-Caveat Lector- www.ctrl.org DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector. ======================================================================== Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ <A HREF="">ctrl</A> ======================================================================== To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

--- Begin Message ---
-Caveat Lector-

THE RISE OF THE AMERICAN EMPIRE 
By John Mason Hart
Houston, Texas 

[This paper was delivered at the Historians Against the
War Conference held in Austin Texas Feb. 17-19, 2006,
and kindly sent to us by the author. - portside mod. ]

. . . we must guard against the acquisition of
unwarranted influence . . . by the military industrial
complex.  The potential for the disastrous rise of
misplaced power exists and will persist. 
Dwight D. Eisenhower January 17, 1961

The people of the United States must critically examine
the excessive violence exercised by their elites
against Third World nations, or face the prospect of
seeing these misdeeds endlessly repeated. The
annihilation of the Native Americans, the invasions of
Mexico, the bloody attacks on the Philippines and
Vietnam, the use of atomic bombs against Japanese
civilians, and the sanctimonious justifications for the
now over 100,000, civilian casualties in Iraq
underscore this need.

This essay sketches the development of the
financial/industrial/military complex of the United
States during the Civil War, treats its role in
establishing U.S. hegemony over Mexico and Latin
America, the beginnings of its global expansion, and
our entry into World War I, in order to understand at
least some elements of our power elite and the economic
interests that spur them to act so violently toward
people in the Third World. Today, this problem is more
important than ever for America’s future, its image
abroad, and safety at home.

When the Civil War began with the battle of Bull Run
the Union forces totaled about 37,000.  Less than two
years later the Union army at Gettysburg totaled 75,000
front line troops with another 75,000 in reserve and an
estimated 75,000 more in and around Washington, D.C.
The dramatic increase of strength was directly related
to the appointment of Thomas A. Scott as Undersecretary
of War.

Scott was president of the largest industrial firm in
the world, the Pennsylvania Railroad, and he took
charge of weapons procurement exercising his 
well-developed relationship with leading financiers and
industrialists, including Moses Taylor, John Jacob
Astor, William Dodge and Anson Phelps of the National
City Bank; Junius Morgan and Anthony Drexel of Morgan
and Drexel, and with the N.Y. financiers who enlisted
George Baker and created the First National Bank.

These men along with Scott were already integrated with
steel manufacturers such as John Griswold, a holder of
the Bessemer Patent, and shipbuilding firms such as the
Morgan Iron Works, owned by “kinsman” Charles Morgan of
New York, and the Eads Company of Saint Louis. These
manufacturers began the construction of 54 iron and
steel Monitor warships. Meanwhile Scott coordinated the
production with the leaders of the arms companies
including DuPont, Remington, Whitney, Union Metallic
Cartridge, Massachusetts Arms, Peabody Rifle, and
others. At the same time, in order to underwrite arms
orders, the financiers sold union bonds in the
northeast and Great Britain. By the second year of the
war they were buying into the major arms producers
while Remington and Union Metallic Cartridge
consolidated smaller firms.

As the ties between the northern financiers and the
arms manufacturers deepened, their British banking
counterparts joined in as passive partners creating an
alliance that would later reshape the World.  In the
short term they created the greatest war machine the
world had ever known. By 1865, over 2 million men had
served in the Union Army.

The financial and military/industrial elites even
merged through marriage. Using National City Bank and
the Remington Arms Company as an example we find a
Dodge marrying a Hartley and bringing the future
Remington president Marcellus Hartley Dodge into the
world.  Leading guests at the wedding included Taylor,
the president of National City, and Charles Stillman, a
leading investor in the bank. During the war Stillman
earned the modern-day equivalent of approximately $16
billion by shipping confederate cotton out of
northeastern Mexico to Liverpool and New York where his
largest customer was the Union Army.  It was a triumph
of capitalism!

Following the Civil War, Generals Grenville Dodge,
William Jackson Palmer, Herman Sturm, Lew Wallace,
William Rosecrans, U.S. Grant, James Garfield, and
Rutherford B. Hayes all took part in transcontinental
and Mexican railroads, giving American expansion an
especially militarist dimension. The victorious
northern elites then led U.S. expansion into Cuba,
Panama, Central America, and across the Pacific and
Atlantic Oceans.

While General Philip Sheridan led his forces against
the hopelessly outgunned western Indians, the railroad
magnates followed his path and reached into Mexico. By
the late nineteenth century Chairman James Stillman of
National City personally owned nineteen banks in Texas
alone, while Jay Gould dominated the Texas and Pacific
Railroad, J. P. Morgan and Baker controlled the
Northern Pacific, and the directors of National City
took control of the Southern Pacific. They all had
British partners. The directors of the National City,
First National, and Morgan Banks shared control of the
Union Pacific and the Mexican National Railway systems.

The financial engagement between the American economic
elite and the Third World deepened profoundly between
1865 and 1867 as U.S. bankers extended loans and arms
grants to Mexico during that nation’s war against
French occupation. By the end of the struggle the
Mexican government had incurred debts beyond reckoning
with the American financiers and arms manufacturers.

As a result President Andrew Johnson sent General
Rosecrans as Minister Plenipotentiary to Mexico and the
New York Bondholders Committee of the Mexican National
Debt hired him to represent them. In lieu of cash,
Rosecrans asked for infrastructure concessions that
included a national railroad and telegraph system with
port facilities on both coasts. The bankers understood
that control of infrastructure and natural resources
meant hegemony.

Between 1872 and 1875, after years of negotiations with
Mexican presidents Benito Juarez and Sebastian Lerdo de
Tejada, various contracts were signed ceding railroad
grants and creating the Mexican Telegraph Company.  The
new owners included the most powerful figures in
American finance and industry—the leaders of the
Pennsylvania Railroad, the founders of the fledgling
New York Central System (Vanderbilt, Morgan, Stillman,
Taylor, Baker, et.al.), and banking interests that
included the Beekmans and Roosevelts.

Following Lerdo’s election to a second term as
president in 1875, he cancelled all of the contracts
with the admonition “Better a desert between strength
and weakness.”  At that point the concessionaires
backed General Porfirio Diaz in a rebellion that
overthrew the democratically elected President. Diaz
was a prototype who set the standard for other American
backed dictators like the Duvaliers, Batistas, Marcos’,
Rhees, Pinochets, and Shahs, that followed.

The New York Bondholders, led by Taylor and Stillman,
sent Diaz to Brownsville on the Mexican border.
Attorney Charles Sterling of the law firm of Spearman
and Sterling accompanied him “in order to represent”
Stillman’s interests. Diaz received 2,000,000
recharging cartridges and other weaponry from Remington
and the Whitney Arms Company shipped to him via Ed
Morgan’s (the son of Charles Morgan) Louisiana
Steamship Line. Diaz forces raided northeastern Mexico
repeatedly in the first half of 1876 while he lived in
Stillman’s home in Brownsville.

Secretary of State Hamilton Fish initially ordered the
U.S. Army to interdict this violation of the Neutrality
Act, but then quickly backed off when he learned what
was up. During the summer of 1876, Diaz moved troops
down the Gulf Coast to Veracruz where they received a
shipment of rifles from Remington and overthrew the
Mexican government, which was denied credit for arms
purchases in New York throughout the affair.

While Mexican democracy was being overthrown in 1876
the Ten Years War (1868-1878) was underway against
Spanish rule in Cuba. Just as Stillman had housed Diaz
in Brownsville, Taylor put up Guillermo Cespedes, the
“President of the Republic of Cuba”, in one of his
Manhattan mansions during the struggle. Taylor, the
largest importer of Cuban sugar in the U.S., also
provided cash to the rebels while his affiliates at
Remington Arms shipped consignments of weapons to the
rebels via Cuban exiles in Tampa. A handful of American
elites were becoming a virtual foreign policy oligarchy
in the U.S., first gaining control of the
infrastructures of Mexico and Cuba.

After 35 years of brutal dictatorship, the leading
financiers and industrialists of the United States
controlled 90 percent of Mexico’s coastlines and
frontiers and 22 percent (100 million acres) of its
surface through 162 individuals and companies and
private properties that included enormous oil, timber
and mineral interests. Meanwhile, U.S. businessmen
owned seventy percent of all corporate enterprises and
seventy percent of the active capital. Sir Weetman
Pearson, a close friend of Stillman and Morgan, was the
only non American to own oil production. After the
Americans, European investors held positions that left
the congenial Mexican elites with perhaps 7 percent of
incorporated national assets.

Some of the American-owned estates operating in this
socio-economic order imposed from the outside used
forced labor, debt peonage, government controlled
unions, segregated housing and work places, and even
slavery in the cases of the Yucatan, the Valle
Nacional, haciendas in San Luis Potosi and Tamaulipas,
and the silver mines of the Copper Canyon.

In Mexico all of this was achieved by the American
financial elite with minimal U.S. government
participation. In contrast, the Spanish American War
provided the hegemonic objectives sought by Taylor,
Baker, the Morgans, and James Stillman and William
Rockefeller in Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Caribbean,
Panama, Central America, the Philippines and much of
the Pacific.

But there were even bigger fish to fry.

In the 1840s Taylor had envisioned the Pacific Ocean as
an “American Lake”. During the 1880s J. P. Morgan,
Baker, Stillman and Jacob Schiff of Kuhn Loeb adopted a
secret name as they pursued an avowedly imperialist
agenda. Calling themselves “The South America Group”
they aligned as junior partners with the leading
capitalists of the British Empire for investments
throughout Latin America, while on an even larger scale
the first three individuals adopted the secret name
“TRIO” for global investments with their British
imperial banking partners. The groups would include
Lord Balfour, Sir Ernest Cassell and Cecil Rhodes. 
Stillman, Baker and Morgan took five percent each on
behalf of their syndicates for a total of fifteen
percent of many British-led undertakings in Asia, the
Middle East and Africa.

The TRIO included America’s wealthiest individuals as
subscribers in the adventure, including Cyrus
McCormack, William and John D.  Rockefeller, Andrew
Carnegie, James Ben Ali Haggin, Ford Frick, Elbert H.
Gary, Henry Phipps, Cleveland Dodge, W. S. Valentine,
John Stewart, and, last names that included, Converse,
DuPont, Barney, Mills, Phelps, Hyde, Drexel, Hearst,
Vanderbilt, Whitney, and Harriman. The British, in
turn, received full opportunities to participate in
U.S., Mexican, Caribbean and Central American resources
and infrastructure.

In the first decade of the twentieth century the TRIO
and its U.S. investors continued to expand their
interests. Led by Morgan, they bought the Panama Canal
concession on April 28, 1904 from the Banque de France
for $25 million. In 1909, National City Bank director
Valentine personally took over the national debt of
Honduras for $4,900,000. Then, in 1910, Morgan took
over the national debt of Liberia and the iron
resources there for his United States Steel trust. His
International Mercantile Marine handled the transport
of ore with Baker and Stillman participating in the
enterprises. On the other side of the world, National
City dominated the Pacific Mail Steamship Company with
the participation of Baker and Morgan.

The TRIO’s greatest achievement, however, reshaped the
world.

When the guns of August roared in 1914 the British
ruling class desperately turned to their American
partners for financial support. At first it was to
stabilize the pound on Broad Street. But then, as the
setbacks of Flanders Fields and Picardy began to
decimate a generation, the British leadership called on
the TRIO for all of their resources in order to save
the situation.

The TRIO responded with loans of $436 million, $344
million and $400 million to the Bank of England and the
British government; $300 million to the French
government, and later, even $25 million to the Tsar.
After the first loan most of the cash went directly to
Remington, DuPont and other arms manufacturers to pay
for weapons and ammunition. Remington greatly enlarged
its operations, to a total of over 11,000 workers,
through refinancing provided by the TRIO, and produced
some fifty percent of the small arms ammunition
expended by the British and Americans during the war;
and, 69 percent of the rifles used by the U.S. European
Expeditionary Force.

The funds for the British initially came from the TRIO,
but they then expanded until the commitments of capital
resources were coming into their offices from banks
across the United States. Finally, Morgan Jr., who had
assumed leadership at the Morgan Bank for his deceased
father in 1913, informed President Woodrow Wilson, “the
private resources of the United States are exhausted;
it is now up to you”.

Between 1914 and 1919 the British elites paid for the
loans by surrendering vast resources at home and in the
empire. These assets included their share in the Cerro
de Pasco mines in Peru, the Republic of Panama 30 Year
Bonds, property transfers across the United States
including railroads and mining operations, the Central
Argentine Railroad, the Braden Copper Company of Chile,
the Chile Copper Company, Kissel-Kennecott of Chile,
the Penyon Syndicate in Chile, the Cuban-American Sugar
Company, the Cuban Cane Sugar Syndicate, the Cuban
Sugar Export Credit Syndicate, the Cuban Railroad, “the
$50 million Persian Government Credit,” the Burma Mines
Company (Morgan assigned Herbert Hoover to run it), the
1909 Argentine bond issue, the Government of Chile 8%
Gold Bonds, the Manitoba Sterling Debt, the Kingdom of
Belgium Six Year Notes, The International Agricultural
Corporation, and $7,500,000 in Uruguayan Bonds.

By 1919, a small group of American financiers held as
much as 25 percent of the assets of the British Empire.
Six acquisitions stood out in their importance: The
Anglo-American Oil Company, all British interests in
American banks, The Pacific Development Corporation of
China, The Asia Banking Corporation, “The Outstanding
Debt of the Persian Government” and The Anglo American
Corporation of South Africa.

The consolidations continued. In 1933, the directors of
DuPont bought out Remington. Then, in 1939, as Hitler’s
forces roared into Poland, the directors of the First
National Bank merged with National City Bank creating a
financial giant that proved crucial to DuPont-Remington
and the Financial/Military/Industrial Complex during
World War II.  During that conflict the 82,500 workers
at Remington produced 1,000,000 rifles and
16,000,000,000 cartridges.

Later, following the demise of the Soviet Union, the
Morgan directors merged their resources with those of
Chase Bank creating a second massive consolidation of
finance capital long engaged with the arms industry and
in the domination of infrastructure, productivity and
markets throughout the Third World.

Taylor’s vision of global empire has been realized, but
it is time the American people challenged the univocal
nature of U.S. foreign policy that has brought so much
grief to so many.

If we do not do that, we forfeit our democracy to a
foreign policy oligarchy and doom ourselves to watching
the misdeeds of the past repeated in the future.
===
_______________________________________________________

portside (the left side in nautical parlance) is a news,
discussion and debate service of the Committees of
Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism. It aims to
provide varied material of interest to people on the
left.

For answers to frequently asked questions:
http://www.portside.org/faq

To subscribe, unsubscribe or change settings:
http://lists.portside.org/mailman/listinfo/portside

To submit material, paste into an email and send to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (postings are moderated)

For assistance with your account:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

To search the portside archive:
https://lists.portside.org/pipermail/portside/

www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

--- End Message ---

Reply via email to