unequivocal guaranty of disinterested 
action for the common benefit of mankind and not for our 
selfish advantage. 

In the message which was sent to Congress by President 

Roosevelt on January 4, 1904, explaining the course of this 

Government r^arding the revolution in Panama and the 

making of the treaty by which we acquired all the title that 

we have upon the Isthmus, President Roosevelt said: 

If ever a Government could he said to have received a mandate from 
civili2ati<Hi to effect an object the accomplishment of which was demanded 
in the interest ot mankind, the United States holds that positicm with 
regard to the interoceanic canal. 

Mr. President, there has been much discussion for many 
years among authorities upon international law, as to 
whether artificial canals for the convenience of commerce 
did not partake of the character of natmral passageways to 
such a d^ree that, by the rules of international law, equality 
must be observed in the treatment of mankind by the nation 
which has possession and control* Many very high authori- 
ties have asserted that that rule applies to the Panama Canal 
even without a treaty. We base our title upon the right of 
mankind in the Isthmus, treaty or no treaty. We have long 
asserted, b^inning with Secretary Cass, that the nations of 
Central America had no right to debar the world from its 
right of passage across the Isthmus. Upcm that view, in the 
words which I have quoted from Presidait Rooaevelt's mes* 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 225 

sage to Ckvngress, we base the jiistice of <mr entro 
the Isthmus which resulted in our having the Canal Zone. 
We could not have taken it for our selfish interest; we could 
not have taken it for the pur]>ose of securing an advantage to 
the people of the United States over the other peoples of the 
world. It was only because civilization had its rights to pas- 
sage across the Isthmus, and because we made oursdves the 
mandatory of civilization to assert those rights, that we are 
entitled to be there at all. On the principles which underlie 
our action and upon all the declarations that we have made 
for more than half a century, as well as upcm the express 
and positive stipulations of our treaties, we are forbidden 
to say we have taken the custody of the Canal Zone to 
give oursdves any right of preference over the other civil- 
ized nations of the world, beyond those rights which go 
to the owner of a canal to have the tolls that are charged 
for passage. 

Well, Mr. President, asserting that we were acting for the 
common benefit of mankind, willing to accept no preferential 
right of our own, just as we asserted it to secure the Clayton- 
Bulwer Treaty, just as we asserted it to secure the Hay- 
Pauncefote Treaty, when we had recognized the republic of 
Panama, we made a treaty with her on November 18, 1908. 
I ask your attention now to the provisions of that treaty. In 
that treaty both Panama and the United States recognize the 
fact that the United States was acting, not for its own special 
and selfish interest, but in the interest of mankind. 

The suggestion has been made that we are relieved from 
the obligations of our treaties with Great Britain because the 
Canal Zone is our territory. It is said that, because it has 
become ours, we are entitled to build the canal on our own 
territory and do what we please with it. Nothing can be 
further from the fact. It is not our territory, excq>t in trust. 
Artide two of the treaty with Panama provides: 



9M DiTEBNATiaNAL SUBIBCIS 




and f or DO oClier purpoie — 

of tbe width ol ten milei eitcwfiBg to tlie dblaoee cf tie ] 
iide of the ccotcr BDe of tlie mrte of tfe end to be 4 

The nprfilt of PaaoMi iorther fnntB to the lUted Slatce m 
petnt^ the oee^ cccuptOioa, aad eootvol of aqj other kads i 
ootiide of the sooe abore deKribed niudi may be irrfwij a 
jqit for the congtmctioo^ ■dnteaaaee, operation, wnititinn, end protee- 
tioH dt the aeid camtl or of auj «iiai«y caaib or other worfg iwtm mt y 
and oooTeuient for the oonetnictiont HMiintfiMUicc» opei>iion» nnitatioa* 
and protection ol the Mid cttterpriee. 

Artide three provides: 

The repobUc of Fnaoui gnate to the United Statci all the nghta, 
power, and anthoritj within the sone mentioned and deecribed in article ft 
of thie agreement — 

from which I have just read — 

and within the limitf of all auziliafy lands and waten mentioned and 
deecribed In aaid article ft which the United States would poseeae and 
eierciie if it were the sovereign of the territory within wludi said lands 
and waters are located to the entire ezdusion of the exercise by the 
republic of Panama of any such sovereign rights, power, or authority. 

Artide five provides: 

The republic of Panama grants to the United States in perpetuity a 
monopoly for the constructi<m, maintenance, and operation of any system 
of communication by means of canal or railroad across its territory be- 
tween the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean. 

I now read from artide eighteen: 

The canal, when constructed, and the entrances thereto shall be neutral 
b perpetuity, and shall be opened npoa the terms provided for by section 
1 c^ article 8 of, and in conformity with all the stipulati<His of, the treaty 
entered into by the Governments of the United States and Great Britain 
on November 18, 1901. 

So> Mr. President, far from our bdng relieved of the obliga- 
tions of the treaty with Great Britain by reason of the title 



PANAMA CANAL TOUS 227 

that we have obtained to the Canal Zone, we have taken that 
title impressed with a solemn trust. We have taken it for no 
pmpose excq>t the construction and maintenance of a canal 
in accordance with all the stipulations of our treaty with 
Great Britain. We cannot be false to those stipulations 
without adding to the breach of contract a breach of the trust 
which we have assumed, according to our own dedarations, 
for the benefit of mankind, as the mandatory of civilization. 
In anticipation of the plainly-to-be-foreseen contingenqr of 
our having to acquire some kind of title in order to construct 
the canal, the Hay-Pauncetote Trea^ provided expressly in 
article four: 

It is agreed tbat no diange of tenitorial soveragnty or of intematioiial 
rdatuMiB of the country or countries tra versed by Uie bclbrementioned 
canal shall affect the general principle ol neutralisation or the obligation 
ol the high contracting parties under the present treaty. 

So you will see that the treaty with Great Britain expressly 
provides that its obligations shall continue, no matter what 
title we get to the Canal Zone; and the treaty by which we 
get the title expressly impresses upcm it as a trust the obliga- 
tions of the treaty with Great Britain. How idle it is to say 
that because the Canal Zone is ours, we can do with it what 
we pleasel 

There is another suggestion made regarding the obligations 
of this treaty, and that is that matters relating to the coasting 
trade are matters of special domestic concern, and that no- 
body else has any right to say anything about them. We did 
not think so when we were dealing with the Canadian canals. 
But that may not be conclusive as to rights under this treaty. 
Let us examine it for a moment. 

It is rather poverty of language than a genius for defini- 
tion which leads us to call a voyage from New York to San 
Francisco, passing along countries thousands of miles away 
from our territory, ** coasting trade,'' or to call a voyage 



226 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

The republic of Panama grants to the United States in perpetuity the 
use, oocupation» and control of a aone of land and land under water for 
the constructicHi» maintenance, operation, sanitation, and protection of 
said canal — 

and for no other piupose — 

of the width of ten miles extending to the distance of five miles on eadi 
aide of the center line of the route of the canal to be constructed. . • . 

The republic of Panama further grants to the United States in per- 
petuity the use, occupation, and control of any other lands and waters 
outside of the sone above described which may be necessary and conven- 
ient for the construction, maintenance, operation, sanitation, and protec- 
tion of the said canal or of any auxiliary canab or other works necessary 
and convenient for the constructioin, maintenance, operatioiu sanitation, 
and protection of the said enieqmse. 

Article three provides: 

The republic ci Panama grants to the United States all the rights, 
power, and authority within the sone mentioned and described in article ft 
of this agreement — 

from which I have just read — 

and within the limits of all auxiliary lands and waters mentiooed and 
described in said article 2 which the United States would possess and 
exercise if it were the sovereign of the territory within which said lands 
and waters are located to the entire exdusiiHi of the exercise by the 
republic of Panama of any such sovereign rights, power, or authority. 

Article five provides: 

The republic of Panama grants to the United States in perpetuity a 
monc^xdy for the c(»istruction, maintenance, and operati<Hi of any system 
of cooununication by means of canal or railroad across its territory be- 
tween the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean. 

I novir read from article eighteen: 

The canal, when constructed, and the entrances thereto shall be neutral 
in perpetuity, and shall be opened upcm the terms provided for by section 
1 of artide 8 of, and in conformity with all the stipulaticms of, the treaty 
entered into by the Governments of the United States and Great Britain 
on November IS, 1901. 

So, Mr. President, far from our bdng relieved of the obliga* 
tions of the treaty with Great Britain by reason of the title 



PANAlfA CANAL TOUS 227 

that we have obtained to the Canal Zone» wehave taken that 
title impressed with a solemn trust. We have taken it for no 
purpose excq>t the construction and maintenance of a canal 
in accordance with all the stipulations of our treaty with 
Great Britain. We cannot be false to those stipulations 
without adding to the breach of contract a breach of the trust 
which we have assumed, according to our own declarations, 
for the benefit of mankind, as the mandatory of civilization. 
In anticipation of the plainly-to-be-foreseen contingenqr of 
our having to acquire some kind of title in order to ccmstruct 
the canal, the Hay-Pauncetote Trea^ provided expressly in 
article four: 

It is agreed tbat no diange of tenitorial soveragnty or of intematioiial 
rdatuMiB of the eoimtry <v eoimtries tra veiBed by Uie beforemfaitioned 
canal ahall affect the general principle of neutralization or the obligation 
of the high contracting parties under the present treaty. 

So you will see that the treaty with Great Britain expressly 
provides that its obligations shall continue, no matter what 
title we get to the Canal Zone; and the treaty by which we 
get the title expressly impresses upon it as a trust the obliga- 
tions of the treaty with Great Britain. How idle it is to say 
that because the Canal Zone is ours, we can do with it what 
we pleasel 

There is another suggestion made regarding the obligations 
of this treaty, and that is that matters relating to the coasting 
trade are matters of special domestic concern, and that no- 
body else has any right to say anything about them. We did 
not think so when we were dealing with the Canadian canals. 
But that may not be conclusive as to rights under this treaty. 
Let us examine it for a moment. 

It is rather poverty of language than a genius for defini- 
tion which leads us to call a voyage from New York to San 
Francisco, passing along countries thousands of miles away 
from our territory, ** coasting trade,'' or to call a v<qrage 



9SS INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

from New York to Manila, on the other side of the worid, 
** coasting trade/* When we use the term ** coasting trade,"* 
what we really mean is that mider our navigation laws a voy- 
age which b^ins and ends at an American port has certain 
privileges and immunities and rights, and it is necessarily in 
that sense that the term is used in this statute. It must be 
construed in accordance with our statutes. 

Sir, I do not for a moment dispute that ordinary coasting 
trade is a special kind of trade that is entitled to be treated 
differently from trade to or from distant foreign points. It is 
ordinarily neighborhood trade, from port to port, by which 
the people of a coimtry carry on their intercommunication, 
often by small vessels, poor vessds, carrying cargoes of slight 
value. It would be quite impracticable to impose upon trade 
of that kind the same kind of burdens which great ocean- 
going steamers, trading to the farthest parts of the earth, can 
well bear. We make that distinction. Indeed, Great Britain 
herself makes it, although Great Britain admits all the world 
to her coasting trade. But it is by quite a different basis of 
classification — that is, the statutory basis — that we call a 
voyage from the eastern coast of the United States to the 
Orient a coasting voyage, because it b^ins and ends in an 
American port. 

This is a special, peculiar kind of trade which passes 
through the Panama Canal. You may call it ^^ coasting 
trade," but it is unlike any other coasting trade. It b 
special and peculiar to itself. 

Grant that we are entitled to fix a different rate of tolls for 
that class of trade from that which would be fixed for other 
classes of trade. Ah, yes; but Great Britain has her coasting 
trade through the canal imder the same definition, and 
Mexico has her coasting trade, and Germany has her coasting 
trade, and Colombia has her coasting trade, in the same sense 
thatwehave. You are not at liberty to discriminate in fixing 



PANAlfA CANAL TOLLS 229 

toUs between a voyage from Portland, Maine, to PortJand, 
OregqUf by an American ship, and a voyage from Halifax to 
Victoria in a British ship, or a voyage from V^» Cruz to 
Acapulco in a Mexican ship, because when you do so you 
discriminate, not between coasting trade and other trade, but 
between American ships and British ships, Mexican ships, or 
Colombian ships. That is a violation of the rule of equality 
which we have solemnly adopted, and asserted and reas- 
serted, and to which we are bound by every consideration 
of honor and good faith. Whatever this treaty means, it 
means for that kind of trade as well as for any other kind of 
trade. 

The suggestion has been made, also, that we should not 
consider that the provision in this treaty about equality as to 
tolls really means what it says, because it is not to be sup- 
posed that the United States would give up the right to de- 
fend itself, to protect its own territory, to land its own troops, 
and to send through the canal as it pleases its own ships of 
war. That is disposed of by the considerations which were 
presented to the Senate in the Davis report, to which I have 
already referred, in r^ard to the Suez convention. 

The Suez convention, from which these rules of the Hay- 
Paimcef ote Treaty were taken almost — though not quite — 
textually, contained other provisions which reserved to Tur- 
key and to Egypt, as sovereigns of the territory through 
which the canal passed — Egypt as the sovereign and Tur- 
key as the suzerain over Egypt — all of the rights that per- 
tained to sovereigns for the protection of their own territory. 
As when the Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty was made neither parly 
to the treaty had any title to the region which would be 
traversed by the canal, no such clauses could be introduced. 
But, as was pointed out, the rules which were taken from the 
Suez Canal for the control of the canal management would 
necessarily be subject to these rights of sovereignty which 



280 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

were still to be secured from the countries owning the terri- 
tory. That is recognized by the British Government in the 
note which has been sent to us and has been laid before the 
Senate, or is in the possession of the Senate, from the British 
foreign oflSce* 

In Sir Edward Grey's note of November 14, 1912, he says 
what I am about to read. This is an explicit disclaimer of 
any contention that the provisions of the Hay-Pauncefote 
Treaty exclude us from the same rights of protection of terri- 
tory which Nicaragua or Colombia or Panama would have 
had as sovereigns, and which we succeed to, yro tatUOt by 
virtue of the Panama Canal treaty. 

Sir Edward Grey says: 

I Dotioe that in the course ot the debate in the Senate on the Panama 
Canal bill the argument was used by one of the speekfen that the third, 
fourth* and fifth rules embodied in article 8 of the treaty show that the 
words " all nations '* cannot include the United States, because, if the 
United States were at war, it is impossible to believe that it could be 
intended to be ddbarred by the treaty from using its own teiritoiy for 
revictualling its warships or landing troops. 

The same point may strike others who read nothing but the text of 
the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty itself, and I think it is theref (»e worth while 
that I should luiefly show that this argument is not weU founded. 

I read this not as an argmnent but because it is a formal, 
official disclaimer which is binding. 
Sir Edward Grey proceeds: 

The Hay-Pauncefote Treaty of 1901 aimed at carrying out the principle 
of the neutralisati<Hi of the Panama Canal by subjecting it to the same 
regime as the Sues Canal. Rules 8, 4, and 5 of artide S of the treaty are 
taken almost textually from articles 4» 5» and 6 of the Sues Canal Con- 
vention of 1888. 

At the date of the signature of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty the territory 
on which the Isthmian Canal was to be construct^ did not belong to the 
United States, consequently there was no need to insert in the draft treaty 
provisions coneqxmding to those in artides 10 and 18 of the Sues Canal 
Convention, which preserve the sovereign rights of Turk^ and of Egypt* 
and stipulate that articles 4 and 5 shall not affect the right of Turkey, 
as the local soverdgn, and of Egypt, within the measure of her antoDomy » 



PANAMA CANAL TOII^ 2S1 



to take meh meMnret m may be nec caao ry for Mcming the defense of 
Egypt and the maiiitfinftnce of public order, aad» in the caae of Turkey, 
the deCenfle of her possessions <hi the Bed Sea. 

Now that the United States has become the practical sovereign of the 
canal. His Majestjr^s Government do not question its title to ezerdse 
bdligerent rights for its protecti<m« 

Mr. President, Great Britain has asserted the construction 
of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty of 1901, the arguments for 
which I have been stating to the Senate. I realize, sir, that 
I may be wrong. I have often been wrong. I realize that the 
gentlemen who have taken a different view regarding the 
meaning of this treaty may be right. I do not think so. But 
their ability and fairness of mind would make it idle for me 
not to entertain the possibility that they are right and I am 
wrong. Yet, Mr. President, the question whether they are, 
right and I am wrong depends upon the interpretation of the 
treaty. It depends upon the interpretation of the treaty in 
the light of all the declarations that have been made by the 
parties to it, in the light of the nature of the subject-matt^ 
with which it deals. 

Grentlemen say the question of imposing tolls or not im- 
posing tolls upon our coastwise commerce, is a matto* of our 
concern. Ah! we have made a treaty about it. If the inter- 
pretation of the treaty is as England claims, then it is not a 
matto* of our concern; it is a matter of treaty rights and 
duties. But, sir, it is not a question as to our rights to remit 
tolls to our commerce. It is a question whether we can im- 
pose tolls upon British commerce when we have remitted 
them from our own. That is the question. Nobody disputes 
our rights to allow our own ships to go through the canal 
without paying tolls. What is disputed is our right to charge 
tolls against other ships when we do not charge them against 
our own. That is, pure and simple, a question of interna- 
tional right and duty, and dq>ends upcm the interpretation 
of the treaty. 



«32 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Sir, we have another treaty, made between the United 

States and Great Britain on April 4, 1908, in which the two 

nations have agreed as follows: 

DiflFereiioes which may arise o( a legal nature or idatiog to the inter- 
pietatkm of treaties existing between the two ocmtracting parties and 
which it may not have been possible to settle by diplomacy, shall be 
referred to the Permanent Court of Arbitrati<Hi established at Hie 
Hague by the convention ot July 29» 1899, provided, neverthdess, that 
they do not aflfect the vital interests, the independence, or the honor 
of the two co n tract in g states, and do not concern the interests of third 
parties. 

Of course, the question of the rate of tolls on the Panama 
Canal does not affect any nation's vital interests. It does not 
affect the independence or the honor of either of these con- 
tracting states. We have a difference relating to the interpre- 
tation of this treaty, and that is all there is to it. We are 
boimd, by this treaty of arbitration, not to stand with arro- 
gant assertion upon our own Government's opinion as to the 
interpretation of the treaty, not to require that Great Britain 
shall suffer what she deems injustice by violation of the 
treaty, or else go to war. We are bound to say, ** We keep 
the faith of our treaty of arbitration, and we will submit the 
question as to what this treaty means to an impartial tribunal 
of arbitration.'' 

Mr. President, if we stand in the position of arrogant re- 
fusal to submit the questions arising upon the interpretation 
of this treaty to arbitration, we shall not only violate our 
solemn obligation, but we shall be false to all the principles 
that we have asserted to the world, and that we have urged 
upon mankind. We have been the apostle of arbitration. 
We have been urging it upon the other civilized nations. 
Presidents, secretaries of state, ambassadors, and ministers 
— aye. Congresses, the Senate and the House, all branches 
of our Government have conunitted the United States to the 
principle of arbitration irrevocably, unequivocally» and we 



PANABCA CANAL TOLLS 1288 

have urged it in season and out of seascm on the rest d 
mankind. 

Sir» I cannot detain the Senate by mofe than beginning 
upon the expressions that have come from our Grovemment 
upon this subject, but I will ask your indulgence while I call 
your attention to a few selected from the others. 

On Jime 9, 1874» the Senate Conmiittee on Foreign Rela- 
tions reported and the Senate adopted this resolution: 

Reiohed, That tbe United States having at heart the cause of peace 
everywhere, and hoping to hdp its permanent estahliahment between 
nations, hereby recommend the adoption of arintration as a great and 
practical method for the determination of international difference, to be 
maintained sincerdy and in good faith, so that war may cease to be 
r^^arded as a proper form of trial between nations. 

On Jime 17, 1874, the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the 

House adopted this resolution: 

Whereas, War is at all times destructive of the material interests <rf a 
people, demoralizing in its tendencies, and at variance with an enlightened 
public sentiment; and whereas, differencea between natians should in the 
interests qf kamomiby and fraUmity he adjusted^ if possible, by iniemoHonal 
arbitralum: therefore, 

Resolvedy That the people of the United States being devoted to the 
policy of peace with dl mankind, enjoining its blessings and hoping for 
its permanence and its universal adoption, hereby through their repre- 
sentati ves in Congress reconunend such arbitration as a rational substitute 
for war; and they further recommend to the treaty-making power of the 
Government to provide, if practicable, that hereafter in treaties made 
between the United States and foreign powers war shall not be declared 
by either of the contracting parties against the other u^til efforts shall have 
been made to ad just all alleged cause of difference by impartial arbitration. 

On the same June 17, 1874, the Senate adopted this resolu- 
tion: 

Resobed, etc.. That tbe President of the United States is hereby au- 
thOTised and requested to negotiate with all civilised powers who may be 
willing to enter into such negotiations for the establishment of an inter- 
national c^ystem whereby matters in dispute between different Govern- 
ments agreeing thereto may be adjusted by arbitration, and, if possible, 
without recourse to war. 



284 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

On June 14, 1888, and again on Fdbruaiy 14, 1800, the 
Senate and the House adopted a ooncoirent resolution in the 
words which I now read: 

Retobedbythe Senate (the HtnuecfBepreeentatimieonewring), That the 
Presideiit be, and is hereby, requested to invite, from time to time, as fit 
occasions may arise, negotiaticMis with any Government with whidi the 
United States has, <v may have, diplomatic relations, to the end that any 
differences or disputes arising between the two Governments which cannot 
be adjusted by diplomatic agency may be referred to arbitration and be 
peaceably adjusted by such means. 

This was concurred in by the House on April 8, 1800. 

Mr. President, in pursuance of those declarations by both 
Houses of Congress, the Presidents and the Secretaries of 
State and the diplomatic agents of the United States, doing 
their bounden duty, have been urging arbitration upon the 
people of the world. Our representatives in The Hague Con- 
ference of 1899, and in The Hague Conference of 1907, and 
in the Pan-American Conference in Washington, and in the 
Pan-American Conference in Mexico, and in the Pan-Ameri- 
can Conference in Rio de Janeiro, were instructed to luge 
and did urge and pledge the United States in the most im- 
equivocal and lurgent terms to support the principle of 
arbitration upon all questions capable of being submitted 
to a tribunal for a decision. 

Under those instructions, Mr. Hay addressed the people 
of the entire civilized world with the request to come into 
treaties of arbitration with the United States. Here was. his 
letto*. After quoting from the resolutions and from espres- 
sions by the President he said: 

Moved by these views, the President has diarged me to instruct you 
to ascertain whether the Government to which you are accredited* which 
he has reaaoa to bdieve is equaOy desirous of advancing the prindide ot 
international arbitration, is willing to condude with the Government of 
the United States an arbitration treaty ot like tenor to the arrangement 
cooduded between Fnnoe and Great Britain on October li» 1005. 



PANAlfA CANAL TOLLS 985 

That was the origin of this treaty. The treaties made by 
Mr. Hay were not satisfactory to the Senate because of the 
question about the participation of the Senate in the niake-up 
of the special agreement of submission. Mr. Hay's successor 
modified that on conference with the C<munittee on Fweign 
Rdations of the Senate, and secured the assent of the other 
countries of the world to the treaty with that modification. 
We have made twenty-five of these treaties of arbitration, 
covering the greater part of the woxid, under the direction of 
the Senate of the United States and the House of Represen- 
tatives of the United States and in accordance with the 
traditional policy of the United States, holding up to the 
worid the principle of peaceful arbitration. 

One of these treaties is here, and under it Great Britain is 
demanding that the question as to what the true interpreta- 
tion of our treaty about the canal is, shall be submitted to 
decision and not be made the subject of war or of submission 
to what she deems injustice to avoid war. 

In response to the last resolution which I have read, the 
concurrent resolution passed by the Senate and the House 
requesting the President to enter into the negotiations which 
resulted in these treaties of arbitration, the British House of 
Commons passed a resolution accepting the overture. On 
July 16, 1898, the House of Coiomons adopted this resolution: 

Resobfed^ That this House has learnt with satisfaction that both Houses 
ol the United States Congress have, by resdution, requested the President 
to invite from time to time» as fit occasions may arise* negotiations with 
any government with which the United States have or may have diplo- 
matic relations^ to the end that any differences or disputes arising between 
the two governments which cannot be adjusted by diplomatic agency may 
be referred to arbitration and peaceably adjusted by such means, and 
that this House, cordially sympathising with the purpose in view, expresses 
the hope that Her Majesty's Government will lend their ready co<)peration 
to the Government 61 the United States wpoa the basis of the foregoing 
resolution. 

Her Majesty's Government did, and thence came this treaty. 



286 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Mr. President, what revoltiiig hypocrisy we convict our- 
selves of » if after all this, the first time there comes up a ques- 
tion in which we have an interest, the first time there comes 
up a question of difference about the meaning of a treaty as 
to which we fear we may be beaten in an arbitration, we re- 
fuse to keep OUT agreement! Where will be our self-respect 
if we do that ? Where will be that respect to which a great 
nation is entitled from the other nations of the earth ? 

I have read from what Congress has said. Let me read 
something from President Grant's annual message of Decem- 
ber 4, 1871. He is commenting upon the arbitration provi* 
sions of the treaty of 1871, in which Great Britain submitted 
to arbitration our claims against her, known as the Alabama 
Claims, in which Great Britain submitted those claims where 
she stood possibly to lose but not possibly to gain anything, 
and submitted them against the most earnest and violent 
protest of many of her own citizens. President Grant said : 

The year has been an eventful <Hie in witnessing two great nations 
speaking one language and having one lineage, settling by peaceful arbi- 
tration disputes of long standing and liable at any time to bring those 
nations into costly and bloody conflict. An example has been set which, 
if successful in its final issue, may be followed by other civilised nations 
and finally be the means <^ returning to productive industry millimi'^ of 
men now maintained to settle the disputes of nations by the bay<Hiet and 
by broadside. 

Under the authority of these resolutions, our delegates 
in the first Pan-American Conference at Washington secured 
the adoption of this resolution April 18, 1890: 

Articlb 1. The republics ot North, Central, and South America 
herdby adc^t arbitration as a principle of American international law for 
the settlement of the differences, disputes, or controversies that may arise 
between two ot more of them. 

And this: 

The Inteniational American Conference resdves that this eonfefence, 
having recommended arbitratioQ for the 8ett(emeiit of diqiutes amokig the 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS «37 

lepmbScs of Amerio^ begs leaTe to apreai the wish that oontrovenies 
between them and the nations of Europe may be settled in the same 
friendly manner. 

It is further reconmiended that the Crovemment of each nation herein 
represented communicate this wish to all friendly powers. 

Upon that Mr. Blaine, that most vigorous and virile 
American, in his address as the presiding officer of that first 
Pan-American Conference in Washington said: 

U » in this closing hour, the Conference had but one deed to celebrate 
we should daie call the world's attention to the deliberate, confident, 
solemn dedication of two great continents to peace and to the prosperity 
which has peace for its foundation. We hold up this new Magna Charta, 
which abolishes war and substitutes arbitration between the American 
republics, as the first and great fruit ot the International American Con- 
ference. That noblest of Americans, the aged poet and philanthropist, 
Whittier, is the fiirst to send his salutation and his benediction, declaring, 
*' If in the spirit of peace the American conference agrees upon a rule of 
arbitration which shall make war in this hemi^here well-nigh impossible, 
its sessions will prove one ci the most impwtant events in the history of 
the world.'* 

President Arthur in his annual message of December 4, 
1882, said, in discussing the proposition for a Pan-American 
Conference: 

I am unwilling to dismiss this subject without assuring you of my 
support of any measure the wisdom of Congress may devise for the 
promotion of peace on this continent and throughout the world, and I 
trust the time is nigh when, with the universal assent of civilized peoples, 
all international differences shall be determined without resort to arms by 
the benignant processes of arbitration. 

President Harrison in his message of December 8, 1889, 
said concerning the Pan-American Conference: 

But while the commercial results which it is hoped will follow this 
Conference are worthy of pursuit and oi the great interests they have 
ezdted, it is believed that the crowning benefit will be found in the better 
securities which may be devised for the maintenance of peace among all 
American nations and the settlement of all contentions by methods that 
a Christian civilisatiiHi can i^iprove. 



288 INTEBNATiONAL SUBJECTS 

President GeveUnd, in his menage of December 4, 1808, 

said* ooncaning the resolution of the British Parliament of 

July 16» 189S» which I have already read» and commenting on 

the concurrent resolution of February 14 and April 18, 1890: 

It affords me aignal jdeMore to lay this pariiamentary reaolutkm before 
the Congress and to express my smcere gratificatioii that the sentiment of 
two great kindred nations is thus authoritatively manifested in favor of 
the rational and peaceabk settiement of international quarrels by honor* 
aUe resort to arbitration* 

President McEjnley, in his message of December 6, 1897, 

said: 

Inteniational arbitration cannot be omitted bom the list oi subjects 
claiming our consideration. Events have only served to strengthen the 
general views on this question expressed in my inaugural address. The 
best sentiment of the civilized world is moving toward the settiement 
of differences between nations without resorting to the horrors ol war. 
Treaties embodying these humane principles on broad lines without in 
any way imperiling our interests or our honor shall have my omstant 
encouragement. 

President Roosevelt, in his message of December 8» 1905, 
said: 

I eamestiy hc^ that the G)nf etenoe — 
the second Hague Conference — 

may be able to devise some way to make arbitration between nations the 
custonuiry way ct settling international disputes in all save a few dasses 
of cases, which should themsdves be sharply defined and rigidly limited 
as the present governmental and social devdopment of the wcHrld will 
permit. If possible, there should be a general arbitration treaty negotiated 
among all nations represented at the Conference. 

O Mr. Prejndent, are we Pharisees ? Have we been insin- 
cere and false ? Have we been pretending in all these long 
years of resolution and declaration and proposal and urgenpy 
for arbitration ? Are we ready now to admit that our coun- 
try, that its Congresses and its Prejndents, have all been 
guilty of false pretense, of humbug, of talking to the gal- 
leries, of fine words to secure applause, and that the instant 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 289 

we have an interest we are ready to falsify every declaration, 
every promise, and every principle ? But we must do that 
if we arrogantly insist that we alone will determine upcm the 
interpretation of this treaty and will refuse to abide by the 
agreement of our treaty of arbitration. 

Mr. President, what is all this for ? Is the game worth the 
candle ? Is it worth while to put ourselves in a position and 
to remain in a position, to maintain which we may be driven 
to repudiate our principles, our professions, and our agree- 
ments for the purpose of conferring a money benefit — not 
vary great, not vary important, but a money benefit — at the 
expense of the Treasury of the United States, upon the most 
highly and absolutely protected q>ecial industry in the 
United States ? Is it worth while ? We refuse to help our 
foreign shipping, which is in competition with the lower wages 
and the lower standard of living of foreign countries, and we 
are proposing to do this for a part of our coastwise shipping 
which has now by law the absolute protection of a statutory 
monopoly and which needs no help. 

Mr. Prejndent, there is but one alternative consistent with 
self-respect. We must arbitrate the interpretation of this 
treaty or we must retire from the position we have taken. 

O Senators, consider for a moment what it iy that we are 
doing. We all love our country; we are all proud of its his- 
tory; we are all full of hope and courage for its future; we 
love its good name; we desire for it that power among the 
nations of the earth which will enable it to accomplish still 
greater things for civilization than it has acconq>lished in its 
noble past. Shall we make ourselves in the minds of the 
world like unto the man who in his own community is marked 
as astute and cunning to get out of his obligations? Shall we 
make ourselves like unto the man who is known to be false 
to his agreemaits; false to his pledged word? Shallwehave 
it understood the whole world over that ** you must look out 



240 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

for the United States or she wiU get the advantage of you **; 
that we are clever and cunning to get the better of the other 
party to an agreement, and that at the end — 

Mt. Bbandbgsb. ** Slippery '* would be a better word* 

Mr.RooT. Yes; I thank the S^iator for the suggestion — 
^' slippery/' Shall we in our generation add to those dauns 
to honor and respect that our fathers have established for our 
country good cause that we shall be considered slippery ? 

It is worth while, Mr. Prejndent, to be a citizen of a great 
country, but size alone is not enough to make a country great* 
A country must be great in its ideab; it must be great- 
hearted; it must be noble; it must despise and reject all 
smallness and meanness; it must be faithful to its word; it 
must keep the faith of treaties; it must be faithful to its 
mission of civilization in order that it shall be truly great* 
It is because weWieve that of our country that we are proud, 
aye, that the alien with the first st^ of his foot upon our soil 
is proud to be a part of this great democracy. 

Let us put aside the idea of small, petty advantage; let us 
treat this situation and these obligations in our relation to 
this canal in that large way which befits a great nation* 

Mr. President, how sad it would be if we were to dim the 
splendor of t^at great achievement by drawing across it the 
mark of petty selfishness; if we were to diminish and reduce 
for generations to come the power and influence of this free 
republic for the uplifting and the progress of mankind by 
destroying the respect of mankind for us! How sad it would 
be if you and I, S^iators, were to make ourselves responsible 
for destroying that bright and inspiring ideal which has 
enabled free America to lead the ?^rld in progress toward 
liberty and justicel 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 

SPEECH IN BEPLY IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES 

MAY 81, 1914 

Tbe Senate* ai in Committee of tlie Whole* had mider consideration the biH 
(H. B. IASS5) to amend section 5 of an act to provide for the c^iening, maintenance^ 
protection, and <^>eration of the Fknama Canal and the sanitation of the Canal 
Zone, ai^wored August 24, 1912. 

MR. PRESIDENT, some time ago I taxed the patience 
of the Senate by rather extended remarks upon the 
duty of the United States in r^ard to tolls upon the Panama 
Canal; and what I have to say now upon that subject is 
rather in the way of reply to arguments which have been 
made, views which have been expressed, and opinions which 
have been made manifest by various Senators in the course 
of the long debate which has intervened. 

I wish, before proceeding, to express my very great satis- 
faction with the character of the debate in this Chamber 
upon this subject. The excitement and fervor of a false 
patriotism, the insolence and rancor which ill befit the con- 
sideration of a serious international subject by a great people, 
but which have been injected into the popular discussion of 
this question in some quarters, have found but littie response 
among the members of the Senate of the United States. The 
question which is before us has been debated with a sense of 
responsibility and dignity. S^iators have argued the ques- 
tion as lawyers and legislators upon its merits. I address 
myself to a reply to some of the arguments which have heeai 
made with a sense of serene satisfaction in dealing with a 
question which rests in the minds of my colleagues upon 
considerations of right reason and just r^ard for national 
obligations and national rights. 

f41 



242 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Let me try, sir, to state the question; aad to state the ques- 
tion, I must state the situation as it is presented. The bill 
which is before the Senate proposes to repeal certain clauses 
of the Panama Canal Act passed August 24, 1912. That act 
was designed to provide for the opening, maintenance, pro- 
tection, and operation of the canal, and it conferred authority 
upon the President in respect of establishing tolls for the use 
of the canal and imposed certain limitations upon him. Sec- 
tion five of the act authorized the President to prescribe and 
from time to time change the tolls; it provided *^ that no 
tolls, when prescribed as above, shall be changed ** without 
six months' notice; it provided that no tolls shall be levied 
upon vessels engaged in the coastwise trade of the United 
States. Further, the act provided: 

When based up(Mi net registered tcmnage for aidps ct oommeree, the 
tolls shall not exceed $1.25 per net registered ton, nor be less, other than 
for vessels of the United States and its citizens, than the estimated pro- 
portionate cost of the actual maintenance and operaticm of the canal. 

Then it goes on to say: 

Nor be less than the equivalent of seventy-five cents per net registered 
ton. 

So that the President is authorized to impose tolls not ex- 
ceeding $1.25 per net registered ton, except for vessels of the 
United States and its citizens, and not less than seventy-five 
cents per net registered ton, and is prohibited from imposing 
any tolls upon vessels engaged in the coastwise trade of the 
United States. He is required to impose tolls of at least 
seventy-five cents per net registered ton upon all foreign 
vessels. He is authorized to impose no tolls upon any Ameri- 
can vessel, and is required to impose no tdls upon American 
vessels engaged in the coastwise trade. 

The President has issued a proclamation imposing tolls of 
$1.20 per net registered ton upon vessels loaded, a smaller 
amount upon vessels in ballast, and no tolls upon vessds en- 



PANAIIA CANAL TOLLS 248 

gaged in Ammcan coastwise trade* A question has been 
raised by Great Britain as to the conformity of that action 
with a treaty made between the United States and Great 
Britain in 1901, known as the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty. It is 
claimed that that treaty requires that there shall be no dis- 
crimination between the tolls imposed upon foreign vessels 
and the tolls imposed upon vessels owned by citizens of the 
United States. 

The first thing which we naturally do when such a question 
is presented is to inquire: What is our title ? What are the 
rights that we have ? 

Until very recently the Isthmus of Panama was not the 
property of the United States, and we had no rights there 
except certain rights derived from an old treaty with New 
Granada, made in 1846, by which New Granada gave to the 
United States certain privil^es in any lines of communica- 
tion which might be constructed, either railroad or canal, but 
gave the United States no right to construct a canal and no 
property rights whatever. 

How did we get the canal upon which we are proposing to 
exact tolls ? It was under a treaty made with the rq>ublic 
of Panama, sometimes called the Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty. 
It was signed at Washington on November 18, 1903. Under 
that treaty with Panama, the owner of the Isthmus, by 
article two — 

granted to the United States in perpetuity tlie uae, occupation^ and 
contrd ol a zone of land and land under water, for the construction, 
maintenance, <^>eratiQn, sanitation, and protection of said canal, of the 
width of ten miles — 

and so forth. By article three it granted to the United 
States all the rights, power, and authority which the 
United States would possess and exercise if it were the 
sovereign of the territory, to the exclusion of Panama. In 
article eighte^i it provided that — 



244 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

The canal, whoiooDstructed, and theentranoei thereto, shall be neutral 
in popetuity and shall be opened iqxm the terms provided for by section 1 
of article 8 of, and in conformity with all the stipulations of, the treaty 
entered into by the Governments of the United States and Great Britain 
on November 18, 11K)1. 

That treaty with Panama is the basis of our rights. That 
treaty lies at the foundation of any question that can be 
raised as to what we do with the canal which we are con- 
structing, because it is by that treaty, and by that treaty 
alone, that we get our title. By that treaty the grant of 
property and jurisdiction upon which we have proceeded, 
upon which we hold the canal, is subject to the provision that 
the canal, when constructed, and the entrances thereto, shall 
be neutral in perpetuity, and shall be opened upon the terms 
provided for by the treaty between the United States and 
Great Britam of November 18, 1901. 

So the treaty with Great Britam which is referred to here is 
carried into our title as a limitation upon it. 

Let us turn to the treaty with Great Britam which is re- 
ferred to by Panama in this grant. That treaty was signed 
at Washington November 18, 1901. It recites that a con- 
vention was considered expedient by the United States and 
Great Britain — 

to facilitate the construction of a ship canal to connect the Atlantic and 
PadjBc Oceans, by whatever route may be ccMisidered expedient, and to 
that end to remove any objection which may arise out oi the convention 
of April 19, 1850, commonly called the Qayton-Bulwer Treaty . • . 
without impairing the ** general prindide ** of neutralization estaUished 
in article 8 ol that convention. 

It proceeds to say: 

The canal may be constructed under the auspices of the Govenmient 
ct the United States, either directly at its own cost, or by gift or loan of 
money to individuals or coiporatioiis, or through subocripticm to or pur- 
chase of stock or shares, and that, subject to the i»ovisions ol the fnesent 
treaty, the said Government shall have and enjoy all the rights incident 
to such construction, as wdl as the exclusive right of providing for the 
regulation and management of the canaL 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 245 

It then proceeds with artide three: 

The United States adopts as the basb ct the neiitrali«ation oi such ship 
canal the following rules* substantially as embodied in the Conventicm of 
Constantinople, signed October 28, 1888, for the free navigation of the 
Sues Canal; that is to say: 

1. The canal shall be free and ctpea to the vessels of commerce and of 
war ci all nations observing these rules on terms of entire equality, so 
that there shall be no discrimination against any such nati<m, or its citisens 
or subjects, in respect of the conditions or charges of traffic or otherwise. 
Such conditions and charges of traffic shall be just and equitable. 

Rule 1, which I have just read, is the section 1 of artide 8 
of the treaty with Great Britain, which is specified in the 
eighteenth artide of our grant of title from Panama as being 
especially and peculiarly and signally incumbent upon us to 
observe. ."' The canal/* says the treaty with Panama, ** when 
constructed, and the entrances thereto, shall be neutral in 
perpetuity and shall be opened upon the terms provided for 
by section 1 of artide 3 ** of the treaty with Great Britam. 

I have now read secticm 1 of artide 3. There follows, then, 
in artide 3, a series of provisions relating specifically to the 
kind of neutrality which shall be imposed. They are in sub- 
stance these: 

First. There shall be no blodcade of the canal or act of war 
in it or in its terminal waters. 

Second. There shall be no delay in transit in time of waf 
by a belligerent. 

Third. No troops or supplies in time of war shaH be landed 
or taken on by vessels in the canal. 

Fourth. Belligerent ships shall remain but twenty-four 
hours in the terminal waters. 

Fifth. A war vessd of one belligerent shall not leave the 
canal within twenty-four hours after the vessd of another 
belligerent has left. 

All of those are covered by the general provision of the 
artide in the treaty with Panama in these words: 



246 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

And in oonf wmity with all the stipukticxis of the treaty entered into 
by the Governments of the United ^ates and Great Britain. 

Under these provisions, first, of the Panama treaty, and, 
second, of the treaty with Great Britain, which is incor- 
porated into the grant of title to us, one question, and one 
question only, is raised. That is : What is the measure of the 
tolls that we are at liberty to charge a ship belonging to a 
British or Grerman or French citizen passing through the 
canal ? 

It is quite natural to say that this is a question of the ex- 
emption of our ships. It is not a question of the exemption 
of our ships. No one doubts our right to pass our ships 
through the canal free, or for any toUs that we choose to 
impose and that they are able and willing to pay. The ques- 
tion is whether we are bound to take our treatment of the 
ships belonging to American citizens as the measure of the 
treatment that we accord to ships belonging to the citizens of 
other countries. 

We have the canal at the Sault, through which pass a 
greater tonnage and a greater traffic than we can anticipate 
for the Panama Canal for generations. We charge no tolls to 
American vessels — that is to say, vessels owned by Ameri- 
can citizens — passing through the canal at the Sault; and 
by treaty we grant to the citizens of Great Britain and 
Canada the same treatment we accord to our own citizens 
and their vessels. We have agreed that the measure that we 
mete to our own citizens shall be the measure we mete to the 
citizens of Canada. Tliere is no question there about our 
rights with our own, and there is no question here about 
our rights with our own. 

Nor, Mr. President, is there any question here about the 
absolute and complete control of the canal by the United 
States. There is no question, there can be no question, about 
it. PoUtical control, miUtary control, administrative controU 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 247 

all are ours. The only question is. What standard are we 
bound to apply in making a charge to the citizens of another 
country for the use of the canal for passing the ships through? 
The treaty itself is quite dear. It says: 

Subject to the proviskniA of the present treaty, the said Goyemment 
shall have and enjoy all the rights incident to such construction* as well 
as the exclusive right of providing for the regulation and management of 
thecanaL 

We occupy a variety of relations to that business. We 
are the practical sovereign of the territory, and we have 
all the rights of sovereignty in respect of the territory. 
We are the owner of the canal just as a canal company 
would be the owner if it had constructed it under a charter, 
just as the Panama Railroad Company owns the Panama 
Railroad. We shall be the owner of many ships that pass 
through the canal. We owe protection to many citizens of 
the United States who will own ships that pass through 
the canal. 

Those four different relations of the United States to this 
business stand each by itself, and the rights and obligations 
of each may be clearly ascertained and stated. Sometimes a 
dual quality will effect an extinguishment of rights and obli- 
gations, as, for instance, if the United States as the owner of a 
ship sends its ship through a canal and is also the owner of 
the canal, the obligation as owner of the ship to the owner 
of the canal will be offset; but for any dear conception of 
what the rights and obligations are, we must consider each 
character in which the United States stands by itself. 

It would be impossible to state more distinctly the precise 
relation that we have in r^ard to the control of the canal 
than Mr. Choate stated it in his letter of October 2, 1901, to 
Mr. Hay, wh^i the treaty was agreed upon. He said: 

I am sure that in this whole matter, since the receipt by him of your 
new draft. Lord Lansdowne has been most considerate and mote than 



248 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

generous. He has shown an earnest desire to bring to an amicable settle- 
ment, honorable alike to both parties, this long and important eontro- 
versy between the two nations. In substance, he abrogates the Clayton- 
Bulwer Treaty, gives us an American canal — ours to bufld as and where 
we like, to own, control, and govern — <m the sole condition oi its bong 
always neutral and free for the passage of the ships of all nations on equal 
terms, exoept that if we get into a war with any naticm we can shut its 
ships out and take care of oursdves. 

Nor is there any question here about ships owned by the 
United States. There is much oonfusicm in discussing this 
subject, arising from the use of the term ** ships of the United 
States '* or ^* American ships/* The Sqiator from Mississippi 
[Mr. Williams] called attention to that the othar day very 
pointedly. There are ships owned by the United States. 
When the United States acquires the other character of 
owner of the canal, of course there can be no question about 
tolls on those ships; but ships owned by citizens of the 
United States are quite a different thing. Citizens of the 
United States are not the United States. They are aepante 
and distinct entities. We tax them, we regulate them, we 
fine them, we impose charges upon them. If they acquire 
property from the United States, they pay for it, and if the 
United States acquires property from them, it pays for it. 
They are entirely sq>arate and distinct individuab from the 
United States. The questicm here is about charges that shall 
be made by the United States to two different classes of 
separate and distinct individuab, both classes being the 
owners of ships, one dass being citizens of the United States 
and the other dass being dtizens of some other country. 

The words of this Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, Mr. President, 
are framed to cover both a canal company and the United 
States. Observe that artide 2 of the Hay-Pauncefote 
Treaty says: 

It is agreed tbat the canal may be eoostnieted under the ampiees of 
the Govenunent of the United States, either directly at its own cost or 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 249 

by gift or lotn of money to indiyiduaLi or ooipormtioiis* or tbrough sub- 
scriptioii to or purchaae ol atodc at shares, and that, subject to the pro- 
viakHis of the present treaty, the said Government shall have and enjoy — 

and so forth. 

Now, there is a variety of oontrngendes to which the wcmxIs 
of this treaty are addressed, and you must construe the words 
as they would apply to a canal company in which the Gov- 
ernment of the United States had become a stockholder, as 
it is of the Panama Railroad Company today, or the bonds of . 
which the United States has guaranteed, as it guaranteed the 
bonds of the Pacific railroad companies. The fact that the 
United States has stuped in and itself taken the character 
of a canal company makes no difference whatever in the 
meaning and force and interpretation and application of 
these words. The treaty remains the same, the meaning of it 
the same. The acquisition of additional and different rights 
by the United States may arise merely to modify the effect of 
the application of the treaty. 

Nor, Mr. President, is there any question here about the 
right of the United States to subsidize its own ships. That is 
as dear and as unquestionable as its right to appropriate 
money to put up a public building in the dty of Washington. 
It does not rest upon our assertion, for Sir Edward Gr^, the 
secretary of state for fordgn affairs of Great Britain, in his 
memorandum handed to our Secretary of State on Decem- 
ber 9, 1912, says, commenting upon Preddent Taft's memo- 
randum accompanying the signature to the bill — 

The President argues upcm the a8sunq>tion that it is the intention of 
Hb Majesty's Government to i^aoe upon the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty an 
interpretation which would prevent the United States from granting sub- 
sidies to their own shipping passing through the canal* and which would 
I^aoe them at a disadvantage as compared with other nations* This fa 
not the case. His Majesty's Government regard equality of all nations 
as the fundamental principle underlying the treaty of 1001 in the same 
way that it was the basb of the Suez Canal convention ol 1888» and th^ 
do not seek to deprive the United States of any liberty which is opea 



250 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

other to themadyes or to any other natioii; nor do th^ find either in 
the letter or in the spirit oi the Hay-Paunoef ote IVeaty any surrender by 
either of the cimtracting powers ol the right to encourage its shq^ung or 
its commeroe by such suMdies as it may deem expedient. 

I take the line to be at the point where title to the money 
vests in the United States. If the construction which I fed 
forced to give to this treaty is a sound one, we are not at 
liberty to produce the result of a subsidy to American ships 
by relieving them of tolls which we impose upon other ships. 
We are not at liberty to produce the effect of a subsidy in 
that way; but the instant that the money paid for tolls be- 
comes the property of the United States, becomes a part of 
the general fund of the United States, the United States has 
absolute and uncontrollable authority in the disposition of 
that money. All lawyers are familiar with the distinction 
between accomplishing an unlawful object in a lawful way 
and accomplishing a lawful object in an unlawful way. To 
subsidize American ships is lawful. However we may differ 
about the policy, we have the power; we have the right; but 
if the construction I give to this treaty is the correct one, we 
have excluded ourselves by solemn covenant from accom- 
plishing that lawful result in this particular way; and if it be 
true that we have excluded ourselves from doing it in this 
particular way, it is no answer to say the same result could 
be accomplished in another way. In my view it is no concern 
of ours why Great Britain chooses to insist upon our keeping 
the covenant and not to produce the effect of a subsidy in 
that particular way. If this construction of the treaty is 
right, she has a right to say, '' You shall not do that thing in 
that way ""; and if we made the covenant, it is none of our 
affairs why she chooses to say it. 

Now, upon what conflict of reasons rests the decision of the 
question whether we are bound to rq^ate the tolls upon 
foreign shipping by the tolls on American shipping ? The 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 251 

underlying question has been stated quite frequently as being 
whether the words ** all nations ** in rule 1 of article 3 include 
the United States or not. Rule 1 reads: 

The canal ahaU be free and ctpea to the vessels of commerce and war oi 
all natioDs observing these rules on terms ol entire equality. 

I say that very often the subject has been discussed upon 
the assumption that the answer to the practical question 
raised depends upon whether the term " all nations " in- 
cludes the United States or not. That does not get to the 
foundation upon which the reasoning should rest. The 
fundamental question is» What kind of equality did the 
makers of this treaty intend ? Says the treaty: 

The canal ahaU be free and open to all vessels of commerce and war 
of all nations observing these rules on terms of entire equality. 

When a French or a German ship sails into that canal and 
has imposed upon it a toll» and says» " this toll is unequal be- 
cause the vessel that passed here immediately before me was 
allowed to go with a lower rate of toll/' can that be said, if 
the vessel before was an American ship — 

Mr. Williams. The ship of an American citizen. 

Mr. Root. The ship of an American citizen; or can it be 
said only if it was the ship of some foreign power ? What is 
the ^' entire equality ** contemplated by rule 1 of article S of 
this treaty ? Is it entire so that it assures equality in com- 
parison with all ships engaged in the same trade similarly 
situated, the same kind of trade, or is it partial, so as to be 
equality in comparison only with certain ships engaged in the 
same kind of trade and not applying to other ships engaged in 
the same kin d of trade, to wit, not applying to ships which are 
owned by American citizens ? The rule proceeds: 

So that there shall be no discrimination against any such nation or its 
dtisens or subjects in respect ol the conditions or charges of traffic or 
otherwise. 



252 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Is the kind of equality that is assured such that there wiH 
be no discrimination, or that there will be no diserimmation 
except against the ships of other nations and in f avw of ships 
belonging to American citizens ? 

Now, let us examine the question in the light of the circum- 
stances which surroimded the making of this treaty and the 
conditions imder which it was made. Treaties cannot be use- 
fully interpreted with the microscope and the dissecting 
knife, as if they were criminal indictments. Treaties are 
steps in the life and the development of great nations. Pub- 
lic policies enter into them; public policies certified by public 
documents and authentic expressions of public officers. Long 
contests between the representatives of nations enter into the 
choice and arrangement of the words of a treaty. If you 
would be sure of what a treaty means, if there be any doubt, 
if there are two interpretations suggested, learn out of what 
conflicting public policies the words of the treaty had their 
birth; what arguments were made for one side or the other, 
what concessions were yielded in the making of a treaty. 
Always, with rare exceptions, the birth and development of 
every important clause may be traced by the authentic rec- 
ords of the negotiators and of the coimtries which are recon- 
ciling their differences. So it is the universal rule in all 
diplomatic correspondence regarding international rights, in 
all courts of arbitration, that far more weight is given to 
records of negotiations, to the expressions of the n^otiators» 
to the history of the provisions than is customary in r^ard to 
private contracts or criminal indictments. 

This question as to the kind of equality that the makers of 
this treaty intended to give, divides itself very clearly and 
distinctly into a question between two perfectly well-known 
expedients of treaty making; one is the favored-nation pro- 
vision, with which we are all very familiar in commercial 
treaties, and the other b the provision according to citizens of 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 258 

another country rights measui^ by the rights of the natioi^ 
or citizens of the contracting country. The most-favored-na- 
tion provision has its most common expression in the provi- 
sion regarding tariff duties, a provision that no higher duties 
shall becharged upon goods imported from one foreign country 
than upon goods imported from other foreign countries. That 
is the common "' most-favored-nation dause.'' 

The other has its probably most common provision in the 
laws relating to the treatment of vessels in the ports of a con- 
tracting country, assuring to them that no higher tolls or 
charges, harbor dues or light dues, or dues of that description 
shall be charged against them than against the vesseb of the 
country in which the port is situated. 

This question here is between those two. I cannot better 
illustrate the two kinds I have mentioned than by referring 
to the treaty with the Argentine Republic in 1853, a typical 
treaty of friendship, commerce, and navigation. Before I 
read from it, I will state what is an almost universal custom 
among civilized nations in r^ard to the use of these two 
standards of comparison for the purpose of assuring one or 
another kind of equality. It is the practically universal cus- 
tom, where the citizens of another country bear the same 
relation to a particular anticipated transaction or course of 
business, that the citizens of the contracting country bear, in 
treaties of peace and friendship and amity, to accord to 
citizens of the other country equality measured by the treat- 
ment of the citizens of the contracting country; and, in 
general, it is only when the citizens of the other country bear 
a different relation to the anticipated transaction or course of 
business, that recourse is had to the favored-nation dause, as 
where the people of one country are exporting goods and the 
people of the contracting country are importing goods. 
Plainly you cannot give to the exporter the same treatment 
you give to the importer; they are two different classes. 



«64 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Let me illustrate that by referring to the Argentme treaty: 

AsncLB i. There shall be between all the territories of the United 
States and all the territories oi the Argentine C<mf ederation a reciprocal 
freedom of commerce. The citizens oi the two countries, respectively, 
shall have liberty, freely and securely, to come with their sh^M and car- 
goes to all places, ports, and rivers in the territories of either, to which 
other foreigners, or the ships or cargoes of any other foreign nation or 
state, are, or may be, permitted to come. 

Abticlb 8. The two high contracting parties agree that any favor, 
exemption, privilege, or immunity, whatever, in matters of commerce and 
navigation, which either of them has actually granted, or may hereafter 
grant, to the citizens or subjects ci any other government, nation, or state, 
shall extend, in identity of cases and drcumstanoes, to the citizens oi the 
other contracting party. 

AsncLB 4. No higher or other duties shall be imposed on the importa- 
tion into the territories of either of the two contracting parties oi any 
article of the growth, produce, or manufacture of the territories of the 
other contracting party than are, or shall be, payable on the like article 
oi any other foreign country. 

Those are favored-nation clauses. Article 5 provides: 

No other or higher duties or charges, on account of tonnage, light, or 
harbor dues, pilotage, salvage in case of average or shipwredc, or any 
other local charges, shall be imposed in the pwts of the two contracting 
parties on the vessels of the other than those payable in the same ports on 
its own vessels. 

There is the higher type of equality » because the ships coming 
into an American port have the same relation to that port, 
whether they belong to an Argentine citizen or to an 

^^<^- Abticl. 6 

The same duties shall be paid, and the same drawbacks and bounties 
allowed, upon the importation or exportation, of any article into or from 
the territories of the United States or into or from the territories of the 
Argentine Confederation whether such imputation or exportation be made 
in vessels of the United States or in vesseb of the Argentine CoofederatioD. 

Abticlis 8 
All merchants, commanders of ships, and others, dtinns ol the United 
States, shall have full liberty m all the territories ol the Argentine Con- 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 255 

federation to nuuiage tbeir own aflUn themadTei or to commit them to 
the management ci whomaoever they please as brdcer, factor, agent, or 
interpreter; nor shall they be oUiged to employ any other perscms in those 
capacities than those enqdoyed by citizens oi the Argentine Confedera- 
tion. • • • 

AsncLB 9 

Li whatever rdates to the police of the ports, the lading and unl^/ling 
ci ships, the safety of the merchandiBe, goods and effects, and to the 
acquiring and disposing of pr(^)erty of every sort and denomination, eith^ 
by sale, donation, exchange, testament, or in any oth^ manner whatsoever, 
as also to the administration ol justice, the citizens at the two contracting 
parties shall redinrocally enjoy the same privfleges, liberties, and rights 
as native citizens. 

And so on through a great number of other provisions. In 
brief, a careful examination shows this to be a fact: that it 
is the universal rule, with rare exceptions, that wherever 
the rights of the citizens of a contracting country can be 
made the standard of equality for the citizens of another 
country they are made so, and that recourse is not had to 
the most-favored-nation clause, except where that higher 
degree of equality is impossible because the citizens of the 
two countries occupy different relations to the business that 
is contemplated. 

So we have the question between these two kinds of 
equality clearly drawn and resting upon long experience of 
nations, a subject fully understood by the negotiators of this 
treaty upon both sides. 

We know now that the negotiators of this treaty, the men 
who made it, all understood that the larger equality was in- 
tended by its terms. Of co\u*se, what the negotiator of a 
treaty says cannot be effective to overthrow a treaty; but 
I think we must all start, in considering this question, with 
the assumption that the words are arable of two construc- 
tions. I think no one can d^iy that, in view of the differences 
of opinion which have been expressed h^re r^arding their 
meaning. So here are words capable of two ccmstructions, a 



266 INTEKNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

broad construction and a narrow construction, but the fact 
that all the makers of the treaty intended that the words th^ 
used should have the larger effect, is certainly very persuasive 
toward the conclusion that those words should receive the 
larger effect. Not only the American negotiators but the 
British negotiators as well so understood it. l?Vhenever we 
seek to impose upon these words a narrower construction for 
our own interests than the makers of the treaty understood 
them to have, we should remember the fundamental rule of 
morab that a promisor is bound to keep a promise in the 
sense in which he had reason to believe the promisee under- 
stood it was made. 

Let us look at the understanding of the negotiators. Mr. 
Choate writes this in a letter to Honorable Henry White, 
dated April 14, 1914: 

As I telegraphed to you last night, on receipt of your tdegram of 
yesterday, I wrote to the chairman ci the committee. Senator (VGorman, 
inclosing to him, by the express permission of the Secretary oi State, a 
copy of my letters to Secretary Ehy between August 8, and October 12, 
1901, the same that you have. To my mind th^ establish beycmd ques- 
tion the intent of the parties engaged in the negotiation, that the treaty 
should mean exactly what it says, and excludes the possibility of any 
exemption of any kind of vessels of the United States. Equality between 
Great Britain and the United States is the constant theme, and especially 
in my last letter oi October 2, 1901, where I speak of Lord Lansdowne's 
part in the matter, and say, ** He has shown an earnest desire to bring 
to an amicable settlement, honorable alike to both parties, this long and 
important controversy between the two nations. In substance, he abro- 
gates the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, gives us an American canal, ours to build 
as and where we like, to own, control, and govern, on the acle condition of 
its being always neutral and free for the passage of the ships of all nations 
on equal terms, except that if we get into a war with any nation we can 
shut its ships out and take care of ourselves." 

This was the summing-up oi our whole two months' negotiatioin. 

Mr. Henry White's understanding of it is shown in the 
testimony before the Conunittee on Interooeanic Canals, 
Aprill4»1914. He says: 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 267 

During the entire period oi those negotiationa and in aO of my conver- 
sations with LcMxi Salisbury or with any one dse on either side of the 
Athintic I never heard the subject of our coastwise traffic mentioned. It 
was always assumed by those carrying on the negotiations — it certainly 
was by me in my interview with LcMxi Salisbury — that he meant that our 
ships should be considered, or rather that tbe United States should be 
considered, as included in the term " all nations." 

Senator Shimonb. And our coastwise abipa ? 

Mr. WmTB. All ships. 

The Chairman. You are stating now what your understanding is, 
not what the language was ? 

Mr. White. No; my understanding. The language was ** ships of 
all nations on equal terms." That was the language used by Lord Salis- 
bury, which I cabled the same day to Mr. Eby. Mr. Eby had asked Lord 
Salisbury to remove such obstacles in the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty as stood 
in the way of our building the canal, and his reply was that he had no 
doubt these obstacles would eventually be removed, provided the shqps 
of all nations should go through the canal on equal terms. 

Senator Sdoconb. Do I understand you to say you had suggestions 
from any direction that our coastwise ships were to be treated differently ? 

Mr. Whitb. Never from beginning to end. 

We know from many sources what Mr. Hay's views were. 
The Senator from Connecticut [Mr. McLean] has read to you 
a statement of them, authentic, made about the time of the 
treaty, at the time the treaty vnth Panama was under con- 
sideration. Here is what Mr. Hay says: 

** All means all. The treaty was not so long that we could not have 
made room for the word * other ' if we had understood that it belonged 
there. * All nations ' means all nations, and the United States is certainly 
a nation." 

** That was the understanding between yoursdf and Lord Pauncefote 
when you and he made the treaty ? " I pursued. 

** It certainly was,'' he replied. ** It was the understanding of both 
Governments, and I have no doubt that the Senate realized that in ratify- 
ing the second treaty without such an amendment it was committing us 
to the principle of giving all friendly nations equal privileges in the canal 
with ourselves. That is our golden rule." 

I cannot pass from this subject without also calling atten- 
tion to the language used by President Roosevelt'in his 



258 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

message to the Senate, upon which the Panama treaty 
ratified. President Roosevelt said in this message of January 
4, 1904, laying before Congress the Panama treaty: 

Tbe proper pooitioii for the United States to •asume in reference to this 
canal, and therel<xe to the Governments of the Isthmus, had been dearly 
set forth by Secretary Cass in 1858. In my annual message I have already 
quoted what Secretary Cass said; but I repeat the quotation here, because 
the principle it states is fundamental: 

** While the rights of sovereignty of the states occupying this regicHi 
(Central America) should always be respected, we shall expect that these 
rights be exercised in a spirit befitting the occasion and the wants and 
circumstances that have arisen. Sovereignty has its duties as well as its 
rights, and none of these local governments, even if administered with 
more regard to the just demands of other nations than th^r have been, 
would be permitted in a s[nrit at Eastern isolation to dose the gates of 
intercourse on the great highways of the w<H4d and justify the act by the 
pretension that these avenues of trade and travd bdong to them and 
that they choose to shut them, or, what is almost equivalent, to encumber 
them with such unjust relations as would prevent their general use.*' 

The prindide thus enunciated by Secretary Cass was sound then and 
it is sound now. The United States has taken the position that no other 
Government is to build the canal. In 1889, when France proposed to 
come to the aid of the French Panama Company by guaranteeing tbdr 
bonds, the Senate of the United States in executive session, with only some 
three votes dissenting, passed a resolution, as follows: 

*' That the Government of the United States will look with serious con- 
cern and disapproval up(m any connection of any European Government 
with the construction or control of any ship canal across the Isthmus of 
Darien or across Central America, and must regard any such ccmnection 
or contrd as injurious to the just rights and interests of the United States 
and as a menace to their welfare.'' 

Under the Eby-Pauncefote Treaty it was explicitly provided that the 
United States should contrd, police, and protect the canal which was to 
be built, keq>ing it open tot the vessels of all nations on equal terms. 
The United States thus assumed the position of guarantor of the canal 
and ci its peaceful use by all the world. 

Who were these men? Certainly, any one who finds in this 
treaty now a meaning di£Ferent from that which th^ thought 
their words carried, should consider many times the stq)s by 
which he reaches his conclusion. 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 259 

Mr. Choate» the head of the American bar» dear, able» with 
penetrating intelligence, with vast experience in the use of 
words and the construction of treaties, of statutes, of con- 
tracts, unquestionable in the virile strength and loyalty of his 
Americanism. Vfhea he thought that the words he used had 
a particular meaning, we may well think twice before we say 
that they have not that meaning. 

Henry White, one of the few diplomats trained from their 
youth up in the American service. 

John Hay, the pride of our generation in American diplo- 
macy. John Hay, that sensitive soul who could produce the 
American types of the Pike County ballads, and the charm, 
the felicity of whose phrases makes them jewels in the history 
of American literature. John Hay, who received the spirit, 
the motive, the characteristics of his Americanism as the 
yoimg secretary and the confidential and intimate frigid of 
Lincoln. 

Theodore Roosevelt, with his swift, incisive mind and his 
high courage. 

All these — the charge d'affaires who opened the negotia- 
tions with Lord Salisbury, the ambassador who carried on the 
negotiations, the Secretary of State who supervised and au- 
thorized the n^otiations, the President who authorized, as 
one of the first acts of his presidency, the signature to the 
treaty and laid it before the Senate — all these understood 
that they were making a treaty with the largest equality, and 
with no trifling, narrow, " favored nation ** provision. 

Lideed, sir, the '' favored nation '' clause is of but little 
value. If the standard of equality be not the standard of the 
treatment of ships owned by American citizens, and be 
nothing but the " favored nation " standard — that is, 
equality as between foreigners — it is of but very little value. 
That equality would be practically compelled by the usages 
of civilization without any treaty at all. No nation could 



260 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

ever maintain a practice of charging for the use of a canal 
connecting two oceans a different rate of tolls as against Ger- 
mans or French or English or Italians. It never has be^i 
done anywhere in the world. It never will be done unless 
civilization goes back from the level which it has now 
reached. But the other, the larger, equality is of value; for 
the treatment of the citizens of the country which owns the 
canal, the treatment they will submit to, the treatment that 
it is safe to accord to them before election, is a safe and a 
sound, substantial guaranty of the treatment the citizens of 
other nations will receive; so that is of value. 

Mr. President, of course what these n^otiators all thought 
they were doing by the use of these words is not conclusive. 
It is persuasive, but not conclusive. Let us ascertain why 
they thought so, if we can. 

The first reason why it seems to me they could not possibly 
have meant anything else than they say they meant, is that 
for three-quarters of a century the United States had been 
declaring to the world that she sought to procure the making 
of the canal across the Isthmus as a public-service work, a 
public calling, a public utility, with all the nations the public 
to be served. I say, for three-quarters of a century the 
United States had been making that declaration as to her 
relation to this work; yes, always without one varying note, 
until we got the title and control of the canal; and then for 
the first time is heard the demand that American owners of 
ships shall receive better treatment in tolls than the ships 
of other owners. 

Now, let me call attention to some of the declarations. 
You have read them all; they are not new in this debate; but 
I beg you to consider them as a whole and consider the posi- 
tion in which we stand with reference to them as a series 
unbroken and unvarying. In 1826, Henry Clay, Secretary 
of State, said: 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 261 

If a canal across the Isthmus be opened so as to admit of the passage 
of sea vessels from ocean to ocean, the benefits of it ought not to be exclu- 
sively appropriated to any one nation, but should be extended to all parts 
€i the globe upon the payment of a just compensation or reasonable toUs. 

In a resolution of the Senate in 1835: 

The construction of a ship canal across the Isthmus which connects 
North and South America, and of securing forever by such stipulations 
the free and equal right oi navigating such canal to all such nations — 

is recommended as the subject of n^otiation, ''free and 

equal right to all such nations." 

In a resolution of the House in 1889: 

For the purpose of ascertaining the practicability of effecting a com- 
munication between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans by the construction 
oi a ship canal across the Isthmus and of securing {orever, by suitable 
treaty stipulations, the free and equal right of navigating such canal to 
all nations — 

is recommended. 

In the overtures by the United States to Great Britain 
which resulted in the making of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty 
Mr. Rives said to Lord Palmerston in 1849: 

That the United States sought no exdusive privilege or iMreferential 
right of any kind in regard to the proposed communication, and their 
sincere wish, if it should be found practical, was to see it dedicated to the 
common use of all nations on tl^ most liberal terms and a footing of 
perfect equality for alL 

That the United States would not if they could obtain any exclusive 
right or privilege in a great highway which naturally belongs to all man- 
kind. 

In the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty of 1859, article 6» we find 
And the contracting parties — 

the United States and Great Britain — 

likewise agree that each shall enter into treaty stipulations with such d 
the Central American states as they may deem advisable, for the purpose 
of more effectually carrying out the great design of this convention, 
namely, that of constructing and maintaining the said canal as a ship 
communication between the two oceans for the benefit of mankind, (m 
equal terms to all, and ci i»otecting the same. 



202 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

In 1858, Secretary Cass, in the utterance which I have just 
read from the January 4, 1904, message of President Roose- 
velt. 

In 1881, Secretary Blaine. Mr. President, this utterance 
is of special significance, because it was the first serious over* 
ture to Great Britain to bring about that abrogation of the 
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty and the substitution of a canal under 
the sole auspices of the United States, which has been realized 
in the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty. Mr. Blaine, on June 24, 1881, 
writes to the American minister to open n^otiations with 
Great Britain for obviating the objections in the Clayton- 
Bulwer Treaty. He says: 

There has never been the lightest doubt on the part ci the United 
States as to the purpose or extent ci the obligation then assumed — 

that is, in the Colombian treaty of 1846 — 

by which it became surety alike for the free transit of the worid's oom- 
meroe over whatever land-way or water-way might be opeaed from sea 
to sea, and for the i»otection of the territorial rights of GdomlMa bcxa 
aggression or interference of any kind. 

He then proceeds to say that the President deems it due to 

frankness to suggest a new arrangement with Great Britain. 

He says: 

iJor, in time of peace, does the United States seek to have any exdusive 
privfl^ges accorded to American ships in respect to i»ecedence or toDs 
through an interoceanic canal any more than it has sought like privileges 
tar American goods in transit over the Panama Bailway» under the exdu- 
sive control of an American onporation. The extent of the privileges of 
American citizens and ships is measurable under the treaty of 1846 by 
those of G)lombian citizens and ships. It would be our earnest desire and 
expectation to see the world's peaceful commerce enjoy the same just» 
liberal, and rational treatment. 

In the following letter of November 19, 1881, he lays down 
the policy of the United States almost exactly as it was 
worked out by the negotiators in the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty 
now in existence. He lays it down to Great Britain, and this 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 268 

uttaranoe of Secretary Blaine was the main expression of 
American pdicy which Mr. Hay» Mr. White, Mr. Choate, 
and Mr. Roosevelt found before them to follow in making 
this. treaty. Let me read it: 

Li awwiming as a necemty the political ooetrol ol whatever canal or 
canals may be constracted across the Isthmus, the United States will act 
m entire hannony with the Governments within whose territory the 
canals shall be located. Between the United States and the oth^ Ameri- 
can republics there can be no hostility, no jealousy, no rivalry, no distrust. 
This Government entertains no design in connection with this project for 
its own advantage which is not also for the equal or greater advantage 
of the country to be directly and immediatdy affected. Nor does the 
United States seek any exclusive or narrow commercial advantage. It 
frankly agrees and will by public proclamation declare at the proper time, 
in ccMijunction with the r^mblic cm whose soil the canal may be located, 
that the same rights and privileges, the same tdls and obligations for the 
use oi the canal, shall apply with absolute in^Nirtiality to the merchant 
marine of every nation on the globe. And equally in time of peace the 
harmless use ol the canal shall be fredy granted to the war vessds of 
other nations. In time oi war, aside from the defensive use to be made 
ci it by the country in which ii is constructed and by the United States, 
the canal shall be impartially closed against the war vesseb of all 
bdligerents. 

It is the desire and determination of the United States that the canal 
shall be used only for the devdopment and increase of peaceful ccMnmeree 
among all the nations, and shall not be considered a strategic point in 
warfare which may tempt the aggression of belligerents or be seised under 
the compulsions oi military necessity by any oi the great powers that may 
have ccmtests in which the United States has no stake and will take no 
part 

Mr. Blaine went out of office; other interests arose — the 
Venezuelan controversy with Great Britain, the progress of 
construction by the De Lesseps Company, which seemed for 
a time to bid fair to produce a canal across the Isthmus of 
Panama, the Spanish War, all intervened, and these n^otia- 
tions languished and were intermitted until Mr. Hay, in 1898, 
reopened the subject with this declaration of Mr. Blaine still 
standing, declaring what the United States would do if 
England would give to her the same sole control which she 



264 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

did give in the Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty. How could the nego- 
tiators intend anything else in the words they used than that 
same large equality which the United States had thus already 
offered formally and solemnly ? 

In 1885» in his message of December 8» Mr. Cleveland says 
to Congress: 

Whatever highway may be constructed across the barrier dividing the 
two greatest maritime areas oi the world must be for the w<»>ld's benefit — 
a trust for mankind, to be removed from the chance of domination by 
any single power, nor become a point of invitation for hostilities or a prise 
tor wariike ambition. 

In 1898, Mr. Hay, in reopening the negotiations which Mr. 

Blaine had b^;un» instructs Mr. White to say: 

The President thinks it is more judicious to af^iroach the British 
Government in a frank and friendly spirit of mutual aocommodati<m, and 
to ask whether it may not be possible to secure such nuxlification of the 
{Mx>visions of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty as to admit such action by the 
Government ci the United States as may render possible the aoconqtlishr 
ment of a work which will be for the benefit ci the entire civilized world. 
The President hopes he may take it for granted that the British Govern- 
ment not only have no wish to prevent the accomplishment oi this great 
work, but that they feel a livdy interest in it and appreciate the fact that 
the benefits of its successful achievement will be to the advantage not 
only of England and America but of all commercial nations. 

We know that the answer to that by Lord Salisbury was 
that he would be favorable to such a modification of the 
treaty relations, provided that the vessels of all nations could 
use the canal on terms of equality. 

In the year 1900, when the first Hay-Pauncefote Treaty 

came before the Senate, the report of the Committee on 

Foreign Relations, commonly spoken of as the Davis rq>ort, 

a very able, very thorough, very careful consideraticm of the 

whole subject, says: 

It is not reasonable to 8Ui^)ose that Nicaragua and Costa Bica would 
grant to the United States the exdusive control of a canal through those 
States on terms less generous to the oth^ maritime nations than those 
prescribed in the great act of October 9S, 1888; 



PANAMA CANAL TOUS 266 

referring to the Suez Canal convention — 

or if we could compd them to give us such advantages over other nations 
it would not be creditable to our country to accept them. 

That our Government or our people will furnish the money to buQd 
the canal presents the single question whether it is iMx>fitable to do so. 
If the canal, as property, is worth more than its cost, we are not called 
on to divide the iMx>fits with other nations. If it is WOTth less and we are 
compdled by national necessities to bufld the canal, we have no right to 
call on other nations to make up the loss to us. In any view, it is a ven- 
ture that we will enter upon if it is to our interest, and if it is otherwise 
we will withdraw from its further considerati^ML 

The Suez Canal makes no discrimination in its tolls in favor of its 
stockholders; and, taking its profits or the half of them as our basis of 
calculation, we will never find it necessary to differentiate our rates of 
toll in favor of our own people in order to secure a very great profit on 
the investment. 

In 1904» in the message of President Roosevelt from which 
I have already read, submitting the Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty 
to the Senate, is the last authoritative and unmistakable 
declaration of the public service for all the world which the 
United States undertook in building the Panama Canal. 

Now, Mr. President, the common law of England and 
America, the public policy especially of America at the very 
time this treaty was being negotiated, enforced with unspar- 
ing rigor the duty of equal charges and equal service by all 
public utilities to all the public which they were to serve, and 
in the face of this long series of public declarations by the 
Government of the United States committing itself to that 
relation, the rdation of the builder and operator of a public 
utility for all the world, the makers of this treaty could not 
honorably have used words with any other meaning than the 
meaning of the large equality which th^ say they meant 
these words should have. 

There is another reason. Thekindof equality which the ne- 
gotiators intended — that is, an equality in which the treat- 
ment of American citizens is made the standard for the 



266 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

treatment of foreign citizens — had during all the history of 
the Isthmian Canal efforts been the standard sought for in 
negotiations and treaties. That kind 6f equality was the 
standard adopted by the public policy of the United States 
for all similar enterprises. It was customary; it was uniform; 
it was natural for negotiators of a treaty relating to a canal. 
Let me illustrate that by referring to the initial treaty on this 
subject, the treaty of New Granada of 1846. When the 
American negotiators mftlnng that treaty dealt with the sub- 
ject of a railroad and canal, what kind of equality did they 
stipulate for ? Why, this: 

The Government of New Granada guarantees to the Govemm^it 
of the United States that the right of way or transit across the Isthmus of 
Panama upon any modes of conmiunication that now exist, or that may 
be hereafter constructed, shall be open and free to the Government and 
citizens of the United States, and for the transportation oi any articles of 
produce, manufactures, or merchandise of lawful ccnnmerce belonging to 
the citizens of the United States; that no other tdls or charges shall be 
levied or collected upon the citizens of the United States or their said 
merchandise thus passing over any road or canal that may be made by 
the Government of New Granada or by the authcMity of the same than is, 
under like drcumstanoes, levied upon and collected from the Gtanadian 
citizens. 

The message of President Polk transmitting this New Gra^ 
nada treaty of 1846 to Congress dwells especially upon the 
assurance to citizens of the United States of equal charges 
and equal facilities in the use of railroad and canal with 
citizens of New Granada. 

I go back again to the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty of 1850. 
There is no doubt about the kind of equality which the nego- 
tiators considered it to be valuable to get, useful to get, 
natural to get. 

Article 1 of that treaty provides that neither Govemm^it 
shall undertake any control or make any fortifications, make 
any effort *' for the purpose of acquiring or holding, directly 
or indirectly, for the citizens or subjects of the one, any 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 267 

rights or advantage in regard to commeroe or navigation 
through the said canal which shall not be offered on the same 
terms to the citizens or subjects of the other/' 

Article 5 provides that protection may be withdrawn if the 
company which builds the canal shall make *' unfair dis- 
criminations in favor of the commerce of one of the contract- 
ing parties over the commerce of the other/' 

Article 6 uses as interchangeable terms the expression ** on 
equal terms to all,'' and these provisions for measuring the 
rights of the citizens of one country by the rights accorded to 
the citizens of the other. They are used interchangeably. 

Article 8 provides that — 

It IB always understood by the United States and Great Britain that 
the parties constructing ot owning the canal shall impose no oth^ charges 
or conditions of traffic therei^wn than the aforesaid Govenunents shall 
approve of as just and equitable, and that the same canals or TaHways^ 
being open to the citizens and subjects of the United States and Great 
Britain on equal terms, shall also be <^>en on like terms to the citizens and 
subjects of every other state. 

You will perceive, sir, that the terms on which citizens of 
other countries were to be allowed to come in were not terms 
of the most-favored nations as among themselves. They 
were on like terms with those which existed between Great 
Britain and the United States; that is to say, each other 
country which came in and adhered to this Clayton-Bulwer 
Treaty was to have the rights of its citizens measured by the 
rights accorded to the citizens of the United States and to the 
citizens of Great Britain. 

In our treaty with Great Britain in 1854, the reciprocity 
treaty of 1854 — 

It is agreed that the citizens and inhabitants of the United States shall 
have the right to navigate the River St. Lawrence, and the canals in 
Ginada used as the means of communicating between the Great Lakes 
and the Atlantic Ocean, with their vessds, boats, and crafts, as fully and 
fredy as the subjects ol Her Britannic Majesty, subject only to the same 



268 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

tcXia and other assessments as now are» or may hereafter be, exacted of 
Her Majesty's said subjects. ... 

It is further agreed that British subjects shall have the right freely to 
navigate Lake Michigan with their veuels, boats, and crafts so long as 
the privilege of navigating the River St. Lawrence, secured to American 
citizens by the above clause of the present article, shall continue; and 
the Government of the United States further engages to urge upon the 
State governments to secure to the subjects of Her Britannic Majesty 
the use of the several State canals on terms of equality with the inhabitants 
(rf the United States. 

We made a treaty with Nicaragua in 1867, under which, 
then expecting the canal to be through Nicaraguan territory, 
it was provided that — 

The republic of Nicaragua hereby grants to the United States, and 
to their citiz^is and property, the right of transit between the Atlantic 
and Pacific Oceans through the territcH*y of that republic, on any route 
of communication, natural or artificial, whether by land at by water, 
which may now at hereafter exist or be constructed under the authority 
of Nicaragua, to be used and enjoyed in the same manner and upon equal 
terms by both republics and their respective dtiaeos. 

That treaty further provided: 

And no higher or other charges or tolls shall be imposed on the coq- 
veyance or transit of persons and property of citizens or subjects of the 
United States, or of any other country, across the said routes oi ccMnmuni- 
caticMi, than are or may be imposed on the persons and property of dtiaens 
of Nicaragua. 

Li I8689 Mr. Seward made a treaty with Colombia, which 
was never ratified, in which the provision originally proposed 
by the United States was: 

That the tariff of toDs and freights shall be on the basis of perfect 
equality for both nations and for all other nations who shall be at peace 
both with the United States of America and the United States of Colombia. 

Colombia wished that provision to apply to both times of 
war and of peace; and accordingly it was modified and came 
into th^ completed treaty, which was submitted to the Senate 
in this form: 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 269 

The Govenmieiit of the United States of America shall estahliih a 
tariff of tolls and freights for the said canal on a basis (rf perfect equality 
f<»r all nations, whether in time oi peace or war. • 

Li 1870, another treaty was made with Colombia, in which 
the provision was that the United States was to establish, 
just as it does here in the Hay-Pamicefote Treaty, a tariff of 
charges on merchant vessels and vessels of war upon the 
basis of perfect equality at all times among all nations, with 
no other distinctions than are contained in the preceding 
article. 

Li the preceding article the distinction is that the parties to 
the treaty — that is, Colombia and the United States — re- 
serve to themselves the right of passing ships of war, troops, 
and munitions of war through the canal at all times free of 
charge of any description. 

Li 1871, in the great Treaty of Washington of that year, 
we enlarged the stipulation regarding the use of American 
and Canadian canals, and the United States stipulated defi- 
nitely that — 

The subjects of Her Britannic Migesty shall enjoy the use (^ the St. 
Clair Flats Canal on terms of equality with the inhabitants of the United 
SUtes. 

We have heard much discussion here of the controversy 
which arose between the United States and Great Britain 
over the application of that paragraph of the Treaty of Wash- 
ington giving equaUty to citizens of the two countries in the 
use both of American and Canadian canals. Several times 
the discussion has run into an attack upon the Canadian 
treatment of the subject, into a declaration that Canada did 
not yield gracefully or easily; that Canada did not yield untfl 
measures of retaliation were proposed. That is quite irrele- 
vant to the bearing of this treaty and the discussion upon the 
question that is before us and upon the treatment of this 
subject by the makers of this treaty. 



270 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

What position did we take ? What was the attitude of the 
United States toward the subject of equality between the 
United States and Canada under this treaty stipulating for 
equality ? That is the important question — not whether 
Great Britain was right or wrong; not whether Canada did 
right or wrong; not whether they were willing or unwilling; 
but what did the United States say and what position could 
the United States take consistently upon this subject of the 
equal use of the canals ? 

We are not left entirely to the treatment of canals for a 
guide as to the public policy of the United States. When 
this treaty was negotiated it had long been the general public 
policy of the United States to accord to all other nations in all 
ports and waters of the United States rights in respect of serv- 
ice and of charges, measured by the service and the charges to 
American citizens. The act of Congress of June 26, 1884, as 
amended June 19, 1886, reads: 

Provided^ That the President of the United States shall suspend the 
ooUeetion of so much of the duty herein imposed on vesseb entered from 
any foreign port as may be in excess oi the tonnage and lighthouse dues 
or other equivalent tax or taxes imposed in said port on American vessds 
by the Government of the foreign country in which such port is situated* 
and shall, upon the passage of this act, and horn time to time thereafter, 
as often as it may become necessary by reason of changes in the laws of 
the foreign countries above mentioned, indicate, by proclamation, the 
ports to which such suspension shall apply, and the rate or rates of ton- 
nage duty, if any, to be collected under such suspension: Provided further. 
That sudi proclamation shall exclude horn the benefits of the su^>ension 
herein authorized the vessels of any f <»eign country in whose pwts the 
fees or dues of any kind or nature imposed on vessels of the United States 
or the import or export duties on their cargoes are in excess of the fees, 
dues, or duties imposed on the vessels oi the country in which such port 
b situated, ot on the cargoes of such vessds. 

I say that was the public policy of the United States re- 
garding all ports and waters of the United States, and it was a 
policy toward all the world. A controversy arose about it. 
Canada claimed that we imposed excessive charges upon h^ 



PANABfA CANAL TOLLS 271 

vessels, and we daiined that she unposed excessive charges 
upon ours. A correspondence ensued, and on February 18, 
1896, Mr. Ofaiey, then Secretary of State, wrote to Sir Julian 
Pauncefote as follows: 

Hie understandiiig of the GoTemment of the United States in the 
matter of the unif (nrm treatment of t<»eign and domestic yeasds is that 
charges on f <»eign yeasds in the potts of the United States should be no 
higher than those imposed on veaada of the United States in the pwts oi 
this comitry, and that the charges inqxMed on American vessds in t<»eign 
p(uls should be no higher than the charges imposed on the vessds native 
to those ports. This is the practice of this Government, and it is in accord 
with nearly all of its treaties of commerce and navigation with foreign 
powers. 

The fact cited in the Canadian minute that the charges of this Govern- 
ment on lake ports are larger than those inq)08ed by the Dominion authwi- 
ties will, upon more mature reflection, I am confident, be regarded as 
irrelevant, since those charges are inqxMcd equally on American and 
foreign vessels. 

On the ninth of June of the same year Sir Julian Pauncefote 
replied to Mr. Olney as follows: 

Sm: With reference to my note of the twenty-first of Felmiary last, and 
to previous COTrespondence respecting the alleged discrimination against 
United States vessels in Canadian ports on the Great Lakes, I have the 
honor to inform you that the Governor-General of Canada has approved 
a minute of his privy council, recommending the revocation of the 
r^ulations comi^ained of and the abolition of all fees hitherto exacted 
from vessels navigating inland waters ^^len entering or clearing above 
Montreal. 

That Sir Julian Pauncefote was the Lord Pauncefote who, 
with Mr. Hay and Mr. White, negotiated the Hay-Paunce- 
fote Treaty. We are asked to believe that starting with the 
Clayton-Bulwer convention, which gave to Great Britain 
unquestioned assurance of the larger and more valuable 
equality of her vessels with the vessels of American citiz^is, 
in a negotiation with a country which in all its history had 
insisted regarding all canals that the measure of equality 
should be the measure of service and of charges to its national 



272 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

citizens, in nq^tiating with a country which had just com- 
pelled him to yield that equality of treatment as a measure 
of general public policy, he abandoned the vantage ground 
of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty and gave up that basis of 
equality without one word in the negotiation, without dis- 
cussion, without its being asked, without its being mentioned, 
without his knowing it, without the other negotiators' 
knowing it. But that is not all. 

It was not merely the immemorial policy of the United 
States and Great Britain regarding all canals; it was not 
merely the general public policy of the United States and 
Great Britain r^arding all ports and waters, but it was the 
policy of the United States r^arding trade the world over, 
and the champion and protagonist of that policy was John 
Hay. At the very time that he was n^otiating the Hay- 
Faimcef ote Treaty he was appealing to the justice of all the 
nations of the world for the ** open door ** in China; he was 
appealing to them in the interest of the world's commerce, 
in the interest of civilization to accord in all their possessions 
in China, what ? Favored-nation treatment ? Oh, no; the 
same treatment that they accorded to their own citizens. 
Let me ask you to attend for a moment to things that John 
Hay wrote regarding this great design, the accomplishment 
of which will ever stand in the history of diplomacy as one oi 
the proudest contributions of America to the progress of 
civilization. On September 6, 1899, he wrote to Mr. Choate 
in London: 

The Goveniment of Her Britannic Majesty has dedaied that its polky 
and its very traditions i»eduded it from using any privileges which might 
be granted it in China as a weapon tar excluding commercial rivals, and 
that freedom of trade for Great Britain in that Emiure meant freedom of 
trade for all the w<rid alike. While conceding by formal agreements, first 
with Germany and then with Russia, the possession of ** spheres of in- 
fluence or interest " in China, in which they are to enjoy special ri^ts 
and privileges, more especially in req>ect of railroads and mining enter- 



PANABfA CANAL TOLLS 278 

prises. Her BrHannie Majesty's Goveminent has thcrelbr e sou|^t to 
OMuntain at the same time what is eaDed the ** open-door policy ** to 
insure to the commerce of the w<»ld in China equality of treatmoit within 
said ** spheres " for conmierce and navigatimi. 

He wrote to Ambassador White in Grermany, September 
siztli, the same date: 

Earnestly desirous to remove any cause of irritation and to insure at 
the same time to the commerce of all nations in China the undoubted 
benefits which should accrue horn a formal recognition by the various 
powers claiming ''spheres of interest" that th^ shall enjoy perfect 
equality of treatmoit tor their commerce and navigation within such 
** spheres " the Government of the United States would be pleased to see 
His German Majesty's Government give formal assurances and lend its 
co(^>eration in securing like assurances horn the other interested powers 
that each within its respective sphere of whatever influence. • • . 

Third. That it will levy no higher harbor dues on vessds <rf another 
nationality frequenting any port in such " sphere " than shall be levied 
on vessds of its own nationality, and no higher railroad charges over lines 
buflt, controlled, or operated within its '* sphere " on merchandise .bdong- 
ing to citizens or subjects of other nationalities transported through such 
** sphere " than shall be levied <»i similar merchandise bdonging to its 
own naticHials transported over equal distances. 

So he wrote to all of the great nations of the world an 
appeal for equal treatment, an appeal for a specific stipula- 
tion to secure the equal treatment that no higher charges 
should be imposed upon the. citizens of any other country 
in the ports and waters possessed by those great powers in 
China or for freight or passage over the railroads built and 
controlled by them than were imposed upon their own citi- 
zens. To that appeal all the great powers of the world re- 
sponded in affirmance; and on March 20, 1900, Mr. Hay was 
able to issue his circular of instructions to all the ambassadors 
and ministers of the United States announcing the universal 
assent of the world to that great principle of equality — 
equaUty measured by the rights of the citizens of the nation 
granting it in all the empire of China; yet we are asked to 
bdieve that John Hay denied, abjured, repudiated that 



274 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

policy of civilization in i^ard to the Panama Canal at the 
very moment that, through the same agents, he ¥^as enforcing 
the policy upon the same countries; and that he did it without 
knowing it. 

But, Mr. President, we are not left to inferences which 
must be drawn from the circumstances that I have men- 
tioned or from declarations of public policy or from the uni- 
form course and custom ct treaty-making regarding canals 
and regarding public waters and transportation. There is 
positive, and it appears to me conclusive, affirmative evi- 
dence that the nq^tiators did effectively proceed in making 
this treaty in accordance with the honorable obligation of 
their country as the builder and main twiner of a public utility, 
as the champion of equal commercial li^ts the world over. 

We b^in the consideration of the express provisions lead- 
ing to the conclusion that the larger equality was intended 
with the communication of the Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty to 
the Senate. Of course, we are all familiar with the terms of 
the preamble preserving the general principle of article 8 
of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. Let me read them again, 
however, for convenience of reference: 

The United States of America and His Majesty Edward the Seventh* 
<rf the United Kingdom ci Great Britain and Ireland, and of the British 
dominions beyond the seas» King, and Emperor of India, being desirous 
to facilitate the ccmstruction of a ship canal to connect the Atlantic and 
Pacific Oceans, by whatever route may be considered expedient, and to 
that end to remove any objection which may arise out of the conventioii 
€i April 19, 1S50, conmionly called the Claytcm-Bulwer Treaty, to the 
construction of such canal under the auspices of the Government oi the 
United States, without impairing the ** general prindi^ '* of neutralisa- 
tion established in article 8 of that convention, have for that purpose 
appointed as their plen^x>tentiaries. . . • 

Now we are told that the language of a treaty or of a om- 
tract or of a statute cannot be changed by the preamble; but 
what is the purpose of a preamble ? The piupose is to afford 
a guide to the interpretation of the terms of the treaty or of 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 276 

the statute. YtHiien you start with the third artide of the 
Hay-Paimcef ote Treaty and have a debate as to its interpre- 
tation you turn to the preamble and you find there a guide 
intended by the makers of the treaty to enable you to reach 
the right interpretation upon the terms of the third article. 
But, still further than that, the idea of not impairing the 
general principle of neutralization is carried into the treaty 
itself, for in article 4 — 

It 18 agreed that no change of tenitorial sovereignty or ot intonational 
lektions oi the country or countries traversed by the^before-mentioned 
canal shall affect the general {unnciide of neutralizaticm at the obligation 
of the high contracting parties under the inresent treaty. 

That is, repeating in the fourth article as being a part of the 
treaty itself the words of the preamble that the obstacles 
of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty are to be removed without 
impairing the general principle of neutralization established 
in article 8 of that convention. 

This preamble, sir, which refers to the general principle of 
neutralization in the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty and which mani- 
festly is designed to preserve in the Hay-Paimcefote Treaty 
something of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, has been treated in 
discussion as being a matter of not very much importance. 
Not so the view of the negotiators of the treaty. Not so the 
view of anybody connected with our Government at the time 
the treaty was made, for you will perceive, in the first place, 
that in the letters of transmittal of the treaty special pains 
are taken to have it understood that this treaty preserves 
unimpaired something which is called the general principle 
of neutralization. 

Mr. Hay, in transmitting the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty to 

the President, writes: 

I submit tor your consideration ... a convention ... to remove any 
objection which may arise out of the . • . Clayton-Bulwer IVeaty . • • 
without impairing the " general princqile ** of neutralization estabUshed 
in article 8 of that convention. 



276 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

President Roosevelt, in transmitting the treaty to the 
Senate, says: 

I transmit, for the advice and consent of the Senate to its rati&atioii, 
a convention signed November 18, 1001, ... to remove any objectioQ 
which may arise out of the convention of A|ml 19, 1850, ... to the 
construction of such canal under the auquces of the Government 6t the 
United States without impairing the ** general princq>le ** of neutralisation 

established in article 8 of that convention. 

• 

That feature of the Hay-Fauncefote Treaty is dwelt upon 
and made extraordinarily prominent, and there is a mani- 
fest feeling that the Senate ought not to lose sight of it in 
considering whether it shall advise the ratification of the 
treaty. 

We are not left to that, however. yVhen the treaty negotia- 
tions were nearly completed, Mr, Hay wrote to Lord Faunce- 
fote September 2, 1901, regarding the last treaty as com- 
pared with the first Hay-Fauncefote Treaty, which failed of 
ratification. He said: 

I considered the adoption by the Senate without change of the pre- 
amble of our former treaty — 

that is, the first Hay-Fauncefote Treaty — 

by which it was declared that the general prindi^ of neutralisati<m estab- 
lished in article 8 oi the Clayton-Bulwer convention was not impaired 
thereby, a fortunate circumstance, as it enabled us in passing a new diaft 
to retain the important utterance in the preamble in the same form to 
which the Senate had already given its assent. 

Not only did Mr. Hay regard that as important, but the 

British negotiators r^arded it as highly important. On 

September 25, 1901, Mr. Choate wrote to Mr. Hay as follows: 

On Monday, the twenty-third, I had an interview with Ix»d Paunce- 
fote and tried, as I had befcH^ to persuade him that it was neither 
wise nor necessary to mar your artide 4 by the addition pn^xMed in my 
cable to you. But he thou^t, as he did before, and more strongly 
than he did before, that with the addition Pariiament and the British 
press and public could be made to aooq>t the treaty, but that without it 
th^ could not. 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 277 

Referring to artide 4 as it now appears in print — 

He thought it very necessary that th^ should be able to say very em- 
phatically that althou^ they had abrogated the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty 
they had preserved the principle of it. 

What was that principle ? We have to turn to the Clay- 
ton-Bulwer Treaty again. The principle of neutralization in 
the eighth artide of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty is to be pre- 
served unimpaired, according to the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty; 
and it is regarded by the nq^tiators upon both sides as a 
matter of great importance. Special attention is called to it 
when the treaty is submitted to the Senate. Now, let me go 
over again the provisions of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. 

Li the first artide there is an agreement not to take advan- 
tage of any alliance or any connection of either Grovemment 
on the Isthmus — 

fcnr the purpose of acquiring or holding, directly or indirectly, for the 
citizens or subjects oi the one any rights at advantages in regard to com- 
merce or navigation through the said canal which shall not be offered cm 
the same tains to the dtisens or subjects of the other. 

No discriminations are to be made in favor of the commerce 
of the one against the commerce of the other. The great 
design of the convention is said to be, in article 6 — 

That <rf constructing and Tn^mf i ^^Tiifig the said canal as a ship ccmi- 
munication between the two oceans for the benefit <rf mankind, on equal 
terms to all, and of protecting the same. 

In the eighth article it is provided: 

The Governments of the United States and Great Britain having not 
only desired, in entering into this convention, to accomplish a particular 
object, but also to estaUish a general principle, they hereby agree to 
extend their protection, by treaty stipulations, to any other imMsticable 
communications, whether by canal or railway, across the isthmus which 
connects North and South America, and e9q>ecially to the interoceanic 
communications, should the same prove to be practicable, whether by 
canal or railway, which are now proposed to be established by the way of 
Tehuantepec or Panama. In granting, however, their joint protection to 
any such canals or railways as are by this artide specified, it is always 



278 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

underatood by the United SUtei and Gfeot Britain that the parties < 
structing at owning the same shall impose no other charges or conditions 
of traffic thereupon than the aforesaid Govemmoits shall approve <rf as 
just and equitable; and that the same canab ot railways, being open to 
the dtiz^is and subjects oi the United States and Great Britain <»i equal 
terms, shall also be open on like terms to the dtisens and subjects oi every 
other state which is willing to grant thereto such {wotection as the United 
States and Great Britain engage to afford. 

What is the principle of neutralization contained in that 

article ? The n^otiators imderstood that there was such a 

principle in that article, for they say: 

Without impairing the ** general {unnciple of neutralization established 
in article 8 " of that ccmvention. 

The only two things in article 8 are the equality <^ s^vioe 
and <^ charge between the vessels of the United States and 
those of Great Britain and the extension of that to other 
countries that come in and the obligation of protection. The 
great object of the negotiation of the Hay-Fauncefote Treaty 
was to take over to the United States alone the duty and 
the right of protection. That was the difference between the 
Hay-Pauncefote Treaty and the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty — 
that Great Britain was to surrender the rij^t of protection^ 
to be relieved from the duty of protection and no other coun- 
tries were to be permitted to come in and exardse the ligjat of 
protection. The United States was to put itself on the plat- 
form that Blaine laid down in 1881, as the sole protector of 
the canal. What, then, was there to be preserved unim- 
paired in the eighth article of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty ? 
Nothing except the basis of equality; equality between the 
United States and Great Britain, equality measured by the 
treatment of the nationals of one country for the nationals of 
the other. Nothing else was left to be preserved unimpaired. 

Observe that the term used by the preamble and by the 
fourth article of the Hay-Fauncefote Treaty, is not ^^neutral- 
ity,'' but ** neutralization.'' They are both well-understood 



PANABfA CANAL TOLLS 279 

and well-defined terms. By all writers upon international 
law, in all the literature of international law» the distinction 
is well understood. Neutralization is the contractual ar- 
rangement which produces neutrality. The end to be at- 
tained is neutrality. The means by which it is obtained is 
neutralization. 

Now, let us go back to the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. The 
only thing in the eighth article that was not expressly and 
intentionally destroyed was the equality stipulated in the 
eighth article, stipulated in the fifth article and the sixth 
article and the first article, and carried into the eighth article 
by reference. That equaUty was the principle upon which 
this canal was to be made neutral. There is no other mean- 
ing that you can find for it, and that is what was to be 
preserved unimpaired. 

There is no need of speculating about it. Fortunately, we 
are told by the n^otiators themselves what they meant. I 
read from a letter of Mr. Choate to Mr. Hay, dated August 
20, 1901, when this negotiation had far progressed and this 
second treaty was in form, and there was nothing at all left 
to be discussed which affected the subject. When I read 
these words, I want you to remember that you must construe 
the equality provision of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty as 
being the very equality established in the eighth article of 
the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, unless you can find some other 
meaning in the minds of the makers of this treaty. 

Now let me read what Mr. Choate said: 

As article 8 stands in the C.-B. treaty — 
the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty — 

it undoubtedly contemplates further treaty stipulatknis — not ** these ^ 
treaty stipulatuHis» in case any other interoceanic route, either by land 
or by water, should " prove to be jMncticable,'* and it i»oceeds to state 
what the general principle to be I4>plied is to be, viz.: no other charges 
or conditions of traffic thereon *' than are just and equitable,'* and that 



280 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

said ^canals or nubrays** bemg open to the subjects and cttiaeos ol 
Great Britain and the United States on equal tenns shall also be open 
on like tenns to the subjects and dtiaens of other states, whidi I believe 
to be the real general princii^ of neutralization (if you choose to cab it so) 
intended to be asserted by this eighth article of the C.-B. TVeaty. 

That is from Mr. Qioate to Mr. Hay. That is from the 
man who put those words into the Hay-Pamicef ote Treaty for 
us to the man who authorized the signing ci the Hay-Paunce- 
f ote Treaty for us, and that is what he meant. That is what 
he said over his official signature he meant by preserving 
unimpaired in the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty the general prin- 
ciple of neutralization established in the eighth article of the 
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty; and no power of reasoning or of 
sophistry can justify the American Government in putting 
upon the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty any other meaning than the 
meaning there declared. 

The negotiators on the other side thought the same thing 

about it. Mr. Choate, on September twenty-first, reports to 

Mr. Hay a conversation he had had with Lord Pauncefote. 

He says: 

He again insisted, as Lotd Lansdowne had insisted, that th^ must 
have something to satisfy Pariiament and the British public that in giving 
up the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty th^ had retained and reasserted the 
** general princqde " of it, that the canal should be technically neutral 
and should be tree to all nations on terms of equality, and especially that 
in the oontingenqy supposed, of the territory on both sides of the canal 
becoming ours, the canal, its neutrality, its being free and open to all 
nations on equal terms should not be thereby affected. 

There you perceive that Lord Paimcefote's paraphrase of 
the terms of the eighth section of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty 
IS — 
should be free to all nations <»i terms of equality. 

It is the provision for equality in the Clayton-Bulwer 
Treaty which he r^arded as the general principle established 
in the eighth artide. 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 981 

Let me read it again: 

They must have iiomef.hing to satisfy Fariuuiient and the Britidi puMic 
that in giving up the Gayton-Bulwer Treaty th^ had retained and 
reasserted the ** general principle ** of it, that the canal should be techni- 
cally neutral and should be free to all nations on terms <rf equality. 

What that equality v«ras, you find in the eighth article of the 

Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. 

Mr. Hay, in his letter to Senator Cullom at the time the 

treaty was under consideration by the Senate, says: 

He (the President) not only was willing but earnestly desired that the 
*' general principle ** of neutralization referred to in the preamble of this 
treaty and in the eighth article of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty should be 
perpetually applied to this canaL This* in &ct, had always been insisted 
upon by the United States. 

There v^as no change in policy. 

He recognized the entire justice and propriety ct the demand of Great 
Britain that if she was asked to surrender the material interest secured 
by the first article of that treaty, which might result at some indefinite 
future time in a change of sovereignty in the territory traversed by the 
canal, the " general principle ** of neutralization as applied to the canal 
should be absolutely secured. 

Whatever else the Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty means, it means 
to secure absolutely the general principle of neutralization 
contained in the eighth article of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, 
which was, according to the understanding of the makers of 
the Hay-Paimcefote Treaty, the absolute equality of the 
ships, the citizens and the subjects of all nations with the 
ships and the citizens of the United States and of Great 
Britain; and we are not at liberty to spell out any different 
meaning of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty. 

In the face of these declarations we are asked to find a 
meaning of this treaty which ascribes to Great Britain the 
intent to abandon everything there was in the eighth article 
of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. We are asked, in the face of 
Mr. Choate's declarations to Mr. Hay, and Mr. Hay's to the 



282 E^TERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

President and to the Senate, to ascribe to this treaty an in- 
tention to take away from Great Britain everything there was 
left of equality in the eighth article of the Clayton-Bnlwer 
Treaty; and we are asked to suppose that that was done 
without its being mentioned in the negotiations, without 
one word, without our asking it of Great Britain or Great 
Britain's offering it to us, without its being discussed, without 
its being proposed or broached in any way. 

As the Senator from North Dakota pVlr. McCumber] sug- 
gests to me. Great Britain could have surrendered much 
more easily. AU she need have done was to say: " We 
consent to the abrogation of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty.'^ 

That, however, is not the only thing. The third article of 
the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty provides: 

The United States adepts, as the basis of the neutndisatioQ of siidi 
ship canal, the following rules, substantially as embodied in the canven- 
tion of Ginstantim^le, signed October 28» 1888» for the tree navigatioii 
of the Sues Canal; that is to say — 

Rules 1 to 6 are then enumerated: 

1. The canal shall be free and open to the vessds ct oommeroe and 
of war of all nations observing these rules, on terms of entire equality, so 
that there shall be no discrimination against any such nation, ot its citi- 
zens or subjects, in respect of the ccmditions or charges of traffic ot other- 
wise. Such conditions and charges of traffic shall be just and equitable. 

That is declared by the treaty to be substantially as em- 
bodied in the convention of Constantinople regarding the 
Suez Canal. Turn to the convention of Constantinoj^e, and 
see what guide you find there to determine what was the 
scope and character of the equality provided in this first rule, 
which is said to be substantially as provided in the Treaty of 
Constantinople. 

The Treaty of Constantinople was made, not before title to 
the canal was obtained, as in the case of our Hay-Paimcefote 
Treaty, but after the title was obtained. The company that 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 283 

built the Suez Canal had aheady gotten their grant from the 
territorial sovereign when this convention was made. Our 
EEay-Paimcefote Treaty was made before the grant was 
obtained from the territorial sovereign. 

Mr. Williams. As a matter of inf ormation^ was that after 
Disraeli bought a majority of the stock in the Suez Canal ? 

Mr. Root. I am not certain. 

Mr. Williams. It was bought prior to that, was it not ? 

Mr. Root. I am not positive. 

Mr. Williams. The date of the treaty was 1888 ? 

Mr. Root. October 28, 1888. 

Mr. WiLLLAMS. That was after Disraeli bought the stock. 

Mr. Root. It must have been afterwards. This conven- 
tion provides that Great Britain, Austria-Hungary, Spain, 
and so forth — 

Yl^shing to estabUsh by a oonventioiial act a definite system destined 
to guarantee at all times and for all the powers the free use of the Sues 
Maritime Canal, and thus to oomi^ete the system under which the 
navigation of this canal has been jdaced by the firman of His Imperial 
Majesty, the Sultan, dated February 22, 1866 (2 Zilkad^ 1282), and 
sanctioning the concessions of His Highness the Khedive, have named as 
their plenipotentiaries; that is to say — 

The finnan of the Sultan sanctioning the concession of the 

Khedive under date of February 22, 1866, referred to in this 

paragraph, provides for a great variety of drcumstances and 

conditions relating to the construction and operation of the 

canal, and in article 17 it provides: 

The dues are to be levied without exception or hvor upon all vessds 
under like conditions. 

So that was a fundamental basis under which the Suez 

Canal was to be operated, and to which this convention was 

to apply. The convention then proceeds: 

The Sues Maritime Canal shall always be free and open, in time ci 
war as in time of peace, to every veaad of commerce or of war, without 
distincticm of flag. 



284 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

ArUde 12: 

The high oontractiiig parties, by applicatioo of the principle ci eqaaBtj 
«8 regards the free use of the canal, a principle which forms <Hie of tlie 
bases of the present treaty, agree that none of them shall endeavor to 
obtain with respect to the canal territorial or commercial advantages or 
privileges in any international arrangements which may be concluded. 
Moreover, the rights of Tvakey as the territ<Mial power are reserved. 

There, sir» you have the Suez Canal convention declaring 
the principle of equality as one of the bases of its convention, 
a convention made to regulate the operation of the canal 
under a concession by the Khedive and a finnan by the Sul- 
tan, which prescribes that equal tolls shall be exacted of all 
vessels under like conditions. 

Mr. Williams. And after Great Britain had become the 
owner. 

Mr. Root. This convention which makes that declaration 
of absolute and universal equality of tolls a basis of its agree- 
ment was made, as the Senator from Mississippi suggests, 
after Great Britain had become the chief owner and arbiter 
of the canal. Now, I come back to the Hay-Pauncetote 
Treaty. Article 3: 

The United States adepts as the basis — 

they use the very term of the twelfth article of the Suee 
convention, which makes equality one of the bases of its 
convention. They use the very words of the twelfth artide. 

The United States adopts as the basis of the neutralization of sudi 
ship canal the following rules, substantially as embodied in the conven- 
tion of Constantinople, etc.: 

1. The canal shall be free and opea to the vessels of commerce and of 
war of all nations observing these rules on terms of entire equality. 

An ** entire equality " substantially as embodied m the 
Suez convention. You are boimd to say that the equality 
was substantially the same. When these n^otiators at that 
very instant were appealing to the Suez convention, and 



PANAAfA CANAL TOLLS 285 

dedaring the treaty they were makiiig was substantially 
the same in the rule of equality which it prescribedy when 
they were declaring that what they were doing was substan- 
tially like what the Suez convention did — you are not at 
liberty to say that at that very instant they meant something 
entirely different. U you do that, you say they were dis- 
honest, they were disingenuous, they were deceiving Great 
Britain. 

Ah, Mr. President, the worst thing about it is that our 
Government has said from generation to generation it was 
going to treat all the world alike in whatever it did about this 
canal; that the makers of our treaty declared that they were 
preserving unimpaired the equality established in the eighth 
article of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty; that the makers of our 
treaty declared that the provision for equality was substan- 
tially the same as that in the Suez treaty; that that was the 
uniform, the unvarying attitude of the United States in every 
step which we took to acquire title to the Canal Zone, and to 
get the unrestricted right to own and operate the canal; and 
not until after we got it, not until after we were secure, did 
any American ever broach the idea that we were to use the 
canal for selfish advantage commercially; that to the politi- 
cal control, to the military control, to the power of ownership 
and r^^ulation and management, we were to add a discrimi- 
nation against all the rest of the world for the purpose of 
enabling our merchant ships to outdo them in competition. 

Mr. Williams. Will the Senator pardon me for a sugges- 
tion ? 

Mr. Root. Certainly. 

Mr. Williams. We not only waited untfl after we ac- 
quired title but we waited until after we concluded that pos- 
sibly the operation of the canal would be unprofitable, before 
we. made this claim. 

Mr. Boot. I am obl^^ to the Senator for his su^^estion. 



286 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Now, what are the arguments for the narrower ccmstruo- 
tion ? It is said that in this first rule the words "" observing 
these rules " limit the words ** all nations/' so that they can- 
not be held to include the United States. You cannot give 
that construction to those words, if there is any construc- 
tion that can be given to them consistent with the declarations 
that I have been recoimting here. Is it a necessary construc- 
tion ? CertainlynoL In the first place, when you look at the 
history of the words ** observing these rules " you see that 
they were put into the clause for an entirely different pur- 
pose. They were not put there for the purpose of excluding 
the United States. The reason why they were put there 
appears in full, and with great distinctness and b^ond any 
doubt, in the correspondence and the record xd the n^gotia^ 
tions. 

The original Hay-Pauncetote Treaty contained a clause 
providing that other nations should be invited to adhere, to 
come in and become parties to the contract. Our n^otiators 
insisted, in n^otiating the second treaty, that that should go 
out. Indeed, the Senate had stricken it out in its amend- 
ment of the first treaty. When Great Britain assented to 
that she said that that done by itself, leaving the provision 
that the canal should be free and open to the vessels of all 
nations upon terms of entire equality, would operate against 
her in time of war, because the rules from 2 to 5 in the third 
article of the treaty, which described the conditions and re- 
quirements of neutrality of the canal, would be binding upon 
her, since she was a party to the treaty, and they would not 
be binding upon any other country; and so other countries, 
bemg entirely free from all the limitations of these neutrality 
provisions, would have an advantage over her and she would 
be subject to a burden. Accordingly she put into this first 
clause '" all nations agreeing to observe these rules.*' But 
Mr. Choate and Mr. Hay said, ''No, we will have no nations 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 887 

agreeing at all; that would let them into a contract relation 
with the United States regarding the canal, and that we will 
not have. Strike out * agreeing ' and put it * all nations 
observing these rules/ because then any country which does 
not wish to observe the neutrality provisions and rules 2 to 5 
or 2 to 6, will be excluded from the use of the canal and Great 
Britain will not be placed at a disadvantage in time of war/' 
That was the sole reason for putting in those words, and it 
appears, I say, in full. 

Now we are asked to give an entirely different meaning 
and effect to the introduction of those words, a meaning and 
effect which the negotiations show never entered the minds 
of the negotiators upon either side. 

It appears very clearly, by the enumeration of the changes 
in the treaty when it was sent to the Senate, that the intro- 
duction of the words ** observing these rules '' was not under- 
stood by the makers of the treaty as producing any change 
whatever in the meaning of the first article except the limi- 
tation that I have referred to; for Mr. Hay, in the memoran- 
dum which came with the treaty, states the changes from the 
first form of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, which did not con- 
tain the words '^ observing these rules/' but was for all 
nations, not limited to nations observing these rules. He 
says they were as follows: 

First Li the new draft of treaty the iHx>vi8ion8iipenediiig the Clayton 
Bulwer Treaty as a whole. 

Second. By a change in the first line of artkie 8, instead of the United 
States and Great Britain jointly adopting as the basis of the neutralization 
of the canal, the rules of neutrality {M-escribed for its use as was provided 
by the fOTmer treaty, the United States now alone adepts them. 

lliird. The omission of the words ** in time of war as in time of peace " 
bom clause 1, of article S. 

Fourth* The striking out of the |xovisioa by which other powers were 
to be invited to come in and adhere to the treaty. 

Fifth. The duuige from the former treaty in the <HniaBioQ ci the pro- 
I in clause 7 of article S, which prcdiibited the fortification of the canal. 



288 intebnahonal subjects 

and the tnnakr to daiue 2 erf the renuuning provmoa of chuiae 7» that the 
United States shall be at liberty to maintain such military police along the 
canal as may be necessary to iHx>tect it against lawlessness and dis(Htler. 
Sixth. The omission of the words ** in time of war as in tune of peace,** 
and dispensing with the necessity of the Davis amendment, giving ezpreas 
authority to die United States to iHx>tect itself in time of war. 

That is the enumeraticm of the dianges that were made, 
and you will find no place there for any change made by the 
introduction of the words ** observing these rules/' It ap- 
pears affirmatively otherwise that the n^otiators did not 
consider that they were making any change, for Mr. Choate 
says in his final account of the second treaty, which I have 
already read to you, for a di£Ferent purpose — 

It gives us an American canal» aa the sole condition ci its being always 
neutral and free for the passage of the ships of all nations on equal terms. 

That is his statement of what this treaty meant. The clause 
which provided that the treaty was to be for all nations ob- 
serving these rules oa terms of entire equality Mr. Choate 
translates as being on the sole condition of its being always 
neutral and free for the ships of all the nations on equal 
terms; and Mr. EEay, in his accoimt to the Senate of the terms 
of this final treaty written to Mr. Cullom, says: 

While omitting to invite other nations to adhere to the treaty when 
ratified, and so to acquire contract rights in the canal, it was thought 
that the provision that the canal should be free and open to all nations 
on terms of entire equality would practically meet the objection. 

He says, further, that Lord Paimcetote was requested '' to 
reach a conclusion which should be satisfactory to the United 
States, if this could be done without departing from the great 
principle of neutrality, including the use of the canal by all 
nations on equal terms.'' 

And he says it was believed that the declaration that it 
should be free and open to all nations of the world on terms 
of entire equality would practically meet the force of the 
objection which had been made. 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 280 

I refer you again to the message of Flresideiit Roosevelt, 
transmitting this treaty to the Senate^ in which he describes 
it as a treaty which assures the right to the free passage of 
the canal to all the nations of the world on equal terms. 

Mr. Sutherland. Does the Senator from New York 
think that President Roosevelt intended by that language to 
exclude the United States from the power to exempt its own 
coastwise ships ? 

Mr. Root. No; I do not think he had that in mind at all. 
I think that he had in mind then the subject which I am now 
discussing. It has nothing to do with the coastwise ships. 
The subject which I am now discussing is the question what 
was the rule of equality declared in the third article of the 
Hay-Pauncefote Treaty. The question whether coastwise 
vessels furnished an exception to that rule is an entirely 
different question, which I shall come to presently. 

I am certain there is no other conclusion that can be 
reached, and that President Roosevelt in that message in- 
tended to declare that this treaty established the broad rule 
of equality for all nations. He did not stumble over the 
words ** observing these rules.'' He said: 

Under the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty it was exididtly iHx>v]ded that the 
United States should control and protect the canal which was to be built, 
keeping it open for the yessek of all nations on equal terms. 

That is what he understood the treaty meant. But it is said 
that the broad construction cannot be given, because the 
United States is not to observe these rules. Nothing could be 
further from the truth. 

I turn again to the words of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty. 
Under artide 3 there are six rules prescribed. The first is 
that — 

The canal shall be free and open ... on tenns of entire equality. 

We are told that that is not a rule, because it does not 
relate to neutrality, and that the second, third, fourth, fifth. 



290 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

and sixth paragraphs of artide 3 are rules. Well, Mr. Presi- 
dent, the treaty says it is a rule. I do not know that any of 
us should assume to know better than the treaty-makers or 
assume to know better than the treaty itself. The treaty 
says: 

The United States Bdop/ts as the basis ct the neutralisation of sudi Aip 
canal the following rules* substantially as embodied in the convention of 
C<Histantin(^»le. 

That is to say: 

1. The canal shall be free and opea to the vesseb of oommerce and of 
war of all nations observing these rules. 

And I ask whether the United States was not to observe 
this rule ? 

Mr. Sutherland. How would Great Britain observe that 
first paragraph ? 

Mr. Root. Perhaps she could not. The rules are to be 
observed by the countries as they are applicable to those 
countries. The code of rules may none of them ever have to 
be observed by any country except the United States, be- 
cause there may be no coimtry ever under such drcum-- 
stances as to call one of them into application; but it is quite 
dear that the first paragraph imder the preamble in article 3 
is a rule, because the treaty says it is, and that the nation 
which is primarily charged with the observance of that is the 
United States, so that the United States must be considered 
as coming within the description of nations observing these 
rules. But let us pass to the others: 

2. The canal shall never be blockaded, nor shall any right ci war be 
eierdsed nor any act of hostility be committed within it. The United 
States, however, shall be at liberty to maintain soch military pdice along 
the canal. . . • 

Thesy evidently thought the United States had something to 
do with that rule or thqr would not have expressly provided 
for what th^ apparently considered an exception to it. 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 201 

8. Veasebcrfwarof abdligefentshaUnotrevktoalnortakeaiiyst^^ 

4. No bdligerait shall embark or disembark troaps. 

5. The iHx>vi8ioiis of this article shall b^^ to waters adjacent to the 
canal, within three marine miles of either end, but a vessel of war of one 
bdligerent shall not dq;)art within twenty-four hours from the departure of 
a vessel of war of the other bdligerent. 

Mr. President, all those rules of neutrality, the product of 
the direct application of the principle of neutralization pre- 
served from the eighth article of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, 
are primarily for the observance of the United States. We 
are not dealing with an unknown subject here; we are dealing 
with a subject which has enlisted the attention of publicists 
and rulers and diplomatists since international law began. 

We undertook in the Treaty of Washington tojformulate 
certain rules, and we did formulate certain rules of neutrality, 
to the observance of which Great Britain and the United 
States pledged themsdves, and for the non-observance of 
those rules in the past, through the Greneva arbitration, we 
compelled Great Britain to pay us $15,000,000. 

There are two kinds of neutrality — the result of neutral- 
ization by a general convention, in which a great number of 
countries declare certain territory to be neutral and all accept 
the burden of maintaining the neutrality and observing it; 
that is one. The other is the neutrality which a territorial 
sovereign declares in respect of its territory. The leader of 
the world in neutrality of that description is the United 
States. It commenced its wise and beneficent treatment of 
the subject by Washington's neutrality proclamation. When 
any country declares the neutrality of its territory, as be- 
tween any two or more belligerents, that country assumes 
the duty of observing the rules which the law of nations has 
established for the regulation of neutrality. A part of those 
rules were codified in the Treaty of Washington in 1871. In 
that treaty Great Britain and the United States in express 
terms declare that the high contracting parties agree to 



292 INTEKNATIONAL ST7BJECTS 

observe those rules, that were codified in that treaty. The 
most enli^tened and advanced rules regulating the neu- 
trality of a country under the powers of a single sovereignty 
were codified here in this Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, and im- 
posed upon the United States, because the change from the 
first Hay-Pauncefote Treaty to the second treaty changed the 
character of the neutrality from a neutralily by univosal 
agreement, to a neutrality by the fiat of the sovereign of the 
territory, the controller of the territory. Those rules have 
been codified again in the neutrality treaty of the second 
Hague Conference of 1907; and in that codification there are 
express provisions, declaring in detail the obligations of the 
sovereign guaranteeing the neutrality. There is not a rule 
here, from the second to the fifth, that does not impose duties 
upon the United States. Where the rule says the canal shall 
not be blockaded, the duty of observance rests upon Great 
Britain as a contracting party; it rests upon all other coun- 
tries that use the canal, because they avail themselves of the 
privilege; it rests upon the United States, because she has 
contracted that the canal shall be open; and it will be her 
duty to stop a blockade if she has the physical power, and if 
she has not, it will be her duty to exact rq>aration from any 
party who violates the rule by blockading the canal. 

If ships of war, in time of war, shall loiter in the canal, it is 
her duty to urge them forward. If a ship stay s to the limit of 
twenly-f our hours, it is her duty to give notice and to require 
it to leave. If a ship undertakes to disembark or to embaj^ 
men and munitions in time of war, it is the duty of the United 
States to prevent it. We have time and again in our diplo- 
matic history acknowledged the duly of observance both by 
the power that guarantees the neutrality of the territory and 
the duty of the powers that avail themselves of the privilege 
<rf using the neutralized territory. We have made amends fcnr 
vic^ting the territory of a neutral; we have exacted amends 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 298 

of others that have violated our neutral territory; and every 
rule which is contained in the second artide of the Hay- 
Pauncefote Treaty in rq;ard to neutrality is a rule the 
observance of which is incumbent upon the United States. 

We are told that the United States cannot be supposed to 
have been laying down rules for herself as a customer; that 
this article of the Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty prescribes rules for 
the customers of the canal, and that we cannot suppose that 
the United States expected to be its own customer. Well, 
that involves confusion of ideas between the vessels of citi- 
zens of the United States and vesseb of the United States 
itself, to which I have already adverted. The customers of 
the canal are not nations in theii political capacity. If this 
canal had been built by a company, as was within the con- 
templation of the treaty and the words of the treaty, the 
United States politically would not have been a customer of 
the canal; but the ships of the citizens of the United States 
and the owners of those ships would have been customers, the 
ships of the United States would have been customers, and 
the ships of all other countries would have been customers. 
American citizens owning American registered and enrolled 
ships will be customers of the canal just as much as will be the 
subjects of other countries. 

We are also told that all presumptions are against grants 
m derogation of sovereignty. There are two things to be said 
about that: in the first place, when we made this treaty we 
had no sovereignty. We made no grant in derogation of 
sovereignty; we made no grant affecting any sovereignty 
that we had. The observance of this provision is a reserva- 
tion in favor of the sovereignty of Panama in her grant to us, 
and the observance of that reservation is one of the stipu- 
lations under which we acquired the right to build the canal. 

Another thing to be said about that argument is, that no 
stipulation about the amount of tolls can be in derogation of 



294 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

sovereignty under any drcumstances. Fixing tolls is a busi- 
ness transaction. When the United States goes into business 
as the owner of a railroad or of a canal, the fixing of a diarge 
is not an act of sovereignty; it is an act of business. 

Did we derogate from sovereignty when we made our 
treaty in 1854, our treaty in 1871, and our stiD more recent 
treaty of 1909, in which we agreed that the tolls charged upon 
Canadian or British vessels in all our canals along the bound- 
ary should be measured by the tolls charged to American 
citizens ? Have we lost our sovereignty over the Sault 
Canal ? Do we derogate our sovereignty when we agree 
that we shall charge the same rates in our ports to citizens of 
other countries that we charge to citizens of our own country? 
EEave we thereby lost our sovereignty over the port of New 
York or of Boston or of Philadelphia or of Buffalo ? 

The argument is made that this treaty is no longer binding 
because there has been a change of sovereignty. There has 
been much argument made upon the express provision of 
this treaty, the fourth article, under which it was expressly 
provided that no change of sovereignty should affect the 
rights and duties of the parties to the treaty; but the corre- 
spondence shows that that fourth article of the treaty was 
put in for the express purpose of preventing any such argu- 
ment as has been made here from prevailing. Here is Mr. 
Choate writing to Mr. EEay about this fourth article. That 
was proposed by Great Britain. Form was given to it by 
Mr. Hay. Let me read it again: 

It is agreed that no cbange of territorial sovereignty or of international 
rdations of the country or countries traversed by the beforementioDed 
canal shall affect the general principle of neutralisati<m or the obligatioD 
of the hi£^ contracting parties under the present treaty. 

Mr. Choate writes: 

The idea ** change of sovereignty/' of course, relates to the rq>ort of 
an intention on the part of the United States to acquire a 8trq> of teni- 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 205 

lory on each side of tlie canal, and ** otber change of dicmnstances " is 
aimed at tlie argument in some future epoch against the continuance of 
this treaty that has often been directed against the continued binding 
force of the C.-B. Treaty that '^change of drcumstanoe ** since 1850 has 
put an end to it. 

And Mr. Hay's letter to Senator Cullom, referring to the 
Lansdowne treatment of the negotiation^ says: 

In this connection he referred to the fact that the new treaty contained 
no stipulation against the acquisition of sovereignty over the territory 
through which the canal should pass. ... 

It was daimed that if Great Britain were now to be caDed upon to 
surrender the interests and the principle thus secured by what remained 
of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, there should be, in view of the character 
of the treaty now to be concluded and of the " general principle " of neu- 
tralization thus rea£Brmed in the i»eamble, some clause inserted agreeing 
that no change of sovereignty or other change of circumstances in the 
territory through which the canal b intended to pass shall affect such 
'' general principle " or release the parties, or either of them, from their 
obligations under this treaty. 

Mr. Coi/T. May I ask the Senator a question for instruc- 
tion merely ? Were any rights of sovereignty reserved to the 
United States under the Hay-Pauneef ote Treaty such as were 
reserved to Turkey under the Suez convention ? 

Mr. Boot. I think I would answer that question in the 
n^[ative. At the time the Hay-Paimcef ote Treaty was made, 
neither party had sovereignty, and there could be no reserva- 
tion of any rights of sovereignty. The convention mani- 
festly contemplated that the United States should, either for 
itself or for a company to be patronized by it, acquire certain 
rights for the construction of a canal on the Isthmus, either 
by the way of Nicaragua or of Panama. All questions of 
sovereignty would necessarily have to be dealt with in the 
instrument which conferred those rights. In the treaty with 
Nicaragua, to which I have already referred, the United 
States acquired rights very far short of sovereignty; in the 
Hay-Herran Treaty, which was negotiated with Cobmbia 



296 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

immediately after the Hay-Pamioetote Treaty, and whidi 
Colombia refused to ratify, the United States received rights 
very far short of sovereignty. But in the Panama treaty, for 
the first time, there was a grant to the United States of what 
amounted to substantial sovereignty over the Canal Zone, 
Panama making, however, certain reservations and im- 
posing certain stipulations, among them a stipulation that 
the canal should always be free and open to ships of all 
nations upon the terms of the third article and aU the tains 
of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty. 

Mr. Coi/r. I do not desire to interrupt the Senator. I 
simply want to suggest that, as it lay in my mind, the pro- 
vision as to change of sovereignty bdng inserted in the second 
EEay-Pauncef ote Treaty and our negotiators failing in the 
conclusion of that treaty to resarve to the United States the 
same rights of sovereignty of the territorial sovereign which 
were reserved to Turkey, the territorial sovereign of the Suez 
Canal, under, I think, the tenth and thirteenth articles of the 
Suez convention, whether it was not an omission on thdr 
part not to reserve to the United States the same soverdgn 
rights reserved in the Suez convention? 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, it may be that it would have 
been advisable to put into the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty some 
dause of that kind; but manifestly the controlling provisim 
must be the provision of the treaty with Panama, because 
only the sovereign can effectively reserve such rights. 

Mr. President, when we are talking about the infringe- 
ment of sovereignty, and especially when we hear heated 
denunciations of what is called the surrender of American 
sovereignty, assertions that we have built the canal on our 
own territory, with our own mcmey, and can do what we 
please with it, I cannot forget that four years ago at this 
time I was r^resenting our country before a great tribunal 
at The Hague, urging upon that court the rights of the 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 297 

United States to have observed in good faith by Great Britain 
the stipulations which she had made in the treaty of 1818, 
regarding the treatment of our fishermen upon the coasts and 
in the bays and harbors of Newfoimdland. I was urging 
then that under the treaty of 1818, which provided that 
American fishermen should have in conunon with the sub- 
jects of His Britannic Majesty the liberty to take fish upon 
that coast. Great Britain was bound to treat our fishermen 
in letter and in spirit by the rule of equality and of justice, 
although it was in her waters, in the unquestioned territoiy 
of her oldest colony, that we were claiming to exercise our 
rights. The result of that arbitration was that, pursuant to 
the provisions of the award and the agreement between the 
countries adjusting and giving effect to it, if any law be 
passed now which the fishermen of the United States r^ard 
as unjust and unequal toward them in the exercise of their 
calling in those British waters, upon the objection of the 
United States it is suspended in operation and submitted 
to the arbitration of an impartial international tribunal, to 
determine whether it shall take effect. Ah, Mr. President, 
conformity to the obligations of treaties is the highest exercise 
of sovereignty and not the infringement of sovereignty. 

It seems to me, sir, that I have now reached a point where 
I am justified in leaving the main question, which I have dis- 
cussed with a feeling that I have, in a poor and halting way, 
but by the presentation of substantial matter, established the 
general rule prescribed in the third article of the Hay-Paimce- 
fote Treaty as a rule of real entire equality, of real absence of 
discrimination, applicable to all the nations of the world, to 
all ships, to all subjects, and to all citizens. 

The question to which we now must pass, is the questicm 
whether the statute whose repeal is sought is in conf ormily 
with that rule of equality. 



298 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

It is said that coastwise traffic may be exempted from that 

rule, and that is claimed on the authority of the case of Olsen 

against Smith in One hundred and ninety-fifth Supreme 

Court Reports. In that case the court say: 

Nor is there merit in the con t en t ion that as the veaid in question was 
a British vessd coming bom a f <mgn port, the State laws concerning 
pilotage are in conflict with the treaty between Great Britain and the 
United States, providing that ** no higher or other duties ot charges shall 
be imposed in any ports of the United States on British vessds than those 
payaUe in the same ports by vessds of the United States.'* Neither the 
exemption of coastwise steam vessds from {Hlotage resulting from the law 
of the United States nor any lawful exemption of coastwise vessels created 
by the State law concerns vessds in the f (nreign trade, and therefore any 
such exemptions do not operate to jHtKluce a discrimination against 
British venels engaged in f<mgn trade and in favw of vessds of the 
United States in such trade. In substance, the proposition but asserts 
that because by the law of the United States steam vessds in the coast- 
wise trade have been exempt from pilotage regulations, therefore, there is 
no power to subject vessels in f (nreign trade to iHlotage regulations, evoai 
although such regulations apply, without discrimination, to all vessds 
engaged in such foreign trade, whether domestic or f oreign. 

It will be perceived that that utterance of the Supreme 
Court lays down the rule of equality as to trade of the same 
kind. Now, sir, I do not doubt that coastwise trade, real 
coastwise trade, is a special kind of trade, standing by itself, 
quite unhke the great over-seas trade. All countries, as a 
rule, treat their coastwise trade with special favor; they 
charge reduced rates for the privil^es it has in their ports; 
and if any such real coastwise trade, any of the trade that has 
been known to the laws and treaties and navigators and 
traders time out of mind as coastwise trade, or cabotage, were 
to pass through the Panama Canal, I should not question 
the right to treat that in a different way from the great over- 
seas trade that goes through that canal. But, Mr. President, 
the real gist of this discrimination is not the discrimina- 
tion between coastwise trade, properly so called,, and othar 
trade. No real coastwise trade will go through that canaL 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 299 

It is a thousand miles and more away from our coast. The 
trade that goes through it will be real over-seas trade> carried 
on by great ships, making long voyages — in its nature the 
exact antithesis to real coastwise trade. 

The trouble with this discrimination is the kind of trade 
which is included in this statute. The great over-seas trade, 
the trade from New York to San Francisco; from Portland, 
Maine, to Seattle; from Philadelphia to Hawaii; from Balti- 
more to Alaska, in great ships plowing two oceans, great over- 
seas trade, although beginning and aiding in American ports, 
is included by our statute under the term '" coastwise ** and 
has the benefit of this discrimination; and other countries 
have the same kind of trade and will send the same kind of 
trade through the Suez Canal. The decision of the Supreme 
Court of the United States was based upon the absence of 
discrimination between the same kind of trade. Here this 
discrimination is solely between the same kind of trade. It is 
a discrimination between a kind of trade carried on in Ameri- 
can ships and the same kind of trade carried on in other ships. 

Great Britain — Canada — will have the same kind of 
trade between Halifax and Vancouver. Mexico will have the 
same kind of trade between Tampico, sometimes Vera Cruz, 
and Acapulco. Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Colom- 
bia; Germany between her ports and the Caroline Islands 
will have just the same kind of trade that we have between 
our Atlantic ports and Hawaii; England from London to 
Hong-Kong; Russia from her Baltic ports to her Siberian 
ports. There is no basis of this discrimination in the kind of 
trade. The basis of the discrimination is nothing but the 
flag; and I cannot resist the conclusion, sir, that such 
discrimination is not in conformity with the rule of equality. 

But we are told, sir, that we must not repeal this statute 
'' at the behest of Great Britain." The behest of Great 
Britain I 



SOO INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

What has Great Britain said to us ? Let us see. She has 

said that she considered this statute to be a violation ol 

the contract; and she said> in Mr. Mitchdl Innes's note 

of August 27: 

I am instructed to add at the same time that should there eventually 
be a difference between the two countries as to the correct interpretation 
of the Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty which cannot be settled by other means. 
His Majesty's Govoimient would then ask that it should be referred to 
arbitraticm in acccntlance with the provisions of the existing arbitratioQ 
treaty concluded in 190B. 

The same thing was said to Mr. Phillips, who was our 

chai^ in London; and he reports that Sir Edward Ghrey 

announced in Parliament that — 

Should there eventually be a difference between the two countries 
respecting the interpretation of the Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty that could not 
be settled by other means. His Majesty's Government would ask that it 
be referred to arbitration in accordance with the provisions of the existing 
arbitration treaty concluded with the United States in 1908. 

In the formal note of Sir Edward Grey to our State 

Department^ he concludes: 

His Majesty's Govoimient feel no doubt as to the correctness (rf their 
interpretation of the treaties of 1850 and 1901 and as to the validity of 
the rights they claim under them for British shipping; not does there 
seem to them to be any room for doubt that the provisions of the Panama 
Canal Act as to tolls conflict with the rights secured to their shipping by 
the treaty. But they recognize that many persons of note in the United 
States, whose opinions are entitled to great weight, hold that the provisions 
of the act do not infringe the conventional obligations by which the 
United States is bound, and under these circumstances th^ desire to 
state their perfect readiness to submit the question to arbitraticui if the 
Government of the United States would prefer to take this course. 

Does that sound like a behest ? Is thare anything arrogant 
or insolent about that ? 

Let me recall to your minds, without going over the long 
history, what the United States has said and done in respect 
of arbitration. Let me recall to your minds the resolutions 
passed by the Senate and by the House calling for the n^go- 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 801 

tiation of treaties of arbitration; the messages of Presidents, 
in kmg succession, declaring to Congress the unalterable 
devotion of the Grovemment of the United States to the prin- 
ciples of arbitration; the multitude of treaties negotiated at 
the instance and by the request aud urgency of the United 
States pursuant to these resolutions of Congress, and 
providing for arbitration. 

Are we to regard it as arrogant and insol^it that a nation 
with which we have made a treaty regarding the price of a 
service to be rendered differs from our interpretation of the 
treaty and proposes arbitration ? 

Let me recall to you also the Alabama Claims, and the time 
wh^i we called for arbitration to enforce our demands agaiost 
Great Britain, and got it, and got judgment for $15,000,000. 
Let me recall when we called for arbitration of our northwest- 
em boundary, and obtained for ourselves the disputed sover- 
eignty to the island of San Juau, in the Strait of Fuca. Let 
me recall the time when we wanted arbitration for the rights 
of om* helpless fisherm^i upon the Newfoundland and the 
Canadian coasts, and got it, and got protection for them. Let 
me recall the time when the miners of two countries were 
standing on either side of the disputed boundary line in 
Alaska, and in the interest of peace and civilization the two 
countries arbitrated the Alaska boundary, and we got the 
territory we claimed. Let me recall to you the Venezuela 
boundary controversy, when we demanded that Great Bri- 
tain arbitrate. Let me read to you the language of Secretary 

Olney to England: 

QuncT TO Batabd , ^ ,^^^ 

JiTLT ftO, 1895. 

You are instnicted, tlioefore, to present tbe foregoiiig views to Lord 

SaUsbuiy by reading to him this communication (leaving with him a 

cc^y, should he so desire), and to re^oroe them by such pertinent con- 

sideraticms as will doubtless Occur to you. They call for a definite decision 

up<m the point whether Great Britain will consent ot will decline to submit 

the Veoeeuelan boundary question in its entirety to in^Mrtial arbitration. 



802 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Those are peremptory words, evindng no doubt of the nuxal 
right to demand arbitration. 

It is the earnest hope of the President that the oondusiozi wiD be oo 
the side of arlntration, and that Grreat Britain will add ooe more to the 
conspicuous iMreoedents she has already furnished in &vor ot that wise 
and just mode of adjusting intonatituial disputes. If he is to be dis- 
appointed in that hope, however, — a result not to be anticipated and, in 
his judgment, calculated to greatly embarrass the future rdations betweem 
this country and Great Britain — it is his wish to be made acquainted 
with the fact at such early date as will enable him to lay the whole sub- 
ject before Congress in his next annual message. 

He laid it before Congress. You all remember that it was a 
war message. All the world understood it. He got his 
arbitration. 

Oh, arbitration when we want it, yes; but when another 
country wants it, ** Never, never furl the Amaican flag at 
the behest of a foreign nation.'* 

Mr. President, the subject that I am now discussing raises 
sharply the question how the American people want thar 
affairs to be conducted. They have a multitude of relations 
with other countries. They are doing a business of over four 
thousand million dollars with other countries. They are 
travelling all over the world in hundreds of thousands. Tliey 
are receiving in this coimtry hundreds of thousands of the 
citizens of other coimtries. Vast interests of property and of 
liberty and of life are regulated by the great body of treaties 
and conventions that we have with other countries. We 
think ourselves, and rightly think ourselves, leaders in civili- 
zation. We are for the amelioration of manners and of con- 
duct which tends to substitute kindly feelings and considerate 
treatment for the rule of hatred, of strife, and of war. 

Do the American people wish their representatives to treat 
all the other nations that are in conventional relations with 
us, that are brought in contact with us by travel, by trade, 
by all the multitudinous intercourse of modem life, upon the 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 808 

theory that any question of right by them is an insult, that 
any according of a right to them by us is a surrender ? Do 
ihey want us to conduct our foreign affairs on the principle 
of the thoughtless youth who flings up his hat and shouts for 
the flag, or as just and considerate m^i transact their own 
business with each other, as neighbors in a town treat each 
other, as business men treat thar customers and the persons 
from whom they buy ? Do ihey want us to be ugly and 
revengeful and insolent and brutal and boasting, or do they 
want us to be dignified and calm and considerate and 
reasonable in our relatioDus with foreign countries ? 

I say that the argum^it that we are called upon to ** sur- 
render at the behest of Great Britain " raises the question 
which I have just described, and which I will not stop to 
answer, for there can be but one answer and that finds itself 
in the immediate response of every Senator. 

But, Mr. President, why are we here discussing repeal ? 
Great Britain asked for arbitration. Why are we here 
discussing repeal ? 

Mr. Presid^it, Mr. Talt, who was President of the United 
States when this controversy arose, was in favor of arbitra- 
tion. He declared for arbitration in a public speech made 
early in January, 191S. I have not that speech here, but I 
know that it was before I spoke in the Senate on January 21, 
191S, on this subject Mr. Talt substantially repeated what 
he then said in a speech at Ottawa on January thirty-first of 
this year, in which he said: 

Now, we shall doubtless have to arbitrate the matter, unless Congress 
reverses itsdf • There are some hot-heads that talk in absurd tones about 
the right of the United States to manage her own canal and her own 
property as she likes, no matter what she has agreed to; but that is all 
troth. Those are the *' ezi^osiviBtas.'* 

President Roosevelt, with all his courageous and comba- 
tive nature, is in favor of arbitration. President Wilson is 



804 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

devoted to arbitration. Senator Lodge is in favor of aibitra^ 
tion. SenatOT Sutherland is in favor of arbitration. I refa* 
to them because they have announced it upon the floor in 
this debate. Why am I discussing the subject here ? I am in 
favor of arbitration. 

Will you pardon me if I go back to the first thing that I 
ever said on this subject ? When the Panama Canal bill was 
up in this body on July IB, 1912, 1 said: 

It appears quite certain to me, sir, that if we enact the provision which 
is now bef (»e us, making the discrimination against which Great Britain 
inx>te8ts, as the other party to this international agreement, the questioQ 
nused will be one for arbitration under our existing treaty with Great 
Britain. It will present the simplest, most unquestionable case for the 
submission to an impartial tribunal of the contending claims of the two 
parties to the contract. We could not refuse to arbitrate the qu e stion. 
Great Britain could not refuse to arbitrate it. It is the kind of question 
which our treaty of arbitration expresdy requires to be arbitrated, and it 
is a question which ought to be arbitrated. 

Instead of arguing the question, I shall omtent mysdf with suggesting 
to the Senate that any legislation which may be enacted ought to be 
framed with a yiew to the fact that this is a matter about which we can- 
not finally decide. If the judgment of the Senate shall be in favw of the 
pdicy of discrimination — and mine is not; I think it is wholly unjustifi- 
able and unnecessary — neverthdess we should exercise our power of 
legislation with a view to the fact that the question of our right to legis- 
late in such a way as to discriminate is one which may be decided against 
us by the international tribunal to which we are bound to submit it. 

After Presid^it Talt had made his public speech in favor of 
arbitration, I made a speech in the Senate on June 21, 191S, 
in favor of arbitration. It was an arbitration speech, but I 
already knew that the obstacles to arbitration which were 
arising might be insurmoimtable, and I put the altama- 
tive that we must arbitrate or we must withdraw from the 
position that we refused to arbitrate. 

Now, let me answer the question why we are here. I will 
answer by reading part of the debate in the Congressumal 
Record of April ninth. The Senator from Iowa [Sir. Ken- 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 805 

yon] had just put into the Record the letter of President 

Roosevelt saying that he considered that the coastwise 

exemption was permissible mider the treaty, but that it was 

a subject that ought to be arbitrated. He had wound up his 

letter by this: 

But when we have delibcnttdy sad solemnly made a promise* then I 
most emphatically bdieve that this nation should keep that promise 
just as an honorable man would do as regards a i»rivate promise of the 
same type. Tbeniore I believe it to be the bounden duty of this nation 
to arbitrate the question ot the canal tolls under the provisions of our 
arbitration treaty. 

The Senator from Mississippi [Mr. Williams] said: 

Mr. President, I agree with the utterances of ex-President Booseydt 
to the effect that this is a question which might be very wdl and ought 
to be submitted to arbitration; but I wish to ask the question now» Do 
the followers of ex-President Boosevdt upon this floor bdieve it ? 

If it had been thought that this question could be submitted to arbitra- 
tkm, that the Senate would submit it to arbitratiiHi» the questicm never 
would have been here in its present form. When we were discussing this 
matter when the Panama Canal Act was passed, the senior Senator from 
Iowa piiilr. Cummins], the colleague ot the Senator who has just had this 
article read, in his place upon the floor ot the Senate said that this was 
not an arbitrable question. He differed from the ex-President. He 
thought it was a matter that affected the independence and the vital 
interests and the honor of the United States. We found, or thought we 
found, that a good many more than a third of the Senate entertained that 
idea, and they were not willing to submit the question to arbitration. 

I am not one of those who say that the exemption of coastwise shqyping 
tiom the payment of tolls was a violation of the treaty with Great Britain; 
but I am one of those who say that the position which the Senate or its 
members have undoubtedly taken, that they will not submit this ques- 
tion to arbitratiim, is a violation of another treaty which we have made 
with about eight or nine powers; a treaty which says that all questions of 
the interpretation of treaties shall be submitted to arbitration. 

Mr. Galunqkb. Mr. President — 

The VicB-PRnaroxNT. Does the Senator from MississiMH yidd to the 
Senator frtnn New Hampshire ? 

Mr. W1LUAM8. I yield. 

Mr. Gallinqkb. I have been a pretty constant attendant upon the 
sessions of the Senate for a long time, and I do not recall that this question 
ever was fwesented to the Senate. 



806 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Mr. VfiLUAMB. Oh, I did not say it was. There are moie ways of 
finding out what Senators think than by presenting a question to the 
Senate. Will the Senates say that he believes two thirds of the Senate 
would submit this questicm to arbitration, or will he, on the ocmtiaiy, 
frankly tell me that he does not believe it ? 

Mr. Gallinqkb. I am always frank when I am dealing with the 
Senator from Mississippi. He knows that. I will say that I do iwt 
think two thirds of the Senate would. 

Mr. WiLLEAMB. No; I know they would not. 

There we are. That is why we are here — all of us who are 
in favor of arbitration, we who from the beginning declared 
that this question ought to be determined by an impartial 
court of arbitration, we who have argued for it. We are here 
now supporting this repeal bill because, in the judgment of 
the old and wise and experi^iced Senators best qualified to 
judge, it was impossible and is impossible to get a vote of 
two thirds of the Senate to s^id the question to arbitration. 
There were other evidences, but I will not detain you to 
give them. I could read from the records of the Committee 
on Interoceanic Canals matter to sustain the same conclu- 
sion. A majority of thirty-two of the memba*s of the Senate 
would be necessary to send this case to arbitration. We are 
for this repeal first and chiefly because we cannot arbitrate it, 
and to refuse to arbitrate it would be discredit and dishonor 
for our coimtry. 

Right or wrong, whatever rules or whatever exceptions 
may justify it, if we decide this in our favor and refuse to 
arbitrate we are discredited, we are dishonored, we have 
repudiated our principles. 

Now, let any man who votes against this repeal take to 
himself the responsibility of leading his country into that 
position. I for one shall not. If every constituent I have 
were looking with hope for lower freight rates, I would not 
If my convictions were so blinded that I saw only the lurid 
light of red flame when a railroad is menti^med, I would not 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 807 

lead my country into such a position. If I had away back in 
my childhood learned a tradition of hatred against any other 
country, I would not lead my own country into such a posi- 
tion as that. I will vote for this repeal because it is the surest 
and> I belieye, the only way to save our country from that 
most discreditable result* 

Mr. President, thare is one argument which I have omitted 
to notice against this repeal. It is the argument that Great 
Britain alone has protested; that no other country has pro- 
tested or remonstrated. That is true, so far as I know; but 
let me call your attention to something that happened in the 
course of the n^^tiations. You remember that the Clayton- 
Bul wer Treaty provided for all other countries coming in and 
agreeing to share in protection. You remember that the 
first Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty provided that all other countries 
should be asked to adhere; that is to say, to become parties 
to the treaty. The Senate struck it out, and in the negotia- 
tion of the second Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty it was omitted. 
You remember that Lord Lansdowne wished to have in- 
serted in the treaty a provision limiting the benefits of free- 
dom and equality of the canal to those nations which should 
agree to observe these rules, and Mr. Hay objected to having 
the agreement. Here is what Mr. Choate said about it, in 
giving an account of an interview with Lord Lansdowne: 

Secondly. I tdd him that I thought his amendment of the first clause 
of the third article, inwifiting upon bringing in other nati<ms as parties 
to the agreement alter the Senate had struck out of the Hay-Paunoef ote 
Treaty the article inviting them to come in, would seem counter to the 
very strong ocmviction in the Senate, sustained, as I bdieve, by an equally 
strong and general popular conviction, that we ought not to accord to 
other nations any contract rights whatever in the canal which we were to 
build and own; that none of them, though invited, ever came in or 
offered to come in under the Clayton-Bulwer TVeaty; that at present they 
hadnorights; that th^ must be ocmtent to rdy on our naticHial honor to 
keep the canal <^peQ to them, as dedared in this treaty with Great Britain* 



908 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Mr. Hay repcnrts to the Senate: 

This was represented to EGa Majesty's Goveniiiient» and it was abo 
insisted on the part of the United States that there was a strong national 
feeling among the peoi^ of the United States against giving to foreign 
powers a contract right to intervene. • . . 

That th^ must rely upon the good faith of the United States in its 
dedaration to Great Britain in the treaty that it adopts the rules and 
principles of neutralisation therein set forth, and that it was not quite 
correct to apeak of the nations other than the United States as being 
bound by the rules of neutralisation set lotth in the treaty. 

No contract rights are given to these oth^ powexB. Our 
Senate will not pennit it; our people will not permit it. 
France, Germany, Austria-Hmigary, Italy, Russia, and all 
the rest are to have no contract right, but they are to rdy on 
the honor of the United States. They are to have only the 
good faith of the United States that we will observe the 
declarations of the treaty. They have made no representa- 
tion or protest. Oh, no; thqr cannot. They have no contract 
rights. They have nothing but our honor; nothing but the 
good faith of America. 

Mr. Williams. Which can be carried out by no one ezcq>t 
ourselves. 

Mr. Root. Yes. Mr. President, who is the guardian of a 
nation's honor but her own sons ? Do we commit its keq>- 
ing to England ? Oh, no; not to England nor to any other 
power on earth do we commit the duty of remonstrance 
against orn* breach of honor. Our conscience must be our 
monitor. America must make the demand upon America 
that her honor and her good faith be kept without stain. 

It is no petty question with England about tolls. This is 
a question whether the United States, put on its honor with 
the world, is going to make good the public declarations that 
reach back beyond our lives, whether the honor and good 
faith of the United States is as good as its bond, whether 
acute and subtle reasoning is to be applied to the terms of a 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS S09 

treaty with England to destroy the just expectations of the 
world upon more than half a century of American professions, 
upon which we give no contract right, and there is no security 
but honor and good faith. 

Sir, in the weak and inadequate arguments and appeals 
that I have made upon this subject I speak not for England. 
I do not present England's case. I do not care about h^ 
case. But I knew something about this treaty. I knew what 
John Hay thought. I sat next him in the Cabinet of Presi- 
d^it McKinley while it was n^otiated, and of President 
Roosevelt when it was signed. I was called in with Senator 
Spooner to help in the framing of the Panama Treaty which 
makes obedi^ice to this Hay-Pauncef ote Treaty a part of the 
stipulations under which we get our title. I negotiated the 
treaty with Colombia for the settlement and the removal of 
the cloud upon the title to the Isthmus of Panama, and car- 
ried on the n^^tiations with England under which she gave 
her assent to the privil^es that were given to Colombia in 
that treaty. I have had to have a full conception of what 
this treaty meant for now nearly thirteen years. I know 
what Mr. Hay felt and what he thought, and, Mr. President, 
I speak for all the forebears that went before me in America, 
and for the g^ierations that shall come after me, for the 
honor and credit qf our country, and for that alone. If we 
do not guard it, who shall ? 

A settlem^it ? We are told that the speech I made in 
January, 191S, prevented a settlement. If I could believe 
that, I would tell it to my children, that they might rejoice 
after I am gone at that one service rendered to their country. 
Settle ? Compromise ? Compromise the honorable obliga- 
tions of our country ? Never. If Great Britain should be so 
false to the duty she assumed in imposing upon us stipula- 
tions as a condition of our having the right to build the canal, 
if she should be so false to the duty toward mankind which 



810 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

she assumed then, as to commute the obligations that we 
took upon us for any advantage to herself, I would not con- 
sent to give one copper farthing to have her withdraw her 
demand. 

We are right or we are wrong. If the rule of equality whi<^ 
we have prescribed for all the world is infringed by this 
statute, no negotiations with Great Britain can relieve us of 
our obligations to arbitrate or withdraw the statute, our obli- 
gations to the rest of the world to arbitrate or withdraw the 
statute, our obligations to ourselves, to our own consciences, 
our own sense of right and honor. 

There is even more than the higher interests of an ordinaiy 
nation involved in this question. 

It is now some eighty years since De Tocqueville, in his 

great book, Democraqf in America, which presented to the 

world so just and favoring an estimate of our country, wrote 

these words: 

It is tlioefore very dilBcult to asoertain at present what degree of 
sagacity the American tiemocraQy will diq>lay in the ccmduct of the f<mgn 
policy of the country* and upon this point its adversaries, as wdl as its 
advocates, must suspend their judgment. As for mysdf , I have no hesi- 
tation in avowing my ocmvictioa that it is most especially in the ocmduct 
of toreiga rdations that democratic governments Bppeair to me to be 
decidedly inferior to governments carried on upon di£ferent prindides. 

Mr. President, I have not believed that to be true. I do 
not believe it to be true. I could not believe it and not de- 
spair of the future of our civilization; for more and more the 
control of all foreign as well as domestic affairs is coming into 
the hands of democracy. More and more the judgment of the 
great body of the people determines the actions of secretaries 
of state and ministers of foreign affairs and foreign ambassa- 
dors and ministers. If democracy is incompetent to deal 
with foreign affanrs, more and more the world will return to 
the diaos of international strife and war. 



PANAMA CANAL TOLLS 811 

Our oountiy has taught the world the most valuable lesson 
of modem histcxry, if not of all history, that a democracy is 
competc^nt to maintain within its own territory peace and 
order with justice. Our democracy has set at naught all the 
dismal forebodings of its ^lemies and compelled an unwilling 
assent from the Governments of the world to its entire com- 
petency to rule itself. I have believed and I do beEeve that 
the power of a developing democracy is competent to the 
maintenance of international peace and justice, to substitute 
kindly consideration, the mutual courtesy and forgiv^iess 
of international brotherhood for the hatred and strife of 
monarchical and dynastic rule. 

Our democracy has assumed a great duty and asserts a 
mighty power. I have hoped that all diplomacy would be 
made better, purer, nobler, placed on a higher plane, because 
America was a democracy. I beHeve it has been; I believe 
that during all our history the right-thinking, the peace- 
loving, the justice-loving people of America have sweetened 
and ennobled and elevated the intercourse of nations with 
each other; and I believe that now is a great opportunity for 
another step forward in that beneficent and noble purpose 
for civilization that goes far beyond and rises far above the 
mere question of tolls or a mere question with England. It 
is the conduct of our nation in conformity with the highest 
principles of ethics and the highest dictates of that religion 
which aims to make the men of all the races of the earth 
brothers in the end. 

Mr. President, the noble American who negotiated this 
treaty as Secretary of State did his share in his time toward 
accomplishing the beneficent work of ennobling diplomacy 
and the relations of states. He did it with purest patriotism 
and the most imswerving devotion to the interests of his own 
country; and I cannot but feel that in preventing our coun- 
try from repudiating the obligation into which he entered to 



312 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

make possible the great wcvk of the caiud, we are rendering a 
service to his memory that must be grateful to his friends. I 
recall something that he said that is worth remCTibmng 
when we are dealing with his work and thinking of the spirit 
in which he wrought. I ask you to listen to it: 

There are many crossei and triab in tbe lif e of one who is eodeavoiii^ 
to serve the commonwealth* but there are also two permanent sources of 
comfort One is the siq>p(«t and sympathy of honest and reasonable 
peoide. The other is the conyiction dwdling forever, like a wdl of living 
water, in the hearts of all of us who have faith in the country, that all we 
do, in the fear of God and the love of the land, will somdiow be overruled 
to the public good; and that even our errors and failures cannot greatly 
check the irresistible onward march of this mighty rqmblic, the oon- 
summate evdution of countless ages, called by divine voices to a destiny 
grander and brighter than we can conceive, and moving always, con- 
sciously or unccmsdously, along lines of beneficent achieveme&t whose 
constant aims and ultimate ends are peace and righteousness. 

I invoke for the consideration of this obligation of hcmor 
and good faith, which he assumed in our behalf and in the 
name of our country, that nobility and largeness of spirit 
which he exhibited and illustrated in his life. 



THE TREATY OF 1882 WITH RUSSIA 

THE BIGHT OF EXPATRIATION 

Deoembcr 10, 1011. — The Senate luiTiiig under oomidefatioD the jomt raols- 
tkm (H J. Bes. 166) providing for the tennuwtioii ol the IVe^ 
United States and Bmiia. The joint reeolntion wai approved by the Ptendent 
December 81» 1011. 

The first artide ol the treaty ol December 18^ 1888» between Ronia and the 
United States, reads as follows: 

There shall be between the territories ol the high contracting parties, a 
reciprocal liberty of commerce and navigation. The inhabitants of their 
req>ective states shall mutually have liberty to enter the ports, places, and 
rivers of the territories of each party, wherever foreign commerce is permitted. 
They shall be at liberty to sojourn and reside in all parts whatsoever of said 
territories, in order to attend to their affairs, and they diaU enjoy, to that 
effect, the same security and protection as natives of the country wherein they 
reside* on condition of their subnutting to the laws and ordinances there 
prevailing, and particularly to the regulations m force concerning commerce. 
Article 10 of the treaty provided that certain concessions previously set out in the 
artide '* shall not derogate, in any manner, from the force dF the laws already pub- 
lished, or which may hereafter be published by His Majesty the Emperor of all the 
Russias: to prevent the emigration of his subjects.'' 

Diflficulties having arisen between the two governments concerning Russian 
subjects of the Jewish faith who had come to the United States and after acquiring 
Amfffican dtiaenship, sought to return to Russia, the refusal of the Russian Govern- 
ment to admit sudi persons and to give them the privileges accorded to other 
American dtisens under this treaty; the insistfince of the Russian authorities that 
there should be noted upon the passports issued to sudi citiiens that the bearers 
were persons of the Jewish faith, caused great friction between the two countries 
and led to a joint resolution of Congress, introduced December 4, 1911, in the 
House, to abn^te the IVeaty of 1888. The resolution as passed by both Houses and 
signed by the President, read as follows: 

Whbbbab, the treaty of commerce and navigation between the United States 
and Russia, concluded on the ei^teenth day of December, ei^teen hundred 
and thir^-two, provides in Artide XH thereof that it ** shall continue in force 
until the first day of January, in the year of our Lord ei^teen hundred and 
thirty-nine, and if, one year before that day, one of the hi^ contracting parties 
shall not have announced to the other, by an oflkial notification, its intention 
to arrest the operation thereof this treaty diaU remain obligatory <me year 
beyond that day, and so on until the ezpiratioD of the year which diaU com- 
mence after the date of a dmilar notification "; and 

Whereas, on the seventeenth day of December, ninet/em hundred and 
eleven, the President caused to be delivered to the Imperial Russian Govem- 
mentt by the American Ambassador at Saint Petersburg, an oflSdal notification 

818 



814 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

on hthaM ol the Goyornment of the United Statei, Mmonnring intentioii to 
terminate the<q>eration ol this treaty iqwn the expiration ol the year oommenc- 
ing on the first ol Janoaiy, nineteen hundred and twelve; and 

Whereas, said treaty is no longer reqxMisive in various respects to the 
political prindples and commercial needs ol the two countries; and 

Whereas, the constructions placed thereon by the r espec ti ve c o ntract in g 
parties differ upon matters of fundamental importance and interest to each: 
Iherelore be it 

Re$oUfed by ihs Senate and Eouee of RepreeenJUdidee of the Uniied States of 
America in Congreee aeeembUd, That the notice thus given by the President of 
the United States to the Government of the Empire ol Russia to terminate said 
treaty in accordancft with the terms ol the treaty is hereby adc^ted and ratified. 

T II TEREitnotforthe references made by the senior Sen- 
V V ator from Maryland [Mr. Rayner] in his very eloquent 
address this morning to some statements made and positions 
taken by me I should not venture to detain the Senate from 
a vote on these resolutions by any observations of mine. 
What the Senator from Maryland referred to was a brief 
statement which I made in the Conunittee on Foreign Rela- 
tions both as to my position and as to the reasons which 
ledtoit. Of course, the remarks made in the committee have 
vanished in thin air and enter into no record; and accord- 
ingly the very brief and partial observations of the Senator 
from Maryland alone remain. I will endeavor to state 
substantially what I stated in the conmiittee. 

I am clearly of the opinion that the United States ouj^t to 
terminate the Treaty of 1832 with Russia. I do not think, 
however, that the House resolution which was addressed to 
that end contains an adequate statement of the reasons 
why we ought to terminate the treaty, and I do think that 
the language of that House resolution is in some respects 
unfortunate. 

If the treaty, Mr. President, properly construed, construed 
as we think it should be construed, would be adequate to 
meet the needs of our people and would be in conformity to 
the political principles which we profess, then I should say 
that instead of abrogating the treaty it would be appropriate 



TREATY WITH RUSSIA 315 

to assert our construction and to call upon Russia as a co- 
signatory with us of The Hague conventions r^arding the 
peaceable settlement of international di£Ferences to submit 
the true construction of the treaty to arbitration; and then, 
if the decision was against us, we could take whatever course 
appeared to be wise at that time. 

The trouble with taking any such course, however, is that 
no matter how this treaty is construed, no matter how any 
real question of difference between us and Russia regarding 
the construction is resolved, the treaty is and must always 
remain an unsatisfactory and injurious instrument for us to 
continue by our assent. 

During the eighty years which have dapsed dnce the mak- 
ing of the treaty, there has been a very momentous change in 
the attitude of the greater part of the civilized world toward 
the subject-matter of the treaty, and we have shared in that 
change. 

The treaty in its first article provides that the inhabitants 

of the respective states shall have liberty to go into each 

other's territories on condition of their submitting to the 

laws and ordinances there prevailing, and particularly to 

the regulations in force concerning commerce; and the tenth 

article of the treaty concludes with this paragraph: 

But this article shaD not derogate in any manner from the force (rf the 
laws already published, or which may hereafter be published by His Majesty 
the Emperor of all the Russias, to prevent the emigration (^ his subjects. 

There is what appears to be and is generally considered to 
be a dear recognition on the part of the United States of the 
right of Russia to prohibit the emigration of her subjects. 

In 1882, when this treaty was made, the United States 
equally with Russia maintained the doctrine of indefeasible 
all^iance. Only shortly before, in the year 1797, the Su- 
preme Court of the United States had asserted that doctrine 
in the famous Williams case. 



316 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Williams was a native American citizen. He had left our 
country. He had gone to France. He had become natural- 
ized as a French citizen. He had entered into the military 
or naval forces of France and taken part in conflicts between 
France and Great Britain. The course that he followed was a 
course that was forbidden by the laws of the United States to 
American citizens; and sometime afterwards, returning to 
this country upon a visit, Williams was arrested, indicted, 
and tried for a violation of those laws. He pleaded and im- 
dertook to prove that he had renounced his all^iance to the 
United States and had become a French citizen, and that 
evidence was excluded; and the exclusion was sustained by 
the Supreme Court of the United States upon the ground that 
he could not divest himself of his alliance to his native 
country and become a citizen of another country. 

In 1830, immediately before the n^otiation of this treaty, 
there came up in the Supreme Court of the United States the 
case of Shank v. Dupont, which turned upon the question 
whether a citizen could divest himself of citizenship and ac- 
quire citizenship in another country. The Supreme Court <rf 
the United States, Mr, Justice Story delivering the opin]<Hi, 
said: 

The general doctrine is that no persons can, by any act of their own, 
without the consent of the Government, put off their allegiance and 
become aliens. 

And the case was decided on that ground. 

In that same year Mr. Kent, in his Commentaries, whidi 
were published from 1826 to 1830, declared the geaersl rule 
maintained by the United States to be the rule of the common 
law of England of indefeasible allegiance. 

So, when this treaty was made and we gave our ezi^ess 
recognition of the right of the Emperor of Russia to make laws 
to prevent the emigration of his subjects, it was a treaty be- 
tween two powers both of which maintained that no subject 



TREATY WITH RUSSIA 317 

or dtizen of theirs could ever emigrate to the other country 
and become a citizen of the other country without the express 
assent of his native land. 

That, sir, was the universal doctrine of the civilized world 
at that time. We held to that doctrine for many years, until 
in 1848, James Buchanan — to his eternal credit be it said — 
as Secretary of State of the United States, first announced 
the repudiation by the Government of the United States of 
that theory and declared the inalienable right of man to 
change his domicile and to change his allegiance at his own 
will. 

There were varying views expressed. After Mr. Buchanan, 
with views reverting to the old doctrine, came Webster and 
Everett and Marcy, until Buchanan became President, and 
then he again asserted his view, and so effectively that it has 
never been departed from by the United States. It was as- 
serted by Buchanan as President. It was reasoned out by 
Jeremiah Black as Attorney-General of the United States, in 
dealing with the Ernst case, that arose regarding the effect of 
the naturalization here of a citizen of Hanover. In that case, 
by the action of these great statesmen, to whom sufficient 
honor has never been given for the firmness and constancy 
with which they asserted that view — in that case the posi- 
tion of the United States was irrevocably changed, repudiat- 
ing the view she had taken at the time this treaty was made 
and repudiating the view under which she gave in this treaty 
her assent to the right of the Emperor of Russia to prevent 
the emigration of his subjects. 

Of course, sir, this change had come along with a change in 
conditions. When this treaty was made, the great tide of 
immigration to this country had not begun. It came first 
after the famine in Ireland in 1848. It was swelled by a 
stream from a different source after the political troubles on 
the Continent in 1848. It was still increased through the 



S18 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

continiial sucoession of wars in which Euik^ was engaged f <^ 
the quarter of a century beginning with the Crimean War in 
1858. 

In the meantime, whereas the greatest number of immi- 
grants that ever came to these shores, prior to 1882, was 
found in the immigration, I think, of 1880, of 27,882, and 
whereas the first year when the immigration passed a hun- 
dred thousand was in 1842, when it readied 104,585, this 
stream swelled still year after year untfl hundreds <rf thou- 
sands grew to millions, and a very large part of our people 
came to be composed either of emigrants or the children of 
emigrants; and our repudiation of the old doctrine of inde- 
feasible allegiance was a repudiation based upon that clearer 
view which came from an immediate contact with the living 
needs of mankind as exhibited by those who came to us from 
their old homes. 

This process, Mr. President, greatly accelerated by the 
active interest excited in the Warren and Costello cases with 
Great Britain in 1866, culminated and found its compre- 
hensive and effective declaration on the part of Congress in 
the statute of July 27, 1868, which has been referred to by 
both the Senator from Maryland and the Senator from 
Massachusetts. That statute recites: 

Whereas the right of ezpatriatioii is a natural and inherent right of aO 
pec^de. 

And then it proceeds to use terms which are pointed 
directly at and are designed to do away completely with the 
effect of aU the expressions to which I have referred during 
the period of time in which the United States maintained the 
doctrine of indefeasible allegiance. It was the dear intenticm 
of Congress in passmg that statute not to deny that we had 
ever maintained the doctrine, but to give dear notice that we 
wiped out the past and took a new departure; for the statute 
says: 



TREATY WITH RUSSIA 819 

Any dedaratioii, instnictioii* ofHiiioii* order, or dednon of any officers 
of this Government which denies, restricts, in^Murs, or questions the right 
of expatriation is hereby declared inconsistent with the fundamental 
{windples of this Government. . 

That comes very near, Mr. Preddent, the repeal of this 
treaty which gives assent to the right of the Emperor of all 
the Russias to prevent by law the emigration of his subjects. 
It clearly establishes a position on the part of the United 
States wholly inconsistent with the treaty in that respect. 

With this radical change in position, sir, the representa- 
tives of the United States in its foreign policy b^an upon a 
process which I think has rarely been equaled in the records 
of any nation — a process most creditable to the good sense 
and wisdom of the American people and of their representa- 
tives, and which, by steady, temperate, and judicious rep- 
resentation and appeal to friendship, to reason, to justice, 
to the desire for good-f ellov^ship and friendly relations, has, 
step by step, brought nearly all the governments of the 
civilized nations of the earth to leave the old position and to 
stand by the side of the United States in the new. 

By the Bancroft treaties of 1868, the year in which this 
statute was passed, the adhesion of the North German Con- 
federation and substantially all of the states which now make 
up the German Empire was secured to the doctrine of the 
right of expatriation and change of allegiance. By the treaty 
of May 26, 1869, with Sweden and Norway, and of July 20, 
1872, with Denmark, the adhesion of the Scandinavian states 
to the same doctrine of international human freedom was 
secured. By the treaty of May 18, 1870, Great Britain was 
brought to abandon the immemorial rule of her common law, 
whence we derived our doctrine of indefeasible allegiance and 
to adhere to the new rule. By the treaty of November 16, 
1868, Belgium adhered, and by the treaty of September 20, 
1870, Austria-Hungary came into the same cat^^ry. 



8S0 INTEBNATI(»^AL SUBJECTS 

So you will perceive, Mr. Flresident, that step by step we 
secured the adoption of the new rule answering to the sue* 
cessive waves of immigration to our shores from di£ferent 
countries. The Irish immigration was set free by the treaty 
with England; the Scandinavian immigration was set free 
by the treaties with Sweden and Norway and Denmark; the 
Grerman immigration was set free by the Bancroft treaties 
with the German states. The Hungarian immigration was 
cared for, together with the immigration of Croats and Slavs 
and other Austrian peoples, by the treaty with Austria- 
Hungary. France and Italy in their treaties of commerce 
and navigation with us omitted the last clause as contained 
in article 10 of the Russian treaty, and in their laws have 
recognized the right of emigration and naturalization. 

The position to which the world was brought by this long 

course of diplomatic effort and achievement is well stated by 

a very celebrated Russian publicist, Frederick de Martens, 

in his recent work entitled Traiie de droit intemaHonaL I 

translate from the French. He says: 

With the exoqitiQii of Bussia, all the dvilused oontemporaiieoiia states 
are imbued with the conviction that the right of emigratioa is <me of the 
inalienable rights pertaining to each citizen, and that every individual is 
free to change his nationality. This modification has taken place, thanks 
above all to the pnrfound transformaiion which has followed in the present 
century the old p<Jitical order. Liberty of emigration is the direct ccmse- 
quence of the new social and political order which has for its basis respect 
for the human perscHiality and for the interests which surround it. 

So, Mr. President, the maintenance of this treaty is wholly 
inconsistent with the solemnly declared principles of the 
United States. It is a part of an old condition of things long 
since passed away. It is inconsistent with the vie w taken by 
the greater part of the civilized world, and I consider that the 
first and great reason for ending the treaty is that we may 
set ourselves right with our own principles and no longer 
occupy the false position of consenting to that negation of our 



TREATY WITH RUSSIA 8il 

principles whidi is involved in the assent to the preven- 
tion by the Empennr of Russia of the emigration of his own 
subjects. 

And, Mr. Ftasident, no change in construction of the treaty 
that we can expect, that we can look forward to from diplo- 
macy or from the result of an arbitration, could possibly 
change this characteristic of the treaty. The time has clearly 
come — I think the time had come when we passed that 
statute in 1868, but the time has dearly come now — when 
consistency and regard for our own principles require us to 
do what the treaty contemplated — to say that the change of 
conditions calls upon us to give the notice provided for its 
termination. 

Mr. President, that characteristic of the treaty covers 
reaUy the great part; it covers the greater part of the field. 
While it is doubtless true that some native-bom Americans 
h^vebeen exduded from Russia when they ought not to have 
been excluded under the treaty, while it is doubtless true 
that Russia puts upon the treaty a construction di£fering. 
from ours as to the nature of the rq^ilations which she is 
entitled to impose upon American citizens who are Jews, 
when they come into her territory, still the number of such 
people is comparatively small, and the great field is the field 
whidi affects these millions of new arrivals here who have 
intimate and direct relations with the country from which 
they came and from which they are cut off by virtue of 
the necessary construction of this treaty and by virtue of the 
severe statutes whidi the Senator from Maryland has read. 

Mr. Bailey. If it would not interrupt the Senator from 
New York just now, I should like to ask him how he recon* 
cfles the declaration that the right of expatriation is both a 
natural and a political right, with our Chinese policy. If a 
Chinaman has a natural and political right to come to this 
country, then we can have no right to forbid his coming; and 



322 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

wholly independent of the question now under consideratk>n, 
I would not like to commit myself to the extent of conceding 
that. 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, the Senator from Texas has 
given to the declaration of the right of expatriation a meaning 
which goes further than I think is warranted. 

I have planted my self upon the declaration of the statute of 
1868, which I think is the final and authoritative declaration 
of the policy and the view <rf this country. The right of ex- 
patriation is the right of a man to leave his country and go to 
another, but it carries no right on his part to force himsdf 
into any other country that chooses to reject him. 

Mr. Bailet. But, Mr. President, if the Senator will per- 
mit me, the right to leave your own country is a barren one 
unless you can go into some other country. If every country 
on the globe would adopt our policy against Chinese immi- 
gration, then the Chinaman would have a right to leave his 
country, but there would be no country to which he could go, 
and his right would be an utterly barren one. 

Mr. Root. I think entirely so. 

Mr. Bailet. I can hardly bring myself to think that logi- 
cally there is a natural right which can be defeated by the 
action of other people. I will say to the Senator from New 
York if the Chinese question had been as vital then as it is 
now, I very seriously doubt if the statute of 1868 would have 
been quite as broad as it is. 

Mr. Root. That may be. I am not going to discuss the 
Chinese question further than to take advantage of the atten- 
tion called to it by the Senator from Texas, to say that it be- 
hooves us to be quite conservative and cautious in the official 
use of language about this Russian treaty, lest we find our- 
selves in a moment of enthusiasm or irritation betrayed into 
an assertion of propositions which will come back to plague 
us when they are turned the other way. 



TREATY WITH RUSSIA 828 

One very good reason, Mr. President, for giving the notice 
to terminate this treaty in shnple t^ms and without under- 
taking to specify reasons is that there are many, I suppose 
millions, of subjects of Russia of Mongolian birth, whom we 
would not admit to our country, treaty or no treaty, and 
we had better not undertake to specify reasons which will in- 
volve us in making nice discriminations in r^ard to the dif- 
ference between Russians admitting Amerk»n citizens there 
and our admitting Russian subjects here, in advance of 
thorough and careful consideration of the true meaning and 
effect of what we say. 

There is one other reason, Mr. President, why this treaty is 
not satisfactory, and that is, it is exceedingly limited in its 
scope. The construction generally put upon it is, that it 
applies to entering Russia only for commercial purposes. I 
do not know that that can be successfully contested. So the 
treaty itself and all questions regarding the proper enforce- 
ment and construction of the treaty cover but a small comer 
of the real difficulty. The only way to solve the difficulty is 
to get rid of the treaty and bc^ anew. In doing that, sir, 
we will avoid one very serious objection which now exists to 
our relations with Russia. 

When the treaty has been terminated, if no new treaty 
is made in its place, nobody from the United States will have 
a right to enter Russia. In that event the effect will not 
be to admit to Russia the people who have been denied 
entrance there, but it will be to exclude from Russia aU other 
Americans. 

That in some respects would be unfortunate, but, Mr. 
President, it would be better than the present. It is better 
that there should not be any discrimination which constitutes 
two sharply sqMurated dasses of our citizens. I would rather 
have one great body of American citizens who have no rij^t 
to enter a foreign land than to have two bodies of American 



824 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

dtisens (me of which has the right under our treaties to enter 
and the other of which has no right. 

So, while I hope that a new treaty will be made, which will 
give the right of entry to those who have not had it hitherto^ 
and I think it is the duty of our Government to b«ui every 
effort toward bringing that about, still, if we must go with no 
treaty, I shall be better satisfied than to have this treaty of 
discrimination continued. 

Now a word, Mr. Flresident, r^^arding the terms that we 
aretouse. Of course there is occasion to be more guarded in 
language between sovereign states, which have over them 
nobody to control their action, than there is between men, 
who can be obliged to keep the peace by police officers and 
the law. The peace of the world rests upon the observance 
of studied and careful courtesy in the rdatk>ns between 
nations. 

Mr. President, among men there ate more quarrels, there 
are more assaults, there are more murders brought about by 
insults, by wounded feelings, and injured honor than there 
are by the deprivation of property or injury to pecuniary 
rights. Among nations it is doubly so, because a jealous 
regard for independence and national honor are the part 
of patriotism the world over. No one can respect a man 
who does not resent an insult to his country. No people on 
earth are quicker to resent it than the people of the United 
States. 

It is difficult for men in one country to realise how thdr 
words will be understood and received in another country. 
You and I are in the habit of thinking alike, talking alike. 
We are in the same surroundings. We can understand what 
impulses and f edings move each other. When we are using 
words which relate to i>eople far away, on the other side of 
the earth, we can know but little of the weight, stress, and 
effect which will be produced in those far distant and alien 



TREATY WITH RUSSIA 825 

lands. Different oonditiQns maj give new and different 
meanings to the words. 

So it is that for the peace of the world» that nations may so 
conduct their affairs as to enable their people to live in peace 
and prosperity, it has come to be the universal custom to use 
especially guarded and courteous terms in diplomatic inter- 
course. It is not frill and nonsense; it is not fancy ot fad; 
it is the teaching of the universal experience of civilization. 

I am most anxious that in adopting a resolution to put an 
end to this treaty we should do it in accordance with that 
obligation of courtesy and respect which the peace and 
dignity of mankind require. 

Mr. President, accusations of violations of duty, imputa- 
tion, insinuations, all controversial matter should be ex- 
cluded from a resolution like this. If we assert our adherence 
to a great principle of acknowledged right as a reason for 
putting an end to this treaty we imply that Russia is opposed 
to it. We cannot vaunt ourselves, our principles, our virtues, 
our love of freedom in this resolution, without implying a 
charge against Russia that she is without them. 

Mr. President, were it true, what would be the effect of a 
charge made expressly or by implication but to b^pn a con- 
troversy ? Are we desirous to end this treaty and to secure a 
better one, or are we desirous to b^gin a controversy that will 
end we cannot tell where ? 

Mr. President, let me say one further thing. If in this 
resolution we depart from that dignified and courteous treat- 
ment which the customs of international intercourse through- 
out the world require, the sympathy of every civilized people 
on the face of the earth will be with the nation that has been 
offended, and the tremendous power of the public opinion of 
mankind will be behind a refusal of all the efforts of our 
dq>lomacy to secure a new arrangement which may benefit 
our fellow-citizens with whose woes we sympathize so deeply. 



Sjee INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

It not only will affect us in this particular case* but it will 
affect the position, the prestige, the good name, and credit of 
our country in all its foreign rdations. It will leave a condi- 
tion of feeling between us and Russia, our traditional friend, 
which it would take generations to do away, and it will leave 
us in aU the countries of the world lower in credit and less 
esteemed than we have been hitherto. 



THE MEXICAN RESOLUTION 

On Apni n, 1914, the Senate as in Committee ol the Whole had onder con- 
sideration the joint resolution (H. J. Bes. tffl), which dedaied: 

That the Fk«sident ol the United States is justified in the employment ol the 
anned loroes ol the United States to enfbroe the demands made iqxm Vio- 
toriano Huerta lor unequivocal amends to the Govenmient ol the United 
States lor aiboots and indignitiei mmmittfid against this Goyemment by 
General Huerta and his re p resentatives. 

To this resolution Senator Henry Cabot Lodge ol Massadrasetts proposed a 
substitute which lurther provided: 

That the United States disclaims any hostility to the Merican people or any 
purpose to make war upon Mexico. 
As thus amended, the resolution passed the Senate and was agreed to by the 
House ol Bepresentatives, Sfacty-ihird Congress^ Second sfasion. 
Mr. Boot said: 

MR. PRESIDENT, I shall not pioloDg veiy much this 
discussion, for I think that whatever action we take 
ought to be taken today without further dday. I do wish, 
however, to state the reasons for supporting the substitute 
offered by the Senator from Massachusetts [Mr. Lodge] in 
lieu of the resolution reported by the Committee on Foreign 
Relations. 

The President has «sked Congress for its approval of a 
course which he purposed to follow to compel amends for an 
insult to the flag of the United States. A resolution has come 
from the House declaring that the President is justified in the 
course he proposes and naming General Huerta as the person 
against whom the present action is understood to be directed. 
The Committee on Foreign Relations has reported a substi- 
tute resolution which omits all reference by name to General 
Huerta, but so refers to the statements made by the President 
in his address that in explaining the justification of the course 
which he proposes, the effect is substantially the same. We 
are not asked to authorize action; we are asked to justify it. 

8t7 



828 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Mr. President, I have the highest respect — more than 
respect, I have r^ard and admiration — for the President of 
the United States. I have entire confidence in the sincerity 
of his purpose, in the lofty quality of the ideals whidi he 
pursues, and in the genuineness of his adherence to peace. 

But we are asked not to express our opinion of the Presi- 
dent of the United States, not to express our confidence in 
him or in his purposes. We are asked in the ^cercise of our 
duty as a part of the Government of the United States to 
declare a specified course of conduct under specified condi- 
tions to be justified. It is our duty that we are to perform, 
our duty as a part of the Government of the United States, 
our duty to the hundred millions of people of the United 
States, to the community of nations, to the credit and good 
name of our country, to the honor and glory that this great 
democracy has intrusted to our hands as its representatives. 
This duty we are called upon to perform. 

The course which is proposed is the forcible armed com- 
pulsion of the people or some of the people of a friendly 
nation, the armed compulsion of a government which I think 
we all are agreed is an existing de facto government, having 
in its control the greater part of the territory of Mexico — 
the armed compulsion of that government to make amends 
to the United States for an insult to its flag. 

What is the justification ? We cannot justify, sir, upon 
confidence which we all have in the President. We must 
justify upon grounds which commend themselves to our con- 
sciences, to our intelligence, to the conscience of the Amar- 
ican people, and to the deliberate judgment of the civilized 
world. 

What is the justification ? Observe, sir, I do not say that 
there is no justification. I ask what it is. In the address of 
the President, in the plain implications and exclusive infer- 
ences of the resolution which came from the House, and 



THE MEXICAN RESOLlTnON 820 

equally in the resdution reported by the oonmiittee, the 
justification is to be found in a single inddent. That incident 
was this: A boat-load of sailors in the uniform of the United 
States, upon a boat flying the flag of the United States, 
landed the oth^ day at a wharf in Tampico and were arrested 
by an officer in charge of a guard, taken through the streets, 
presently returned to the boat and set free — a very gross 
offense to the dignity of the United States, an insult which 
cannot be ignored. 

But, sir, immediate amends were made. The action of the 
officer who made the arrest was disavowed by the govern- 
ment under which he served, the de facto government of 
Mexico, under the de facto presidency of General Huerta. 
It is stated that the officer was in turn arrested and was to 
be punished. The commandant at Tampico apologized for 
the act, and promptly upon being advised of the circum- 
stance, the head of the de facto government. General Huerta, 
also apologized. Those amends, which would be all that 
could be expected from private individuals, were, neverthe- 
less, not satisfactory and not sufficient for the officer in com- 
mand of the American fleet or squadron at Tampico, and he 
demanded a formal salute to the American flag. 

Mr. President, I agree with the admiral that the amends 
were not sufficient as coming from the de facto government 
and that there should have been a salute to the American flag, 
but it appears that there was an interposition by our Govern- 
ment; there were communications between our State Depart- 
ment and our charge in the City of Mexico, representations 
to the de facto government in Mexico, nq^tiations and 
conversations, as to the character of the further amends that 
should be made. The matter came plainly to be a discussion 
between the Government of the United States and the de 
facto government of Mexico. Not about the quality of the 
act that was done; there is no dispute about that. Notabout 



880 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

the obligation to make amends; that was done. Not 
about the obligation to apologize; the apologies were made. 
But about the form of further amends, how a salute should 
be fired, what were the propor and customary obligatory 
incidents in the way of returning such a salute, and the 
number of guns which should be fired. It is upon that dis- 
pute — upon a dispute between these two Govamnents 
about the number of guns that are to be fired and about 
what the propor custom is as to returning the salute when 
it is fired — it is upon that dispute that this justification is 
made to rest in the resolution passed by the other House 
and in the resolution reported by the Committee on Foreign 
Rdations of the Senate. 

Mr. President, I feel bound to say that while I would nev^ 
for a moment fail so far as in me lay in preserving the dignity 
and honor of the flag of the United States, the dispute to 
which this incident has come seems to be painfully inade- 
quate to the results which are to be drawn from it. If that 
is all — if there is nothing else except a question of the 
number of guns and the form and manner of salute — which 
stands between the hundred million people of the United 
States and this poor, harried, and distressed people, it seems 
to me that the occasion is painfully inadequate to the results 
that are to follow. 

Is that all ? We learn toni^t that Vera Cruz has fallen, 
that four American marines lie dead in that dty, and that 
twenty-one lie suffering from wounds. Is there nothing but 
this dispute about the number of guns and the form and o»e- 
mony of a salute to justify the sacrificeof those Amaican lives? 

O Mr. President, deeply and sincerely as the President d 
the United States desires to limit the scope of his action, 
deeply and sincerely as he desires the maintenance of peace, 
all history and human experience teach us that once lighted, 
the fires of war cannot be quenched at will* 



THE MEXICAN BESQLUTION SSI 

It is intervention, technically, but it is war in its essence 
that we are to vote to justify tonight. How long it will 
continue, what its results and its incidents will be, no man 
can state. Men will die, men dear to us will die, because of 
the acti<m that we are to approve tonight. Amaican homes 
will be desolate; American women will mourn; Ammcan 
children will go through life f ath^ less, because of the action 
that we are to approve tonight; and when those children, 
grown to manhood, turn back the page to leam in what 
cause their fathers died, are they to find that it was about a 
quarrel as to the number of guns and the form and ceremony 
of a salute, and nothing else ? 

We are to justify. What is the justification ? Is there none 
but that? We, the representatives of the great peace-loving 
nation; we, the representatives of the great democracy that 
prides itself upon demonstrating to the world that democraqr 
can be peaceful and just; we are to justify these acts of war; 
and is there no justification that we can lay before our coun- 
trymen, before the world, before the community of nations, 
belore the judgment seat of history, except our dispute about 
the number of guns and the form and method of a salute ? 
O Mr. President, how inadequate! How can we justify our- 
selves if we have no justification but that ? 

But, sir, that is not all. If it had been all, the President 
would not have come to the Congress yesterday; if it had 
been all, we would not be discussing the subject here tonight. 
Back of the incident, back of the special circumstance which 
f cnrms the whole of the resolution reported by the committee, 
there is a great array of facts, a long, dreadful history. Mr. 
President, if there were nothing else but the incident referred 
to in the resdution, would the Ammcan Grovemment have 
thought for a moment of treating this poor, weak country in 
this peremptory way ? Such things have happened hundreds 
of times hdore. Ignorant subalterns have many and many 



S32 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

a time transgressed the limits of propriety, mistaken their 
duty and their powers, and have done acts which were insults 
to great governments. It has often occurred in the history 
of the United States. What have we done? what would we 
do today if a subordinate officer in a port of England or 
France or Germany or Italy were to mistake his duty, make 
an arrest of American sailors, as American sailors have been 
arrested before, and the act were disavowed by the Govern- 
ment he served and an apology were made, and regret was 
expressed, and an intention to punish him was expressed — 
what would we do about the form and method of further 
amends ? Sir, in the first place, we would settle the facts. 

We are now engaged in signing a series of treaties designed 
to take in all the world, and already a very large number ol 
nations of the world have signed, under which we agree with 
them that if there be any dispute about any question of fact 
a commission shall investigate and report, and no action shall 
be taken for one year, to allow the report to be made. We 
find here that, while our admiral rq[>orted that the Amaican 
flag was flying on the boat, the Mexican officer reported to 
General Huerta that no flag was flying. I believe our admiral 
but can we think it strange that General Huerta believed his 
officer? If there were nothing else — if this were all — should 
not that question of fact be determined by peaceful means? 

The question of the proper, appropriate, and customary 
form and method of a salute is a matter of precedent and the 
usage of nations. It is the universal custom of civilized na- 
tions to present in diplomatic communications the prece- 
dents, the authorities showing that the custom contaided 
for by one country is the true custom and that the other 
country is mistaken. In the case that I suppose, of sudi an 
incident occurring in a port of France or Germany or Eng- 
land or Italy, sir, we would have presented our facts, investi- 
gated the facts, made certain and dear the facts, presented 



THE MEXICAN RESOLUnON 888 

the authoonties upon precedent and custom, and by peaceable 
and friendly communication would have reached a result. 

If that were all» that is what we would do. If this be all, 
is this nation of a hundred millions, the richest upon earth, 
with its mighty power, to treat poor, weak, bankrupt, down- 
trodden, distressed, despairing Mexico in any less kindly and 
just a way ? If this be all, how can we, in the arrogance of 
power, justify treating this weak neighbor with a peremptory 
harshness that we would not think of using toward a powerful 
nation ? 

Mr. President, what I have said is what the good people of 
our country and of the world will think, if we finish our work 
tonight by the adoption of the resolution reported by the 
committee. There is no justification for us there. No; by 
the expression of one thing, the dispute about the salute, we 
commit ourselves to the exclusion of all other justifications. 
We commit ourselves to a condemnation that will weigh 
heavily upon the heart of many a good American who loves 
his country and her honor, and which as time goes on, and 
the judgment of the world and of the future is made up, will 
grow darker and darker. 

But, Mr. President, it is not all — it is not all. There is 
matter of justification; and the Senator from Massachusetts 
[Mr. Lodge] has sought to lay it before the people of America 
and of Mexico and of the community of nations by the recital 
in the substitute resolution which he offers. What is it ? It 
is that lying bdiind the insult to our flag by this poor, 
ignorant subordinate are years of violence and anarchy in 
Mexico. Lying behind it are hundreds of American lives 
sacrificed, millions of Amaican property destroyed, and 
thousands of Americans reduced to poverty today through 
the destruction of their property. Lying behind it is a condi- 
tion of anarchy in Mexico which makes it impossible to 
secure, by diplomatic means, protection for American life 



334 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

and property in that country. Lying behind it is a c<mditi<Mi 
of affairs in Mexico which makes that country incapable ol 
performing its international obligations. 

The insult to the flag is but a part — the culmination, if 
you please — of a long series of violations of American rights, 
a long series of violations of those rights which it is the duty 
of our country to protect — violations not for the most part 
of govamnent, but made possible by the weakness of govan- 
ment, because through that country range bands of free- 
booters and chieftains like the captains of free companies, 
without control or responsibility. Lying back of this incident 
is a condition of things in Mexico which absolutely prevents 
the protection of Amaican life and property except through 
respect for the American flag, the Ammcan uniform, the 
American Grovemment. 

It is that which gives significance to the demand that 
public respect shall be paid to the flag of the United States. 
There is our justification. It is a justification lying not in 
Victoriano Huerta or in his conduct alone, but in the uni- 
versal condition of affairs in Mexico. The real object to be 
attained by the course we are asked to approve is not the 
gratification of personal pride; it is not the satisfaction of an 
admiral or a Government. It is the preservation of the powa* 
of the United States to protect its citizens under those 
conditions. 

If we omit from the resolution that shall be passed tonight 
all reference to the matters that are enumerated in the sub- 
stitute, we omit the real object which forms the only justifi- 
cation for action. Without that, sir, upon the showing of the 
resolution reported by the committee we would be ev^ last- 
ingly wrong. With the facts that are enumerated in the 
substitute the action of the United States will rest with 
becoming sense of proportion and national dignity upon 
adequate foundation and cause. 



THE MEXICAN RESOLUTION 835 

The Saiator from Indiana [Mr. Shivdy] has observed, in 
effect, that the substitute resolution thunders in the index. 
Ah, Mr. President, the capture of Vera Cruz, the death of 
American citizens, the wounds and sufferings of men who lie 
there tonight demand something more than formal indict- 
ment. The recitals of the substitute resolution are weak in 
the face of death and wounds and sufferings of Americans in 
Vera Cruz. No less than the substitute resolution avers can 
justify us. 

The conclusion of the substitute resolution, sir, is the same 
as that of the other. It justifies the President in the same 
course of conduct which the committee resolution justifies, 
but it gives grounds. It gives substantial grounds. It gives 
grounds creditable to the United States and adequate for the 
proposed action, instead of leaving this momentous move- 
ment of a great naval and military power to rest upon no 
justification but a dispute with a weak and helpless adver- 
sary about the number of guns and the proper ceremonies 
of a salute. 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BUL 

On January 4» 1915, the Senate^ at in Committee ol the Wholes had under con- 
sideration the bill (S. 6856) to authoriie the United Stately acting through a ahq>- 
lang board, to subscribe to the c^Mtal stodc ol a corporation to be organised under 
the laws ol the United Stetes or ol a State thereof or ol the District ol Columlua, to 
purdiase, construct, equips maintain, and operate merohant vessels in the foreign 
trade of the United States, and for other purposes. 

Thb Pbsbident pro temp(H«. The bill is in G>mmittee of the Whole 
and open to amendment. Unless there is objection, the committee amend- 
ments will be first considered. The Chair hears no objection. 

Mr. Root said: 

I DO not wish at this time to enter upon a discussion of 
the merits of this bill, but I do wish to say a very few 
words r^arding the discussion of the bill. 

I think it is a bill of vast importance. I have Jmown of no 
measure laid before the Senate in the past half dozen years 
which seemed to me weighted with such consequence as is 
this bill. 

There are three major lines of consideration, upon each one 
of which we must r^ard this bill as of very great consequence 
to the people of the country. The first and least is that it pro- 
poses to embark the Government of the United States upon a 
very large expense in a business venture of a kind in which 
the private enterprise of the United States has uniformly 
met with loss rather than profit, and it proposes to embark 
the Government in such a venture practically without limit 
imposed by the Congress of the United States. 

I say that is the least of the reasons why this bill must be 
regarded as of great importance. A second and more import- 
ant reason is that it proposes to put the Grovemment of the 
United States into the foreign trade at a time when that trade 
necessarily involves frequent, almost constant, questions of 
critical importance, of great delicacy and difficulty, arising 

887 



338 INTEHNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

under the law of nations r^arding neutxal and belligerent 
rights. It proposes to put the Grovemment of the United 
States in a position where her good faith will be questioned, 
where her violation of the law of nations will be asserted, if 
any situations arise such as have been detailed to us within a 
few days by the Senator from Montana [Mr. Walsh]. It 
proposes to create a condition where it will be no mere ques- 
tion of an individual citizen of the United States undertaking 
and succeeding or failing in carrying contraband to a bellig- 
erent, but where the Same state of facts will raise the ques- 
tion of the United States violating its neutrality and taking 
sides with one belligerent or another. 

That is the second reason. The third is that this bill pro- 
poses a reversal of the policy which has been followed by this 
Government from the b^inning. It proposes to embark the 
Grovemment of the United States in a business far more ex- 
treme than would be the ownership of railroads, far more 
extreme as an ^cerdse of governmental authority than 
would be the ownership of telegraph and telephone lines. It 
proposes to put the Grovemment of the United States in a 
position where it will stq> in and remedy the defects, the 
shortcomings, the failures of individual enterprise by raising 
money by taxation from all the people in ord^ to carry on 
the business that individual enterprise has not carried on; 
and that, sir, means a complete reversal of the pd^cy of the 
United States. It means a new d^Murture on a line of Gov- 
ernment action more important, more fateful in its results 
than any act which has ever been passed by this Congress 
since I, since you, Mr. President became a member of this 
body. It means a repudiation more signal than has ever yet 
been made of the principles of the great leader of the party 
which "" has the votes ** to put this bill through. 

Sir, there has been no discussion here since I have been in 
this body so imperative in its demands upon the m^nbefs of 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL 389 

the Saiate as the discussion of this bill. There has been no 
measure going so deep to the basis of our institutions as this 
bill. It comes here, sir, under circumstances which are repug- 
nant. There was no hearing before the committee of the 
House on such a measure as we have before us. There was 
no hearing before the committee of the Senate. The demand 
for a hearing was refused, and the bill was reported speedily, 
peremptorily, with but slight opportunity for discussion; 
and now, sir, the Senator from Missouri, in advance, with 
some show of feeling, which I know was evanescent and 
which, I trust, does not even now continue, has stigmatized 
all discussion of this bill on the part of the minority as — 
what were the words ? — " improper and unjustifiable." 

The Senator from Florida, with that kindliness and fairness 
which always characterize him, has told us that there was no 
disposition to interfere with the debate on this bill, but the 
Senator from Missouri in advance gives notice to the country 
that the debate on this bill is to be r^arded as obstructive, 
improper, and unjustifiable. I protest against any such spirit 
dominating this body, whether it be on the part of those who 
have the votes or not. May the time be far distant when 
there is so little spirit of independence, so little courage, so 
little loyalty to the duty of a minority in this body that such 
a notice in advance is accq>ted without just resentment. 

Mr. President, the discussion of measures in this body does 
not consist alone in the making of speeches. We discuss 
measures with but very few Senators here. There are not 
twenty in the room at this moment. I counted them a few 
minutes ago, and there were fourteen. What, then, is the 
use of discussion ? The use is this, that every speech is going 
to the country, that every hour passed is calling the attention 
of the country to the measure. The people of the United 
States b^in to consider, begin to read, b^in to discuss, and 
gradually week by week they form their opinions, and their 



840 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

<q[>inioiis find their way back here. The process of discussicHi 
results ultimately in the reaching of condusi^Mis which are 
confcmnable to the will and judgment of the pec^le of the 
United States. That, sir, is why the loDg» patient, and some- 
times tedious discussion of questions in the Senate of the 
United States is of vast utility, although we would siq)pose 
that it was useless from counting the men who are listening 
to the speeches which are made. 

Now, Mr. President, this bill, fraught with such great 
consequences, must have and shall have the kind of discus- 
sion which brings these grave and serious questions before 
the pec^le of the United States and which enables them to 
form their judgments upon the subjects whidi are involved. 



SECOND SPEECH ON THE SHIP 
PURCHASE BILL 



' Jamutfy 8^ 1915, the Senate hating been m oootiniioiit Mtnoo, with reoeiMi^ 
under the fiction ol the legiilattye day ol January 15, Mr. Boot spoke again on the 
Ship Parchaae Bill, addressing himself particularly to the pendbg amendment ol 
Senator Henry Cabot Lodge* ol Massadrasetts, wfaidi was as follows: 

PtoMedp That no vessels shall be purchased under this act wfaidi are the 

property* in whole on in part* or which are in any manner controlled or sub- 

sidiaed by any ol the nations now at war* nor shall any vessels be purchased 

mider this act whidi are the p roper ly ol any ol the subjects or citiiens ol said 

belligerent nations. 

Mr. Boot spoke a third time on this bill on February 9* 1915* addressing himself 

to the national aspects ol the proposed legidation. The Sixty-third Congress 

adjowned dne du on March 4^ 1915* without enacting this legislation* 

I WISH to address mysdf this morning to the amendment 
to the pending ship purchase bill o£Fered by the Senator 
from Massachusetts [Mr. Lodge]. I may find it neces- 
sary hereafter to speak upon another important phase of 
the proposed legislation, but at present I speak upon that 
alone. 

I wish at the outset to say a few words regarding the discus- 
sion of the measure. I hope I am not warped or carried away 
by feeling or by any partisan considerations, but it does not 
seem to me that this bill to put the Government of the United 
States into the business of foreign shipping is receiving the 
kind of discussion which a measure of great importance and 
novelty ought to have. It is a very important measure. It is 
important not merely because it involves the expenditure of a 
vast sum of money at a time when we have been forced to 
make up a deficit in our revenues by imposing an extraordi- 
nary tax which we call the war-revenue tax, but it is impor- 
tant because it embarks the Government of the United States 
upon a new departure, based upon a reversal of the principles 

841 



842 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

of govemment which we have always fdlowed up to this time. 
No such change of princq>le and polii^ was in the contempla- 
tion of the people of the United States wbea the present 
Administration was put into power by their votes. No such 
reversal of principle and policy was ever discussed and passed 
upon by the people of the United States in any dection. 

Hainly the judgment of the people should be taken, so far 
as it 4S possible by the ordinary methods in which a free, 
self-governing people proceed with the conduct of thdr 
Government. Hainly if there be any strength or virtue in 
our representative government, such a new departure and 
reversal of principle and poliqr should have the fullest pos- 
sible discussion in the great public forum of the Congress of 
the United States. Is this measure receiving that ? It 
seems to me, sir, that it is not. 

The bill in its present form was reported on the sixth of Jan- 
nary. During the month before, in December, it had been 
introduced by the Senator from Missouri [Mr. Stone] and 
referred to the Committee on Commerce. It was reported by 
that committee without hearing and without any extended 
consideration or discussion in the committee. 

The bill was brought before the Senate for consideration, 
if I am not mistaken in my dates, on the fourth day of the 
present month, and the Senator from Florida presented in a 
brief and not exhaustive or extensive manner the report in 
favor of the bill. Upon that day notice was given that dis- 
cussion of the bill by the minority in the Senate would be re- 
garded as improper and obstructive. Those are substantially 
the words that were used by the senior Senator from Missouri 
[Mr. Stone]. Notice was given which stigmatized all discus- 
sion of the bill by the minority as obstructive and inq»oper. 

Mr. Flbtchsb. May I interrupt the Senat(Mr ? 

The Vicb-Pbbbident. Does the Senator from New York 
yield to the Senator from Florida ? 



THE SHIP FUBCHASB BILL 343 

Mr. Root. Certamly. 

Mr. Flbtghbb. May I inquire ^dio gave that notice ? 

Mr. Root. The Senator from Idlssouri [Mr. Stone] gave 
that notice. 

Mr. Flotchsr. I certainly did not myself, becauae I 
stated postively that we would afford ample importunity for 
full discussion. 

Mr. Root. The Senator fnmi Missouri, who introduced 
the bill, gave the notice, and he accompanied it by the state- 
ment that they had the votes to pass the biU. In advance 
of any discussion, in advance of any consideration, the 
notice was given that the majority in the Senate had the 
votes to pass the bill. 

Mr. Stonb. Mr. President, I was looking for the record of 
exactly what occurred. I did look that up when the Senator 
from New York made a statement somewhat similar to the 
one which he repeats this morning, and I thought later to 
have the exact facts shown from the record of what was said 
rq[>eated here. I am not able at this moment to turn to that 
record, not recalling the exact time when the colloquies 
occurred; but if the Senator wH permit me a few moments, 
as soon as I can look it up I will be very glad to have the 
exact facts and everything that was said in consecutive order 
stated. Now, Mr. President — 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, it is not my purpose to yield the 
floor. 

Mr. Stons. I am not asking the Senator to yield the floor. 

The Vice-President. The Chair would not rule that the 
Senator from New York had yielded the floor. 

Mr. Root. I say that because it is commonly reported — 

Mr. Stone. But the statement — 

Mr. Root. That it will be regarded during the progress of 
this debate as a yielding of the floor by the Senator holding it 
if he permits any interruption for the j>urpose of any speech 



844 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

or busmess whatever — tliat is the undefstanding — exo^ 
the askmg of a question. 

Mr.SroNiL Very well; I wiD wait untB the Senator from 
New York concludes his address, Mr. President, and then I 
will produce the Record^ for I am sure the Senator from New 
York does not wish to make a misleading statement, although 
a mistaken one. 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, I do not wish to do the Senator 
from Missouri any injustice. like him, I have not examined 
to get the precise words which were used. I am stating the 
effect of what he said upon my mind, the effect upon the mind 
of all the Senators about me, and upon the minds of all the 
Senators with whom I have since conversed. The effect was 
that the Senator from Missouri intended on the fourth of 
January to give notice that discussion of this ship purchase 
biU on this side of the aisle would be regarded as improper 
and obstructive. He accompanied that by the statement: 
** We have the votes to put the bill through, unless it is pre- 
vented from coming to a vote by improper or obstructive 
tactics.'' That was but the b^finning. 

Two days after this notice was given a substitute bill was 
introduced striking out everything that had been in the 
measure on the fourth of January and substituting an oi- 
tirdy new measure, with much that was in the <Ad, but a new 
measure from b^inning to end. Since that time we ha ve not 
been discussing this bill; there has been no discussion of this 
biU in this representative body. Some of us who have been 
opposed to the bill have been making speeches about it, but 
the biU has not been discussed. 

I have sat here and counted with wonder from time to time 
the numbers of the majority who have been present while 
men eminent for learning and e3q>erience and ability and 
patriotism have been attempting to discuss the bill. I have 
seen here four Democratic Senators pres^it, three Resent, 



THE SHIP FDBCHASE BILL 845 

one preBimt. I marked the {NreBoice of but one Democratie 
Senator in this Chamber by saying to the Senator from New 
Hampshire [Mr. Gallinger]: "" If some one would call Mr. 
Fletdier out of the Chamber, we might move to adjourn.^ 
I say that has been the rule — one, three, four, five, half a 
doEeai Senators present while the Senator from Ohio [Mr. 
Burton], the sailor Senator from Iowa [Mr. Cummins], the 
jimior Senator from Massadiusetts [Mr. Weeks], and the 
senior Senator from Massachusetts [Mr. Lodge], have been 
trying to perform their duty of discussing this great and 
novel measure in the Senate of the United States. The men 
who announced at the b^inning that they had the votes to 
carry the bill have been absent. 

The Senator from Mississippi [Mr. ISHliams], with that 
goiial humor which so often brightens the closing hours of our 
l^islative days, had — I will not say the effrontery, but I 
will say the disrespect, to tdl the Senate that the speeches 
made by these gentlemen were not worth listening to. He 
said what was true, that he was not obliged to listen to the 
Senator from Ohio or to the Senator from Massachusetts or 
to the Senator from Iowa — that is true — but when having 
been absent, not having heard one word, he comes into the 
Senate and says they were not worth listening to, that they 
were long speeches with nothing in them, he daiies the effi- 
cacy of the Ammcan system of representative government; 
he discredits the Senate of the United States; for, sirs, there 
is not now and never has been in our history a group of men 
whose study and thought and expression upon great public 
questions have been of greater value to the people of the 
United States than the Senators whom I have pointed out 
and who, the Senator from Mississippi says, are not worth 
listening to. 

Why is it, Mr. President, that this course has been fol- 
lowed ? Not because the Senators upcm the other side really 



846 . INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

beUeve that the contributions these Senators have made 
to the discussion of this biU are not worth Hstening to» 
but for a very di£Ferent reason. It has not been the <»di- 
nary fatigue or desire to attend to other business; it has 
been for a specific purpose. Before I state that purpose, 
let me add that not only had there been an announce- 
ment at the b^finning that you had the votes to pass the 
biU and, subsequent to that, abstention from the meetings 
ci the Senate during our attempts at discussion; not <mly 
has there been the open and public declaration that what 
the ablest men in the minority had to say on this new sub- 
ject is not worth listening to, but the rules of the Senate 
have been so used, have been used in such an unusual 
and extraordinary way as to make any attempt at discus- 
sion upon this side of the Chamber most burdensome and 
difficult. 

I am now spealdng on the twenty-fifth day of January, but 
we are proceeding according to the Calendar of Business, 
from which I read, and according to the order of the majiuily 
of the Senate, upon the l^islative day of Friday, January 15, 
1915. Why is that fiction employed ? 

Mr. Hughes. Mr. President — 

The Vics-PBBaiDENT. Does the Senator from New York 
yield to the Senator from New Jersey ? 

Mr. Boot. I yield so far as I may without losing the 
floor. 

Mr. Hughes. I merely desire to ask the Senator if that 
situation does not exist by virtue of unanimous consent 
entered into in this body ? 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, it does not exist by unanimous 
consent. 

Mr. Hughes. Well, practically by unanimous consent. 

Mr. Boot. It does not exist practically by unanimous 
consent. It exists against my open and vigorous objec* 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL S47 

tion, and it exists because of the voting down of a motion 
to adjourn made by the junior Senator from Pennsylvania 
[Mr. Oliver] and the carrying by the majority of a motion 
for a recess until eleven o'dock, instead of the ordinary 
adjournment. 

Mr. President, why is it that for ten days we have been 
conducting our business under a fiction, under a false pre- 
tense — the pretense that we are in the day of January 15 ? 
Why, sir, it is in order that we may have from eleven o'clock 
in the morning until six or seven o'clock in the evening, dur- 
ing which no business can be transacted, except the making of 
speeches on this bill; that is, eight hours of continuous speak- 
ing on this biU with no other business. This fiction of a 
continuous legislative day cuts out the morning hour; it cuts 
out the order of business under which petiticois and memorials 
may be presented, under which bills may be introduced, 
under which reports of committees may be submitted; all 
business of the Senate is pushed aside by this fiction in 
order that the opponents of this biU may be turned into the 
Chamber under the necessity of speaking continuously eight 
hours every day, and with the threat looming up before us of 
night sessions also, and speaking to empty benches on the 
other side. 

Mr. President, this bill is being put through by the pressure 
of physical weakness. It is being put through by means of 
making it as exhausting as possible for the opponents of the 
bill to discuss it. 

Sir, there are two objects of discussion in a representative 
body. One is to convince one's colleagues, to produce an 
effect upon the minds of one's colleagues. That is the de- 
liberation, the consideration of the representative body. 
That, sir, does not exist in regard to this biU. No one can 
deny it. There have been discussions behind closed doors, 
we are told by the newspapers. There have been discussions 



848 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

in the Democratic caucus, amendments offered and adopted, 
amendments offered and rejected behind dosed doors, but no 
discussion of this great measure in this representative body. 

I am not one, sir, who flouts at caucuses. I think there 
may well come a time in the course of the progress of legisla- 
tion when a party shall undertake to act as a unit; but,sir,it 
ought to be after discussion, and not before discussion or as 1^ 
substitute for discussion. You are substituting secret dis- 
cussion in your caucus to the exclusion of that discussion and 
consideration of this great measure which the Constituticm, 
the spirit of our free Ammcan Government, danands. 

There is another object of discussion, sir, and that is an 
object which reminds me of the <M phrase, so familiar to 
some of us, " leading in prayer.*' When we properly discuss 
a measure of public importance we not only address our- 
selves to each other, but we are leading, stimulating, inciting 
the thought and discussion of the people of the whole coun- 
try ; and that, sir, is after all the great, the all-important, the 
indispensable function of a public l^islative body. Once we 
begin in the Senate to discuss a new measure, as littie attri- 
tion as may seem to be paid to specific utterances, scnne get 
into the press; in all the great newspaper offices there are 
men whose business it is to read the Record; public discus- 
sion b^;ins; pertinent conversation among citizens b^pns; 
in all the places where American voters meet they heffn to 
discuss, and gradually, through the press and through l^tors, 
telqprams, and conversations comes back to the body a sense 
of public judgment. 

Mr. President, when has there been prc^KMsed to the Ameri- 
can Congress a measure which required that kind of discus- 
sion more plainly than this novel and important measure t 
Yet it is daiied by the continued pressure of a fictitious 
legislative day, and long hours, and abstention from discus- 
skm upon the side of the majcmty, pressing on the progress 



THE SHIP PUBCHASB BILL 849 

of this measure for the purpose of putting it through by brute 
force and weii^t of votes before the pec^le of the United 
States can think about it and discuss it and express their 
opinicm upon it. 

Mr. President, the fact that this measure cannot have that 
kind of discussicm and be passed at this short session con- 
sistently with doing the primary work of the session upon the 
appropriation bills shows that it ought not to pass at this 
short session. You can pass it, my friends upon the Demo- 
cratic side of this Chamber. You can pass the bill. You 
have it in your power. The Senator from Missouri was right 
when he said: '" We have the votes, and will pass it.*' You 
can do it because upon this side of the Chamber are men who 
have grown old in the public service, and whose physical 
stxength makes it impossible for them to do what their sense 
of duty would dictate. You can pass it, but you do it at the 
fearful risk of denying to the people of the United States that 
consideration and discussion and f ormaticm and expression of 
judgment to which they are entitled. 

Mr. President, important as this biU is, I am not sure that 
the subject I am now discussing is not still more important. 
The modification of constitutional govenmient by practice is 
a gradual but resistless process. We are all familiar with the 
change in our constitutional ^stem which practice has made 
in regard to the election of a President. The electoral coU^e 
no longer is at liberty to speak its own mind or to act upon 
the dictates of its own judgment. Gradual progress has 
nullified the constitutional providon, and has created a new 
^stem. That process has taken place in many a land. 
When Louis XIV dedared himself to be the State, it had 
become the sole function of the Parliament of Paris to register 
— not to discuss, but to register his decrees. I have seen 
national legislative bodies which have reached that point. I 
have seen them, have been inresent in them, when no vdce 



350 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

was dear enough, no courage high enough, to break away 
from the custom which accepted and registered the directions 
of the chief executive. It was the result of a gradual process. 

Let us not be too confident that we are proof against such a 
process. We abandon today the performance of our func- 
tion of so discussing this measure among ourselves that there 
shall be real deliberation, real consideration, real forming of 
opinion here, of discussing it so that the people of the coun- 
try shall follow us in discussing it, in forming and expressing 
their opinion, and we have taken one step further than ever 
before in the process which will make us a registering body 
rather than a l^islative body. 

I do not mean that it will come tomorrow. I do not mean 
that other bills may not come, on which there will be dis- 
cussion; but I mean that we are taking a step in a process 
which is fraught with danger and with fatal results to repre- 
sentative government. We can justify our existence as a 
body only by the performance of our duty. 

Oh, sir, the liberties of a free people depend upon the 
courage and persistency of a minority. They depend upcm 
independence of thought and action on the part of all the 
members of a l^^lative body. If we are merely to r^^ister, 
if we are to refrain from discussion, if we are to smother our 
judgment, we are contributing our part toward a process 
more fatal to our country than any legislation we can devise, 
more injurious than any benefit we can render will compai- 
sate for. 

Now, Mr. President, let me turn my attenticm to the bill 
itself, and what it does. 

It is an emeigen<7 measure. It puts in the hands of 
three members of the Cabinet practically $40,000,000, with 
power to increase the amount for the purpose of entering 
into the business of ocean transportation on the part of the 
Government of the United States. 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL 851 

I looked to see what may have prompted the sponsors of 

the bill, and I find that in the testimony of the protagonist in 

its behalf, the Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. McAdoo, the 

emergency character of the bill is clearly and forcibly stated. 

I read from his testimony taken on September 1, 1914, before 

the House committee, the hearing of the Committee on 

Merchant Marine and Fisheries on House BiU 18518. He 

says: 

A great many of our oommoditiea and oar products are dependent and 
have been dependent for outlet upcm acMne ol the foreign bottoms whidi 
are now idle, and that, in turn, has, ol course, had an injurious reflex actkm 
upon our conuneroe. The immediate problem confronting us is to provide 
additional facilities for carrying American fmxiucts in the foreign trade; 
and in order to do that, we must depend upcm either private aH[>ital to 
make these investments in ships to be safled under our flag or dse the 
Government will have, as an emergency measure, to come to the assistance 
of the country. 

He says also: 

Of course this measure is designed to be an emergency measure. It 
never was contemplated that this should be a permanent (q)erati(»i on the 
part of the Government. Still I think the provision for the disposition of 
these ships is ample in case the necessity for them shall have disi4>peared. 
Therefore the biU was drawn with reference to the immediate emergency 
that is to be met. 

He says also: 

You are facing a situation now where you cannot measure economy 
against the interests of the American pec^e, and you must assume also, 
in the discussion of subsidy, which I am opposed to on {vindple anyway, 
you must assume that companies are available to take advantage of any 
subsidy that would be granted. They are not availaUe, and there is 
no teDing how soon th^ could be organised. It is only by the Govern-* 
ment dealing with this question in douUe-flsted fashion that rdief can be 
given. 

There was something said about South Ammcan trade, 
but manifestly that is not an emeif^ency and not any part of 
the emergency, for every (me agrees that there is more ship- 
ping to transact the South American business than there is 



852 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

business to be transacted for the present, and there is no 
emergency there* 

I said this puts a large amount ol mon^ in the hands 
of these gentlemen. They are at liberty to subscribe for 
$10,000,000 61 stock. They are bound to subscribe for 
fifty-one per cent of that. They are to offer the remainder 
to public subscription; but it is agreed that the business is 
to be conducted at a certain loss. The Secretary of the 
Treasury stated that with great frankness in the hearing; 
and therefore it is assumed by him and by other sponsors 
of the measure that there will be practicaUy no private sub- 
scriptions for stock. It is quite evident that no one would 
from ordinary and proper commercial motives, subscribe at 
par for the minority stock of a corporation which is adver- 
tised beforehand as a losing venture. 

Therefore the Government will subscribe for all the stodc 
under the terms of the biU. They are authorized to sdl 
$80,000,000 of Panama bonds, makmg $40,000,000. They 
are authorized to increase the stock indefinitely with the 
approval of the President. 

The newspapers say that in the Democratic caucus an 
amendment has been adopted which will limit that increase 
to $10,000,000 more, and I will without dwelling further upon 
it assume that to be the limit, making $50,000,000. They are 
to put $50,000,000 into a losing business, the loss upon whidi 
will have to be made up from taxation. 

Of course, this must be but an emergeaicy measure. Of 
course, it is only as an emergency measure that anyone would 
pK^X)se to do such a thing at a time when we have had to 
impose an extraordinary war-revenue tax upon the people of 
the country because of a deficit in our revenue. Every man 
who pays his part of that war-revenue tax will be contributing 
to make up the loss upon the shilling business whidi is author- 
ized by this bill, and of course it is an emcrge n qr measure. 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL S5S 

Mr. SnoiONEL Mr. President — 

The Vics-PBBaiDENT. Does the Senator from New York 
yidd to the Senator from North Carolma ? 

Mr. Root. Yes» I yield. 

Mr. SnfHONB. I assmne that the Senator horn New York 
does not desire to misrepresent the Secretary ol the Treasury 
with reference to the testimony given by him about the first 
of September. I read that testimony very carefully last 
night. I think the Senator is in error when he states that the 
Secretary of the Treasury admitted that this whole business 
would be operated at a loss. At one stage of his testimony 
there was something said by the Secretary which might have 
had that construction^ but later the Secretary made the posi- 
tive statement that while he was satisfied a part of the ships 
would be operated at a loss, especially that part engaged 
on the new routes for the purpose of building up new trade, 
he was equally satisfied that other of these ships would be 
operated at a profit; and there is nowhere, I thinks in his 
testimony anything that could be construed as a statement, 
taken in connection with the qualifications, that there would 
be a loss iqx>n the entire operation. 

Mr. Root. The Secretary of the Treasury says in his 

testimony: 

It 18 not only a question of estaUiahiiig these routes, many of which will 
undoubtedly have to be operated at a loss for a time in order to establish 
the necessary trade relatiimships, but the Govermnent will also have the 
power to establish rates that will be ad vantageous to American commerce. 

He says: 

I think one of the essential requisites is that the Government shall have 
the power to establish these lines and see that they are operated in such a 
way, even at a loss, as to benefit the amunerce of this country. 

There are other expressions at various points in his testi-* 
mony which leave no doubt whatever that that is his expec- 
tati(m. 



854 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

We need not rdy solely upon his ezpectaticms, for we know 
that as a matta of fact private entefpruie <^>erating American 
ships has been a losing enterprise. Upon good auth<»ity it is 
stated that there are, or there were a few weeks ago,2,000»000 
tons of shipping engaged in the conunerce ci the worid under 
foreign flags and owned by American dtixens. \¥hy ? Be- 
cause the conditions of foreign commerce under the laws of 
the United States are such as to make profit pmcticaUy 
impossible. 

The Senator from Massadiusetts [Mr. Lodge] has called my 
attention to a dause in the President's message where he says: 

It— 
that is, the Government — 

It should take action to make it certain that transportation at rea- 
sonable rates will be promptly provided, even where the carriage is not 
at first profitable; and thea» when the carriage has become sufficient^ 
profitable to attract and engage private capital,and engage it in abundance^ 
the Govemmoit ought to withdraw. 

So the proposal is to go into a losing business, and to go 
mto a losing business at a time when we are making up a 
deficit by an extraordinary war-revenue tax; and» of course, 
I say it can be r^^arded only as an emergency measure. 

Now, this biU authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury, the 
Postmaster-General, and the Secretary of Conmoiarce to buy 
or build ships. How can the emergency be met ? Manir 
f estly, not by building ships. The small fieet of ships whidi 
could be procured by the use of this $50,000,000 would 
require from a year to ^hteen months, as I am advised, 
to build. So that will not meet the emergen<7. The ema- 
gency is the prevalence of high rates for the carriage <rf 
American produce to Europe. There is no emetgency 
imywhere else. 

It is true all the steamers in the worid that are free are 
coming in to get the benefit of those high rates, and the ordi- 



THE SHIP PUBCHASE BILL S56 

nary wofkuig of eocmomic laws it sure to bring the rates 
down. But for the moment there is the emergency, and but 
one emergency, and that is hi^ rates of carriage for Ameri- 
can produce to Europe. 

It is true our farmers are getting $1.40 for their wheat, so 
that those high rates are paid not by us but by the purchasers 
abroad. It is true the export of food-stuffs has been greater 
within the hist few months than ever before in our history. 
Still, there is an emergency. It is true cotfam is bringing 
eight cents, and the interposition of Government which was 
so strenuously demanded here a few months ago in order 
to save the cotton producers, proved to be unnecessary. Still 
the rates of transportation of cotton are hi^ and there is an 
emergency. But the emergency cannot be met by building 
ships. We have got to buy them. Now, why ? 

Mr. SiMif ONB. WiU the Senator from New York allow me 
to ask him one more question imd then I wifl not interrupt 
him again ? 

Mr. Root. Certainly. 

Mr. SiMif ONB. The Senator says it is prc^KMed that the 
Government shall go into a losing business. Does the Sena- 
tor see any particular difference between the Government 
going into a losing business and the Government inviting 
private citizens (A this country to go into what is admitted to 
be a losing business with a guarantee that by subsidies that 
loss will be made up out of the Treasury of the United States ? 

Mr. Boor. Oh, Mr. President, I see many differences, but 
I am not going to discuss them here today. I am speaking 
upon an entirely differ^it subject. I wish that I could de- 
tach the mind of the Senator from North Carolina from ob- 
tain preconceived ideas whidi evidently possess it, and get 
him to attend to the subject that I am talking about. 

Mr. SnoiONB. The Senator was just talking upon the 
subject about which I asked the questicm. 



S56 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Mr. Root. I have been preadng upon the Senate the 
emerg^icy nature of this bill, and I had passed on to the 
question as to how the emergaicy can be met. I was saying 
you cannot meet it by building ships because you cannot get 
them in time to meet the emeigency. You have got to buy 
them. Where are you going to buy them ? You meet no 
emergency by buying ships that are abeady oigaged in trans- 
porting our products. You meet no ^nergency by buying free 



A report of a committee of the Chamber of Conmierce ot 
New York, presented to that body on the fourth of the present 
month, makes an observation on that subject which is very 
pertinent, and it is very good authority. This was a special 
committee on the Ammcan qierchant marine in f ordgn 
trade, appointed by the chamber of commerce of the greatest 
commercial city of the country. In their report, which I 
shall hereafter have occasion to bring to the attention of the 
Senate at large, they say: 

Government ownership of ocean lines cannot bring to our aid a single 
vessel except by building. Every steamship in the w(ffld is working today 
except those interned in neutral ports. If these can be transferred to our 
flag without international complications, there will be no difficulty in 
financing the transfer of those suitable for freight carrying, for their 
earnings will justify the purchase. 

Now, that is high authority of men who know far more 
than you and I know about the great complicated worid* 
wide business of ocean freight carriage. 

There is left, then, to meet the emergency nothing but the 
purchase of vessels which are prevented by the conditions ci 
war from engaging in the business of transportation now. 
I therefore was not surprised in reading the testimony of the 
Secretary of the Treasury to find that he plainly contem- 
plated meeting this emergency by the purchase of vessels 
which are, to use the common although not very correct ex* 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL 357 

pression, interned because of war risks; that is to say, the 
vessels which aie remaining in the ports where they were 
found at the outbreak of the war, unable or unwilling to put 
to sea for fear of capture; vesseb belonging to one or another 
of the belligerent powers. 

The Senator from Massachusetts [Mr. Lodge] has called 
attention to the testimony of the Secretary of the Treasury 
iqx>n this subject; there are but a few words of it, and I wish 
to call your attrition to it again as a part of what I have to 
say. In this same hearing from which I have quoted this 
occurred: 

Mr. Edmonds. yfiU they not be able to get plenty at bottoms when 
th^ can make finandal arrangements for payment for the cu'go ? 

Secretary McAdoo. I do not think so. An unmense number of bot- 
toms have been withdrawn from service. 

Mr. Edmonds. There are still quite a number of idle bottoms in New 
York harfocv today. 

Secretary Mc^DOO. The number of bottoms that are idle in New York 
harbor are largely bott<Hns that cannot be put into service now. 

Mr. Saxtmdsbs. How would this bill add to the number of available 
bottoms when it proposes to make its purchases from existing bottoms ? 
It will not add to the volume of bottoms. 

Secretary McAdoo. There is a large number ol idle bottoms. They 
may be purchased. 

Mr. Saxtmdebs. Chiefly* are not those all German bottoms ? 

Secretary McAdoo. More of those are idle at the moment than any 
other. 

Mr. Saundxbs. It has been suggested that there would be grave 
objection to our undertaking to purchase German bottoms. 

Secretary McAdoo. Why? 

Mr. Saxtmdkbs. The newspapers make the statement that objection 
has come from the nations ccmcemed in this war. 

Secretary McAdoo. I shall not attempt to talk of diplomatic matters. 

Mr. Saxtmdebs. They say that would be equal to furnishing immediate 
pecuniary aid — that is, to Germany. 

Secretary McAdoo. That is a question altogether aside, I think, from 
theissue. I believe that it cannot be successfully disputed by any individ- 
ual or any naticm that this Government or any Government has a right to 
buy merchant ships, provided it buys them in good faith and for a neutral 
porpose, and that is eiactly what would be done in this case* 



S58 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 



Tlie CsAnaiAN. B we dicnild boy loiiie n«ndi iliqM» too» thst wooid 
alter the fituAtioii. In other words, tf thiqr had •ome, as weH as Gcmuj* 
that ob jectioo would not be urged ? 

Mr. Saundxbs. We would not buy any IVench sliqM» because they are 
not to be bought. 

Secretary McAdoo. I infer from what you td me, or from iriiat you 
have read In the pi^Mrs, that those ships, if purchased, wouM be iMirchased 
fn»n the German Government. I understand that those ships are simply 
owned by German companies in which German dtisens are stoddiold^ 
It does not follow that the proceeds of a purchase from a private oorpora- 
ticm of that country would be turned over to the Government. 

It is quite plain tliat Secretary McAdoo took the same view 
of the way in which it would be possible — the only way in 
which it would be possible — to utilize this legislation for the 
purpose of meeting this emergency, that I take; that is, that 
the only way is to purchase these idle bottoms, to purchase 
these ships of belligerents which are unable to go to sea be- 
cause, if they went to sea, th^ would be captured. It is 
perfectly evident that that purchase was in the contempla- 
tion of the officer who was to be the head of the shipping 
board, and who came before the committee of the House to 
explain the bill. He came, having in mind this bill as a 
bin which would enable him and his associates, when passed 
into a law, to buy those ships. In the report in the House 
which followed this testimony. Report No. 1149, Sixty- 
third Congress, second session, by Mr. Alexwder, submitted 
September 8, 1914, the committee say: 

Fears are expremed that we will involve oursdves in complications with 
Great Britain and France if we buy German ships. That may be. The 
biD does not direct the shii^nng board to buy ships of the subjects of any 
particular nation. They have the widest discretion in the purchase or 
construction of vessds. We have no reuoa to believe they will act 
otherwise than with the greatest care in whatever they may do. 

It is perfectly plain that the committee of Congress which 
rqxnrted the bill did it with the understanding that the bill 
authorixes the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of 



THE SHIP FUBCHASE BILL S69 

CQiiimetoe» and the Postmaater-General to buy these ships, 
and that th^ were oontemplatiiig the purchase of these shq>s 
m a situation that cannot be met in any other way than by 
the purchase of these ships. 

The Secretary of the Treasury made a speedi on this sub- 
ject in Chicago. It is a speedi» the central thou^t of which 
is one of the most amazing ever proposed by a responsible 
officer of the Government of the United States. WhUe it is 
apart from the line of my discussion, I cannot refrain from 
quoting it. He said: 

The ob jectkm thst the shif^Miig bill pots the GoTcmment in the ahq^ 
(MDg biianesa is not tenable. Those who urge it seem to forget that it is the 
duty of the Government to engage in any activitiesy evm of a business 
nature, which are demanded in the interest of all the peopLe of the country* 
when it is impossiUe to engage private capital in such <q;wrations. 

Do my friends think that that proposition does not need 
discussion by the Congress of the United States and by the 
people of the United States, before the man who holds that 
view has unlimited millions put into his hands with which to 
put the Government into business ? 

I will return to the precise line of discussion; and that is 
the contemplation and the purpose to meet this emergency 
by the purchase of the belligerent ships that, unless we buy 
them, cannot go to sea without being captured. In this 
speech the Secretary further said: 

Scone timid people have argued that if the Government, is interested as 
a stockholder in a Aippingcompany» and a ship of such company should be 
seised by a bdligerent and brought into a prize court, the so vereignty of the 
Government would be involved. Here is no ground whatever for this 
view. If the Government operated ships outright, just as it operates the 
vessds of our navy, an awkward situation of this character mi^t arise; 
but where a nation is merdy a stockholder, or the sc^ stockholder, in a 
private corporation, its sovereignty is not and cannot be directly involved 
if the ships of such a ocwporation become the sub jects of litigation in a prise 
court concerning any issue which does not involve the Government itself. 
The Government would stand in rdatxm to sudi a corporation exactly 



860 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

«8 any uidividuAl stockliolder does to a corpormtioiii in ^diidi he is inter- 
ested. A suit against the corporation does not necessarily involve the 
shareholders. 

You perceive, sir, whenever this subject is suggested and 
objection is made to the purchase of these ships, it is met by 
anai^umentinfavorof the purchase of the ships. Thisisthe 
last aigum^it which has come to my notice from the Secre- 
tary of the Treasury, having been delivered on the ninth <rf 
this month, after the pending biU was laid before the Senate 
— an ai^ument, a lav^er's argument, by the man who is to 
be the head of the shipping board in favor of the power 
to buy the ships. 

The Secretary of Conmierce has said in a speech which I 
have not before me, delivered last Friday, I believe, at St. 
Louis, that he contemplated the purchase of British ships. 
Mr. President, there is no difference in principle, and before 
I get through I think I shall show that there is no difference in 
the obstacles in the way of purchasing ships of one belligerent 
as compared with the ships of another belligerent. 

I am not talking about this because the ships are Ger- 
man; I am talking about it because they are belligerent 
ships, and they are liable to be captured on the high seas as 
belligerents; they are liable to be torpedoed by submarines 
as belligerents; they are liable to be seized in foreign 
ports as belligerents; and I am alarmed by the evidences 
here that the proposed shipping board means to put the 
Government of the United States in the position of giving 
the protection of its flag to such ships when they sail out. 
German, or British, or French, or Austrian, or Russian, or 
what not, the objection is to the purchase of belligerent 
ships, and, as I have said, that objection has been met by 
the argument to which I have referred whenever it has bera 
proposed to the gentlemen whom we are about to endow 
with these vast powers. 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL 961 

But there is another drcumstance more potent in its effect 
upon my mind than the manifest necessities of the emergency 
whidi would require the purchase of belligerent ships, more 
compelling in my mind than the expressions of the gentlemen 
who are going to transact the business in favor of the right to 
purchase belligerent ships, more compelling ev^i than the 
practical admission that that is what they have in mind, and 
that is the filing of an opinion by the Solicitor of the State De- 
partment in theSenateon the elev^ith of August last. Thebin 
to create the shipping board and to endow it with the power 
to build or buy ships had just been introduced in the House 
when, on the eleventh of August, a paper was presented by the 
Senator from New York [Mr. O'Gorman] to be printed, and 
it was printed as Document No. 563, Sixty-third Congress, 
second session. That paper contained an opinion by Mr. 
Cone Johnson, Solicitor of the State Department. In support 
of the right to buy these ships, he states these conclusions: 

1. Merohant ships of a belligeiCQt may be transferred to a neutral 1^^ 
the outbreak <^ hostilities. 

2. If the sale of the ship is made in good faith, without defeasance or 
reservation of title or interest in the vendor, without any understanding, 
expressed or tadt^ that the vessel b to be retitoisferred after hostilities and 
without the indicia or badges <^ a collusive or colorable transaction. 

8. But transfer cannot be made of such vessel in a blockaded port or 
while in transiiu, 

4. The transfer must be allowable under and in conformity to the 
municipal regulations of the country of the neutral purchaser. 

5. The dedaration of the London conventicHi that transfers of an 
enemy vessd to a neutral during war will not be valid unless it be shown 
that the same was not made to evade the consequences to which an enemy 
vessel, as such, is exposed, if it were controlling of the question, relates 
only to the good buth <^ the transfer and not to the ulterior motive of the 
parties to reap the natural advantages to flow from the operati<»i of the 
vessd under the flag of a country not at war, while it inverts the burden of 
proof oi the good bath of the transaction. 

That (pinion was dated August 7, 1914. It was presented 
in the Senate August 11, four days after, almost coindden- 



862 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

USfy with the mtrodnctioii of the bill, and it miirt staiui 
bef ofe us as the opinkm iqxm wfaidi this kgislatinn finds its 
daimof ri^t. 

Bir. JdrnsoQ is alawyer of duuracter and posittoD, a lawyer 
of abilily, but he says in the canduskm at the dose of the 
(pinion: 

Tliit memonyidiim ii Imiriedly ftnick off » and I hmve not had tone or 
oppor tun ity to revise it; but it is b dieved thst it conetdy pr esents the 
status of tbe question involTecL 

Why "^ hurriedly Struck off ""P What exigency called for 
haste in the ocmsideration of this vastly important subject ? 
The answer may be found by smding our minds back to the 
fact that it was announced and publicly reported that it was 
intended to put this shipping bill through then, last summer, 
during the last sessicm; and this hurried memorandum — a 
lawyer's opinion that it is all ri^t to buy these belligerent 
ships — is the basis iqx>n which the Ic^gislation proceeds. 

Bir. Simmons. Mr. President, will not the Senatw permit 
me to interrupt him once more ? 

The Vicb-Presidsnt. Does the Senator from New Yoric 
yield to the Senator from North Carolina ? 

Mr. Root. Certainly. 

Mr.SiMMONs. I wish to ask the Senator if» at the time that 
opinion was presented to the Senate, the Senate was not en- 
gaged in the consideration of the ship registry bill, and if it 
was not with reference to the ship registry bill that that 
opinion was expressed ? 

Mr. Root. I do not know. I have not looked to see, and I 
have not cared to see, what particular thing the Senate was 
engaged in doing. What I do see is that in great haste, coin- 
ddently with the b^pnning of this movement for the pur- 
chase of ships, there is presented to us a lawyer's opinion, that 
we have a ri^t to buy these bdligerent ships. Theref ore» 
Mr. President, I have come to the amdusion that the inter- 



THE SHIP FUBCHASB BILL MS 

natknial iH^uatioii 18 important, that ft is 8^^ 

duty to consider it, and that it is my duty to discuss it. 

There are two reasons which press that duty upon me with 
great weif^t. One is that I find, acccvding to my own 
opinicm, which is fallible, upon which I do not place, I hope, 
any greater weight than long experience of many errors leaves 
in my mind, that in the haste which for some reason or other 
was imposed upon him, the Solicitor of the State Dq>art- 
ment has failed to consider fuUy the state of the law rc^^ard- 
ing which he was writing, and has been led, through the 
inadvertence of haste, to give radically and seriously incor- 
rect advice upon this important subject. 

The other ccmsideration which makes me fed bound to ask 
for the attention of the Senate to my own views of what is the 
true state of the law, is the fact that it happened to be my 
duty to give the instructions for the Government of the 
United States to the delegates to the London conference, and 
to direct their action during all the earlier part of the exist- 
ence of that conference by daily cable communication, and 
afterwards as a member of the Foreign Relations Committee 
of the Senate, to discuss and vote favorably upon the report 
of the conclusions of that conference, and afterwards, as a 
member of theSenate,to vote to advise thePresident to ratify. 
So, when I see that under the law which I am advised we 
are about to pass it is the intention of the agents whom we 
shall constitute, to buy these ships; when I see that that pur- 
pose has been formed and is liable to be executed under ndiat 
I bdieve to be an erroneous opinion as to the state of the 
law and the international situation which they will meet, I 
feel bound to give the best I can in the way of expressing and 
explaining my views of the true conditions of the law. 

I am going now to say something which most of you know. 
Scmieof you may not have given attention to it, however, and 
therefore I will state the rudiments of the case. 



S64 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

The London conference was a sequel of the secimd Hague 
Conference of 1907. At this seomd Hague Confefenee, the 
dd^gates of the United States, under the instructicHis cl 
their Government, pressed stnnigly for the creation of two 
judicial tribunals which should pass upon international dis- 
putes. One was an international prize court, made iq> by the 
rq>resentatiyes of different nations, which should pass upon 
questions of prize — just such questions as are arising now — 
so that instead of going to the courts of the captor country, 
which apply the law of that country, with the disadvantages 
that a claimant naturally has in going into the country of the 
captor and arguing his case before a branch of the govern- 
ment that has captured his ship, he would go to an impartial 
tribunal, selected from the various countries of the world. 
That court was created by a treaty called ** the prize-court 
treaty.'' The other court was a general judicial tribunal 
which should pass upon all justiciable questions arising be- 
tween nations, to be composed of judges who should devote 
their entire time to it, and be paid adequate salaries, and be 
a really judicial tribunal. That court 'never has been 
constituted, although provision was made for it. 

It was not constituted because thare could not be an agree- 
m^it upon the manner of appointing the judges; but the 
prize-court treaty was signed, and that has been ratified by 
the United States. That is to say, the Senate has advised 
and consented to its ratification. But when it came to the 
ratification of that treaty by European powers, there arose 
a question as to what law the court would apply, and it 
seemed to many rq>resentatives of different Eur(^)ean coun- 
tries that there was a long list of disputed questi<ms that a 
prize court would have to pass upon, and that in order to 
make the court effective, there must be some agreement 
upon the law th^ were to apply — questions rdating to 
blockade, rdating to ccmtraband, rdating to ccmtinuoas 



THE SHIP FDBCHASE BILL 865 

▼oyagesy rdatmg to the transformation of merdiant ships 
into warships, relating to the transfer of ships from a bellig- 
erent to a neutral flag; and accordingly Great Britain called 
a meeting of the rq[>resentatives of the chief commercial 
powers of the world, to be held in London in December, 1008. 
That meeting was attended by the rq[>resentatiyes.of Great 
Britain, France, the Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Italy, 
Spain, Russia, Japan, and the United States. I think I have 
enumerated them all. There were ten of them. They dis- 
cussed these diflScult questions. There was long discussion 
upon the question which is raised by the pnq>osal to buy 
these belligerent ships — that is, the right of transfer of 
a vessel from a belligerent flag to a neutral flag. The om- 
chisions to which the conference came upon that subject 
were stated in these words: 

TRAMSFSB TO A NEUTRAL FLAG. ABTICLB 55 

The tranafer of an enemy vessel to a neutral flag, effected before the 
outbreak of hostilities, is valid, unless it is proved that such transfer was 
made in order to evade the consequences to whidi an enemy vessd, as 
such, is exposed. 

Then follows a clause which is not pertinent hare» and the 

article proceeds: 

Where the transfer was effected more than thirty days before the out- 
break of hostilities, there is an absdute presumpti<m that it b valid if it is 
unconditional, complete, and in confwmity with the laws of the countries 
concerned, and if its effect b such that neither the control of, nor the profits 
arising from the employment of, the vessel remain in the same hands as 
before the transfer. 

Then there is a clause not relevant here, and then follows: 

Abt. 56. The transfer of an enemy vessel to a neutral flag effected after 
the outbreak of hostilities is void unless it is proved that sudi transfer was 
not made in order to evade the consequences to which an enemy vessel^ as 
8uch,ise]qx)sed. 

Then follow some clauses not relevant here. 
You have there, sir, three situations stated: 



866 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Pint If the transf « is effected before the begnming of 
hostilities it is valid unless it is proved that the transfer was 
made in order to evade the oonsequences to which the en^ny 
vessel, as such, is exposed. 

Second. If the transfer was effected more than thirty days 
before the opening of hostilities, there is an absolute {re- 
sumption that it is valid, even though it was made in order to 
evade the consequences to which an enemy vessd, as sudi, is 
exposed, provided it is unconditional, complete, and there is 
no interest reserved. Of course, the declaration that a trans- 
fer more than thirty days before the outbreak of hostilities is 
valid if it is unconditional, complete, and in conformity with 
the laws of the countries concerned, neither the contrd ci 
nor the profits arising from the employment of the vessd re- 
maining in the same hands as hdote the transfer, carries by 
necessary implication the declaration that a transfer made 
less than thirty days before the opening of hostilities is not 
valid, although all those OMiditions exist, provided it was 
made to evade the consequences to which an enemy vessd, 
as such, is exposed. 

The third situation, is a transfer after the outbreak of hos- 
tilities, where the transfer is vend, unless it is proved that it 
was not to evade the ccmsequenoes to which an enemy vessd, 
as such, is exposed. 

It is the opinion of the Solidtor, who has given that opinion 
to the State Department, as it has been communicated to us, 
that the^ provisions of the Declaration of London do not in- 
volve any question as to the motive with whidi the transfer is 
made; that when the declaration says the transfer shall be 
valid before hostilities unless it is proved that it was made in 
order to evade, and that it shall be invalid after hostilities 
unless it is proved that it was not made in <Nrder to evade, it 
involves no question of motive. Prima facie, <me would say 
that that is all motive; that there is nothing but motive in 



• THE SHIP FDBCHASB BILL 867 

that pfoviflkm. A thing done in order to evade is done with 
the motive of evading. There would seem to be nothing but 
motiveinthis; but the Solicitor does not think so» and he has 
advised to the contrary. 

Now, sir, the question may arise, and naturally would 
arise. Why should we discuss the Declaration of London ? 
Why should the Solicitor have given an ojunion upon the 
Dedaration of Ixmdon ? It has not been ratified. The 
Soiate has advised and consented to its ratification, but 
before the documents of ratification were ever dq>08ited the, 
war came, and it never has been ratified. The reason why 
the Declaration of London is subject to consideration al- 
though we are not bound by it, is that England and France 
and Russia have adopted it with some modifications not 
touching this subject, as their law for the present conflict. 

Let me repeat, for the purpose of making myself dear, we 
are not bound by the Declaration of Ixmdon because it has 
not been ratified; that is, we are not bound by it as a conven- 
tion, as an agreement, whatever effect the steps which led to 
it may have upon the propriety or wisdom of our conduct 
The convention which embodied that agreement has not be- 
come a binding convention among the nations of the earth. 
It recdves its importance because England and France and 
Russia have, by express provision, made it the law kA those 
respective countries, and Grermany, in an order to which I 
shall call your attention later, has in substance done the same 
thing. Her law for this war in somewhat different phrase, 
but with the same effect, is made to conform to the terms of 
the Declaration of London which I have read. 

It may be fortunate for us, fortunate for all who wish to 
secure freedom of trade, that this is so, because when the 
conference of London met in December, 1008, there was no 
rule of international law regarding the transfer of a vessd 
from a bdligerent to a neutral flag. International law 



368 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

requires the general acceptance of nations, and there had 
been no general acceptance of any rule by the nations el 
the earth. 

The first thing that was done in the conference was to call 
for a statement from the different countries regarding thdr 
position upon the various disputed points that the conference 
sought to settle, and I call your attention now to the rules 
which were stated by the principal countries concerned in the 
present war. 

I read from the proceedings of the International Naval 
Conference held in London, December, 1908, to February, 
1909, printed by the British Government and called " Mis- 
cellaneous No. 5, 1909." 

I will say that this report of the proceedings has never been 
translated from the original French, it is not open to access 
generally, and I think it must have been that the Solicitor, 
in the haste of preparing his opinion, has failed to observe the 
contents of this report, which gives the proceedings, the dis- 
cussion, and conclusions reached from time to time by the 
conference. I am siu-e that if he had read this attentively he 
would have come to a different conclusion. 

I call your attention now to the rules of national law stated 
by these different nations at the opening of the conference, for 
that is the background to which we have to go. 

France. The change of nationality of ships of commeroe effectuated 
after the declaration of war is null and of no effect. 

Russia. The belligerents have the right not to recognize the neutiml 
character of every ship of commerce purchased by neutral citisens from an 
enemy's state or one of its nationals, unless the new proprietor proves that 
the acquisition had become definitive before he had knowledge of the 
commencement of the war. 

Germany. The neutral or enemy character of a ship of commeroe is 
determined by the fiag that it carries. A ship flying a neutral flag will 
nevertheless be treated as an enemy ship if up to the opening of hostilities 
or within the two weeks which have preceded^ it has carried the enemy 
flag. 



THE SHIP PUBCHASE BILL 369 

There are France, Germany, and Russia. Great Britain 
and the United States presented an entirely di£Ferent rule, 
the rule of complete transfer and good faith. The Solicitor 
for the State Department has substantially stated what the 
American rule has been and what the British rule has been, 
subject to some modifications which it perhaps was not 
necessary that he should state. 

In the conference these two different views confronted each 
other, the view of France and Russia and Germany that a 
transfer after the opening of hostilities was void and the view 
of Great Britain and the United States that a transfer, made 
complete and in good faith, would be recognized. 

Mr. President, there being no rule of international law, 
each country applies its own law in such cases. Indeed, when 
a capture is made it is always made under the law of the 
captor. That is our law. Our Supreme Court has decided 
it. It is the municipal law of the captor that is in force when 
the capture is made. 

The courts of England and America have said that the law 
of nations is a part of the law of the country, and we enforce 
the law of nations. But here thore was no law of nations be- 
cause no rule had ever been accepted. So as the law stood 
when this conference opened, if there had been a transfer of 
a merchant ship from the flag of a belligerent to the flag of a 
neutral any time after the opening of hostilities, the armed 
ships of France, of Germany, and Russia would have ignored 
the transfer and treated the vessel as an enemy vessel, not- 
withstanding the transfer. 

Mr. President, that was the law of France when her navy 
rendered us a service more memorable than any other that 
one nation ever rendered to another, and held the mouth of 
the Chesapeake and made the surrender at Yorktown pos- 
sible. That was the law of France then and for all the cen- 
tury and more that has passed. That was the law of Russia 



870 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

<m that never-to-be^orgotten day when her fleet saOed into 
the harbor of New Yoric during the Civil War. Thatwasthe 
law of Germany, whose ships are lying unable to i»ooeed to 
sea in the harbors of New York, Boston, Kiiladelphia, and 
other ports. There was no escape from the capture of any 
vessel from one of these bdligerents by the cruisers of an- 
other bdligercnt which might diance to meet her, notwith- 
standing the transfer to the American flag, except to compd 
these great natUms to abandon the law they have hdd tcf 
generations. 

Mr. WiiiLiAMB. I should like to ask the Senator from New 
York a question, if he will yield for that purpose. 

Mr. Root. Certainly. 

Mr. Williams. Notwithstanding the fact that this was 
the law of Russia and of France, and it has been the law <rf 
those two nations for a long time, have they not agreed 
during the present war to adopt the Dedaration of London 
as their law ? 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, I have already stated that* 

Mr. WiLUAMB. Then if that be true — 

Mr. Root. I bc^ the Senator not to draw me on by lead- 
ing me into a discussion of questions, however interesting 
th^ are, which arise in his mind, because if I do what I think 
I ought I have got to go through a rather complicated sub- 
ject. As I have already said, the significance of the Declara- 
tion of Ixmdon is that these countries who started with these 
perfectly strict and unyielding rules have adopted the 
Declaration of London as their rule for this war. 

Mr. Williams. And have modified their dd position to 
that extent. 

Mr. Root. They have modified theb dd position to that 
extent. So, althou^ the Dedaratimi of Lcmdon is not bhid- 
ing upon us as a ccmvention, although it was never ratified, 
if we undertake to protect our flag upon a ship purdiased 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL 871 

from a bdfigerent we are driyen to the Declaration of London 
as the basis on which we must {noceed. The old law was 
mudi more strict and miyidding than the Dedaration is, and 
that is why the Solicitor of the State D^Murtment was quite 
right in giving his opinion r^arding the meaning of this pro- 
vision of the Dedaration of London, and that is why I am 
going on to discuss that meaning. I have taken so much time 
because I have frequently observed the statement about the 
Dedaration of London, thi^t it is not binding; that it was not 
ratified. If we could not have recourse to that Declaration 
of Londcm, these old rules are the only thing we would meet. 

We have then reached this position, that these belligerent 
powers — England, France, Russia, and Germany — will 
esdarce the provision of the Declaration of London, and if we 
object to then* enforcing that we come against still worse 
rules for neutral trade, that is, the old rules which three of 
them stated at the b^pnning of the conference. So their 
adoption of the Declaration of London is an advantage to us 
of which we must avail oursdves so far as practicable. 

When the different countries had stated their position re- 
garding the transfer of the flag, there was a statement pre- 
pared for the use of the conference which undertook to 
formulate certain propositions for discussion, basing those 
propositions upon the varied statements of rules by the 
different countries, and the basis whidi was formulated for 
discussion regarding the transfer of the flag I will now read. 
This is basis 35: 

A ship cannot be transferred to a neutral flag in order to escape the 
consequences which its quality as an enemy ship draws upaa it. 

86. The transfer effected befwe the <^>ening of hostilities is valid if it 
has come about regdariy. That is to say if it involves nothing fictitious or 
irregular which renders it suspicious. 

87. After the <^>ening of hostihties there b an absdute presumption of 
knowledge of the transfer which is effected while the shq> is in the oowse 
of a voyage. 



372 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Upon that they proceed to a discussion. After the discus- 
sion proceeded for a considerable time these statements were 
made by the representatives of Gamany and Great Britain. 
Mr. Kri^e, the very able and experienced adviser of the Gar- 
man Foreign Office, who was the representative of that 
country at this conference, said: 

We are in accord with the authors of the summary upcm the jmndple 
that a ship cannot be transferred to a neutral flag with a view to escape the 
consequences which its quality as an enemy ship draws on it, but in the 
point of view of existing rights and for codBideraticHis of practical order we 
wish to see adopted the syston of our meuKmuidum which would have the 
douUe advantage of facilitating the task of commanders of cruisers and ol 
avoiding consequences to neutral commerce. 

Mr. Crowe, one of the English del^ates, explained the 
principle that was intended to be expressed in basis 85 — 
that is to say, ** that a commercial man subject of a belligar- 
ent state ought not to escape the consequences of war while 
transferring his ships under a neutral flag, but the application 
of this principle it is difficult to find among the memoranda 
by a rule predse and generally recognized/' 

There you see that the Grerman and the English representa- 
tives were drawing together upon the rule which looked not 
so much to what we would call good faith, as to the purpose 
for which the transfer was made. 

A short time after, Mr. Kriege, the Glerman representative^ 

stated with great lucidity the actual point of difference which 

had been reached by the conference. I read from page 188 of 

this publication of the proceedings: 

Mr. Kriege eiqxMed the manner in wfakh, according to him, this ques- 
tion ought to be treated in the basis <^ discussion. This expose, with the 
motives which have inspired it, is found treated in Annex 73. 

A formal paper which he presented* I call your especial 
attention to it because it was a formal paper and has a very 
important bearing upon detennining the meaning of this 
declaration. In this paper he says: 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL S78 

I denre to call the attentioii of the oommiaaioQ to m diviergeiioe whidi 
a|>pean to eiist between the propoaitioo of the United States of Amerio 
on the one part, and, upon the other part» the pn^xisitions of Great 
Britain and Crennany. 

Remember that our representatives and the British repre- 
sentatives had presented a rule which called for good faith in 
the transfer, and now he says: 

This is a question of the meaning of the tenn ** good faith.^^ Hie 
propositions are, all thiee» in accord to prescribe that the transfers made 
during a war ot immediately More a war are to be made in good faith. 

Only it seems that, in the idea of the delegation of the United States of 
America, the good faith would exist if the agreement relative to the trans- 
fer was genuine and definitive and involved nothing fictitious or irregular. 
On the other hand the German and Britannic propositicms understand by 
good faith the absence amcHig the motives of the transfer of the intention 
to withdraw the ship from the efiPect of the right of capture. 

You perceive this is precisely what Mr. Johnson in his 
opinion says does not exist in the declaration. Let me read 
it again: 

On the other hand the German and British propoationB understand by 
good faith the absence among the motives of transfer of the intention to 
withdraw the ship from the efiPect of the right of capture. 

In the sense of these propositions as according to the <mginal text of 
basis 85 the transfer would be null and without efiPect from the moment 
when it should have been induced by the desire of the yeadot to put him- 
self under protectiqii from the loss which the confiscati<»i of the ship would 
inflict upon him. The transfer would be, on the ccmtrary, recognised as 
valid when there was ground to bdieve that it would have been efiPected 
also if the war had not arisen or had not been imminent at the moment of 
the conclusion of the contract. 

After that presentation of the precise pmnt in di£Ference 
which had been reached between the dd^ates of the United 
States on the one hand and the dd^ates of these other 
powers, induding England and Germany, on the other hand, 
the subject was submitted to a drafting committee to en- 
deavor to formulate a rule which would be satisfactory, and 
I now wish to call your attention to the report of that 



S74 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

committee. I will say, in order to indicate the materiality of 
the report, that it contains the rule which now i^pears m 
the declaration. It was presented in the ninth sessicm of the 
commission — that is, with the conference sitting as m 
committee of the whole — on February 6, 1909. I read the 
record of proceedings: 

The delegation of the United States of America made a reserve co the 
subject of the first article of the nik — 

which was reported upon the transfer of a flag, and the com- 
mittee of the whole, the conmiission, adopted the report with 
the understanding that the part to which the American dele- 
gates objected, upon which they made their reserve, was to 
be reconsidered, and not deemed as adopted. That resove 
of the American delegates appears on page 290 of these 
proceedings. By reference to it, we find that it rdated not at 
all to the transfer of the flag after the opening of hostilities, 
but related solely to the transfer of the flag before the opening 
of hostilities. They say: 

The American delegation regrets to find itself obliged to make a reserve 
upon the first article of the regulation relative to the transfer of flag. It 
considers that a rule which says» " The transfer to a neutral flag of an 
enemy ship before the opening of hostilities is valid, unless it shall be estab- 
lished that the transfer has been effected with a view to escape the ooo- 
sequences which the enemy character of the shq> draws upon it," is not m 
accord with the spirit of modem rules adopted at The Hague conceniing 
war, which have for their end to guarantee the security of intematiooil 
commerce against the surprises of war and wishing, confOTmaUy to 
modem practice, to protect as much as possible the operatioDS engaged 
in in good faith and in course of execution before the beginning of 
hostilities. 

The report was reconsidered upon that reserve. You per- 
ceive the American delegates accepted the rule which related 
to transfers after the beginning of hostilities, but objected to 
the rule relating to transfers before. A compromise was 
made. Under that compromise a new provision making a 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL 375 

digtmcUon between transfers thirty days before and less than 
thirty days before the opening of hostilities, was made. 
Upon that our dd^ates agreed; that is to say, they got a 
rule whieh made all transfers more than thirty days before 
the war valid, if they were real; th^ got a rule whieh made 
all transfers at any time valid if they were not made with the 
motive of avoiding the risk of war. Before thirty days they 
were valid even though they were made with that motive; 
after thirty days they were valid unless th^ had that motive. 
On that they agreed. 

When the drafting committee came to make its rq>ort to 
the committee of the whole, there was a full discussion of the 
question which Mr. Kri^e had brought up by his very ludd 
statement of the different views as to what constituted good 
faith. That rq>ort leaves no doubt as to the meaning of this 
r^ulation, and no doubt whatever that the advice which 
has been given to the State Department and communicated 
to us as a basis for this legislation, is erroneous. The report 
says — I read from pages 826 and 827 of the proceedings 
of the conference, translating, I hope, with substantial 
correctness. 

The report has just stated the rules as I have read them, 
the rules as th^ were finally adopted. The rq>ort says of 
those rules: 

Hie validity of the transfer is at the b^gimiiiig subordinated to the 
aecomf^iahment of certain judicial conditions, having tot their object to 
flhow that the propnetot has been divested in a definitive manner and 
without reserve of his title to the ship over which he should preserve no 
oontrd. If these conditions have not been fulfilled, tot example, if the 
effect of the transfer has been subovdinated to the eventualities of the war, 
the transfer is presumed to have taken fdaoe with the intention of shun- 
ning the consequences of the war, and it is declared nulL 

This is sinq>le. 

Behold the difficult point. All the juridical oonditicMis have been 
fulfilled; but the captor is able to estaUiah that the transfer, regular in 
substance and in form, has been effected with a view to fscaping the con- 



876 D^'ERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

sequenoes which the enemy chancter entaili. Will he be permitted to 
make this jvoof in order to arrive at the result of declaring the transfer 
void, or will the intentiiHi of avoiding the consequences of the war result 
only from the failure to accomplish the juridical ccmditicms ? It has 
appeared doubtful to scnne. It has been recalled that the ccmdition of good 
fauth was exacted in a distinct manner, independently of juridical condi- 
tions, and that so, even if these ocmditions were fulfilled, one could prove 
that the sale had been made in bad faith; but how is this to be understood ? 
It is a delicate point. The captm evidently will not view ** good buth '* in 
the same manner as the vendor. The vendiw will consider that he acts 
honestly if he divests himsdf r^gulariy and definitivdy of his ships, be- 
cause he does not wish to run the risk of losing them by the exercise of the 
right of prise. The captor will think that there has not been good buth in 
wishing to escape from the consequences of war. If one considers the 
simple juridical interpretation, it seems, indeed, that a prize court, in the 
presence of the proposition reported above, would hold the transfer valid 
because the juridical conditions had been fulfilled, and would not place 
itsdf in the point of view of the captm in order to consider if there had 
been good or bad buth. 

The majwity of the committee did not accept this result, and accord- 
ingly, desiring an unequivocal formula, the following has been adopted: 

The transfer to the neutral flag of an enemy ship effected before the 
<^>ening of the hostilities b valid, unless it should be estaUished that the 
transfer has been effected with a view to escape the consequences which 
the enemy character entails. 

There, Mr. President, is a statement as plain as words can 
make it, that the terms which are used in the rule embraced 
in the declaration were substituted for the words ^^good 
faith ** that our del^ates were pressing for, in order that the 
intention to escape the consequences of the right of capture 
should be a separate and substantive ground for invalidating 
the transfer. There is no escape from that. There is no man 
here who could state with greater certainty and lucidity the 
purpose of the rule than it is stated in this report by Mr. 
Renault, the greatest of living teachers of international law, 
and the official adviser of the French foreign office* 

That report of the drafting committee was adopted by the 
committee of the whole; it was made by the committee 6i 
the whole to the conference in plenary session, and it was 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL 877 

adopted by the conference. If the conference could have 
heard read the advice given to our State Dq>artment and 
laid before the Senate as the basis of this l^^islaticm, it could 
not have controverted the conclusion of that advice in more 
positive and more imambiguous terms. I can find no words ' 
in which to show that the Solicitor tor the State Dq>artment 
was wrong in his advice so dear as the words of Mr. Renault 
in this report. 

Mr. Sutherland. Mr. President, will the Senator permit 
me to ask him a question ? 

The Presiding Officer. Does the Senator from New 
York yield to the Senator from Utah ? 

Mr. Root. Certainly. 

Mr. Sutherland. I understand the Senator from New 
York to have shown that in addition to there having been 
payment in consideration and bona fides, in the usual mean- 
ing of that term, it must also appear that the ship was not 
transferred in order that the capture of it might be avoided. 
If it should turn out that the vendor transferred it with that 
desire; that is, that he transferred it in order that it might 
not be captured, and the vendee did not participate in that 
intention, would that be sufficient to meet the requirements of 
the rule, or does it require that there should be a participation 
on the part of both the vendor and the vendee in the desire to 
avoid capture ? 

Mr. Root. CHearly, Mr. President, the motive is a motive 
which is ascribed to the vendor. It is he who is seeking to 
take his ship out of the danger of capture; it is he who will 
substitute the valuable consideration that is necessary in 
place of the vessel that he cannot use except at the risk of 
capture. The vendee prior to the transaction has no motive 
whatever in r^^ard to the ship. It is the owner of the ship 
who escapes from the effect that the enemy character of the 
ship brings upon it. 



378 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Mr. WALfiH. Mr. President — 

The Presiding Offioeb. Does the Senator from New 
York yidd to the Senator from Montana ? 

Mr. Root. Certainly. 

Mt.Walbh. The distinguished Senator has been giving ns 
the pr<q>ositions iq>on this important question submitted by 
the representatives of the various nations in response to the 
suggestion of the British Government. As I recall, a state- 
ment came from France as well as from Germany. Will the 
Senator kindly advise us whether the American delegates 
stated for the benefit of the conference, in response to the 
invitation, the position of our Government ? 

Mr. Root. Mr. President, the American delegates did 
not upon this point present any memorandum as to the 
position of the United States at the outset, but shortly after 
the discussion b^gan th^ did present a statement of their 
views. 

Mr. Waibh. They were called upon to make a formal 
statement of the position taken by their Government, to- 
gether with the authorities which they desired to submit in 
support of the view taken. Will the Senator, who then was 
Secretary of State, advise us as to why our delegates did not 
comply with that request ? 

Mr. Root. Because the delegates of the United States pre- 
sented, as the basis of their position upon the whole range id 
questions, the naval war code and discussions of the Naval 
War CoU^e, and it was deemed wiser, as those discussions 
covered the entire range, not to attempt to commit them to 
any more definite and precise statement. 

Mr. Walsh. Are we to understand the Senator, then, that 
th^ did not make a definite statement on any of the seven 
propositions submitted by the Government of Great Britain ? 

Mr. Root. I do not remember about the others; I have 
not examined the facts as to them. 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL 879 

Mt.Waibh. VeryweD. Will the Senator have the kind- 
ness to advise us in that connection if the dd^gates from 
Austria-Himgary made a statement as to the position of their 
Government, and, if it is brief, wiU he give it to us ? 

Mr. Root. Th^ made a statement, and the representa- 
tives of various other countries made statements. The dele- 
gates of Austria-Himgary made a statement which was much 
nearer in its view to the position of Great Britain and the 
United States than it was to the position of France and 
Russia. 

Mr. Waibh. My recollection is that the dd^gates from 
Austria-Hungary made a statement to the effect that the 
French doctrine was entirely obsolete and had been dis- 
regarded by France. 

Mr. Root. They did not go so far as that. Th^ said in 
their statement that it was too strict, and that France had 
modified it or varied from it in the war of 1870; but we can 
hardly take the statement of Austria-Hungary regarding the 
position of France as against the formal official statement of 
France herself. 

Now, I want to give credence to what I have said about 
what happened in this conference, by reading from a dis- 
tinguished publicist, a professor in the University of Vienna, 
Professor von Femeck, who was one of the Austrian dele- 
gates to the conference of London. I read from an article by 
him in the Handbuch des Volkerrechts^ for 1914! He says, in 
chapter 5, under the heading '* Transfer of the Flag ": 

It may well be said that this subject, which is perhaps of much less 
importance to neutrals than that of contraband or of blockade, was the 
object of ertraordinary attention on the part of the conference. 

Omitting some irrelevant remarks, he proceeds: 

For some time it seemed as though an unanimous solutkm of this ques- 
tioii could not be reached. The reason for this was that the interests in 
the subject on the part of the powers represented at the conference were of 



880 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

ft widely differing dmrmdet, and that the laws and the customs ci dillereat 
g»4^t^ ^Ftf> ^1— miaM> m iwiporfrAiit rftq>ftfff«- The United States ol America, 
France, Italy, the Netholands, and Russia recognise without exceptioQ 
the transfer of enemy merchant ships to a neutral flag when the transfer is 
completed before the outbreak of the war; Germany, France, and Rosoa 
declare without exception as null and void any transfer of flag made after 
the outbreak of the war — these are strict, uncompromising sohitions that 
may indeed be understood from a theoretical point of view, but in practioe 
lead to difficulties. 

Several of the powers, anuHig them Great Britain, the American Union, 
and Germany in«ist.ed that in <M^er to be valid in law, the transfer must 
have been intended in ** good faith/' and according to the American inter- 
pretation ** good faith '' meant not fictitious, while the other powen un- 
derstood by '* good faith '' that the owner himsdf must not have intended 
to make it impossible for the <^^>onent to seise the shq>. 

You will perceive that this statement answers the question 
put by the Senator from Utah pVIr. Sutherland], and it states 
in few words just what Mr. Renault's report says. 

The other powers — 

says Professor von Femeck — 

understood by *' good faith '* that the owner must not have intended to 
make it impossible for the c^^KHient to seise the ship. 

And so, as Mr. Renault's report said, in order that they 
might have an unequivocal expression, because there were 
these two views of ** good faith," they put in a rule whidi 
states in so many words the second view, according to Pro- 
fessor von Femeck, that ** the ovmer must not have intended 
to make it impossible for the opponent to seize the ship." 
He proceeds: 

By a remarkable argument* the American ddegation ccmtroverted the 
idea that the shipowner could not protect himsdf against the piiie law by 
transferring his ship to a neutral flag. . . • 

At the second session of the commission, the ddegates were evidently 
eager to reach an agreement that would avdd the harshness of the con- 
sequent enforcement of a principle: The transfer of the flag efiPected before 
the outl»eak of the war should be regarded as valid, the transfer after the 
outbreak of the war as invalid; in both cases the presunqytion mi^ be 



THE SHIP FUBCHASE BILL S81 

vefnted hy oounter erkknoe. In the ooune of the third meetiiig 6t the 
commiwiontheqiieetiopwgiiHingtheelaboim 

ing the transfer pre viouf and the transfer sabeequent to the q^ening of the 
hostilitieii " was referred to the investigating oomniittee. This committee 
made its report at the ninth sessioQ of the commission. The rules which 
this committee had daborated met the idea of the agreement, but did not 
meet with the full i^qproval of the American ddegatiiHi, tot the reason tfiat 
ihej did not take into account the thought devdc^)ed in the declaration 
referred to above. In ^Mtler to overcome this difficulty, the representatives 
of Great Britain pn^xMed at the eleventh session of the ccmmiission ** in 
the interest of neutral commerce " to add the following: *'. . . thereshall 
be absolute presumption of validity, if the transfer was effected more than 
thirty days before the opening of the hostilities, i»ovided it is in abs(Jute 
and comjdete conformity with the laws of the countries interested, and has 
for its object that the ccmtrdi over the ship and over the earnings resulting 
from its use does not remain in the same hands that exercised this control 
before the transfer." To this the American ddegatiiHi agreed; it yielded 
in principle, but obtained a practically important concession: The ques- 
tion of ** good faith " might be nused only with regard to such ships as 
were transferred within the last thirty days before the outbreak of the war. 

I find, Mr. President, that Italy upon two occasions since 
the conference of London has applied the rule. In the Revue 
Generale de Droit Intematumal Pvblic^ of September-October, 
1918, there is a report of the case of the sailing vessel Vasilios 
and of the sailing vessel Aghios Oeorghios, Greek ships, or 
ships flying the Greek flag, which had been Turkish vessels 
at the opening of the war between Italy and Turkey, and had 
been sold to a Greek citizen, admitted to Greek r^^istry, and 
were flying the Greek flag. The ships were seized, con- 
demned, and sold. So that we may add Italy to the powers 
which have adopted this rule of the Declaration of London. 

Grermany has put herself upon the same basis, in terms 
which leave no possible doubt. I read from the Prize Ordi- 
nance of September 80, 1909, published in the Law Gazette 
of the Empire for 1914, No. 50: 

I a;pproye the accompanying prize cmlinance, and direct that in the 
enforcement of the prize law my fleet commanders shall, during the war» 
proceed in acoordanoe with the provisions of the priae ordinance. Insobr 



882 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

mH may be n cggaaw y to piahecroeptka thereto m 
make propodtioQ to tliat end to me. I empofwet you to give audi inter- 
iwetation to tbis ordinance and to make such changes thereto as may be 
necessary, i»ovided they are not of fundamental importaaoe. 

(Sifftied) WnmBUc 
In the absence of the Imperial Counselor. 

(Countersigned) ▼• Tebfri. 

Dated September SO, 1909. Promulgated at Berlin, Augusts* 

1914, the date of the b^gimimg of the war. 

The ordinance, section 11, is as follows: 

'Etwmy $kijn and their cargoee. — WiHx the exoeptioos q>ecified un- 
der 6— 

which are not relevant here; they rdate to cartd ships, 
hospital ships, etc. — 

With the exceptions specified under 6» enemy ships are subject to 
capture. 

Ships are adjudged enemy or neutral daps by the flag th^ are entitled 
to carry. 

The flag which a ship is entitled to carry is determined in aocoidanee 
with the flag law of almost all maritime states from an cdidal document 
that any merchant ship must have on board. 

If the nati<Miality of a ship cannot be readily established, and esptdtUj 
if the document required in aooordanoe with ibe flag law of the respective 
state is not in evidence, then the shq> shaQ be considered as an enemy ship. 

Ships that after the outbreak of the hostilities have been transferred 
from the enemy to the neutral flag are abo to be conridered as enemy 
ships — 

(a) If the commander is not convinced that the transfer would have 
followed, even if war had not broken out, as, fop instance, by sucoessioQ, or 
by virtue of a construction contract 

(b), (c), and (d) pertain to matters which are not relevant. 

That points to the German understanding of the rule; and 
I will say that in the final report of the London conf erenoe, 
which is printed in this document containing the solicitor's 
opinion, an illustration is given of the meaning of the rule — 
that is, for instance, ** in case of inheritance." 

Applying these illustrations, the rule becomes plain. The 
ordinary trade in ships is not to be prevented. . Trade in the 



THE SHIP FUBCHASE BJUj 888 

ordinaiy oourse of busiiiess is not to be prevented. The ordi- 
nary devolution of property is not to be interfered with. If 
the owner of a ship belonging to a belligerent dies^ the prop- 
erty may devolve upon a neutral. The rule does not pre- 
vent it, and the neutral flag w31 protect it. If you or I have 
ordered a ship from a shipyard in Germany or Great Britain, 
and the ship is constructed, and we take it, if the ship was 
ordered before the war and the transfer was made after the 
war, that transfer is manifestly in the ordinary course of busi- 
ness, as the German rule says, under a construction contract 
But none of these great nations will permit a citizen of an 
enemy to rob it of its prize by transferring to a neutral the 
ships it is entitled to capture on the high seas. 

Mr. President, we are not bound by that; but that is the 
state of the law of England, France, Germany, Russia, Italy, 
and I presume the allies of these countries, and that is what 
we have to run up against if we buy these belligerent ships; 
for of course no one will contend for a moment that the Ham- 
burg-American Lme or the North German Uoyd Line is sell- 
ing its ships in the ordinary course of business, or for any 
reason other than that they cannot go out on the ocean and 
carry on their business; and no one would doubt it S we were 
to buy a British ship and put it in the Bremen trade or the 
Hamburg trade. There can be no purchase now of ships that 
have been lying idle six months, under the conditions of this 
war, that is not stamped with a purpose that invalidates the 
transfer under the rule of the Declaration of London equally 
with those old and more severe rules which were presented 
at the beginning of the conference. 

But, Mr. President, I have been considering this subject as 
if an American citizen were to buy. I have said about that, 
that we are not bound by the rules of these countries. We 
are at liberty to say: ** Our rule is different, and we insist 
upon its being appUed." I have always bdieved in that rule. 



884 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

sir. I bdieve iiTit now. I instructed our delegates to the 
Second Hague Conference to urge upcm the conference the 
immunity of all private property at sea in time of war. Our 
del^fates fought loyally for the rule which our courts i^plied» 
and which is in furtherance of that beneficent and liberal rule. 
But there is the law of Europe, and against that we will come ; 
and I repeat, it is their law that will be enforced in the treat- 
ment of this subject. We should be left to protest and at- 
tempt to get them or some court of arbitration to abandon 
their rule and adopt ours. How easy it would be, sir, tm us 
to bring that about through the voluntary action of any 
country or the action of any court of arbitration, in view of 
the fact that they have adopted the rule of the Declaration of 
London to which our delq^ates finally agreed, to which our 
Government agreed in sending it to the Senate for rati- 
fication, and to which the Senate agreed by advising and 
consenting to the ratification, I shall not discuss. 

But, says the Secretary of the Treasury, the Government 
of the United States could not be involved in any difficulty 
if it were to buy these ships — that is to say, if this proposed 
corporation were to buy the ships: 

Some timid pec^le have argued that if the Goveniment b interested as a 
stockhdder in a shipping company, and a ship of such company should be 
seized by a belligerent and brought into a prize court, the sovereignty of 
the Government would be involved. There is no ground whatever tat this 
view. 

I am sorry to write myself down ui the cat^ory of timid 
people, but I must, for I do not agree with the Secretary of 
the Treasury in the idea that there is no ground whatever for 
this view; and I am filled with apprdbension by the idea of 
putting these vast powers into the hands of a man who thinks 
there is no ground whatever for that view. 

A question was put to the counselor of the State Dq[Mirt- 
ment, Mr. Lansing, before the Committee on Naval Affairs 



THE SHIP FDBCHASE BILL 385 

of the House. I read from the hearings on Senate Bill 5259 
and H. R. 5980, dated August 20, 1914: 

Mr. WnjiAMB. The first question that we want information on, as a 
l^al pn^xisition, is the liability that would attach to this Goveniment if 
the Government itself was operating a line of steamships engaged in the 
transpOTtation of goods to South America and to European countries com- 
pared with the liability of a steamship company or an individual engaged 
in the same business. Can you give us some information along these lines ? 

Mr. Lanbino. I suj^pose you refer to neutrality and to the question of 
contraband ? 

Mr. Wn.TJAMB. Yes, sir. 

Mr. Lanbimq. I think that the tnuuqxirtation of contraband to a bdlig- 
crent poirt in a public ship of the United States would go much furthor 
than the mere matter of liability, and that it would be regarded as an 
unneutral act 

Mr. Wn.TJAMH. That the United States transporting goods to JgnglMK, 
Freuch, or Gennan ports would be a violation of neutrali^ ? 

Mr. Lambino. I think it might be so regarded. 

That is what we have to deal with. That is what the Secre- 
tary of the Treasury does deal with in the words I have read 
from him. He says: 

If the Government opemted ships outright, just as it opemtes the vesseb 
of our navy, an awkward situation of this character might arise; but 
where a nation is merdy a stockholder, or the sole stockholder, in a private 
ccnpcmtticm, its sovereignty is not and cannot be directly involved if the 
ships of such a corporation become the subjects of litigation in a prise 
court concerning any issue which does not involve the Government itself. 
The Government would stand in relation to such a corporation exactly 
as any individual stockholder does to a corporaticMi in which he is 
interested. A suit against the corporation does not necessarily involve 
the shareholders. 

Mr. President, that is not the law as it has been understood 
by the Government of the United States, or as it has been iq>- 
pUed. In the Delagoa Bay case our Government went 
straight through the legal fiction of a Portuguese corporation 
and asserted and enforced the rights of American citizens who 
were stockholders of that corporation, precisely as if they had 
been the owners themselves. The British Government did 



386 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

the same thing in the same case. Time and again the rule 
which was established in that case has been implied to the 
affairs of these legal fictions which give to the real owners of 
property the mmiicipal right of succession and limitation of 
liability and the use of a corporate seal, etc. Of course, Mr. 
President, it stands to reason that a municipal statute giving 
to A and B and C rights to sue and be sued in corporate form 
and to have limitation of liability and to act through a seal, 
is no concern of another Government if A and B and C, 
through that form, have injiu^ or affected the rights of that 
other Government. The idea is idle and baseless that the 
Government of the United States, by the exercise of its vast 
national power, can wrest enormous funds from its people by 
taxation, can use those funds to withdraw from Germany's 
right of capture British ships and from France's and Great 
Britain's right of capture of German ships, and say: " I can- 
not be called to account because I have made a statute undar 
which I protect myself by a legal fiction, calling myself a 
trading corporation." Ah, no! the real and serious affairs 
of this world are not conducted in that way. Whatever we 
do through this corporation that we create and own, we do 
as a government, and are responsible for as a government. 

In the case of the Parlemenl BelgCy which was referred to 
the other day by the Senator from Massachusetts [Mr. 
Lodge], the courts of England were called upon to consider 
the effects of government ownership. The Government of 
Belgiiun owned a boat plying across the Channel from Ostend 
to some British port, much like our municipal ferries, and the 
question was raised, whether being a trading boat engaged 
solely in trading operations, it was to be treated as subject 
to the laws relating to trading ships or was to have the im- 
mimities which pertained to government ships. The court 
below held that it was subject to the laws rdating to trading 
ships. The court above reversed the decision, and held that. 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL 887 

being the property of the Govemment of Belgium, it was 
immune from the English laws relating to trading ships. The 
reality of things, sir, prevents us from escaping by any pos- 
sibility from responsibility for the use of our national power 
to withdraw any belligerent ships that we may now purchase 
from the right of capture on the part of the other belliger- 
ents, whether we proceed by the fiction of a corporation or 
directly. 

There is only one possible escape from the condemnation 
and forfeiture of a prize court for every ship of this kind that 
is purchased. That is .the possible protection of the sov- 
ereignty of the United States, preferring to occupy the 
position of violating neutrality rather than to submit to 
condemnation. 

What is the meaning, sir, of the violation of neutrality ? 
It means taking sides in the controversy. It means helping 
one belligerent against another. It means that after all our 
proclamations and our efforts, we abandon the attempt to be 
neutral, and we take sides in the great conflict; and we can- 
not stop. We cannot measure the number of steps. One un- 
neutral act by us will lead to acts by others that will compel 
further acts by us, more acts by others and more by us and 
more by them, until we are in the thick of the controversy. 

Remember, sir, the condition of the world today. I am 
arguing against the Govemment of the United States buying, 
not a ship, but an international quarrel with every ship. 
Somebody said to me: ** It is buying a claim, not a ship." 
No. It is buying a quarrel, not a ship; and I say, remember 
the condition of the world. Recall to your minds all that you 
have read during the past six months of the condition of feel- 
ing on the part of the people in all these countries — Eng- 
land, Belgiimi, France, Grermany, Russia, Servia, all of them 
— taise to the highest degree, in that condition of exaltation 
which holds prudence for naught. 



388 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Why» sir» we were ready to fight, from Mason and Dixon's 
line to Canada, on the instant, when Mason and Slidell were 
taken from the Treriit and Great Britain mobilized her fleet. 
It was ruin for the North if we fought — certain ruin. We 
could not stand against the gallant South and against mighty 
England. Our blockade would be gone; but we ware ready 
to fight, because every heart of the North was full of emotion, 
and every nature was tense with feeling, and we cared naught 
for prudence. That is Europe today. 

If we are going to maintam our neutrality, we must hold 
dose to it, and keep out of all needless causes of controversy. 
And let us remember ourselves. We have k^t, hitherto, a 
united America. We have stood behind the President in his 
neutrality proclamations. Here and there fault has heea 
found on one side or the other, but we have stood by him; 
but do not forget that there are here millions of Grermans who 
love their Fatherland, and I honor them for it. I should 
think less of them if their natures were not awakened by the 
peril and the stress of the land that gave birth to them and 
their fathers. They are alive and tense. There are millions 
of men of English blood, bom and bred with a love for Anglo- 
Saxon liberty and the laws that we inherited from England. 
Do not imagine that they are not thinking and feeling, and 
if you precipitate this country into a controversy where 
Europe feels and acts upon the bdlief that we have taken 
sides, we shall rend oxu*selves. 

No; the only safe course is to keep out of unnecessary 
controversial questions with as great care and conserva- 
tism and caution as possible, for we never can tdl where a 
controversy will lead us. 

Mr. President, I deeply r^ret that any shade of party poli- 
tics has fallen upon the consideration of this measure. We 
have in the Senate long felt that it was our duty to lay aside 
party when we reach the water's edge. We have considered 



THE SHIP PURCHASE BILL 389 

the terms of treaties and advised the President, of whatever 
party, in accordance with the best of our judgment and our 
conscience. When we have reached the water^s edge we have 
said we leave party. 

This bill proposes a business which is all beyond the water's 
edge — international in its aspect and in its purpose. It is 
international at a time of intense emotion and certain Con- 
troversy. I wish we could have considered it — I wish we 
could consider it now — as Americans earnest for the peace 
and prosperity of omr country, forgetful of party. 

Mr. President and Senators, there is no crime against our 
country so wicked as the crime of conducting omr interna- 
tional relations with a view to party popularity. The two 
considerations are incompatible, and cannot exist at the same 
time in any mind. He who has charge of omr foreign affairs 
must deal with them regardless of the effect upon his political 
future or his party's advantage, or he cannot deal with them 
as the public safety demands. The man who is considering 
his political future and his party's advantage should keep out 
of foreign relations. The two cannot coexist. 

One incident for which I impute blame to no one has 
recently happened which illustrates what I say. The note 
that was sent by our State Department to Great Britam a 
short time ago r^arding the search for contraband, en- 
deavoring to remedy serious evils of delay and perhaps in- 
difference in making the search for contraband, which is 
admittedly the right of belligerents, was a moderate, a rea- 
sonable, and a proper note. No one in the world had a right 
to find fault with it. But before the note was delivered in 
Great Britain and before it was made public here, the news- 
papers were filled by somdbody, I do not know whom, with 
an account of it, far, far from the truth, with an account of it 
which pictured the Administration as standing up against 
frightful odds and dreadful danger f w a view of American 



890 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

rights which no serious student of international law ever 
thought of asserting and which the note did not assert 
Both this country and England were filled with an ^ron- 
eous view of that note and that erroneous view persists. It 
could have been given for no other purpose than a political 
purpose and it was a crime against the American pecfgie 
and against the peace of the world to misr^resent it. 

I will not proceed. I will not specify or illustrate further. 
I will dose what I have to say by expressing the most fervent 
hope that we may deal both in this great delibarative body 
and in the executive department of the Government with this 
serious, grave question as lovers of our country, with all the 
wisdom and experience and ability that we can bring to our 
country's service. 



THE OUTLOOK FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW 

FRESIDENTIAL ADDBESS AT THE NINTH ANNUAL MEETING 

OP THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OP INTERNATIONAL LAW 

WASHINGTON, DECEMBER S8, 1915 

THE inddents of the great war now raging affect so 
seriously the very foundations of international law that 
there is for the moment but little satisfaction to the student 
of that science in discussing specific rules. Whether or not 
Sir Edward Carson went too far in his recent assertion that 
the law of nations has been destroyed, it is manifest that the 
structure has been rudely shaken. The barriers that states- 
men and jurists have been constructing laboriously for three 
centuries to limit and direct the conduct of nations toward 
each other, in conformity to the standards of modem civili- 
zation, have proved too weak to confine the tremendous 
forces liberated by a conflict which involves almost the whole 
miUtary power of the world and in which the destinies of 
nearly every civilized state outside the American continents 
are directly at stake. 

The war b^an by a denial on the part of a very great 
power that treaties are obligatory when it is no longer for the 
interest of either of the parties to observe them. The denial 
was followed by action supported by approximately one 
half the military power of Europe and is apparently approved 
by a great number of learned students and teachers of inter- 
national law, citizens of the countries supporting the view. 
This position is not an application of the doctrine rebus ne 
stantOms which justifies the tamination of a treaty under 
circumstances not contemplated when the treaty was made 
so that it is no longer justly applicable to existing conditions. 
It is that under the very circumstances contemplated by the 



892 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

treaty and under the conditions for which the treaty was 
intended to provide the treaty is not obligatory as against 
the interest of the contracting party. 

Tliis situation naturally raises the question whether exec- 
utory treaties will continue to be made if they are not to be 
binding, and requires consideration of a system of law under 
which no conventional obligations are recognized. The par- 
ticular treaty which was thus set aside was declaratory of the 
general rule of international law respecting the inviolability 
of neutral territory; and the action which ignored the treaty 
idso avowedly violated the rule of law» and the defense is 
that for such a violation of the law the present interest of a 
sovereign state is justificaticm. It is plain that the applica- 
tion of such a principle to a matter of nmjor importance at 
the b^inning of a long conflict must inevitably be followed 
by the setting aside of other rules as they are found to inter- 
fere with interest or conv^ence; and that has been the case 
during the present war. Many of the rules of law which the 
world has r^arded as most firmly established have been 
completely and continuously disr^arded, in the conduct of 
war, in dealing with the property and lives of civilian non- 
combatants on land and sea and in the treatment of neutrals. 
Allied violations by one belligerent have been asserted to 
justify other violations by other belligerents. The art of 
war has been developed through the invention of new instru- 
ments of destruction and it is asserted that the changes of 
conditions thus produced make the old rules obsolete. 

It is not my purpose at this time to discuss the right or 
wrong of these declarations and actions. Such a discussion 
would be quite inadmissible on the part of the presiding officer 
of this meeting. I am stating things which whether right or 
wrong have unquestionably happened, as bearing upon the 
branch of jurisprudence to which this Society is devoted. It 
seems that if the violation of law justifies other violatioDS» 



OUTLOOK FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW 808 

then the law is destroyed and there is no law; that if the dis- 
covery of new ways of doing a thing prohibited justifies the 
doing of it, then there is no law to prohibit. The basis of such 
assertions really is the view that if a substantial belligerent in- 
terest for the injury of the enemy come in conflict with a rule 
of law, the rule must stand aside and the interest must prevail. 
If that be so it is not difficult to reach the conclusion that for 
the present at all events in all matters which affect the exist- 
ing struggle, international law is greatly impaired. Nor can 
we find much encouragement to believe in the binding force 
of any rules upon nations which observe other rules only so 
far as their interest at the time prompts them. Conditions 
are always changing and a system of rules which ceases to 
bind whenever conditions change should hardly be con- 
sidered a system of law. It does not follow that nations can 
no longer discuss questions of right in their diplonmtic inter- 
course, but upon such a basis it seems quite usdess to appeal 
to the authority of rules already agreed upon as just and 
right and to their compelling effect because they have been 
already agreed upon. 

When we recall Mansfield's familiar description of inter- 
national law as " founded upon justice, equity, convenience, 
the reason of the thing, and confirmed by long usage," we 
may well ask oiurselves whether that general acceptance 
which is necessary to the establishment of a rule of interna- 
tional law may be withdrawn by one or several nations and 
the rule be destroyed by that withdrawal so that the usage 
ceases and the whole subject to which it relates goes back to 
its original status as matter for new discussion as to what is 
just, equitable, convenient and reasonable* 

When this war is ended, as it must be some time, and the 
foreign offices and judicial tribunals and publicists of the 
world resume the peaceable discussion of international rights 
and duties, they will certainly have to consider not merdy 



804 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

what there is left of certain specific rules, but also the funda- 
mental basb of obligation upon which all rules depencL The 
dvilized world will have to determine whether what we call 
international law is to be continued as a mere code of eti- 
quette or is to be a real body of laws imposing obligatimis 
much more definite and inevitable than they have been 
heretofore. It must be one thing or the other. Althou^ 
foreign offices can still discuss what is fair and just and what 
is expedient and wise» they cannot appeal to law for the 
decision of disputed questions unless the appeal rests upon 
an obligation to ob^ the law. What course will the nations 
follow ? 

Vague and uncertain as the future must be, there is some 
reason to think that after the terrible e3q>erience through 
wliich civilization is passing, there will be a tendency to 
strengthen rather than abandon the law of nations. What- 
ever the result may be, the world will have received a dread- 
ful lesson of the evils of war. Thesacrificeof millions of lives, 
millions homeless and in poverty, industry and commax^ 
destroyed, overwhehning national debts, — all will naturally 
produce a strong desire to do something that will prevent 
the same thing happening again. 

While the war has exhibited the inadequacy of interna- 
tional law, so far as it has yet developed, to curb those govern- 
mental policies which aim to extend power at all costs, it has 
shown even more clearly that little reliance can be placed 
upon unrestrained human nature, subject to specific tempta- 
tion, to commit forcible aggression in the pursuit of power 
and wealth. It has shown that where questions of conduct 
are to be determined under no constraint except the circum- 
stances of the particular case, the acquired habits of civiliza- 
tion are weak as against the powerful, innate tendencies 
which survive from the countless centuries of man's struggle 
for existence against brutes and savage foes. Theonlymeans 



OllTLOOK FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW S»S 

yet difloovered by man to fimit those tendencies consist in 
the estaUidmient of Uw» the setting up ol principles ol 
action and definite rules of conduct idiidi cannot be vio- 
lated by the individual without injmy to himsdf • That 
is the method by whidi the witmgs naturally flowing from 
individual impulse within the state have been confined 
to narrow limits. That analogy, difficult as it is to maintiun 
in view of the differences between the individual who is sub- 
ject to sovereignty and the nation whidi is itsdf sovereign, 
indicates the only method to whidi human ecq>erience points 
to avoid repeating the present experience of these years of 
war consistently with the independence of naticms and the 
liberty of individuals. The Pax Romana was effective only 
because the wcuid was subject to Rome. The Christian 
Chmdi has been urging peace and good-wiU among men f c»r 
nineteen centuries, and still there is this war. Omcerts of 
Europe and alliances and ententes and skillful balances of 
power all lead ultimatdy to war. Conciliation, good-will, 
love of peace, human sympathy, are ineffective without in- 
stitutions through which they can act. Only the possibility 
of establishing real restraint by law seems to remain to give 
effect to the undoubted will of the vast majority of mankind. 

Li the effort to arrange the affairs of the world so that they 
will not lead to another great catastrophe, men will therefore 
turn naturally towards the re-establishment and strengthen- 
ing of the law of nations. How can that be done ? How can 
the restraints of law be made more effective upon nations ? 

It is not difficult to suggest some things which will tend 
in that direction. 

Laws to be ob^edmust have sanctions behind them; that 
is to say, violations of them must be followed by punishment. 
That punishment must be caused by power superior to 
the law-breaker; it cannot consist merdy in the possibility 
of being defeated in a conflict with an enemy; oth^wise 



396 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

there would be no law as between the strong and the weak. 
Many states have grown so great that there is no power 
capable of imposing punishment upon them except the powar 
of collective civilization outside of the offending state. Any 
ezerdse of that power must be based upon public opinion. It 
cannot rest ma^ly upon written agreements or upon the 
accidental dictates of particular interests. It must proceed 
from general, concurrent judgment and condemnation. 
When that exists, punishment may be inflicted either by the 
direct action of governments, forcible or otherwise, or by the 
terrible consequences which come upon a nation that finds 
itself without respect or honor in the world and deprived of 
the confidence and good-will necessary to the maintoiance of 
intercoiu'se. Without such an opinion behind it, no punish- 
ment of any kind can be imposed for the violation of inter- 
national law. 

For the formation of such a general opinion, however, 
questions of national conduct must be reduced to simple and 
definite form. Occasionally there is an act the character dl 
which is so dear that mankind forms a judgment upon it 
readily and promptly, but in most cases it is easy for the 
wrongdoer to becloud the issue by assertion and argument 
and to raise a complicated and obscure controversy which 
confuses the judgment of the world. There is but one way 
to make general judgment possible in such cases. That is by 
bringing them to the decision of a competent court which 
will strip away the irrelevant, reject the false, and declare 
what the law requires or prohibits in the particular case. 
Such a court of international justice with a general obligation 
to submit all justiciable questions to its jurisdiction and to 
abide by its judgment is a primary requisite to any real 
restraint of law. 

When we come to consider the working of an intematicnial 
court, however, we are forced to realize that the law itsdf is 



OUTLOOK FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW S97 

m many respects imperfect and uncertain. There is no legis- 
lature to make laws for nations. There is no body of judicial 
decisions having the effect of precedent to declare what inter- 
national laws are. The process of making international law 
by usage and general accq>tance has been necessarily so 
slow that it has not k^t pace with the multiplying questions 
arising in the increasing intercourse of nations. In many 
fields of most fruitful controversy different nations hold 
tenaciously to different rules, as, for recent example, upon 
the right of expatriation, upon the doctrine of continuous 
voyages, upon the right to transfer merchant vesseb after 
the outbreak of a war. Yet any attempt to maintain a court 
of international justice must fail unless there are laws for the 
court to administer. Without them the so-called court would 
be merely a group of men seeking to impose their personal 
opinions upon the states coming before them. The lack of an 
adequate system of law to be applied has been the chief ob- 
stacle to the development of a system of judicial settlement of 
international disputes. This is well illustrated by the history 
of the convention for an international prize court adopted by 
the Second Hague Conference. The Conference agreed to es- 
tablish such a court and provided in article seven of the treaty 
that in the absence, of special treaty provisions governing the 
case presented ** the Court shall apply the rules of int^- 
nationallaw. If no generally recognized rul^ exists, the Court 
shall give judgment in accordance with the general principles 
of justice and equity.** When the question of ratifying this 
treaty was presented to the Powers whose del^ates had 
signed it, some of them awoke to the fact that upon many sub- 
jects most certain to call for the action ci a court ihere was 
no general agreement as to what the rules of international 
law were, and that different nations had different ideas as to 
what justice and equity would require, and that each judge 
would naturally follow the views of his own country. Ac- 



398 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

cordingly the Conference of London was called, and met in 
December, 1908. In that Conference the dd^^tes of the 
principal maritime powers came to agreement upon a series 
of questions and they embodied their agreement in the 
seventy-one articles of the Dedaration of London. If that 
Declaration had been ratified by all the Powers in the Con- 
ference, it would doubtless have been accepted as a statement 
of the international law upon the subjects covered. But it 
was not ratified, and so the Prize Court treaty remains inef- 
fective because the necessary basis for the action of the Court 
is wanting. It is plain that in order to have real courts by 
which the l^al rights ci nations can be determined and the 
conduct of nations can be subjected to definite tests, there 
must be a settlement by agreement of old disputes as to what 
the law ought to be and provisicm for extending the law over 
fields which it does not now cover. One thing especially 
should be done in this direction. Law cannot control na- 
tional policy, and it is through the working of long-continued 
and persistent national policies that the present war has 
come. Against such policies all attempts at conciliation and 
good understanding and good-will among the nations of 
Europe have been powerless. But law, if enforced, can con- 
trol the external steps by which a nation sedcs to follow a 
policy, and rules may be so framed that a policy of aggression 
cannot be worked out except through open violations of law 
which will meet the protest and condemnation of the world 
at large, backed by whatever means shall have been devised 
for law enforcement. 

There is another weakness of international law as abinding 
force which it appears to me can be avoided only by a radical 
change in the attitude of nations towards violaticms of the 
law. 

We are all familiar with the distinction in the municipal 
law of all civilized countries, between private and puUic 



OUTLOOK FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW S99 

rights and the remedies for the protection or enforcement of 
them. Ordinary injuries and breaches of contract are re- 
dressed only at the instance of the injured parson, and other 
persons are not deemed entitled to interfere.' It is no concern 
of theirs. On the other hand, certain flagrant wrongs the 
prevalence of which would threaten the order and security of 
the community are deemed to be everybody's business. If, 
for example, a man be robbed or assaulted, the injury is 
deemed not to be done to him alone, but to every member of 
the state by the breaking of the law against robbery or 
against violence. Every citizen is deemed to be injured by 
the breach of the law because the law is his protection, and 
if the law be violated with impunity, his protection will dis- 
appear. Accordingly, the government, which represents all 
its citizens, undertakes to punish such action even though 
the particular person against whom the injury was done may 
be content to go without redress. Up to this time breaches 
of international law have been treated as we treat wrongs 
under civil procedure, as if they concerned nobody except 
the particular nation upon which the injury was inflicted 
and the nation inflicting it. There has been no general recog- 
nition of the right of other nations to object. There has 
been much international discussion of what the rules of law 
ought to be and the importance of observiilig them in the 
abstract, and there have been frequent interferences by third 
parties as a matter of policy upon the ground that specific, 
consequential injury to them might result from the breach; 
but, in general, states not directly affected by the particular 
injiiry complained of have not been deemed to have any 
right to be heard about it. It is only as disinterested media- 
tors in the quarrels of others or as rendering good offices to 
others that they have been accustomed to speak of it at all. 
Until the First Hague Conference that form of interference 
was upon sufferance. * In the Convention for the Pacific 



400 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Settlement of International Disputes^ concluded at that Con- 
ference, it was agreed that in case of serious trouble or conflict, 
before an appeal to arms the signatory powers should have 
recourse to the good oflSces or mediation of foreign powers, 
and article three also provided: " Independent of this re- 
course, the signatory powers recommend that one or more 
powers, strangers to the dispute, should on their own initiative 
and as far as circumstances may allow, offer their good offices 
or mediation to the states at variance. Powers strangers to 
the dispute have a right to offer good offices or mediation 
even during the course of hostiUties. The exercise of this 
right can never be regarded by one or other of the parties m 
conflict as an imfriendly act." These provisions are a con- 
siderable step towards a change in the theory of the relation 
of third powers to an international controversy. Thqr 
recognize such an independent interest in the prevention 
of conflict to be the basis of a right of initiative of othtf 
powers in an effort to bring about a settlement. It still 
remains under these provisions, however, that the otho* 
powers assert no substantive right of their own. They are 
simply authorized to propose an interference in the quarrels 
of others to which they are deemed to be strangers. The 
enforcement of the rules of international law is thus left to 
the private initiative of the coujitry appealing to those rules 
for protection, and the rest of the world has in theory and in 
practice no concern with the enforcement or non-enforcement 
of the rules. 

If the law of nations is to be binding, if the decisions of 
tribunals charged with the application of that law to inter- 
national controversies are to be respected, there must be a 
change in theory, and violations of the law of such a character 
as to threaten the peace and order of the community of na- 
tions must be deemed to be a violation of the right of every 
civilized nation to have the law maintained and a l^gal 



OUTLOOK FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW 401 

injury to every nation. When a controversy arises between 
two nations, other nations are indeed strangers to the dis- 
pute as to what the law requires in that controversy, but 
they cannot really be strangers to a dispute as to whether 
the law which is applicable to the circumstances shall be 
observed or violated. Next to the preservation of national 
character, the most valuable possession of all peaceable 
nations, great and smaU, is the protection of those laws which 
constrain other nations to conduct based upon principles of 
justice and humanity. Without that protection, thare is no 
safety for the small state, except in the shifting currents of 
policy among its great neighbors, and none for a great state, 
however peaceable and just may be its disposition, except in 
readiness for war. International laws violated with im- 
punity must soon cease to exist, and every state has a direct 
interest in preventing those violations which, if permitted to 
continue, would destroy the law. Wha^ver in the world the 
laws which should protect the independence of nations, the 
inviolabiUty of their territory, the lives and property of their 
citizens, are violated, all other nations have a right to protest 
against the breaking down of the law. Such a protest would 
not be an interference in the quarreb of others. It would be 
an assertion of the protesting nation's own right against the 
injiuy done to it by the destruction of the law upon which it 
relies for its peace and security. What would follow such a 
protest must in each case depend upon the protesting na- 
tion's own judgment as to policy, upon the feeling of its 
people and the wisdom of its governing body. Whatever it 
does, if it does anything, will be done not as a stranger to a 
dispute or as an intermediary in the affairs of others, but in 
its own right for the protection of its own interest. Upon no 
other theory than this can the decisions of any court for the 
application of the law of nations be respected, or any league 
or concM or agreement among nations for the enforcement 



402 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

of peace by arms or otherwise be established, or any general 
opinion of mankind for the maintaiance of law be effective. 
Can any of these things be done ? Can the law be strength- 
ened and made effective ? Imperfect and conflicting as is 
the information upon which conjecture must be based, I 
think there is grouiid for hope that from the horrors of vio- 
lated law a stronger law may come. It was during the appal- 
ling crimes of the Thirty Years War that Grotius wrote his 
De Jure Belli ac Pads and the science of international law 
first took form and authority. The moral standards of the 
Thirty Years War have returned again to Europe with the 
same dreadful and intolerable consequences. We may hope 
that there will be again a great new departure to escape 
destruction by subjecting the nations to the rule of law. The 
development and extension of international law has been 
obstructed by a multitude of jealousies and supposed inter- 
ests of nations eadb refusmg to consCTit to any rule unless it 
be made most favorable to itself in all possible future con- 
tingencies. The desire to have a law has not been strong 
enough to overcome the determination of each nation to 
have the law suited to its own special circumstances; but 
when this war is over the desire to have some law in order to 
prevent so far as possible a recurrence of the same dreadful 
experience may sweep away all these reluctances and schemes 
for advantage and lead to agreement where agreement has 
never yet been possible. It often happens that small dif- 
ferences and petty controversies are swept away by a great 
disaster, deep feeling, and a sense of common danger. U 
this be so we can have an adequate law and a real court 
which will apply its {Nrinciples to serious as wdl as petty 
controversies, and a real public opinion of the world respond- 
ing to the duty of preserving the law inviolate. If there be 
such an opinion it will be enforced. I shall not now inquire 
into the specific means of enf orcemaDit, but the means can 



OUTLOOK POE INTEBNATIONAL LAW 403 

be found. It is only when opinion is uncertain and divided, 
or when it is sluggish and indi£Ferent and acts too late, that it 
fails of effect. During all the desperate struggles and emer- 
gencies of the great war, the conflicting nations from the 
b^inning have been competing for the favorable judgment 
of the rest of the world with a solicitude which shows what 
a mighty power even now that opinion is. 

Nor can we doubt that this will be a different world when 
peace comes. Universal mourning for the untimely dead, 
suffering and sacrifice, the triumph of patriotism over selfish- 
ness, the long dominance of deep and serious feeling, the 
purifying influences of self-devotion, will surely have changed 
the hearts of the nations, and much that is wise and noble 
and for the good of humanity may be possible, that never was 
possible before. 

Some of us believe that the hope of the world's progress 
lies in the spread and perfection of democratic self-govern- 
ment. It may be that out of the rack and welter of the great 
conflict may arise a general consciousness that it is the people 
who are to be considered, their rights and liberties to govam 
and be govamed for themselves rather than rulers' ambitions 
and policies of aggrandizement. If that be so, our hopes will 
be realized, for autocracy can protect itself by arbitrary 
power, but the people can protect themsdves only by the 
rule of law. 



SHOULD INTERNATIONAL LAW BE 
CODIFIED?^ 

ADDRESS AT A SESSION OF SECTION SK OF THE SECOND PAN- 
AMERICAN SCIENTIFIC CONGRESS MEETING JOINTLY WITH 
THE AMERICAN INSTTTDTE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE 
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW, WASHINGTON, 
DECEMBER 80, 1915 

The Second PUi-American Sdentific Congress met in the city of Washington, 
December 87, 1915, and adjourned January S, 1910. As stated by the preamble to 
the Final Act of this Congress, it was hdd ** for the purpose of bringing into dose 
and intimate contact the leaders of sdentific thought and of public opinion in the 
American RepuUics, to the end that by an exchange of views results mi^t be 
readied of service to the peoples of the American continent, and that by personal 
intercourse foundations would be laid for friendly and harmonious cooperation in 
the future." 

An daborate program was prq)ared by the Executive Conunittee of the United 
States dealing with the various phases of science, arranged in nine sections, the 
Soth Section bdng devoted to International Law, Public Law, and Jurisprudence. 

I SHALL not at this hour detain you by any extended 
remarks, and I should apologize for having no prepared 
address. The subject is one which is very interesting to me 
and must be very interesting, I think, to every one who 
thinks about international affairs or who thinks about the 
possibilities of the future of his country. Should interna- 
tional law be codified ? and, if so, should it be done through 
governmental agencies or by private scientific societies ? If 
that means should we undertake to put the law of nations into 
a single body which shall be the rule and guide for interna- 
tional relations, I think we must answer ** No, that it is im- 
possible at the present time." Mr. Field made a valiant 

^ Tlie reader denring fuUy to grasp Blr. Boot's views on this subject, should see 
also his presidential address at the fifth annual meeting of the American Society of 
International Law, April VT, 1911, on " The Function of Private Codification in 
International Law/* on page 57 of this volume. 

405 



406 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

attempt, and Bhmtsdili a great effort, but the f <»iiiatioa of 
mtemational law, still in its infancy, is a process only just 
bcf^un, and it has not readied a pdnt ^niiere the roles can be 
embodied in a code. On the other hand, codificaticm, con- 
sidered not as a result but as a process, seems to me plainly 
should be attempted and pressed forward and urged with all 
possible force. 

It is curknis that codification should be especialfy necessary 
in a system of law which is based up<m custom more exdu- 
sively even than municipal law; but that is necefii^arily so in 
the case of the law of nations, because there are no l^psla- 
tures to make the law and there are no judicial decisions to 
estabUsh by precedent what the law is. One great weakness 
of international law has been that to ascertain what it was 
you have to go to text writers, and to a great variety of state- 
ments, differing, inconsistent, many of them obscure and 
vague, capable of different interpretations, so that the instant 
the occasion for the application of a law arises, ih&e is 
pressed upon the conflicting or disputing nations the question 
as to what the law is, without any dear and definite standard 
from which to ascertain it. 

Recent events, or rather the realization of the truth whidi 
comes from a great war in Eiurope, compeb us to consider the 
great shortcomings of what we think of as international law, 
to consider how narrow the fidd which it covers, how vague 
and uncertain it is within that fidd, and how difficult it is to 
compel in any way a recognition of its rules of right conduct. 
There is but one way in which that weakness of intematicmal 
law can be cured, and that is by the process of codiflcati<m, a 
process which must extend through long periods, which has 
been going on very gradually for many years. The Declara- 
tion of Pans was a little bit of codification. The three rules 
of the Treaty of Washington constituted a little bit of codi- 
fication as between the United States and Great Britam, and 



CODIFICATION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 407 

they have been in substance accepted and adopted by the 
nations of Europe at The Hague. The Greneva Convention 
covered a certain field by codification, and the Hague Con- 
ventions a much wider field. So I say, considered as a con- 
clusion, there can be no codification, but, considered as a 
process, there must be codification, codification pressed 
forward and urged on by all possible means. 

The very fact that there are no courts to establish prece- 
dents and no legislatures to make laws makes this necessary. 
All international law is made, not by any kind of l^islation, 
but by agreement. The agreement is based upon customs, 
but the ascertainment and recognition of the customs is the 
subject of the agreement; and how can agreement be pos- 
sible unless the subject-matter of the agreement is definite 
and certain ? 

I say that recent events indicate that we must press for- 
ward codification. I can go a step further than that. The 
changes in the conditions of the earth, the changes in inter- 
national relations which have been so nq[>id in recent years, 
have outstripped the growth of international law. I think it 
quite right to say that the law of nations does not come so 
near to covering the field of national conduct today as it did 
fifty years ago. The development of international relations 
in all their variety, in the multitude of questions that arise, 
goes on more n^idly than the development of international 
law; and if you wait for customs without any effort to trans- 
late the custom into definite statements from year to year, 
you will never get any law settled except by bitter contro- 
versy. The pressing forward of the codification of interna- 
tional law is made necessary by the swift moving of events 
among nations. We cannot wait for custom to lag behind the 
action to which the law should be applied. 

Mr. Chairman, I want to express entire harmony with 
what GovemOT Baldwin said a few moments ago upon the 



408 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

other branch of this question, as to whether codification 
should be by governmental agencies or by private societies* 
It is not practicable that governments should do the thresh- 
ing out of questions necessary to reach a definite statement oi 
a conclusion. That has to be done with freedom from con- 
straint by the private individual doing his work in a learned 
society or in private intercourse. I think it is not generally 
understood that the first conference at The Hague would 
have been a complete failure if it had not been for the accom- 
plished work of the Institut de Droit International. The first 
ccmference was called by the Czar of Russia to consider and 
agree upon disarmament. It was called with expressions <rf 
the most noble character which, if they could have in^>ressed 
themselves upon the minds and hearts of Europe, would have 
rendered impossible the terrible sacrifices that are now going 
on. The conference was called for the purpose of agreeing 
upon disarmament, and for the purpose of averting what the 
Czar saw coming in the future and which has now come. But 
there were Powers in Europe which would not have it. They 
refused to enter a conference for the piupose of considoing 
that subject. Something had to be done. Here was a ccmfer- 
ence called by this great Power about to meet, and something 
had to be done, so they took the accomplished work of the 
Institut de Droit International, which had been threshed out 
through the labors and discussions of the most learned inter- 
national lawyers of Europe, including most of the technical 
advisers of the foreign offices of Europe meeting in their 
private capacity, and embodied it in the conventions of the 
First Hague Conference. It would have been impossible for 
the Hague Conference to do that work or one tithe of it if 
they had not had the material already provided. 

So I think it is quite dear that the process of codification, 
step by step, subject by subject, point by point, must begin 
with the intellectual labor of private individuals, and it must 



CODIFICATION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 409 

be completed by the acceptance of govemments. All of the 
hundreds of thousands of pages that have been written upon 
international law by the private individuals go for nothing 
unless govemments accept them. A wilderness of text- 
writers one has to wander through in endeavoring to get at 
what the law of nations is, and all that they wrote is of no 
consequence, accept as it exercises a force in bringing about 
action and agreement by the govemments of the earth. So, 
Mr. Chairman, this process must have both private initiative 
and governmental sanction. 

Mr. Chairman, there is one other subject which I think we 
should consider in dealing with the subject of codification, 
and that is this: Are the small nations of the earth to con- 
tinue ? Is it to be any longer possible for the little people to 
maintain their independence ? That is a serious question 
with many of us in this joint meeting of the Society and Sub- 
section Six of the Pan-American Congress and the American 
Institute. The large nations can take care of themselves by 
the acerdse of power, if they are willing to be armed to the 
teeth always; but the small countries — what are they to 
do ? There is no protection for them but the protection of 
law! And there is no protection in law unless the law be 
made dear and definite and certain, so that a great bully 
cannot escape it without running into the condemnation of 
that law. So I say that every dictate of humanity should 
lead us to ui^e forward that process by which in its better 
moments mankind may be led to agree to the setting up of 
dear and definite and distinct rules of right conduct for the 
control of the great nations in their dealings with the small 
and weak. 

The presence here of Dr. Maurtua, whom it is a great pleas- 
ure for me to hail as a colleague in the Faculty of Political 
and Administrative Sdence of the University of San Marcos, 
at lima, and of the distinguished Ambassador from Brazil, 



410 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

my old friend from Bio de Janeiro, lead me to say something 
which follows naturally from my reflections r^arding the 
interests of the smaller nations. It is now nearly ten years 
ago when your people, gentlemen, and the other peoples of 
South America, were good enough to give serious and respect- 
ful consideration to a message that it was my fortune to take 
from this great and powaful rq[>ublic of North America to 
the other American nations. I wish to say to you, gentlemen, 
and to all my Latin American friends here in this congress, 
that everjihing that I said in behalf of the Government of the 
United States at Bio de Janeiro in 1906 is as true now as it 
was true then. There has been no departure from the stand- 
ard of feeling and of policy which was declared then in behalf 
of the American people. On the contrary, there is through- 
out the people of this country a fuller realization of the duty 
and the morality and the high policy of that standard. 

Of course, in every country there are individuals who de- 
part from the general opinion and general conviction, both in 
their views and in their conduct; but the great, the over- 
whelming body of the American people love liberty, not in 
the restricted sense of desiring it for themselves alone, but in 
the broader sense of desiring it for all mankind. The great 
body of the people of these United States love justice, not 
merely as they demand it for themselves, but in beuig willing 
to render it to others. We believe in the independence and 
the dignity of nations, and while we are great, we estimate 
oiur greatness as one of the least of our possessions, and we 
hold the smallest state, be it upon an island of the Caribbean 
or anywhere in Central or South America, as our equal in 
dignity, in the right to respect and in the right to the treat- 
ment of an equal. We believe that nobility of spirit, that 
high ideals, that capacity for siacrifice are nobler than ma- 
terial wealth. We know that these can be found in the little 
state as well as in the big one. In our respect for you who are 



CODIFICATION OF INTEBNATIONAL LAW 411 

smally and for you who are great, there can be no element of 
condescension or patronage, for that would do violence to our 
own conception of the dignity of independent sovereignty. 
We desire no benefits which are not the benefits rendered by 
honorable equals to each other. We seek no control that we 
are unwilling to concede to others, and so long as the spirit of 
American freedom shall continue, it will range us side by side 
with you, great and small, in the maintenance of the rights of 
nations, the rights which exist as against us and as against all 
the rest of the world. 

With that spirit we hail your presence here to cooperate 
with those of us who are interested in international law; we 
hail the formation of the new American Institute of Inter- 
national Law and the personal friendships that are being 
formed day by day between the men of the North and the 
men of the South, all to the end that we may unite in such 
dear and definite declaration of the principles of right con- 
duct among nations, and in such steadfast and honorable 
support of those principles as shall command the respect of 
mankind and insure their enforcement* 



THE DECLARATION OF THE RIGHTS AND 

DUTIES OF NATIONS OF THE AMERICAN 

INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 

PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS AT TEDB TENTH ANNUAL MEETING OF 

THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OP INTERNATIONAL LAW 

WASHINGTON, APRIL 97, 1910 

Hie Americftn Institute of Intematioiial Law, coniinting of five repretentativei 
from eadi naticMial society of intenuitioDal law in eadi of the twenty-one American 
republicB, was fomided on October 18, 1918, and hdd its first session in connection 
with and under the audioes of the Second Pan-American Scientific Congress, at 
Washington, December 88, 1915, to January 8, 1910. On January 6, 1910, the 
American Institute of International Law, upon the motion of its president, James 
Brown Scott, adopted a Declaration of the Rij^ts and Duties of Nations, prefixed 
by a preamble and followed by a commentary upon eadi article of the declaration. 
Tbk conmientary was based in eadi instance upon a decision of the Siqweme Court 
of the United SUtet. 

WITH this meeting we finish the first decade of this 
Society. How great is the change of conditions in the 
field of international law during that period! Ten years ago 
all the governments of the world professed unqualified respect 
and obedience to the law of nations, and a very small number 
of persons not directiy connected with government knew or 
cared anything about it. In this country at least interna- 
tional law was regarded as a rather antiquated branch of use- 
less learning, diplomacy as a foolish mystery, and the foreign 
service as a superfluous expense. Now that governments 
have violated and flouted the law in many ways and with 
appalling consequences, the people of this country at least 
have begun to realize that observance of the law has a real 
and practical relation to the peace and honor of their own 
country and their own prosperity. They are b^^inning to 
take an interest in the subject, to discuss it in the newspapers, 

41S 



414 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

to inquire how observance of the law may be forced. There 
appears a dawning consciousness that a democraQr whidi 
undertakes to control its own foreign relations ought to 
know something about the subject. If we had not estab- 
lished this Society ten years ago to study and discuss and 
spread a knowledge of international law it would surdy be 
demanded now, and we may be certain that our annual 
public discussions and the publication of the admirable 
Journal which we have always maintained, with its definite 
and certain information upon international events, its inter- 
esting and well-informed discussion of international topics, 
and its supplements, with their wealth of authentic copies of 
international documents, havecontributed materially towards 
fitting the people of oiur country to deal with the international 
situations which are before them. 

Following our example, all the American countries have 
established similar societies, so that there are now twenty- 
one such societies on the American continents. In most 
cases these societies have been organized with the direct 
approval and sympathy of the government of the country 
and they include in their numbers a large part of the most 
eminent leaders of opinion in all the American states. Still 
another institution has been created in the American In- 
stitute of International Law, composed of delegates selected* 
to a limited number, by each of these national societies. 
This Institution has been established not as a competitor of 
the Institut de Droit International, which selects its membars 
from among all the civilized countries, and not with the idea 
that there is such a thing as American international law to be 
distinguished from general international law, but with the 
idea that there may be special American views upon int^^ 
national questions; that the circumstances of the American 
republics may make it desirable tot them to insist upon and 
press forward the development of particular principles in the 



RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF NATIONS 415 

law; that there are varieties of opinion upon such subjects 
which it may be useful to subject to common discussion and 
comparison of views; that the promotion of the habit of 
thinking broadly and intemationaUy and not narrowly or 
locally, and a knowledge in each country of the points of view 
and habits of thought of each other country, will make 
all the American states more useful members of the family 
of nations, more considerate, more tolerant of di£Ferences of 
opinion, and more conscious of the international duties 
which are correlative to international rights. 

The American Institute of International Law held its first 
meeting in Washington in December last, and, after a dis- 
cussion in which representatives from all parts of the new 
world engaged, it adopted as its point of dq>arture for 
future discussions a declaration of the rights and duties 
of nations which I commend especially to your attention. 
The declaration was in these words: 

Djdclaratios of thb Rights and Dutobb of Nationb 

I. Every nation has the right to exist* and to protect and to conserve 
its existence; but this right neither implies the right nor justifies the act of 
the state to protect itself or to conserve its existence by the commission 
of unlawful acts against innocent and um^ending states. 

n. Every nation has the right to independence in the sense that it has 
a right to the pursuit of happiness and is free to devd<^ itself without 
interference or control from other states, provided that in so doing it does 
not interfere with or violate the rights of other states. 

m. Every nation is in law and before law the equal of every other 
nation belonging to the society of nations, and all nations have the right 
to claim and, according to the Dedaration of Independence of the United 
States, ** to assume, among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal 
station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them/' 

IV. Every nation has the ri^t to territory within defined boundaries 
and to exercise exdusive jurisdictioii over its territory, and all persons 
whether native or toniga found therein. 

V. Every nation entitled to a right by the law of nations is entitled to 
have that rii^t respected and protected by all other naticms, for right and 
duty are coirdative, and the right of one is the duty of all to observe. 



416 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

VL Intematioiial law is at one and the same tune both national and 
international: national in the sense that it is the law of the land and ap> 
plicable as such to the decision of all questions involving its principles; 
international in the sense that it is the law of the society of nations and 
applicable as such to all questions between and among the members of the 
society of nations involving its principles.^ 

You will observe that this declaration states in the main 
familiar principles. We have long been accustomed to such 
statements in the text books. Indeed the official reports ci 
the Institute, in his commentary upon the declaration, und^- 
takes to show and does show that every statement, far from 
being novel, is based upon the decisions of American courts 
and the authority of American publicists. Yet the declara- 
tion was not superfluous or unimportant. There is a vast 
di£Ference between the occasional decisions of a national 
court or the opinions of individual students, and a unani- 
mous agreement of representatives of all the sovereign states 

^ Blr. Boot quotes only the text of the declaration, and the preamble prefixed to 
it is here printed for the information of the reader idko may deine to have the whole 
document before him. 

Whereas, the municipal law of dyilised nations recognises and protects the ri^t 
to life, the rif^t to liberty , the ri^t to the pursuit of hi4>pine88» as added by the Dedar 
ration of Independence of the United States of America, the ri^t to l^gal equality, 
the rif^t to property, and the rif^t to the enjoyment of the afofesaid ri|^ts; and 

Whereas, these fundamental rif^ts, thus universally recogniaed, create a duty on 
the part of the peoples of all nations to observe them; and 

Whereas, according to the political philosophy of the Declaration of Indepen- 
dence of the United States, and the universal practice of the American Republics, 
nations or governments are regarded as created by the people, deriving their just 
powers from the consent of the governed, and are instituted among men to promote 
their safety and happiness and to secure to the people the enjoyment of their 
fundamental ri|^ts; and 

Whereas, the nation is a moral or juristic person, the creature of law, and sul^ 
ordinated to law as is the natural person in political society; and 

Whereas, we deem that these f undamentid ri|^ts can be stated in terms of inter- 
national law and applied to the relations of the members of the society of nations, 
one with another, just as th^ have been applied in the rdationa of the dtiaeas or 
subjects of the states forming the Society of Nations; and 

Whereas, these fundamental ri|^ts of national ju rispr u dence, namely, the ri^ 
to Ufcb the ri|^t to liberty , the ri^ to the pursmt <k hi4>piness, the right to equality 
before the law, the ri|^t to property, and the ri|^t to the observance thereof are, 



BIGHTS AND DUTIES OF NATIONS 417 

ci the western hemiq[»here upon a statement in definite 
terms of fmidamental principles of international right. A 
still more important reason for such a declaration lies in the 
fact that the fundamental principles declared, now stand 
denied or repudiated by the conduct of nations in the great 
war that rages in the dd world. 

This instrument asserts the right of every nation to con- 
tinued existence, to independence, to occlusive jurisdiction 
over its own territory, and to equality with every other 
nation; and it denies the right of any nation to commit for 
its own protection or preservation, unlawful acts towards 
innocent and unoffending states. These are the fundamen- 
tals of international right. Th^ involve the existence of a 
democratic community of nations in which each individual 
nation has the same rights and full liberty for their enjoy- 
ment, limited and limited only, by the equal rights of every 
other member of the community. The body of rules of 
action which long experience and general consent have 
worked out for the assertion and preservation of these rights 
and the application of the universal limitation upon them in 
the practical relations betweai nations constitutes interna- 
tional law. This scheme of organization of the civilized 

when stated in tenns of interofttknal law, the ri|^t of the nation to eadst and to 
pvotect and to conserve Hf existeooe; the ri|^t of independeoee and the freedom to 
develop Hsdf without interference or control from other nations; the ri|^t of 
equality in law and before law; the right to territory within defined boundaries and 
to enilusive jurisdiction therein; and the rj^t to the observance of these fundap 
mental rif^ts; and 

Wkereoi, the ri^ts and the duties of nations are» by virtue of membership in the 
society thereof, to be exercised and performed in accovdance with the exigencies of 
their mutual interdependence expressed in the preamble to the Ccmvention for the 
Pacific Settlement of International Disputes of the First and Second Hague Peace 
Conferences, reoognixing the solidarity which unites the memben of the society of 
civiliied nations; 

Tkertfore^ the American Institute of International Law, at its first session, held 
in the city of Washington, in the United States of America, on the sixth day of 
January, 1918^ adopts the following six articles, together with the commentary 
thereon, to be known as its Dedaration of the Rights and Duties of Nationi. 



418 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

inhabitants of the earth is sharply distinguished from con- 
ditions of tribal hostility which prevailed during all the eariy 
part of human history and in which each separate tribe main- 
tained its independence and liberty as best it could by force 
of arms in a normal relation of hostility to all other tribes; 
and it is equally distinguished from the condition of subordi- 
nation and suzerainty in which a sin^e nation, acquiring a 
preponderance of power, reduces other nations to submis- 
sion and imposes upon them friendly relations with each 
other as equal vassals of the superior state. A familiar 
example of the one extreme is to be found in Eur<^>e during 
the Middle Ages and of the other in the Roman Empire, and 
upon a smaller scale and for a brief period in the control of 
Napoleon over a large part of Continental Europe. One 
condition affords independence to strong, dvil societies at 
the expense of progress in civilization. The other condition 
fosters the arts of peace at the cost of liberty. The demo- 
cratic organization of a community of nations, on a basis of 
acknowledged right, declared and protected by law, seeks to 
avoid both of these extremes, and the vast progress of civili- 
zation since the Peace of Westphalia, with the general 
advance of mankind in comfort, intelligence, individual 
freedom and opportunity, testify to the superior merit of 
the arrangement. Yet just as ordinary democracies com- 
posed of natural persons tend, unless continually restrained, 
to lapse into anarchy on the one hand or to seek security 
under autocracy on the other, this community of nations has 
hitherto been in a condition of unstable equilibrium, always 
in danger of being overturned in one direction or the other. 
The age-long struggle to maintain the balance of power in 
Europe, often misguided, as we can see in looking back, 
often controlled by selfish purposes, often violating the very 
rights it professed to preserve, has neverthdess been constant 
effort to counteract these tendencies. 



RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF NATIONS 419 

A careful examinatioii of the undisputed facts which show 
the origin and conduct of the present war leaves no room for 
doubt that the entire basis of the community organization 
of nations upon which rests the structure of international law 
is put at issue in the struggle. The principles of action upon 
which the war was b^^un involve a repudiation of every 
element of fundamental right upon which the law of nations 
rests. The right of every nation to continued existence, to 
independence, to exclusive jurisdiction over its own territOTy 
and equality with other nations, is denied. The right of any 
strong nation to destroy all those allied rights of other 
nations in pursuit of what it deems to be useful for its own 
protection or preservation is asserted. Under this view what 
we have been accustomed to call fundamental rights would 
become mere privilege to be enjoyed upon sufferance accord- 
ing to the views of expedience held by the most powerful. 
If this view prevails the whole structure of modem inter- 
national law will be without foundation; and the discussion 
of its rules with the nations who maintain this view must now 
be not a real appeal to any law, but merely a balancing of 
possible injuries and benefits. So long as these fundamental 
questions are unsettled all discussion of international law 
must be hypothetical, as if architects were to discuss the 
elevation of a building while the ground plan remains un- 
determined. These propositions are the postulates of all 
reasoning r^^arding the rules of international law. All dis- 
cussion of international right is based upon them, assumes 
assent to them. To discuss international law with a nation 
which denies these postulates can be nothing but an unreal 
and futile appearance of discussing the law. When your 
major premise is disputed you must establish that before you 
can go on with your argument. 

There is only one real question of international law today, 
and that is, whether these postulates of the law are to stand 



420 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

or not. As between nations which agree that they should 
stand Ih&te may be discussion as to international rules based 
upon that hypothesis, but as between nations which assert 
and nations which rq>udiate these fundamentals of the law^ 
there can be no real discussion except of expediency. The 
declaration of the American Institute of International Law 
arrays the members of all these American countries upon one 
side of this vital question of principle which is being fought 
out in the great war. Their act is altogether impersonal. It 
takes no account of responsibility or blame or racial f edings 
or friendships or enmities, and it is unmistakable. The 
representatives of all the American countries affirm the old 
basis of international ri^t upon which depends the life, the 
independence and the l^al equality of all small nations and 
the laws which protect them against the arbitrary power of 
the strong. 

It will be useful to remember, however, that to be effective 
such declarations must be accompanied by conformity in the 
conduct of the nations adhering to the principles declared. 
There are some rules of national conduct which flow directly 
from the principles of national independence and equality, 
but which do not always coincide with the impulses of senti- 
ment or with the apparent requirements of immediate 
interest. On the one hand these principles require that 
nations shall refrain from interference with the internal 
affairs of other nations. It frequently happens that many 
persons, in the United States for example, strongly disap- 
prove things that are done in other coimtries within the 
jurisdiction and affecting the citizens of those other coimtries 
and not affecting any coimtry's international rights. Such 
acts may run coimter to our ideas of liberty, of morality, of 
humanity, of fair business conduct. The strongest senti- 
ments and interests may urge interference to prevent con- 
duct which shocks or offends us, yet, failing some special and 



RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF NATIONS 421 

exceptional ground — some reeogmjEed intematkmal ground 
for intervention — we have no right to interfere, because 
interf er^ice would be an infringement upon the independent 
equality of the other state. The peace and orda* of the 
world require that each nation shall mind its own business 
and refrain from attempting to impose its ideas of conduct 
upon other equal indepaident states. This is not because 
the interference in the particular case might not be beneficial 
so far as that case goes; but because the right to interfere in 
one case carries with it the right to intarfa^ in other cases; 
the determination of the question when interference is justi- 
fiable would necessarily rest with the interfering power; and 
in the exercise of such a right all weaker states would become 
subject to the control of the stronger and ultimately to the 
control of the strongest. With the great varieties of race and 
custom and conceptions of social morality in the human 
family, the rig^t of each nation to conduct its own internal 
affairs according to its own ideas is of the essence of liberty. 
The rule which prohibits interference by other nations, with 
however good a purpose, is a rule against inevitable tyranny. 
It is not at all unconmion that the best impulses and senti- 
ments of our own people inthis country are enlisted in favor 
of action by our government whidi would do infinitely more 
harm than good, by breaking down the barrier which the 
principle of the independent equality of states presents 
against the evils of foreign domination. 

On the other hand the assertion of the independent 
equality of states implies an interest on the part of all states 
adhering to the doctrine in haviog it pres^ved, and it fel- 
lows necessarily that when one sovereign state is dealing not 
with its internal affairs but with its international relations 
and violates the rule of right as against another equal and 
independent state, all other equally independent states have 
a right to insist that the international rule shall be observed* 



42£ INTEBNATiONAL SUBJECTS 

and racb inaistenoe is not interfering with tbe qnands of 
others but is an assertion of their own rights. In each case 
every state must be guided by its own circumstances and 
interests in determining how far it wiD go in supporting its 
interference. There can, however, be no doubt of the inter- 
national right to intof ere in bdiaU of the maintenance of 
the law. So far as it is possible to see now, if the issue of the 
present conflict leaves the fundamental basis of international 
law still ^existent the possibility of securing conformity to the 
Jules of law resting upon that basis will dq>»id upon the 
recognition by the nations in general of the duty to interfere 
and insist upon the observance of the law and upon the 
adq[>tion by them of a practice in cmif ormity with that duty. 
The exercise of such an international right was wdl iDus- 
trated when, in November, 1861, the Commander of the 
United States man-of-war the San Jacinto took the Con- 
federate commissionars, Messrs. Mason and ^dell, from the 
neutral British passenger vessd, the Trent. Upon En^^d's 
demanding the surrender to her of Mason and Slidell, the 
Prussian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Count Bemstorff , the 
father of the present German Ambassador to the United 
States, wrote to the Prussian Minister at Washington for 
communication to the American State Department a letter, 
dated at Berlin, December 25, 1861. He said: 

Hie maritime operatioiia undertaken by President Unooln against the 
Southern seceding States could not, from their very commenoement» but 
fill the King's Government with apprdbensions lest th^ should result in 
possible prejudice to the legitimate interests ci neutral powers. 

These apprehensions have unfortunately proved fully justified by the 
forcible seizure on board the neutral mafl-packet the Trent, and the abduc- 
tion aknbamp of Messrs. Mason and SUddl by the Commander of the 
United States man-of-war the Smn Jaeinio. 

This occurrence, as you can well imagine, has produced in England and 
throughout Europe the most profound sensation, and thrown not cabinets 
only, but also public opinion, into a state of the most exdted apectatioD. 
For, although at present it is England only whidi is immediately coii- 



RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF NATIONS 423 

cemed in the matter, yet OD the other handy it 18 oiie of the mort 

and universally reoogniied rights 6t the neutral flag which has been called 

into question. 

. . . In the abtenoe of any reliable information we were in doubt as to 
whether the Captain of the San Jaemto^ in the course taken by him, had 
been acting under <»ders from his Government or not. Even now we pre- 
fer to assume that the latter was the case. Should the former supposition, 
however, turn out to be the conect <me, we should consider ourselves under 
the necessity ci attributing greater importance to the occurrence, and to 
our great regret we should find ourselves constrained to see in it not an 
isolated fact but a public menace offered to the existing rights of aD 
neutrals. 

The French Foreign Oflice wrote, on December S, 1861, 
to the French Minister in Washingtcm: 

The wish to contribute to prevent a conflict, inmiinent perhaps between 
two powers towards which it is animated by sentiments equally friendly, 
and duty to maintain certain principles essential to the security ci neutrals 
with the effect of protecting the rights of its own flag from injury, have con- 
vinced it (the Government of the Emperor) after matured reflection, that 
it cannot under these circumstances remain altogether silent. 

M. Thouvenel then discusses the merits of the Trent 
affair, and proceeds: 

Not wishing to enter into a m<»e thorough discussion of the question 
raised by the capture ci MM. Mason and Slidell, I have said enough about 
it, I believe, to establish that the Cabinet at Washington would not be 
able, without infringing upon the prindides for which aD neutral powers 
are equally interested in assuring respect or without contradicting its own 
conduct up to this time, to give its approval to the proceedings of the 
Commander of the San Jaemto. 

The Austrian Grovemment instructed its minister in 
Washington in the same sense. 

Here was a case in which these great powers asserted un- 
hesitatingly their interest in nutinfjuning the eonmion right 
of nations to have the rules of international law maintained. 
The case happened to be free from those obstacles to frank 
expression which have been so frequently presented by the 
delicate adjustments necessary to {ureserve the balance of 



424 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

po w^ in Europe, and accordingly the powers expressed them- 
selves freely. It never occurred to anybody to deny that they 
were within their rights. We can hardly doubt that their 
expressions had a material effect in leading to the action of 
the American Grovemment in preventing war betwe^i Great 
Britain and the United States, and in making effective a rule 
of law which protects the rights of all neutrals. 

Any nation which adheres to the American Institute's 
declaration of the rights and duties of nations rests under a 
duty, whenever the law which declares and protects those 
rights is clearly violated or threatened, to foUow some such 
course as these contin^ital nations foUowed in the Trent 
oase. This is not a duty created by law or by treaty. There 
is no legal obligation, but there is a moral obligation, sup- 
ported by enlightened self-interest, such as urges every 
member of a dvU community who is worthy of respect to 
give his y<ace, his influence, his example, towards the pres- 
ervation of the law through which alone the community 
can continue to exist. If the nations really wish to have 
peace and order maintained by law they must take an 
interest in having the law observed. They must really mean 
it, and act accordingly. 

Furtherm(»^ the declaration of the Institute asserts the 
subwdination of nations to the obligations of morality. It 
denies that any aggregation of human beings in any state, 
under any form of government, can be superior to the duties 
of good faith, of justice, and of humanity. I shall not discuss 
that. No democracy, no republic, no form of government 
based upon the rights of men, can continue to live in a 
world which rejects that view. This R^ublic cannot con- 
tinue to live in a world which rejects that view. 

It is to be observed that this declaration, in which rq>re- 
s^itatives of all the American countries unite, asserts tor all 
the world as a matter of general puUic right the same prin* 



RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF NATIONS 425 

dples wbich, scnnewhat more nanowly and upon a different 
ground, the famous declaration of President Monroe asserted 
in respect of the American republics. The message of 
Monroe aflSmied in effect that all the American states were to 
be regarded as members of the community of nations; that 
they were entitled to live, to be independent, to be treated as 
equals, and to be free from expression by other powers. He 
gave notice that the attempt by any European power to 
override these rights of the American states would be re- 
garded as unfriendly to the United States, because it would 
be dangerous to the peace and safety of the United States. 
As we turn from the narrow limits of the Monroe Doctrine 
to the broader field of universal international right set forth 
in the declaration d the Institute, with the terrible lesson of 
the great war in our minds, we may well assert that the 
repudiation of these principles, the violation of these rules 
anywhere within the confines of civilization, is dangerous to 
the peace and safety of the whole community of nations. To 
the efforts of the community of nations towards defending 
its peace and safety against the destruction of the f imdamen- 
tal bases of its public rig^t, the often quoted words of Mr. 
Calhoun r^^arding the Monroe Doctrine are i^plicable. He 
said in the Senate, in 1848: 

Whether you will resist or not, and the measure of your resistance — 
whether it shall be by negotiation, remonstrance, or some intermediate 
measure, or by a resort to arms; all this must be determined and decided 
on the merits of the question itself. This is the only wise course. . . . 
There are cases of interposition where I would reaort to the hazard of war 
with all its < 



Whether the United States wiD soon have occasion at will 
long have the ability or the wiD to maintain the Monroe 
Doctrine lies in the uncertain future. Whether it will be 
n ec t Mnry lor her to act in defense ol the Doctrine or abandon 
it, may well be determined by the issue of the pres^it war. 



426 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

Wheth^ when the occasion comes she wiU im>ve to have the 
ability and the wiD to maintain the Doctrine, dq>»ids upon 
the spirit of her people, their capacity lot patriotic sacrifice, 
the foresight and character d those to whose initiative in 
foreign affairs the interests d the people are entrusted. 

Whether the broader doctrine affirmed by the American 
Institute d International Law is to be made effective for the 
protectiond justiceand liberty throu^out the worid depends 
upon whether the vision d the nations shall have been so dar* 
ified by the terrible lessons of these years that they can rise 
above small struggles for advantage in intematicMial affairs^ 
and realize that correlative toeach nation's individual right is 
that nation's duty to insist upon the observance of the prin- 
ciples of public right throu^out the community d nations. 



FOREIGN AFFAIRS, 1918-1916 

ADDRESS AS TEMPORARY CHAIRMAN OP THE NSW YORK 
REPUBUCAN CONVENTION, NEW YORE; FEBRUARY 15, 1919 

Only Uioee portioni of this addreai wbidk detl with hrtwiMitioiial matten an 
induded in thii volimie. 

WE are entering upon a contest for the election ci a 
president and the control of government under condi- 
tions essentially new in the experience of our country. The 
forms which we are about to follow are old and familiar; but 
the groimds for action, the demand ol great events for deci- 
sion upon national conduct) the moral forces urging to a 
solution of vaguely outlined questions, the tremendous con- 
sequences of wisdom or f oUy in national policy, all these are 
new to the great mass of American voters. Never since 1864 
has an election been fraught with consequences so vital to 
national life. All the ordinary considerations which play so 
great a part in our presidential campaigns are and ou^t to 
be dwarfed into insignificance* • • • 

When a president and secretary of state have been law- 
fully established in oflSce the power of initiative in foreign 
affairs rests with them. The nation is in their hands. Theirs 
is the authority and theirs the duty to adopt and act upon 
policies, subject to such laws as Congress may enact within 
constitutional limits. Parliamentary opposition can take no 
affirmative step; can accomplish no affirmative action. The 
expression of public opinion can do nothing except as it 
produces an influence upon the minds of those officers who 
have the lawful power to conduct our foreign relations. 
Their policy is the coimtry's policy because it is th^ who 
are authorized to act for the country. While they are work- 

4t7 



428 DW^EBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

ing out their policy all opposition, all critiGiBm, all condem- 
nation, are at the risk of weakening the case of one's own 
country and frustrating the effects of its lawful representa- 
tives to succeed in what they are seeking to accomplish for 
the coimtry's benefit. An American should wish the repre- 
sentatives of his country to succeed whatever may be their 
party unless there be wrongdcnng against conscience* How- 
ever much he may doubt the wisdom of their course he should 
help them where he can and refrain from placing obstacles 
in thdr way. But when the president and secretary of state 
have acted, and sedc a new grant of pow^, they and the 
party whit^ is responsible tm them must account for thebr 
use of power to the pec^>le from whom it came, and the 
people must pass judgment upon them, and then full and 
frank public discussion becomes the citizen's duty. 

The United States had rights and duties in Mexico. 
More than forty thousand of our citizens had sou^t their 
f(»*tunes and made thdr homes there. A thousand millions 
of American capital had be^i invested in that rich and pro- 
ductive coimtry, and millions of income from these esO/a- 
prises were annually returned to the United States not 
merely for the benefit of the investors, but for the enrich- 
ment of our whole country and all its production and 
enterprise. But revdutiim had come, and factional warfare 
was rife. Americans had be^i murdered, American property 
had been wantonly destroyed, the lives and prcfperty of all 
Americans in Mexico were in danger. That was the situation 
when Mr. Wilson became presideit in March, 1913. His 
duty then was plain. It was, first, to use his powers as 
I»esidait, to secure protection tor the lives and properly d 
Americans in Mexico and to require that the rules d law 
and stipulations of treaties should be observed by Mexico 
towards the United States and its citizens. His duty was, 
second, as the head of a foreign power to respect the inde- 



FOREIGN AFFAmS, 191^1916 429 

pendence of Mexico^ to refrain from all interference with her 
internal affairs, except as he was justified by the law of 
nations for the protection of American rights. The President 
of the United States failed to observe either of those duties. 
He deliberately abandoned them both and followed an 
entirely different and inconsistent purpose. He intervened 
in Mexico to aid one faction in dvil strife against another. 
He imdertook to pull down Huerta and set Carranza up in 
his place. Huerta was in possession. He claimed to be the 
constitutional president of Mexico. He certainly was the 
de facto president of Mexico. Rightly or wrongly, good or 
bad, he was there. From the north Carranza and a group of 
independent chieftains were endeavoring to pull down the 
power of Huerta. President Wilson took sides with them in 
pulling down that power. In August, 1913, through Mr. 
John lind, he presented to Huerta a communication which 
was in substance a demand that Huerta should retire per- 
manently from the government of Mexico. When Huerta 
refused, the power of the United States was applied to turn 
him out. Foreign nations were induced to refuse to his 
govenmient the loans of money necessary to repair the 
ravages of war and establish order. Arms and munitions of 
war were freely furnished to the northern forces and withheld 
from Huerta. Finally the President sent our army and navy 
to invade Mexico and capture its great seaport. Vera Cruz, 
and hold it and throttle Mexican commerce until Huerta fell. 
The government of the United States intervened in Mexico 
to control the internal affairs of that independent coimtry 
and to enforce the will of the American President in those 
affairs by threat, by economic pressiure, and by' force of arms. 
Upon what claim of right did this intervention proceed ? 
Not to secure respect for American rights; not to protect 
the hves or property of our citizens; not to assert the law <rf 
nations; not to compel observance of the law d humanity. 



480 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

On the contrary, Huerta's was the only power in Mexico to 
which appeal could be made for protection of life or property. 
That was the only power which in fact did protect eiihet 
American or European or Mexican. It was only within the 
territory where Huerta ruled that comparative peace and 
order prevailed. The territory over which the armed pow« 
of Carranza and Villa and their associates extended was the 
theatre of the most appalling crimes. Bands of robbers 
roved the country with unbridled license. Americans and 
Mexicans alike were at their mercy, and American men were 
murdered and American women were outraged with im- 
punity. Thousands were reduced to poverty by the wanton 
destruction of the industries throu^ which they lived. Tlie 
payment of blackmail was the only protection of property 
against burnings and robbery. No one in authority could at 
would give protection or redress. It had become perfectly 
plain that the terms upon which both Carranza and Villa 
held their supporters, were unrestricted opportunity and 
license for murder, robbery, and lust. Yet the government 
of the United States ignored, condoned, the murder of Ameri- 
can men and the rape of American women and destruction of 
American property and insult to American officers and defile- 
ment of the American flag and joined itself to the men who 
were guilty of all these things to pull down the pow^ oi 
Huerta. Why ? The President himself has told us. It was 
because he adjudged Huerta to be a usurper; because he 
deemed that the common people d Mexico ought to have 
greater participation in government and share in the land; 
and he believed that Carranza and Villa would give them 
these things. We must all sympathize with these sentiments, 
but there is nothing more dangerous than misplaced senti- 
ment. Of all men in this world, the man who had vested in 
him the executive power of the United States was least at 
liberty to sit in judgment d his own motion upon the title d 



FOREIGN AFFAIRS, 191S-1916 431 

a claimant to the Bfeadcan presidency or to reform the land 
laws of Mexico. 

The results d this interference were most unfortmiate. If 
our government had sent an aimed force into Mexico to 
protect American life and honor we might have been opposed 
but we should have been understood and respected by the 
people of Mexico, because they would have realized that we 
were acting within our international rights and performing 
a nation's duty for the protection d its own people; but 
when the President sent an armed force into Mexico to 
determine the Mexican presidential succession he created 
resentment and distrust of motives among all classes and 
sections of the Mexican people. When our army landed at 
Vera Cruz, Carranza himself, who was to be the chief benefi- 
ciary of the act, publicly protested against it. So strong was 
the resentment that he could not have kept his followers 
otherwise. When Huerta had fallen, the new govemmaat 
which for the day had succeeded to his place peremptorily 
demanded the withdrawal of the Ammcan troops. The 
universal sentiment of Mexicans required that peremptory 
demand, and the troops were withdrawn. Still worse than 
that, the taking of Vera Cruz destroyed confidence in the 
sincerity of the American government in Mexico because 
every intelligent man in Mexico believed that the avowed 
reason for the act was not the real reason. The avowed 
purpose was to compel a salute to the American flag. I will 
state the circumstances: On the ninth of April, 1914, a boat's 
crew from the Dolpkin landed at a wharf in Tampico to take 
off supplies. The use of that wharf had been prohibited, and 
the Mexican oflScer in charge of the wharf put the crew under 
arrest, but a higher oflScer ordered him to hold the boat's 
crew at the wharf and await instructions. Within an hour 
and a half the crew was set free. No injury or indignity was 
suffered exeq>t the fact ol the arrest Immediate amends 



432 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

were made. Hie Merican offioer m ommnmnd at Tampico 
jqxdogized; General Huerta's gavemment apologised; the 
officer who made the arrest was hhnaelf aireated and his 
punishment promised. The admiral in command of our fleet 
at Tampico demanded more public amends throu^ a salute 
to our flag, but there ensued a discussion as to the facts and 
as to the diaracter of the salute whidi the circumstances 
demanded, the number of guns, and how, if at all, the salute 
was to be returned. While that discussion was pending and 
avowedly because of that incident the American Government 
presented a twenty-four hour ultimatum and landed an 
armed force and captured the dty of Vera Crua. Three 
hundred Mffxicans were reported killed; seventeen United 
States marines were killed and many were wounded. At 
that very time Mr. Bryan, with the President's ai^xrovalt was 
signing treaties with half the world agreeing that if any con- 
troversy should arise it should be submitted to a jcnnt com- 
nussicm and no action should be taken until after a fuU year 
had elapsed. This controversy arose on the nmth of April, 
and on the twenty-flrst of the same month Vera Cruz was 
taken. Several times the troops of Carranza and ^S^Ila had 
arrested and imprisoned American consular officers and torn 
down the American flags from the ccmsulates and trampled 
them in the mire, with indescribable indignities. The proofs 
were in our hands and no attention was paid to them. Many 
times soldiers of the United States, in unif cnm, on duty, had 
been shot and killed or woimded by soldiers of Carranza and 
Villa across the border. More than fifty of them have been 
killed in this way and no attention has be^i paid to it. The 
demand of a salute to the flag was never heard of again after 
Vera Cruz was captured. There is not an intelligent man in 
Mexico who believes that the diqiute about the salute was 
the real reason for the capture of Vera Cruz. Is there one 
here who doubts that the alleged cause was but a pretext 



FCttEIGN AIVAIBS, 1918-1016 488 

Bnd that the real cause was the purpose to turn Huerta out 
<rf office? The people of Mexico, who saw their unoffending 
dty captured by force of arms, three hundred of its pec^de 
slain, their scmI violated, a fovdign flag floating over thdr 
great seaport, upon what they fdt to be a false pretense^ 
were misled into imputing a more sinister purpose still — to 
secure control of Mexico tor the United States; and they 
bdieved that when the Amarican troops d^>arted, that pur^ 
pose was abandoned through fear. With the occupation of 
Vera Cruz the moral pow^ of the United States in Mexico 
ended. We were then and we are now hated f(»r what we did 
to Mexico, and we were then and we are now despised for 
our feeble and irresolute failure to protect tiie lives and 
rights €i our citizens. No flag is so dishonored and no 
citizenship so little worth the claiming in Mexico as ours« 
And that is why we have failed in Mexico. 

Incredible as it seems, Huerta had been turned out by the 
assistance of the American government without any guaran- 
tees from the men who were to be set up in his place, and so 
the murdering and burning and ravishing have gone on to 
this day. After Huerta had fallen and the Vera Cruz 
expedition had been withdrawn. President Wilson announced 
that no one was entitled to interfere in the affairs of Mexico; 
that she was entitled to settle them herself • He disclaims all 
responsibility for what happens in Mexico and contents him- 
self with a policy of Watchful Waiting. But who can inter- 
fere in a quarrel and help some contestants and destroy 
others and then absolve himself from responsibility for the 
results ? It is not by force of circumstances over which we 
had no control, but largely because the American Administra- 
tion intervened by force to control the internal affairs of that 
country instead of asserting and maintaining American r^ts 
that we have been brought to our present pass of confusion 
and humiliation over Mexico. 



4S4 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

And for the death and outrage, the suffering and rum of 
our own brethren, the hatred and ccmtempt tor our country, 
and the dishonor of our name in that land, the Administration 
at Washington shares responsibility with the inhuman Imites 
with whom it made common cause. 

When we turn to the Administration's omduct of f ootdgn 
affairs incident to the great war in Euiqpe we cannot fail to 
peroeive that there is much dissatisfaction among Americans. 
Some are dissatisfied tor specific reasons, some with a vague 
impression that our diplomacy has been inadequate. Dis- 
satisfaction is not in itsdf ground tor condenmation* The 
best work <rf the diplomatist often fails to receive public 
approval at the time and must look to a cafan review in the 
dispassionate future for recognition of its merit. The situa- 
tion created by the war has been di£Scult and trying. Mudi 
of the correspondence of the State Departmatit, especially 
since Mr. T#an«ing took diaige, has been characterized by 
accurate learning and skillful statraient of q>ecific American 
r^^hts. Every one in the performance of new and unprece- 
dented duties is entitled to generous allowance for unavcud- 
able shortcomings and errors. No one should be held to the 
accomplishment of the impossible. The question whether dis- 
satisfaction is just or unjust is to be determined upon an exam- 
ination of the great lines of policy which have been f oUowed 
and upon considering wheth^ the emergencies of the time 
have been met with foresight, wisdom, and decisive courage. 
U these are lacking as guides, all the learning of the institutes 
and the highest skill in correspondence are of little avail. 

A study of the Administration's policy towards Emx^ 
since July, 1914, reveals three fundamental errors. First, 
the lack <rf f oresi^^t to make timely proviaon for baddng 
up American diplomacy by actual or assured military and 
naval force. Seccmd, the forfeiture of the world's respect 
for our assertion of rights by pursuing the pdk^ of making 



FOREIGN AFFAIRS* 1918-1916 435 

threats and failing to make them good. Third, a loss of the 
moral forces of the dvilized world through failure to truly 
interpret to the world the spirit of the American democracy 
in its attitude towards the terriUe events which accompanied 
the early stages of the war. 

First, as to power. 

When the war in Europe b^pan, free, peaceable little 
Switzerland instantly mobilized upon her frontier a great 
army of trained citizen soldiers. Sturdy little Hcdland did 
the same, and, standing within the very sound of the guns, 
both have k^t their territory and their independence in- 
violate. Nobody has run over them because they have 
made it apparent that the cost would be too great. 

Great, peaceable America was farther removed from the 
conflict, but her trade and her citizens traveDed on every sea. 
Ordinary knowledge of European affairs made it plain that 
the war was begun not by accident, but with purpose which 
would not so<Hi be rdinquished. Ordinary knowledge of 
military events made it plain from the moment when the 
tide of German invasion turned from the Battle of the 
Mame that the conflict was certain to be long and desperate. 
Ordinary knowledge of history — of our own history during 
the Napoleonic wars — made it plain that in that omflict 
neutral rights would be worthless unless powerfuUy main- 
tained. All the world had fair notice that, as against the 
desperate belligerent resdive to conquer, the law of nations 
and the law of humanity interposed no effective barriers for 
the protection of neutral rights. Ordinary practical sense in 
the conduct of affairs demanded that such steps should be 
taken that behind the peaceable assertion of our country's 
rights, its independatice and its honor, should stand power, 
manifest and available, warning the whole world that it 
would cost too much to press aggression too far. TheDemo- 
cratic government at Washington did not see it. Others saw 



486 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

it and thdr c^miions found voice. Mr. Gardner inged it; 
Mr. Lodge inged it; Mr. Stimacm inged it; Mr. Boosev^ 
uiged it; but their argument and urgency were ascribed to 
political motivea; and the President described them with a 
sneer as being nervous and excited. 

But the warning voices would not be stilled. The (pinion 
that we ought no longer to remain defensdess became public 
c^inion. Its eqiressioQ grew more general and insistent, and 
finaDy the President, not leading, but f dlowing, has shifted 
his ground, has reversed his position, and asks the country 
to prqMre against war. God grant that he be not too late. 
But the Democratic party has not shifted its ground. A 
large part of its members in Congress are endeavoring now 
to sidetrack the movement for national preparedness; to 
muddle it by amendment and turn it into channels ¥^iidi 
win produce the least possible result in the increase of nar 
tional power of defense. What sense of effectiveness in this 
effort can we gather from the presence of Josephus Danids 
at the most critical post of all — the head of the Navy De- 
partment; when we see that where prqMiration has been 
possible it has not been made; whoi we see that construction 
of war ships already authorised has not been pressed, and 
in scMtne cases after long delay has not even been bc^gun? 

If an increase of our country's power to defend itsdf 
against aggression is authfnjjsed by the present Congress it 
must be largdy through Republican votes, because the 
representatives <^ the Bepublican party in Washington 
stand tor the country no matter who is president; and all 
the traditions and convictions of that parly are tor national 
power and duly and honor. 

As to the pdiqr of threatening words without deeds. 
When Germany gave notice of her purpose to sink mer^ 
chant vesKls on the high seas without safeguarding the lives 



FOREIGN AFFAIRS* 191S-1016 487 

of innocent passengers, our Goyeniment replied on the tenth 
of February, one year ago, in the following words: 

The Government oi the United States . . . feeb it to be its duty to 
esD the attention of the Imperial German Government, with ainoere 
respect and the most friendly sentiments but very candidly and earnestly, 
to the very serious possibilities oi the course 6t action iq>parentiy con* 
templated under that proclamation. 

The Government ol the United States views those possibilities with 
such grave concern that it feeb it to be its piivflege» and indeed its duty 
in the circumstances, to request the Imperial German Government to con- 
sider before action is taken the critical situation in respect of the reUtions 
between this country and Germany which might arise were the German 
naval forces, in carrying out the policy foreshadowed in the Admiralty's 
proclamation, to destroy any merchant vessel of the United States or 
cause the death oi American citizens. 

... If such a deplorable situation should arise, the Inq>erial German 
Government can readily appreciate that the Government of the United 
States would be constrained to hxAd the Imperial German Government 
to a strict accountability for such acts of their naval authorities and to 
take any steps it might be necessary to take to safeguard American lives 
and property and to secure to American citizens the full enjoyment <^ 
their acknowledged rights on the high i 



By all the usages and traditions of diplomatic intercourse 
those words meant action. They informed Germany in 
unmistakable terms that in attacking and sinking vessds of 
the United States and in destroying the lives of American 
citizens lawfully travelling upon merchant vessels of other 
countries, she would act at her peril. They pledged the power 
and courage of America, with her hundred million people and 
her vast wealth, to the protection of h^ citizens, as during 
all her history through the days of h^ youth and weakness 
she had always protected them. 

On the twenty-eighth of March, the passenger steamer 
Falaba was torpedoed by a German submarine, and an 
American citizen was killed, but nothing was done. On the 
tweity-eighth of April, the American vessel Cuskmg was 
attadced and crippled by a German aenq>lane. On the first 



438 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

of May, the American vessel Otdflight was torpedoed and 
sunk by a German submarine, and two or more Americans 
were killed, yet nothing was done. On the seventh of May, 
the Limtania was torpedoed and sunk by a German sub- 
marine, and more than one hundred Americans and eleven 
hundred other non-combatants were drowned. The very 
thing which our Government had warned Germany she 
must not do, Germany did of set purpose and in the most 
contemptuous and shocking way. Then, wh^i all America 
was stirred to the depths, our Government addressed another 
note to Germany. It repeated its assertion of American 
rights, and renewed its bold declaration of purpose. It de- 
clared again that the American Government ^'must hold 
the Imperial German Government to a strict accountability 
tot any infringement of those rights, intentional or inci- 
dental,'' and it declared that it would not ** omit any word 
or any act necessary to the performance of its sacred duty of 
maintaining the rights of the United States and its citizens 
and of saf^uarding thdr free exaxdse and enjoyment." 

Still nothing was done, and a long and technical onrre- 
spondence ensued; haggling ov^ petty questions of detail, 
every American note growing less and less strong and per- 
emptory, until the Arabic was torpedoed and sunk, and more 
American lives were destroyed, and still nothing was done, 
and the correspondence continued until the Allied defense 
against German submarine warfare made it unprofitable 
and led to its abandonment, and the correspondence is 
apparently approaching its end without securing even that 
partial protection for the future which mi^^t be found in an 
admission that the destruction of the Lusitania was for- 
bidden by law. The later correspondence has been conducted 
by our State Department with dignity, but it has been futile. 
An admission of liability iofr damages has been secured, but 
the time for real protection to American rif^ts has Imig since 



FOREIGN AFFAIRS, lOlS-1916 489 

paaaecL OurGoveiiinientimdertookoiieyearagotopreve^ 
the destruction of American life by submarine attack, and 
now that the attempt has failed and our citizens are long 
since dead and the system of attack has fallen of its own 
weight, there is small advantage in discussing whether we 
shall or shall not have an admission that it^ was unlawful 
to kill them. 

The brave words with whidi we hegfin the controversy had 
produced no effect, because they were read in the light of 
two extraordinary events. One was the report of the Aus- 
trian Ambassador, Mr. Dumba, to his government, that 
when the American note of February tenth was received, he 
asked the Secretary of State, Mr. Bryan, whether it meant 
business, and received an answer which satisfied him that 
it did not, but was int^ided for effect at home in America. 

The other event was the strange and unfortunate declara- 
tion of the President in a public speech in Philadelphia the 
fourth day after the sinking of the Lusiiania that ^* a man 
may be too proud to fight.'' Whatever the Austrian Am- 
bassador was in fact told by the Secretary of State, the 
impression which he reported was supported by the events 
which followed. Whatever the President did mean, his 
declaration, made in public at that solemn time, amid the 
horror and mourning of all our people over the murd^ <^ 
their brethren, was accepted the world ov^ as pres^iting 
the attitude of the American government towards the pro- 
tection of the life and liberty of American citizens in the 
exercise of thdr just rights, and throughout the world the 
phrase " too proud to fight " became a by-word of derision 
and ccmtraipt for the Government ci the United States. 

Later, in another theatre of war — the Mediterranean — 
Austria, and perhaps Turkqr also, resumed the practice. 
The Ancona and then the Persia were destroyed, and more 
Americans were killed. Why should th^ not resume the 



440 INTBBNATIONAL SDBJEdS 

practioe? lli^ had leaziied to bdiei^ that* no matter 1^^ 
■hocked the American Govenmient mi^t be, its lesoliitkm 
would espend itadf m words. Thqr bad learned to bdieve 
that it was safe to kill Americans» — and the world believed 
with them. Measured and restrained eqxessiony badbed to 
the fuU by serious purpose, is strong and respected. Estrone 
and bdligerent ezpresskm, unsupp(urted by resohitHHi, is 
weak and without effect No man should draw a insbd ^liio 
dares not shoot. The govenmient that shakes its fist first 
and its finger afterwards Calls into contempt. Our diplo- 
macy has lost its authority and influence because we have 
been brave in words and irresotute in actiim. Men may say 
that the words of our diplomatic notes were justified; men 
may say that our inactkm was justified; but no man can 
say that both our words and our inaction were wise and 
creditable. 

I have said that this Government lost the moral forces of 
the world by not truly interpreting the ^irit of the American 
democracy. 

The American democmcy stands for something more than 
beef and cotton and grain and manufactures; stands for 
something that cannot be measured by rates of exchange, 
and does not rise or fall with the balance of trade. The 
American people achieved liberty and sdiooled themsdves 
to the service of justice before they acquired wealth, and 
they value their country's liberty and justice above all their 
pride of po8sessi<ms. Beneath their comf CHrtable <qptimism 
and apparent indifference they have a conception of their 
great republic as brave and strong and noUe to hand down 
to their children the blessings of freedom and just and equal 
laws. They have embodied their principles of government 
in fixed rules of right conduct which they jealously pteoave, 
and, with the instinct of individual freedom, th^ stand for 



FOREIGN AFFAIRS, 191S-1916 441 

a govemment of laws and not of men. Tb^ deem that the 
moral laws whidi formulate the duties of men towards eadi 
oth^ are binding upon nations equally with individuals. 
Informed by their own experience, confirmed by their obser- 
vation of inteinati<nial Itfe, they have come to see that the 
independence of nations, the liberty of tibdr peoples, justice 
and humanity, cannot be maintained upon the good nature, 
the kindly feeling, <rf the strong towards the weak; that real 
independence, real liberty, cannot rest upon su£Ferance; that 
peace and liberty can be preserved only by the auth<HJty and 
observance of rules of naticmal conduct founded upon the 
prmdples of justice and humanity; only by the establish- 
ment of law among nations, responsive to the enlightened 
public opinion of mankind. To them liberty means not 
liberty for themselves alone, but toft all who are oppressed. 
Justice means not justice for themselves alone, but a shidd 
for all who are weak against the aggression of the strong. 
When their deeper natures are stirred they have a spiritual 
vision in which the spread and perfection of free self-govern- 
ment shall rescue the humble who toil and endure, from the 
hideous wrongs inflicted upon them by ambition and lust for 
power, and they cherish in their heart of hearts an ideal of 
their country loyal to the mission of liberty for the lifting up 
of the oppressed and bringing in the rule of righteousness 
and peace. 

To this people, the invasion of Bdgium brou^t a shodc 
of amazement and horror. The people of Belgium were 
peaceable, industrious, law-abiding, self-governing and free. 
They had no quarrel with any one on earth. They were 
attacked by overwhelming military pow^; their country 
was devastated by fire and sword; they were slain by tens 
of thousands; tibdr independoice was destroyed and their 
liberty was subjected to the rule <rf an invader, for no oth^ 
cause than that th^ defended their admitted rights. Tliere 



442 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

was no question of fact; there was no queation of law; there 
was not a plausible pretense of any other cause. The 
admitted rights of Belgium stood in the way of a mightier 
nation's purpose; and Belgium was crushed. When the true 
nature of these events was realized^ the people of the United 
States did not hestitate in their feeling or in their judgment. 
Deqpest sympathy with downtrodden Belgium and stem 
ccmdemnati<m of the invader were practically universal. 
Wherev^ there was respect for law, it revolted against the 
wrong done to Belgium. Wherever there was true passion for 
liberty, it blazed out for Belgium. Wherever there was hu- 
manity, it mourned for Belgium. As the realization of the 
truth spread, it carried a vague feeling that not merdy 
s^itiment but loyalty to the eternal principles of right was 
involved in the attitude of the American people. And it 
was so, for if the nations were to be indifferent to this first 
great concrete case for a century of military power trampling 
under foot at will the independence, the liberty, and the life 
of a peaceful and un<^ending people in repudiation of the 
faith of treaties and the law of nations and of morality and 
of humanity — if the public opinion of the world was to 
remain silent upon that, neutral upon that, then all talk 
about peace and justice and international law and the rights 
of man, the progress of humanity and the spread of liberty 
is idle patter — mere weak sentimentality; then opinion is 
powerless and brute force rules and will rule the world. If 
no difference is recognized between right and wrong, then 
there are no moral standards. There come times in the lives 
of nations as of men when to treat wrong as if it were right 
is treason to the right. 

The American people were entitled not merely to fed but 
to speak concerning the wrong d<me to Belgium. It was not 
like interference in the internal affairs of Mexico or any other 
nation, for this was an international wrcmg. The law pro- 



FOREIGN AFFAIRS, 191»-1916 443 

tecting Belgium whidi wbs violated was our law and the law 
of every other civilized country. For' generations we had 
been urging on and helping in its development and estab* 
lishment. We had spent our efforts and our money to that 
end. In legislative resolution and executive declaration and 
diplomatic correspondence and spedal treaties and inter- 
national conferences and conventions we had played our part 
in conjunction with oth^ civilized countries in making that 
law. We had bound ourselves by it; we had regulated our 
conduct by it; and we were entitled to have other nations 
observe it. That law was the protection of our peace and 
security. It was our saf^^uard against the necessity of 
maintaining great armaments and wasting our substance in 
continual readiness for war. Our interest in having it main- 
tained as the law of nations was a substantial, valuable, 
permanent interest, just as real as your interest and mine in 
having maintained and enforced the laws against asMtult 
and robbery and arson whidi protect our personal safety and 
property. Moreover, that law was ^tten into a solenm 
and formal convention, signed and ratified by Germany and 
Belgiimi and France and the United States in which those 
other countries agreed with us that the law should be ob- 
served. When Belgiimi was invaded that agreement was 
binding not only moraDy but strictly and technically, because 
there was then no nation a party to the war which was not 
also a party to the convention. Hie invasion of Bdgium 
was a breach of contract with us for the maintenance of a 
law of nations which was the protection of our peace, and 
the interest which sustained the contract justified an objec- 
tion to its breach. There was no question here of interfering 
in the quarrek of Europe. We had a right to be neutral and 
we were neutral as to the quarrel between Germany and 
France, but when as an incident to the prosecution of that 
quarrel Germany broke the law which we were entitled to 



444 INTERNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

have preserved, and which she had agreed with us to pie- 
serve, we were entitled to be heard in the asserti<Hi of our 
own national right. With the right to speak came responsi- 
bility, and with responsibility came duty — duty of govern- 
ment towards all the peaceful men and women in America 
not to acquiesce in the destruction of the law which protected 
them, for if the world assents to this great and signal viola- 
tion of the law of nations, then the law of nati<ms no longer 
exists and we have no protection save in subserviaicy or in 
force. And with the right to speak there came to this, the 
greatest of neutral nations, the greatest of free democracies 
another duty to the cause of liberty and justice for whidi 
America stands; duty to the ideab of America's nobler 
nature; duty to the honor of her past and the hopes of her 
future; for this law was a bulwark of peace and justice to 
the world; it was a barrier to the spread of war; it was a 
safeguard to the independence and liberty of all small, weak 
states. It marks the progress of civilization. If the world 
consents to its destruction the world turns backwards 
towards savagery, and America's assent would be America's 
abandonment of the mission of democracy. 

Yet the American Government acquiesced in the treat- 
ment of Belgium and the destruction of the law of nations. 
Without one word of objection or dissent to the r^udiation 
of law or the breach of oiu- treaty or the violation of justice 
and humanity in the treatment of Belgimn, our government 
enjoined upon the people of the United States an undis- 
criminating and all-embracing neutrality, and the President 
admonished the people that they must be neutral in all 
respects in act and word and thought and sentiment. We 
were to be not merely neutral as to the quarrds ci Europe^ 
but neutral as to the treatment of Belgimn; neutral betweai 
right and wrong; neutral between justice and injustice; 
neutral between humanity and cruelty; neutral between 



FOREIGN AFFAIRS, 1018-1016 445 

liberty and appteaaiim. Our Govemment did more than 
acquiesce, for ia the first Lumiania note, with the un)q>eak- 
able honors 61 the conquest of Belgium still fresh in our 
minds, on the very day after the report of the Bryce Com- 
mission on Belgian Atrocities, it wrote these words to the 
Govemment of Germany: 

Recalling the humane and enlightened attitude hitherto assumed by 
the Imperial German Government in matters of international right, and 
particulariy with regard to the freedom iA the seas, having learned to 
recognise the German views and the German influence in the fidd of 
international obligation as always engaged upon the side iA justice and 
humanity, etc 

And so the Govemment of the United States appeared aa 
approving the treatment of Belgium. It misrepres^ited the 
people of the United States in that acquiescence and apparent 
approval. It was not necessary that the United States should 
go to war in defense of the violated law. A single official 
expression by the Govemment of the United States, a single 
s^itence denying assent and recording disapproval of what 
Grermany did in Belgium would have given to the people of 
America that leadership to which they were entitled in their 
earnest groping for the light. It would have ranged behind 
American leadership the conscience and morality of the 
neutral world. It would have brought to American diplo- 
macy the respect and strength of loyalty to a great cause. 
But it was not to be. The American Govemment failed to 
rise to the demands of the great occasion. Gone were the 
old love of justice; the old passion for liberty; the old sym- 
pathy with the oppressed; the old ideals of an America 
hel](Kng the world towards a better future; and there re- 
mained in the eyes of mankind only solicitude for trade and 
profit and prosperity and wealth. 

The American Govemment could not really have approved 
the treatment of Belgium, but under a mistaken poliQr it 



446 INTEBNATIONAL SUBJECTS 

shrank from spealdiig the truth. That vital error has carried 
into every effort of our diplomacy the weakness of a false 
position. Every note of remonstrance against interfarence 
with trade, or even against the destruction of life, has been 
projected against the background of an abandonment of the 
principles for which America once stood, and has been 
weakened by the popular feeling among the peoples of 
Europe, whose hearts are lifted up by the impulses of pa- 
triotism and sacrifice, that America has become weak and 
sordid. 

Such policies as I have described are doubly dangerous in 
their effect up<m foreign nations and in their effect at home. 
It is a matter of universal experience that a weak and aj^xre- 
hensive treatment of foreign affairs invites encroachments 
upon rights and leads to situations in which it is difficult 
to prevent war, while a firm and frank policy at the outset 
prevents difficult situations from arising and t^ids most 
strongly to preserve peace. On the oth^ hand, if a govern- 
ment is to be strong in its diplomacy, its own people must 
be ranged in its support by leadership of opinion in a na- 
tional cause worthy to awaken their patriotism and devotion. 

We have not been following the path of peace. We have 
been blindly stumbling along the road that continued will 
lead to inevitable war. Our diplomacy has dealt with symp- 
toms and ignored causes. The great decisive question upon 
which our peace depends, is the question whether the rule of 
action applied to Belgium is to be tolerated. If it is tolerated 
by the civilized world, this nation will have to fight for its 
life. There will be no escape. That is the critical p(»nt ol 
defense for the peace of America. 

When our Government failed to tell the truth about 
Belgium, it lost the opportunity for leadership of the moral 
sense of the American people, and it lost the power which a 
knowledge of that leadership and a sympathetic response 



FOREIGN AFFAIRS, 1918-1916 447 

£rom the moral sense of the world would have given to our 
difdomapy. When our Government failed to make any pro- 
vision whatever for defending its r^ts in case \hey should 
be trampled upon, it lost the power which a belief in its 
readiness and will to maintain its rights would have given to 
its diplomatic representations. When our Government gave 
notice to Germany that it would destroy American lives and 
American ships at its peril, our words, which would have 
been potent if sustained by adequate preparation to make 
them good, and by the prestige and authority of the moral 
leadership of a great people in a great cause, were treated 
with a contraipt which should have been foreseen; and 
when our Government failed to make those words good, its 
diplomacy was bankrupt. 

Upon the record of performance which I have tried to 
describe, will the American pec^le say that the Democratic 
party is entitled to be continued in power ? 



INDEX 



INDEX 



Abdiil-Asis» sultan of Turk^ (IMl- 
1870), 288, 284. 

Acapulco, 229, 299. 

AdaniB, President John Quincy, 120, 228; 
on South American independence, 114. 

Adrian, m0 Hadrian. 

Agadir, 185. 

Aggression, intentional, pretext always 
sought for, 186. 

Aix4a-Chapeile, Congress of (1818), 106. 

Alabama Claims, arbitration of the, at 
Geneva, 66 f., 218, 291, 801. 

Alaska, 299; boundary dispute, 801. 

Alexander U, emperor of Russia (1855- 
1881), 98. 

Alexander, Joshua W., American con- 
gressman, 858. 

Alexandria, 101. 

Algeciras, Conference of (1906), 46, 165. 

Aliens, rights of, under treaties, 7-28. 

Altruism, defects and merits of, 182 f . 

Ambassador from Brasil, see Gama. 

American Institute of International Law, 
the, 405, 411; its Declaration of the 
Rights and Duties of Nations, 412- 
426. 

American Peace Society, the, 68. 

American people, the, characterised, 
188 f., 440 f. 

Americans, killing of, thought safe, 440. 

American Society for Judicial Settlement 
of International Disputes, 145, 150, 
151 f. 

American Society of Intmiational Law, 
8, 7 f ., 72, 89, 124, 126, 154, 404, 418. 

Amos, Shddon, on Ueber, 94. 

Anardiy, tendency of democracies to 
lapse into, 418; condition of , in Mexi- 
co, 888 f ., 480. 

Ancona, the, destroyed, 489. 

Anglo-Saxon liberty, 888. 



Antioquia, Colombian state, 191. 

Arabic, the, torpedoed, 488. 

Arbitral Justice^ Court of, proposed* 86^ 
864. 

Arbitral tribunals, characteristicB of, 148. 

Arbitration, international, 81 f., 88-42; 
57, 185, 140 ff., 144, 147 ff.; principle 
of, the United States committed to» 
282-288, 882, 482; vital questions of 
public pdicy cannot be submitted to^ 
165 f. 

Arbitrations, tendency of, 88 f ., 140 f . 

Ardila, Panaman notable, 196. 

Argentina, 115, 120, 258 ff. 

Argentine Confederation, Argentine Re- 
public, see Argentina. 

Armaments, limitation of, 187 f . 

Arosemana, Justo, Panaman notable, 
196. 

Arosemana, Pablo, Panaman legislator, 
196. 

Arthur, President, 287. 

Ashburton, Lord, 4. 

Asser, T. M. C, of Holland, 165. 

Association for the Reform and Codifi* 
cation of the Law of Nations, 68 f . 

Atmosphere of the court room, import* 
ance of, 87. 

Austria-Hungary, 71, 78, 99, 170, 176, 
288, 808, 819, 865, 879, 489. 

Bacon, Lord, saying of, 157. 

Bahamas, the, 210. 

Bail^, Joseph Weldon, American sena- 
tor, 821, 822. 

Balance of power, the, in Europe, 111* 
165, 895, 418. 

Baldwin, Simeon Eben, governor of 
Connecticut, 407 f. 

Balkans, the, 174. 

Baltic ports, the, of Russia, 299. 



401 



452 



INDEX 



Baocfoft, George, 

and hiitoriaii, 97; nefotifttei tzeslieB 

with the Gerauui statei, 810 f . 
Bar, Lodwig too* p r o f cator ol Gnminal 

Isw At Gtfttiiigeiit IM. 
Bard, Thonutf Bobert, Amerioan aena- 

tor.ttl. 
Bayard, Chevalier de» 174. 
Bi^rard, Thomaa Francis, Amenoan 

ftateman and dqilomat, 801 f . 
Beatqx^ Arthur Matthiaa, American 

diplomat, 108 f. 
Belgium, 170, 178, 810,888, 887; inva- 

fion of, 441-447. 
Bdiae, $6$ Britidi Hoodurat. 
Bentham, Jeremy, 8£. 
Bentwidi, Norman, remarin of , in the 

FortnigkO^ Rmsw, BStt 
Beriin, entry of Napoleon into (1808), 08. 
Berlin Decree, the (1808), 75. 
Bermuda, 210. 
Berne, meeting ol eccmomiftt and puUi- 

citUat,180f. 
Bemttorff, Albrecht, Count, Fruaaian 

miniater, 41tt. 
Bematorff, Johann Heinridi, Count, 

German diplomat, 482. 
Biddle, Nicholas, American financier, 07. 
Binney, Horace, American lawyer, 01. 
Black, Jeremiah Sullivan, attorney- 
general €i the United Statea, 817. 
Black Sea, the, neutralisation of, 180. 
Blaine, Jamea Gilleapie, American atatea- 

man,888,287, 282f., 278. 
Blockadea, in the Declaration of Fluia, 

78. 
Blttcher, Fhiaaian general, 08. 
Bluntadili, Johann Ka^Mur, publidat, 82; 

00, 408; comments ol, on Lieber'a 

wori[,04f., lOlf. 
Bogota, capital ci Colombia, 187, 102, 

108, 104, 108, 107, 108, 100. 
Bolivar, Colombian aUte, 101. 
Boaton, 18, 07, 204, 870. 
Bourbona, reatored to the throne ol 

France, 108. 



Boser Bdidlioa, the^ in CUna (lOOO- 
1001), 47, 208. 

Btandegee^ Frank Boaworth, 
aeBator,240. 

Braail,52f.,120. 

Bremen trader the^ 888. 

Brest, 75. 

Britiah Gdana, 210. 

Britiah Honduraa, 210. 

Bruaaeb Conference, the (1874), 88. 

Kyan, William Jeoningi, 
politician, 482, 480. 

Biyce Commiaaion on Atrocttiea in Bel- 
gium, the, 445. 

Buchanan, Jamea, 110, 817. 

Buchanan, William Inaoo, American dqn 
lomat, 178. 

Buffalo, 204. 

Buffer statea, eatabliahment of. 111. 

Bunau-Varilla, Panaman diplomat, 17^ 
248. 

Bureau of International Peace, the, 88. 

Burritt, Elihu, 'the Learned Bbck- 
amith,' 88. 

Burton, Theodore Elqah, American sena- 
tor, 845. 

Cadwalader, American general, 00. 
Calhoun, John Caldwell, American 

statesman, 110, 425. 
California, 0-28, 154, 200. 
Calvo, Carlos, publicist, 84. 
Canada, 218 f ., 280, 200, 888. 
Canal Zone^ the^ 207, 225 ff ., 241, 248, 

285,208. 
Canning, George^ Eni^iah statesman^' 

108, 114. 
Cape Horn, perils of navigation around* 

170. 
Capital, accumulation of, 45. 
Caribbean Sea, the^ 121, 170, 228, 410. 
Carnegie Endowment for International 

Peace, the, 1241., 128, 154. 
Caroline Islands, the^ 200. 
Carrann, Venustiano, Mciican chiel» 

420-482. 
Carson, Sit Edward, 801. 



INDEX 



453 



Cartago^ Cofta Bica* pennanent court 
for the Central American states estab- 
liahed at (1908)» 154. 

Cases: the Adda, 41; the Agkio$ Oeor- 
gkiot, 881; Baldwin t. Franks* 17; 
Chirac t. Chirac, 10; the Cureassian, 
41; Costdlo (1860), 818; the Da$king 
IF(i90»4O; DdagoaBay,885f.; Ernst, 
817; Fairfax t. Hunter, 10; Geofroy 
f. Riggs, 14 f.; the Georgia, 40; the 
Hiawatha, 41; the IsabeOa Tkompmm, 
40; 01sen9.&mth,808; theParUment 
Edge, 886 f.; Tiburido Parrot, 17; the 
PeaH, 41; the Pderhof, 40; the Scimce, 
41; Shank t. Dvqpont, 816; the Sir 
WUlian Peel, 41; the Springbock, 41; 
the Vaeilios, 881; the Volant, 41; 
Ware 9. Hylton, 18; Warren (1866) 
818; ^>Miams (1707), 815 f . 

Cass, Lewis, on the scope of the Monroe 
Doctrine, 117; on the isthmian route, 
188 f., 224; on canal privileges, 228, 
258,262. 

Cauca, Colombian state, 101. 

Caucuses, place of, 848. 

Cavour, Italian statesman, 174. 

Central America, 47, 180, 210, 211, 224, 
286, 258, 261, 410. 

Central American Peace Congress, the 
(1007), 158 f. 

Central Oflke of International Institu- 
tions, the, at Brussels, 64. 

Chaffee, Adna Romansa, American 
general, at Peking, 205. 

Chamber of Commerce of New York, 
856. 

Channel, En^ish, 886. 

Charieston, 16. 

Chesapeake Bay, 860. 

Chicago, 850. 

Chile, 120. 

China, 46, 47, 48, 176, 205, 272 ff. 

Chinamen, mobbed, 52. 

Chinese children, separate schools for, 
in California, 10. 

Chinese policy, the, of America, 821 f . 

Chiriqui, prorinoe, 101. 



Choate^ Joseph Hodges, American diplo- 
mat, 145, 247 f ., 256, 250, 268, 272; 
276, 270, 280, 281, 286 f., 288, 204 f., 
807 f. 

Christian Church, the, 805. 

Christiania, Norway, 154. 

Civilisation, advances of, 180, 418. 

Civil War, the, 66, 75 f ., 80-05, 870. 

Clay, Henry, American statesman, 120, 
228, 260 f. 

Clayton, John Middleton, American 
poUtidan, 110, 210, 211. 

Geveland, President Grover, on the 
Monroe Doctrine, 108; on dififerential 
tolls at Canadian canals, 218 f.; <m 
the neutrality of interoceanic routes, 
224, 264; on arbitration, 288. 

' Coasting trade,' ' coastwise trade,' use 
of the terms, 227 f., 208 f. 

Codification of intmiational law, 405- 
411; private, 57-72, 408 f.; private 
codification goes for nothing unless 
accepted by governments, 408 f . 

Coercion, to be avoided by peace con- 
ferences, 148. 

Colberg, dty in Prussia, 06. 

Collegium, 8. 

Colombia, 228 f ., 280, 268 f ., 285 f ., 200, 
800; relations of, with Panama and 
the United Stotes, 175-206. 

Colon, dty, 104, 202, 208, 204, 205. 

Colonies, growth of, 20. 

Colonisation, right of, in America, no 
longer asserted, 107. 

Colt, Le Baron Bradford, American sena- 
tor, 205, 206. 

Columbia College, Lieber at, 00, 07. 

Cdunje, Gil, Panaman legislates, 106. 

Confederate archives, classified and ar- 
ranged by Lieber, 08. 

Confederate cruisers, fitted out in the 
ports of Great Britain, 76. 

Confederation of the Rhine, the, 06. 

Conference of Teadiers of International 
Law and ReUted SubjecU (1014), 125. 

Conflict of treaties and state laws, 17-20. 

Conformi^, impulse of, 28. 



454 



INDEX 



Constantinople, Convention of (1888), 
210, 220, 221, 220 ff., 245, 240, 264 f., 
28^-285, 290, 295, 296. 

Constantinople, Treaty of, see Constan- 
tinople, Convention of. 

Constitution, American, 39 f., 51. 

Constitutional government, modification 
of, by practice, 849. 

Constitutional provisions, reason for, 61. 

Continental Congress, treaty-making 
power exercised by, 15 f . 

Contraband, search for, 889 f . 

Contract debts, ordinary, of govern- 
ments, not to be collected by force, 
139 f. 

Control of American nations by the 
United States, not involved in the 
Monroe Doctrine, 119 f. 

Conventions: for the International Pro- 
tection of Industrial Property (1888) 
65; for the Protection of Submarine 
Cables (1884), 65; for the Exchange of 
Official Documents (1886), 65; for the 
Publication of Customs Tariffs (1890), 
65; for the Prohibition of the Use of 
Explosive Bullets (1868), 65; Geneva 
Convention relating to the Treatment 
of the Wounded of Armies in the Field, 
(1864), 65; for the Pacific Settlement 
of International Disputes (1899), 399 f . 

Costa Rica, 176, 190, 211, 220, 264, 299. 

Crete, 180. 

Crimean War, the, 318. 

Crowe, En^ish delegate, 372. 

Cruelty, now shocks the sensibilities, 172. 

Cuba, 110. 153, 176, 206. 

Cullom, Shelby Moore, American sena- 
tor, 281, 288, 295. 

Cummins, Albert Baird, American sena- 
tor, 215 f., 305, 345. 

Cundinamarca, Colombian state, 191. 

Cushing, the, attacked by an aeroplane, 
437. 

Cynics, attitude of, 87. 

Daniels, Josephus, secretary of the navy, 
436. 



Danubian prindpalitieB, 180. 

Dardandles, the, 180. 

Darien, Isthmus of, 258. See Panama. 

Davis, Bancroft, 16. 

Davis, Cushman Kdlogg, American 

senator, 215, 220, 229, 264, 288. 
Declaration of Independence, the, 28» S8; 

209, 416. 
Declaration of the Rights and Duties of 

Nations, the (Jan. 6, 1916), 418-426. 
De Jure Bdli et Pacts, by Grotius, 150, 

402. 
De Lesseps Company, see Panama Canal 

Company. 
Democracy, dangers of, as respects in- 
ternational relations, 7 f ., 22 f ., 127 £<, 

810 f.; tendency of democracies to 

lapse into anarchy, 418; what the 

American democracy stands for, 440 f . 
Democracy in America, by de Tocque- 

ville, 810. 
Democratic party, the, 485, 436, 447. 
Denmark, 170, 176, 819. 
Denver, 52. 
Devonshire, Duke of, on the Monroe 

Doctrine, 109. 
Diplomacy, former character of, 185; 

present rdation of, to moral standards, 

135; American, has lost authority and 

influence, 440. 
Discussion in legislative bodies, uses of, 

339 f., 347-350. 
Disraeli (Eari of Beaconsfield), 288. 
Distribution of powers, 14. 
Dolphin, the, American naval vessel, 481. 
Don Padfioo case, the, 49. 
Drago, Luis Maria, Argentine publicist, 

34, 115. 
Drago Doctrine, the, 139 f . 
Droit oblige, 102. 
Duf our, GuiUamne Henri, Swiss genenl, 

101. 
Dumba, Konstantin Theodor, Anstriaa 

diplomat, 480. 
Dnplessix, Frendi publicist, 68. 
Duties, to be kept in mind as weD at 

rights, 102, 127 f. 



INDEX 



4BS 



EMtern 



tli^lOIL 



100. 



Edmondi, George Wmahington* Amcri- 
cnooiigNMMB»857f. 

Edwud Vn, kbg ol EagluMl (1001- 
1010)» 874. 

Egjpt, 180, ttO» nof.; Bdtiik oocii|w^ 
tioB ol, 121. 

£lba» Napoleon'f enftpe ffom, 06. 

Elb^ the. 7$. 

Electoral college^ tlie, 178» 840. 

El Rdalor, iiewq)aper ol Bogota, quoted, 
105 f. 

Emi, the, 75. 

Bmeifdopoedia Awterieana, the, 07. 

Enf oroement of laws fonditioiuJ upon 
pQbBc opinion, 87 f. 

England, He Great Britain. 

Erie Canal the, 000. 

Erwin, MisniBQipi, 58. 

Europe, quarreb ol, to be kept from 
America, 181 ff.; armaments of, 188. 

European War, the (1014-), 154; rela- 
tion of , to the Ship Purdiase Bill, 887- 
800; relation of, to international law, 
801-480; and the administration of 
President Wilson, 484-^7. 

Everett, Edward, American statesman, 
07, 817. 

Expatriation, ri^ of, 168 f ., 818-886. 

E9pla$mHa$, 808. 

Esuero, province, 101. 

Falaha, the, torpedoed, 487. 
Faultfinders, perennial, an incident of 

free institutions, 177. 
FedmiUH, The, 80. 

Federation of the worid, dreams of , 148 f. 
Feding, matters of, as causes of war, 147, 

884 f. 
Ferdinand VII, king of Spain (1814- 

1888), 106. 
Femeck, Alexander von, p r o f essor at 

Vienna, 870 ff. 
Feudal qrstem, the, in Japan, 88. 
fSdd, David Dudley, American jurist, 

68, 68, 100, 405 f. 



Fioie^ Ptaquale^ Italian publieift, 68 f. 
FSshw IlamiHnn, American sistfsman, 

58 f. 
Fisheries arbitration, th^ 806f. 
Fletdier, Dunean Upshaw, Amerieaa 

ssnator, 880, 848, 848, 845. 
Foroe^ world said to be ruled bj, 185. 
fVanee, 71, 78, 106, 107, 100, 110, 114, 

170, 176, 856, 80B» 816, 880, 888, 858, 

865, 867, 868, 860, 870^ 871, 878, 870, 

880, 888, 886, 887, 448. 
F^anoo-GeraMU War of 1870, the, 08, 04. 
Frendi Company, the, MS Panama Canal 

Conq>any. 
Frendi BevolutioB, inspires a cooeeptioo 

of popuUr liberty, 05 f.; remark of 

Lieber concerning, 108. 
iriedland, Uttle of (1807), 06. 

Galileo, apocryphal exrlamatinn of, 174. 

GaUinger, Jacx^ H., American senator, 
8051,845. 

Gama, Domicio da, Braslian dipkwiat, 
400 f. 

Gardner, Augustus Peabody, American 
congressman, 486. 

General Order No. 100 of 1868, 66, 67, 
80-05. 

Geneva Conventions, the, 178, 407. 

Germany, 78, 100, 111, 117, 186, 165, 
170, 176, 888, 878, 878, 800, 808, 888, 
865, 867, 868, 860, 870, 871, 878, 878, 
878, 880, 881 f., 888, 886, 887; idle 
German sh^ in American harbors^ 
857 f., 870; submarine warfare of, 
486-440^ 447; attack upon Belgram» 
440-446. 

Ghent, 68, 101. 

Golden Bule, thsb as a guide of American 
dii^omacy, 100. 

Grant, President, 886. 

Great Britain, 66 f., 71, 75 f., 76, 80, 88 f.. 
Ill, 170, 176, 816, 818, 810, 880, 888; 
858, 865, 867, 860, 871, 878, 878, 878, 
870, 860, 888, 885, 886, 867, 888, 488; 
484; rdatioas of , to the Monroe Doc- 
trine^ 106, 107, 100, 118, 117, 181 f.; 



456 



INDEX 



to Germany, 111; attitude of» regard- 
ing Agadir, 105; and the question of 
Panama tdls, 207-812; andthequee- 
tion of contraband, 880 f . 

Great Lakes, the, 218, 287. 

Greece, 96, 97, 180; cases ol the Vatilio9 
and the Aghiat Oeorghioa, 881. 

Greek War of Independence, the, 96 f . 

Grey, Sir Edward, British minister, 77, 
207, 280 f., 249 f., 800. 

Greytown, see San Juan de Nicaragua. 

Grotius, Hugo, Dutch jurist, 100, 101, 
156, 402. 

Guatemala, 176. 

Guerillas, Lieber on, 90. 

OtUflighi, the, torpedoed, 437 f . 

Hadrian, Roman emperor (117-188), 
101. 

Hague, The, conferences at, 80, 98 f., 
102, 108, 107, 147, 160, 162 f., 407; 
First, in 1899, 65, 67 f., 78, 126, 129, 
185, 144, 159, 284. 899, 408; Second, 
in 1907, 68 f ., 70, 78, 84, 107, 129-144, 
145, 161, 284, 288, 292, 864, 884, 897; 
Third, proposed, 69, 168. 

Hague Convention, the, for the Pacific 
Settlement of International Disputes, 
118, 119, 159, 815, 899 f. 

Halifax, Nova Scotia, 229, 299. 

Halleck, American general, 90, 91. 

Hamburg-American Line, the, 888. 

Ebunburg trade, the, 888. 

Hamilton, Alexander, 88 f ., 89. 

Handbuch dee VdlkerredUe, 879. 

Hanna, Marcus Alonco, American sena- 
tor, 216. 

Hanover, 817. 

Harrison, President Benjamin, SS, 287. 

Harte, Bret, 51. 

Hart8u£F, American general, 90. 

Hawaii, 299. 

Hay, John, American statesnuui, 158, 175, 
198, 201, 284 f., 247 f., 256, 257, 259, 
268, 264, 271, 272 ff., 275, 276, 279, 
280, 281, 286 f., 288, 294, 295, 807, 808^ 
809, 811 f. 



Heis, American dqilomat, 811. 

Henry IV, king of France (158^1610), 

186. 
Hilliard, FnxKn, American jurist, 97. 
Hipmmg, sinking ol the, 76. 
History, rewriting of, 178. 
Hitdioock, American general, 90, 91. 
HoheosoUem candidature for the Span- 
ish throne, the (1870), 111. 
Holland, 170, 485. Sas Netherlands. 
Holy Alliance, the, 106 f. 
Honduras, 299. 
Hong-Kong, 299. 
House of Gwnmons, resolutioa of, in 

favor of arbitration (July 16, 1808), 

285,288. 
Huerta, Victoriano, Mexican ruler, 827- 

885,429-488. 
Hughes, William, American senator, 846. 
TT iimM-nifitfiimigip^ defocts and merits o^ 

182 f. 
Humanity, sentiment of , as a leading 

power, 188 f . 
Hungary, immigration from, 820. 
Hurtado, Puiaman dq>lomat, 196. 

Idaho, 209. 

Idealism, strain ol, in the American na- 
ture, 184, 440 f. 

Impartiality, not to be expected from 
executive and administrative offioen^ 
86 f., 182. 

Independent sovereignty, the fundamen- 
tal principle ol international law, 118; 
practical limitations of, 115 ff., 180 f. 

Indian childreQ, separate schools for, 10. 

Innes, Mitchdl, 800. 

ItuHM de Droit Iniemaiumal, $m Insti- 
tute of International Law. 

Institute of International Law, tliSb ^ 
68, 98, 101, 102, 406, 414. 

Insults, as causes ol personal and na- 
tional quarrels, 824 f . 

Intelligence, general diffuaon ol, 44. 

International Bureau ol Weights and 
Measures, establishment of (1875), 6ff. 

International Committee ol Geneva^ 101. 



INDEX 



457 



International oonduct, standard of, 85 f . 

International court, proposed, 8IKM08. 

Intematkmal law, priyato codification of, 
57-72; independent sovereignty the 
fundamental principle of, 118; limita- 
tions on this princq>le, 115 ff., 180; 
study of, necessary to avert dangers of 
democratic control, 5 f., 168 ff.; inter- 
national schod of , to be established at 
The Hague, 164 f .; outlook for (1015), 
801-408; Declaration of the Ri^^ts 
and Duties of Nations (1016), 418- 
426. See Law of nations. 

International Law Association, 68 f . 

International Naval Conference, $ee Lon- 
don, Conference of. 

International police forces idea of a, 157. 

International Priie Court, Convention 
for, 70, 79r^ 82-87. 

International pubBc opinion, 28-82. See 
Opinion. 

International societies, multiplication of, 
64 f. 

Irdand, 817. 

Ismail Pasha, khedive of Egypt (1868- 
1870), 288, 284. 

Isolation, breaking down of, 20, 166f ., 171. 

Italians, lynched, 52, SS. 

Italy, 71, 78, 117, 170, 176, 808, 820, 
882, 865, 880, 881. 

Jamaica, 210. 

Japan, 8-28, 46, 71, 76, 78, 154, 170, 176, 
865. 

Jefferson, Thomas, on the Monroe Doc- 
trine, 108. 

Jena, batUe ci (1806), 06. 

Jena, university of, 06. 

Jews, 818, 821. 

Johnson, Cone, solicitor of the American 
State Department, 861 f., 868, 866, 
867, 868, 860, 871, 878. 

Jomini, Baron, Russian delegate, 08. 

Judicial Arbitral Court, creation of, 
recommended, 84. 

Judicial v. diplomatic action in arbitra- 
tion, 142. 



Justice, revered by the founders of the 
American Union, 40; conformity to, 
the unquestionable standard ol inter- 
national conduct, 85 f . 

Justinian, 01. 

Kent, James, American jurist, 816. 

Kenyon, William Squire^ American sena- 
tor, 804 f . 

Khedive, the, eee Ismail Pasha. 

Kmg, American diplomat, 102, 104. 

Knighi Commander, sinking of the, 76. 

Korea, American force in (1004), 205. 

Korean children, separate sdiools for, in 
California, 10. 

Kriege, Johannes, German delegate^ 
872 f., 875. 

Kurihama, town in Japan, 22. 

Labor, fluidity of, 44. 

Labrador, 200. 

La Fontaine, Henri, director of the Inter- 
national Bibliogn^hicai Institute at 
Brussels, 167. 

Lake Mohonk Conference, the, 8. 

Lansdowne, Lord, British minister, 
247f.,256, 280, 285, 807f. 

Lansing, Robert, 884 f ., 484. 

Laodicea, 101. 

Law of nations, 58; new era in, 60; 
formerly existed for Europe alone^ 
107; described by Lord Mansfield, 
161 f ., 808; assertion of Sir Edward 
Carson concerning, 801; violated by 
the attack on Belgium, 442-447. See 
Intttnational law. 

Lawrence, William Beach, American 
jurist, 68. 

Laybach, Congress of (1821), 106. 

Leeward Islands, the, 210. 

Lesseps, Ferdinand de, 185. 

liberalism, reaction against, in Europe^ 
106. 

Ueber, Frands, 66, 67, 80-108. 

Lincoln, Abraham, 66, 80, 08, 04, 174^ 
250,422. 



458 



INDEX 



lind, John, agent of President Wilson, 

429. 
Lodge, Henry Cabot, American senator, 

804, 818, 827, 888, 841, 845, 854, 857, 

886, 486. 
LOvland, president of the Nobel Price 

Committee, 158. 
VOffice Central^ the, at Brussels, 167. 
London, 299. 
London, Conference of (1908), 70 f ., 78- 

87, 868, 864, 865, 867 ff., 882, 898. 
London, Dedaration of (1909), 79-87, 

865-884, 898. 
Louis XIV, king of France (1648-1715), 

849. 
Lowdl, James Russell, American author 

and diplomat, 222. 
Lnsitania, the, torpedoed, 487 f., 489, 445. 

McAdoo, William Gibbs, American cabi- 
net officer, 851. 852, 858, 857 f., 859, 
860, 884, 885. 

McCumber, Porter James, American 
senator, 282. 

McKinley, President William, 158, 175, 
288,309. 

McLean, George Payne, American sena- 
tor, 257. 

McLean, Thomas Chalmers, American 
naval officer, 204. 

Magdalena, Colombian state, 191. 

Mallarino, New Granadan diplomat, 
181 f ., 186. 

Mansfidd, Lord, 58, 161 f ., 898. 

Marcy, William Learned, American 
statesman, 817. 

Mame, battle of the (1914), 485. 

Marroquin, Joo6 Manuel, Colombian 
ruler and savant, 197, 198. 

Marshall, John, American jurist, 19. 

Martens, Frederick de, Russian publicist, 
820; onLieber, 94. 

Martindale, American general, 90. 

Maryland, 15, 19. 

Mason, James Murray, Confederate 
commissioner, 80, 888» 422, 428. 

Massachusetts, 16, 40. 



Maurtua, Pennrian savant, 400. 

Media senUnUa^ 81. 

Mediation, right and dnty of, 118 f ., 401. 

Mediterranean, the, eztensioo of Rntwian 
power towards. 111; submarine at- 
tacks in, 489. 

Mexican Claims Commission, the, 98. 

Mexican Resolution, the (1914), 807- 
885. 

Mexicans, lynched, 52. 

Mexican War. the, 209. 

Mexico, 109, 110, 114, 117, 158, 174, 199, 
209, 228 f., 299, 442; American rela- 
tions with, 1918-1916, 827-435, 428- 
434. 

Michigan, Lake, 268. 

Middle Ages, the, 418. 

MiUn Decree, the (1807), 75. 

Miles, James B., secretary of the Ameri- 
can Peace Society, 68. 

Minority, courage and persistency of a, 
the bulwark of liberties, 850. 

Mobility of mankind, the new, 29, 44, 
166 f. 

Mobilization as a justification for im- 
mediate war. 111. 

Mob violence, outrages on foreigners by, 
50. 

Moe, secretary of the Nobd Prixe Com- 
mittee, 158. 

Mongolian subjects of Rusaa, 828. 

Monroe Doctrine, the, 165, 180 f ., ISii; 
189, 425 f.; defined, 105-128. 

Monroe, President James, 109, 112, 118, 
120, 121, 122, 425; his message ol 
Dec. 2,1828, 105 f. 

Moral isolation, dread of, by govern- 
ments, 80 f . 

Morality, obligations of, nations must 
submit to, 424. 

Morocco, 46, 111, 165. 

Mosquito Coast, British protectocmte 
over the, 210, 211, 212, 216. 

'Most favored natkm' provisioii* ths^ 
16, 252 f., 254, 255, 259 f. 

Mouravieff , Count, Russian minister, 67. 

Municipal law, Godificatkm of, 59. 



INDEX 



459 



Namur, battle of (1815), 96, 108. 
Napoleon, 75, 98, 418. 
Napoleonic wan, the, 485. 
Na^mOe, the, at Colon, 208, 808. 
Nations, law of, m» Law of nations. 
Naval Conference of London, see Lon- 
don, Conference of. 
Naval War CoUege, the, 878. 
Netherlands, the, 71, 78, 178, 885, 880. 

See Holland. 
Neutral flag, in the Dedaration of Paris, 

78. 
Neutralisation, of the Sues and Panama 

canals, 219 f., 244 f.; of the Panama 

canal, 274-279. 
Neutral merchandise, in the Dedaration 

of Paris, 78. 
Neutral territory, inviolabflity of, 892. 
New Brunswick, 209. 
NewfoundUnd, 209, 297, 801. 
New Granada, 181-184, 189, 190 f ., 216, 

217,248,266. 5m Colombia. 
New Orleans, 52, 6S. 
New York, dty and port, 16, 97, 101, 

294, 299, 856, 870. 
New York, stote, 16, 40, 200; RepuUi- 

can state convention of 1916, address 

of Mr. Root at, 427-447. 
New Zealander, the typical, 178. 
Nicaragua, 176, 211, 220 f., 224, 264, 

268,295,299. 
Nicaragua Canal route, the, 210, 268, 

295. 
Nicholas II, csar of Russia (1894-), 67, 

186,408. 
Niebuhr, Barthold Georg, German diplo- 
mat and historian, 97. 
Nippold, Otfried, German scholar, 164. 
Nobel, Alfred, Swedish scientist, 158, 

154, 172. 
Nobel Institute, the, at Christiania, 158, 

154. 
Nobel Prises, the, 158. 
North German Confederation, the^ 819. 
North Gennan Lloyd lane, the, 888. 
North Germany, 100. 
Norway, 176, 819. 



fo 



Notes, of the American 
Germany, 486-440, 445-447. 

Nova Sootia, 200. 

Nunes, Rafael, Colombian 
192 ff. 

Nys, Ernest, on Ueber, 95. 



O'Gorman, James Aloysius, Amerioan 

senator, 256, 861. 
Oliver, George Tener, American senator, 

847. 
Oln^, Richard, American secretary of 

sUte, 217, 271, 801 f. 
' Open door,' the, in China, 272 f . 
Opinion, power of, 185, 167 ff., 896, 402 f. 
Orders in Councfl, the, 75. 
Oregon, 209. 

Oregon boundary, the, 209. 
Orient, passage to the, sought by early 

navigators, 179. 
Oriental Public School, the, in San Fran- 

dsco, 10. 
08tend,886. 
Ottowa,808. 

Pacific railroad companies, bonds of, 249. 

Paknerston, Lord, 49, 210, 261. 

Panama, dty, 194, 202, 208, 204. 

Panama, republic, 280; revolt of, from 
Colombia, 175-206; treaty with the 
United Stotes (1908), 224, 225 ff. 

Panama, Bay of, 121, 179. 

Panama Canal, the, 121, 154; and the 
Panama revolt, 175-206; the ques- 
tion of tfA\B, 207-812. 

Panama Canal Act, the (Aug. 24, 1912), 
207-812. 

Panama Canal Company, the, 185, 187, 
188,189,4258,268. 

Panama Congress, the (1826), 228. 

Panama Railroad, the» 176, 185, 208 ff., 
247,262. 

Panama Railroad Conq>any, the, t47» 
249,262. 

Pan-American Bureau, the, 158. 

Pan-American Ccmferenoe, $ee Piui- 
American Congress. 



460 



INDEX 



Pan-American Congress, First, at Wash- 
ington, 234, 236, 237. 

Pan-American Congress, Second, at 
Mexico, 234. 

Pan-American Congress, Third, at Rio de 
Janeiro, 114 f., 158, 234, 410. 

Pan-Americanism, 153. 

Pan-American Scientific Congress, Sec- 
ond, 124, 405, 400 ff., 413. 

Paris, Declaration of (1856), 66, 78, 162, 
406. 

Paris, Parliament of, 349. 

Paris, Peace of (1856), 66, 99. 

Pariiament of man, dreams of, 143, 157. 

Patriotic societies, in Germany, 96. 

Pauncefote, Julian, British diplomat, 
140, 257, 271 f., 276, 280, 288. 

Pax Romano, 395. 

Peaceful interpenetration, 45. 

Peace-loving and peace-keeping charac- 
ter, steady development of, 144. 

Peace propaganda, methods of, 155. 

Peace, universal, the object of the Hague 
conferences, 144. 

Peking, 47, 205. 

Pennsylvania, 16, 40. 

Permanent Court, the, at The Hague, 
159 ff. 

Permanent judges, court of, needed for 
arbitration, 142, 145, 149-152. 

Perry, Matthew Calbraith, American 
naval officer, 22. 

Persia, the, destroyed, 439. 

Personal rights, how limited, 115. 

Peru, 176. 

Philaddphia, 16, 294, 299, 370. 

Philip II, king of Spain (1556-1598), 
179. 

Philippines, the, 153, 206. 

Phillips, William, American dipl(»nat, 
300. 

Pike County Ballads, by John Hay, 259. 

Pilotage regulations, 298. 

Pitt, William, the younger, 75. 

Polemon of Laodicea, traveling professor 
in the second century, 101. 

Poles, the, 195. 



Policy, questioDi of, as causes of war, 

146, 165-168, 894, 308. 
Pdk, President James Sjioz, 182; states a 

corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, 112; 

on the New Granadan treaty of 1846, 

188,266. 
Portland, Maine, 229, 299. 
Portland, Oregon, 229. 
Portugal, 176; the Ddagoa Bay case^ 

885 f. 
Practical administrator, value of the, 

132 f. 
Privateering, abolished by Declaration of 

Paris, 78. 
Prize Court Bill, rejected, 88. 
Professors, under the Roman empire, 

101. 
Protection, national, problem of, 122. 
Protection to citiiens residing alm>ad, 

43-56. 
Prussia, 16, 96, 97, 100. 
Prussian Decree, the (1806), 75. 
Public opinion, education of, 8, 164. 

Quebec prpvince of, 209. 

Race prejudice, 170, 821-823. 

Rayner, Isidor, American senator,. 814, 
318, 821. 

Rebus sic stantibus, 891. 

Red Sea, the, 281. 

Renault, Louis, professor of intematioDal 
law at Paris, 165; repwt of, 80 f., 
875 ff., 380. 

Republican party, the, 486. 

Reyes, Rafael, Colombian general, 198 f . 

Ri^t and duty, connection of, 102, 127 f . 

Rio Grande, the, 209. 

Rives, William Cabdl, American diplo- 
mat, 210, 215, 261. 

Robber baron, days of, have passed, 166. 

Rock Springs, Wyoming, 52. 

Rolin-Jaequemyns, circular letter of, 101. 

Roman Empire, the, 418. 

Roman prooonsui, days of, have psssrd, 
166. 

Rome, 101. 



INDEX 



461 



Booaevelt, Theodore, S5, 158, 801, 284, 
808, 868, 865, 876, 889, 809, 486; on 
the Monroe Doctrine, 114 f.; on arbi- 
tration, 888, 808, 805; on the Hay- 
Bunan-VariDa Treaty, 857 f ., 859. 

Bouses Colorado^ 58. 

Ruflh, Richard, American diplomat, 106, 
180. 

Buflria, 71, 76, 78, 99, 111, 176, 878, 899, 
808, 865, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 880, 
888^ 887; claims of, in America, 106, 
107; treaty of 1888 with, 818-886. 

Rufltia, ciar of, see Nidiolas U. 

Rnaria, emperor of, »ee Alexander U, 
^nchoUsU. 

St Clair Flats Canal, the, 818. 

Saini KUda, sinking of the, 76. 

St. Lawrence, river, 867, 868. 

St Lawrence Canal, the, 818. 

St Lawrence, Gulf of, 809. 

St Louis, 860. 

Salisbury, Lord, 857, 859, 864; on arbi- 
tration, 140 f . 

Salnte, demanded from Mexico, on ac- 
count of Tampico affair, 889-885, 481 f . 

Sandemente, M. A., Colombian presi- 
dent, 197, 198. 

Sanction of international law, the, 85-88. 

San Frandsco, 154, 899; and the Japa- 
nese question, 9-88. 

San Jacinto, the, 488, 488. 

San Juan, island of, 801. 

San Juan, river in Central America, 810. 

San Juan de Nicaragua, or Greytown, 
810. 

Santander, Colombian state, 191. 

Sault Sainte Marie, canal at, 846, 894. 

Saunders, Edward Watts, American con- 
gressman, 857 f . 

Savagery, 189, 444. 

Sawyer, Justice, 17. 

Schamhorst, P^russian statesman, 96. 

Schill, Fkussian officer, 96. 

Schools of California, Japanese in, 9-88. 

Scott, James Brown, 185, 186, 189, 145, 
418. 



Scott, Winfield, American general, 91. 

Seattle, 899. 

Self-protection, national right of. 111. 

Sentiment, in international relations^ 
118,480. 

Separatist policy of Washington, import- 
ance of, 188. 

Servia, 887. 

Seward, William Henry, American 
sUtesman, 110, 114, 117, 868. 

Ship Purchase BiU, the, 887-890. 

Ship registry bill, the. 868. 

Ship subsidies, 849 f ., 851, 855. 

Shively, Benjamin Franklin, American 
acDAUx, 885. 

Siberian ports, the, of Rusria, 899. 

Sidney, Sir Philip, 174. 

Simmons, Fumifold McLendel, Ameri- 
can senator, 857, 858, 855, 868. 

Sims, Thetus WOrette, American con- 
gressman, 808. 

SlideU, John, Confederate commissioner, 
80, 888, 488, 488. 

Smyrna, 101. 

Smyth, American dtiseo, injured by a 
mob in Brazfl, 58 f . 

Soil, severance from the, 89, 44, 166 f . 

Sdidtor of the State Department, the, 
$ee Johnson, Cone. 

Sosa, Panaman savant, 196. 

South America, strug^e for independ- 
ence in, 107, 118; misunderstanding of 
the attitude and purposes of the 
United States in, 114; importance of 
the Monroe Doctrine to, 188 f.; de- 
vdopment of arbitration in, 148» 886; 
visited by Secretary Root, 158, 410; 
trade with, 851 f., 885. 

South Carolina, 16. 

South Carolina College, lieber at, 97. 

Soverdgn rights, how limited^ 115ff.» 
180. 

Spain, 71, 78, 106, 109, 111, 117, 179, 
888,865. 

Spanish provinces in America, revolt of, 
106. 

Spanish War, the, 158, 868. 



402 



INDEX 



Spooner, John Cott» Ameriota MMilor, 

810,809. 
Sqnicr, Ephnim George^ AnMrioui au- 
thor and diploniAt, 811. 
Staatoo, Edwin McMuUn, Amerioan 

•tatetman, 00. 
Stein, FhiMian statesman, 00. 
Stimton, Henry Levris, Amerioan oabinot 

officer, 400. 
Stone, Winiam Joel, American senator, 

390, 048, 048, 044, 040. 
Story, Joseph, Amerioan jurist^ 10, 97, 

06,010. 
Strasburg, 101. 
Sturdn, Demetrins, Bovnaniaa scholar, 

104 f. 
Snbmarine warfare, 400^140, 447. 
Soes Canal the, 810, 845, 800, 808ff., 

800. 
Soes Conyention, $6$ Constantinople, 

ConTcntion of. 
Saltan, the, $ee Abdul-Asi. 
Sumner, Charles, American stotesman, 

97, 00, 100. 
Supreme Court, the, 17, 18^ 10, 40 f., 000. 
SurviTal of the fittest, law of the^ 100. 
Sutherland, George^ American senator, 

880, 800, 004, 877, 880. 
Sweden, 170, 010. 
Switaeriand, 170, 170, 485. 
Sympathy, in international relations, 

118. 

TWft, Prasident, 840, 000, 004, 818. 

Tyiulah, Louisiana, 58. 

Tampioo, 800, 880^885, 481 f . 

Tehuantepec, isthmus of, 818, 877. 

Texas, 800. 

Thayer, Biartin Russell, American jurist, 

100,108. 
Thirty Years' War, the, 408. 
TliouTenel, fidouard Antoine, French 

minister, 480. 
niucydides* remark of, on property at 

sea, 100. 
Tilsit, Peace of (1807), 00. 



Tirptts, Alfred Ton, Gesmaai 

minister, 088. 
Tocqucrville^ Akods de, French statesman 

and writer, 810. 
Tolima, Colombian state, 101. 
Tolls, Fknama Canal, questioo of, 807- 

818. 
' Too proud to fight,' 488. 
Torres, Cclonel, Colombian oflfeer, 808. 
Torture, of witnesses or of criminsls, now 

unthinkable, 178. 

880. 

TVansporUtion, Aeapness and ease oC 
44. 

Traye, the, 75. 

IVeaties: of Berlin (1878), 111; the Fkiae 
Court Treaty, 804, 887 f.; ofSanSfeef- 
ano (1878), 111; on the SUve Trade 
(1800), 05; the Ship Canal Tiealy 
(1000), 175; of the United States of 
America, with the Argentine Confeder- 
ation (1858), 858 ff.; with Austria- 
Hungary (1870), 810; with China (the 
Burlingame Treaty, 1808), 10 f.; with 
Colomlna (1808), 808 f.; (1870), 800; 
(Hay-Herran), 205 f.; with Denmark 
(1878), 810; with France (1778), 15 f.; 
with Great Britain (1788), 18; (1818), 
887; (Webster-Ashburton, 1848), 4, 
200; (Claytmi-Bulwer, 1850), 810-818, 
814-810, 888, 888, 884, 885, 844, 848w 
850, 801, 808, 804, 800 f., 871 f., 874f., 
877-888,800,807; (olrecqirocity,1854), 
Oirrf., 894; (May 18, 1870), 810; (of 
Washington. 1871), 00 f., 08, 818 f., 
800 f., 801, 804, 400 f .; (Hay-Ftance- 
fote^ 1001), 807, 817-885, 84^-818; (of 
arbitration, 1008), 888, 800; (1000), 
894; with Japan (1854)» 81 f.; (1804), 
7-88; with Meodoo (Guadalupe-Hidal- 
go, 1848), 209; with the Netherianda 
(1788), 10; with New Granada (1840), 
188 ff., 185, 810, 884, 840, 808, 800; 
with Nicaragua (Hds), 811; (Squier), 
811; (1807), 808, 805; with Panama 
(Hay-Bunau-VariUa, 1000), 884, 885 



INDEX 



468 



ff^ t48f^ %87, MO, 800; wHh VnmuM, 

(1780), 10; with Rmsk (1888), 818- 

880; with Sweden and Norway (1808), 

810. 
TVeaty-makiiig power, the, in the United 

States, llHtt. 
TrmU affair, the, 80, 80, 488ff. 
Trinidad, 810. 
Tripartite Agreement, the, faflure of., 

175, 800. 
Tripoli, 174. 
Turkey, 40, 48, 880, 880 f., 884, 805, 800, 

881,480. 

United States of America, the, 00 f ., 71, 
78, 85 f., 04, 07, 100, 180, 170, 400, 
410, 480, 488 ff.; and the Monroe Doc- 
trine, 10^188, 105, 485 f.; and the 
Panama revolt, 175-800; obligations 
of, as to Panama tolls, 807-818; rela- 
tions with Russia, 818-880; with 
Mexico, 887-885, 488^484; the Ship 
Purchase Bill, 887-800; foreign affairs, 
1018-1010, 487-447; relations to the 
European war, 484-447; the question 
of Germany, 488-447; need of military 
and naval preparation, 484 ff., 447; a 
government ' too proud to fight,' 480; 
the true spirit of the American de- 
mocracy, 440 f. 

Vancouver, British Columbia, 800. 

Varilla, J00 Bunau-Varilla. 

Venemla, 100, 117 f., 110 ,170, 100; 

boundary controversy, 808, 801 f . 
Vera Crus, 880, 800, 880, 885, 480, 481, 

488 f. 
Veraguas, province, 101. 
Veritat carisnma, 108. 
Verona, Congress of (1888), 100. 
Victoria, British Columbia, 880. 
ViOa, Francisco, Mexican chief, 480, 

488. 
Virginia, 18, 10, 40. 



Walsh, Thomas James, American 
tor, 888, 878 f. 



War, continual rec ui re nc e of, 155; uni- 
veraally increasing preparations for. 
155; avenue to all that mankind do- 
sired. 150; causes of, dassified, 140 f. 

War of 1818, the, 75. 

Washburn, Emory, American ■^•♦^Tft^ 
08. 

Washington, states 800. 

Washington, George, 114, 188, 174, 801; 
FareweU Addrew of, 181. 

Watdiful Waiting, poUpy of, 488. 

Waterioo, battle of (1815), 00. 

Weak states, protection of, against the 
strong, 118, 115, 188, 401, 400. 

Webster, Daniel, 4, 817; on the Monroe 
Doctrine, 106. 

Weeks, John Wingate, American senator, 
845. 

Welland Canal, the, 818. 

Weser, the, 75. 

West Indies, the, 47. 

Westlake, John, remarks of , in the Nine^ 
teenik Century, 81 f . 

Westphalia, Peace of (1048), 418. 

Whiter Andrew Dickson, American edu- 
cator and diplomat, 100, 185, 186, 878. 

White, Henry, American diplomat, 850 
f., 850, 808, 804, 871. 

Wilkes, Charies, American naval officer, 
80. 488, 488. 

William II, German emperor (1886-), 
888. 

TMiam the Sflent, 174. 

Williams, Jc^ Siaip, American senator, 
848, 884. 885, 805 f., 806, 845, 870. 

Williams, WHliam Elia, American con- 
gressman, 885. 

Wnson, P^resident Woodrow, 807 f ., 808 
f., 854; and the Mexican Resolution 
(1014), 887-^85; foreign pdiqr of 
(101^1010), 487-447. 

Windward Islands, the, 810. 

Woolsey, Theodore Dwigfat, American 
educator, 08, 08. 

Yori^town, 800. 

Yucatan Bill, the (1846), 110. 



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