The United States have rich and complicated diplomatic histories.
Although some of their key figures at the time of their founding,
such as George Washington and Thomas Paine, envisioned a nation
separated diplomatically from the wars of Europe, the United States
soon became parts of a conflict between France and Britain during
the Napoleonic wars.
Timeline of United States diplomatic history
1776- Declaration of Independence
- written by Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams,
Robert Livingston, and Roger Sherman.
1778- Treaty of Alliance (1778)-
As a result of Battle of Saratoga, France and US agreed to come
to each others aid in event of British attack from the present
time and forever, abrogated in late 1799 after XYZ Affair.
1789- Jay-Gardoqui Treaty- Spain's
exclusive right to navigate Mississippi River guaranteed for 30
years, Spain's European and West Indian ports open to American
shipping, not ratified under Articles of Confederation.
1795- Jay Treaty- Promised British
subjects would leave Great Lakes region within a year, did not
deal with impressment nor Loyalists debts. Accepted by Senate.
1795- Treaty of Madrid - Establishes
boundaries with the Spanish colonies of Florida and Louisiana
and guarantees navigation rights on the Mississippi River.
1796 - Treaty of Tripoli - A peace
treaty between the United States and the Barbary State of Tripoli.
Notable for the confirmation by the U.S. that the American government
was non-religious in origin and practice. Violated in 1801 by
the Basha of Tripoli which led to the Tripolitanian War.
early 1800s- Barbary Wars- Algiers,
Morocco, Tripoli, and Tunis require US to pay protection money,
when Tripoli increased sum, Thomas Jefferson sent Stephen Decatur
and United States Navy to Mediterranean Sea, where they forced
abandonment of tribute. Other states demanded tribute until 1815
when Decatur again prevailed.
1803- Louisiana Purchase Treaty-
Robert Livingston the minister to France offered to purchase New
Orleans, Napoleon counteroffered with the whole territory, and
for $15,000,000 US agrees to buy Louisiana Territory and incorporate
into US.
1814- Treaty of Ghent- ended War
of 1812 providing status quo ante bellum, but as Napoleonic Wars
ended, impressment also ended.
1819- Adams-Onis Treaty- Spain ceded
Florida to US for $5,000,000 (after Florida was invaded by Andrew
Jackson with unclear approval of President Monroe on the pretense
of suppressing Seminole Indian raids), US agreed to assume claims
against Spain, US gave up claims to Texas.
1823- Monroe Doctrine- British Foreign
Minister Canning proposed US join England in stating that European
powers not be permitted further American colonization. Monroe
states on December 2 as independent American Policy.
1837- Caroline Affair- a band of
Canadian rebels took refuge on Navy island on Canadian side Niagara
River, US sympathizers supplied them with aid via steamboat Caroline.
On December 29, Canadian forces crossed to US and set Caroline
ablaze. May 29, 1838 US forces burned British steamer Sir Robert
Peel while in US.
1838- Aroostook War- disagreement
over Northern Boundary of Maine resulted in troops being called
on both sides, Martin Van Buren arranged truce while a commission
was established.
1839- Amistad case - Spanish ship
Amistad left Havana, Cuba bound for Puerto Principe, Cuba with
54 recently captured Africans, who broke free and killed the captain.
Two passengers whose lives were spared deceived the Africans and
sailed the ship to Long Island, where it was recaptured by the
United States Navy, delivered to Connecticut, and libeled by the
commander of the navy vessel. Various admiralty claims were made,
including claims by the Spanish crown, alleging that the Africans
were slaves, but the Africans were adjudicated free men by the
district court. The district court's decision was affirmed by
the circuit court of appeals, and further affirmed by the United
States Supreme Court.
1842 - Webster-Ashburton Treaty-settled
Maine New Brunswick border and rest of US Canadian border, settling
Aroostook War and Caroline Affair.
1848- Treaty of Guadelupe Hidalgo-
settled Mexican-American War, Rio Grande as border of Texas, Territory
of New Mexico rest of west ceded to US, California ceded, US paid
Mexico $15,000,000 and assumed $3,250,000 liability against Mexico.
1850- Clayton-Bulwer Treaty- US
and Britain agreed both nations were not to colonize or control
any Central American republic, neither nation would seek exclusive
control of Isthmian canal, if canal built protected by both nations
for neutrality and security. Any canal built open to all nations
on equal terms.
1853- Gadsden Purchase- Purchase
of 30,000 square miles (78,700 km²) south of Gila River for
$10,000,000 for purpose of Railroad line pass through Rockies.
1854- Kanagawa Treaty- Millard Fillmore
sent Matthew Perry to Tokyo, he arrived in 1853 and delivered
letter, returned next year with seven warships and treaty signed
opening two Japanese ports and guaranteeing safety of shipwrecked
US seamen.
1864- Maximilian Affair- in violation
of Monroe Doctrine, French Emperor Napoleon III placed Austrian
Archduke Maximilian on Mexican throne, US in Civil War and could
not respond. Benito Juárez deposed Maximilian in 1867.
1867- Alaska Purchase- Secretary
of State William Seward purchases Alaska from Russia for $7,200,000,
ridiculed at the time as Sewards Folly or Icebox.
1868 - Treaty on Naturalization
with North German Confederation marked first recognition by a
European power of the right of its subjects to become naturalized
US citizens.
1868- Burlingame Treaty- established
formal friendly relations with China and placed them on Most Favored
Nation status, Chinese immigration encouraged. Reversed in 1882
Chinese Exclusion Act.
1872- Alabama Claims- during United
States Civil War, Confederate States of America raider CSS Alabama
built in Britain, US claimed direct and collateral damage against
Britain, awarded $15,500,000 by international tribunal.
1891- Baltimore Crisis- Secretary
of State James Blaine attempted to aid government of Chile in
its unsuccessful attempt to quell a rebellion. USS Charleston
seized rebel ship, in Valparaíso, two sailors from USS
Baltimore were killed. The new Chilean government rejects protests,
after Benjamin Harrison sends message to Congress, Chile apologized
and paid $75,000.
1898- DeLome Letter- in private
letter to friend, Spanish minister wrote disparagingly of President
William McKinley, letter stolen from Post Office in Havana and
released by Cuban revolutionists.
1901- Hay-Pauncefote Treaty- US
reached agreement with British Foreign Minister nullifying Clayton-Bulwer
Treaty of 1850 in return for guarantee of open passage for any
nation through canal.
1902- Drago Doctrine- Foreign Minister
of Argentina announced policy that no European power could use
force against American nation to collect debt, supplanted in 1904
by Roosevelt Corollary to Monroe Doctrine.
1903- Big Stick Diplomacy- Theodore
Roosevelt says speak softly and carry a big stick, applied to
assistance of Province of Panama's independence movement from
Colombia.
1903- Hay-Herran Treaty- with Colombian
minister, US acquired renewable 99 year lease on 6 mile wide strip
across Panama for 10,000,000 and annual payment. Ratified by US
but not by Colombian Senate.
1903- Hay-Bunau Varilla Treaty -
after Hay-Herran Treaty failed, same treaty passed with Panamanian
representative, leased strip of land increased to 10 miles (16
km) wide.
1906- Algeciras Conference- Met
in Spain at Algeciras with a representative of Theodore Roosevelt
mediating the First Moroccan Crisis between France and Germany,
essentially in French favor.
1914- ABC Powers- Argentina, Brazil,
Chile met in 1914 to avoid a US Mexican War over Veracruz incident.
1915- RMS Lusitania sunk off Irish
coast by submarine under control of Captain Schweiger. The British
passenger liner contained troops and munitions as well as passengers.
128 Americans were killed.
1917- Lansing-Ishii Agreement- US
recognized Japan had special interests in China, particularly
in contiguous territory, US had objected to Japan assuming German
Asian territories.
1918- Fourteen Points- statement
of US War aims by Woodrow Wilson, served as basis for Treaty of
Versailles.
1919- League of Nations- Agreed
to at Versailles, but US Senate did not permit American entry.
1928- Kellogg-Briand Pact- multilateral
treaty outlawing War by moral force of 60 signatory nations.
1933- Montevideo Conference- Franklin
Roosevelt declared US opposition to armed intervention in inter
American affairs.
1941- Atlantic Charter- Conferences
aboard warships in Placentia Bay off Argentia, Newfoundland between
FDR and Churchill resulted in (1) no territorial gains sought
by US or UK, (2) territorial adjustments must conform to people
involved, (3) people have right to choose own govt. (4) trade
barriers lowered, (5) there must be disarmament, (6) there must
be freedom from want and fear (4 Freedoms of FDR), (7) there must
be freedom of the seas, (8) there must be an association of nations.
1943- Cairo Conference- Franklin
Roosevelt, Winston Churchill and Chiang Kai-Shek met to make decisions
about postwar Asia: Japan returns all territory, Korea independent.
1943- Casablanca Conference- Franklin
Roosevelt, Winston Churchill met to plan European strategy. Unconditional
Surrender of axis demanded, USSR aided, invasion of Sicily and
Italy's "soft underbelly" planned.
1944- United Nations Monetary and Financial
Conference- in July in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire; International
Monetary Fund and International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(World Bank) created to aid nations devastated by World War II
and stabilize the international monetary system.
1944- Dumbarton Oaks Conference-
in August in Washington, DC mansion, United Nations was formulated,
followed up by San Francisco Conference, Security Council veto
powers established.
1947- Cold War- Referred to hostility
between formerly allied nations after World War II, term coined
by Herbert Bayard Swope in speech for Bernard Baruch at Columbia,
South Carolina on April 16.
1947- General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade- Signed in Geneva by 23 nations including US, membership
has since increased, for purpose of eliminating trade barriers
of all kinds on industrial and agricultural goods.
1948- Berlin Blockade- imposed June
24 by Soviet Union blocking traffic into western sectors of Berlin,
Operation Vittles airlifted aid into city, Blockade lifted May
12, 1949.
1949- The United States along with
eleven other nations signes the North Atlantic
Treaty, creating NATO, a military alliance with the purpose
of countering the USSR and its allies.
1952- ANZUS Treaty- Treaty united
Australia, US and New Zealand in defensive regional pact, resulted
from Korean War.
1954- Baghdad Pact- Central Treaty
Organization (or CENTO) initiated by John Foster Dulles, members
were Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, and Turkey, aid from US.
1957- Eisenhower Doctrine- stated
US would use armed force upon request of imminent or actual aggression,
applied in Lebanon that year successfully.
1961- Alliance for Progress- Agreement
extended economic assistance to Latin American nations in exchange
for land and tax reform, more democratic govt., and greater stability.
1961- Bay of Pigs- April 17 trained
Cuban refugees invaded Cuba and were defeated because of lack
of U.S. air support
1961- Berlin Crisis- Soviets give
East Germany control over East Berlin, in August the Berlin Wall
is built to stem wave of refugees, John F. Kennedy says "Ich
bin ein Berliner" to thousands of cheering West Berliners.
1962- Cuban Missile Crisis- John
F. Kennedy on October 22 announced that there existed Soviet missiles
in Cuba and demanded their removal while imposing an air sea blockade.
Nikita Khrushchev sent two letters, one belligerent one conciliatory
to Kennedy, Kennedy ignores belligerent letter and missiles withdrawn
on condition that US won't invade Cuba, Kennedy demanded onsite
inspection, this was not allowed.
1963- Partial Test Ban Treaty-
US and USSR agreed not to conduct nuclear tests in space, in the
atmosphere or underwater. Underground tests permitted, signed
by 100 nations, not France or People's Republic of China.
1978- Camp David Accords (1978)-
in August Anwar Sadat, Menachem Begin, and Jimmy Carter met to
determine land for peace exchange in Israel.