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For other treaties of Paris, see Treaty of Paris. The Treaty of Paris of 1898 was signed on December 10, 1898, and ended the Spanish-American War.
[edit] BackgroundArticle V of a peace protocol entered into between United States and Spain on August 12, 1898 read as follows:
The composition of the American commission was somewhat unusual in that three of its members were Senators (meaning, as many newspapers pointed out, that at a later date they would vote on the ratification of their own negotiations).[2] The American delegation members were:
On September 16, U.S. President McKinley issued secret written instructions to his emissaries:
The Spanish commission included the Spanish diplomats Eugenio Montero Ríos, Buenaventura de Abarzuza, José de Garnica, Wenceslao Ramírez de Villa-Urrutia, Rafael Cerero, as well as a French diplomat, Jules Cambon. [edit] NegotiationsThe American delegation arrived in Paris on September 26, 1898. The negotiations were conducted in a suite of rooms at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. At the first session on October 1, the Spanish demanded that before the talks get underway the city of Manila, which had been captured by the Americans a few hours after the signing of the peace protocol in Washington, be returned to Spanish authority. The Americans refused to consider this and for the moment it was pursued no further.[5] For almost a month, negotiations revolved around Cuba, which Spain was more than willing to cede to the U.S., along with the Cuban national debt of four hundred million dollars. The Teller Amendment to the U.S. Declaration of War with Spain, however, made it impossible for the U.S. to accept the island, much less its financial obligations.[5] The Spanish delegations threatened at one point to break off negotiations and resume the war, but the U.S. would not budge on this point. Eventually, it was agreed that Cuba was to be delivered to the Cubans and the four hundred million dollar liability returned to Spain. It was also agreed that Spain would cede Guam and Puerto Rico to America.[6] The negotiators then turned to the question of the Philippines. Spanish negotiators were determined to hang onto all they could; hoping to cede only Mindanao and perhaps the Sulu Islands.[6] On the American side, Chaiman Day had once recommended the acquisition of only naval base in Manila as a "hitching post".[7] Others had recommended retaining just the island of Luzon. In discussions with its advisors, though, the commission concluded that Spain, if it retained part of the Philippines, would be likely to sell that part to another European power and that this would likely be troublesome for America.[8] On 25 November, the American Commission cabled President McKinley for explicit instructions. Their cable crossed one from McKinley saying that duty left him no choice but to demand the entire archipelago, the following morning, another cable from McKinley arrived, saying
On November 4, the Spanish delegation formally rejected the American demand, and Spain's Prime Minister Sagasta backed up the commission. As the specter of collapse of the negotiations grew, there were mutters about resumption of the war. U.S. election results on November 8, however, cut McKinley's Republican majority in Congress less than had been anticipated. The American delegation took heart from this, and Frye unveiled a plan of offering Spain ten or twenty million dollars for the islands.[10] After some discussion, the American delegation offered twenty million dollars on November 21 and requested an answer within two days. Rios said angrily that he could reply at once, but the American delegation had already left the conference table. When the two sides met again, Queen-Regent Maria Christina had cabled her acceptance. Montero Rios recited the formal reply:
Work on the final draft of the treaty began on November 30. It was signed on December 10, 1898. The next step was legislative ratification. In Madrid, the Cortes rejected it but the Queen Regent signed it, empowered to do so by a clause in the Spanish constitution. [edit] U.S. Senate debate on ratification of the treatyDuring the Senate debate to ratify the treaty, Senators George Frisbie Hoar and George Graham Vest were outspoken opponents of the treaty.
Some anti-expansionists stated that the treaty committed the United States to a course of empire and violated the most basic tenets of the United States Constitution. They argued that neither the Congress nor the President had the right to pass laws governing colonial peoples who were not represented by law-makers. Senate Expansionists who supported the treaty said:
Expansionists said that the Constitution applied only to the citizens of the United States. This idea was later supported by the Supreme Court in the Insular Cases. As the Senate debate continued, Andrew Carnegie and former President Grover Cleveland petitioned the Senate to reject the treaty. [edit] U.S. ratificationThe controversial treaty was approved on February 6, 1899 by a vote 57 to 27, only one vote more than the two-thirds majority required.[12] Only two Republicans voted against ratification, George Frisbie Hoar of Massachusetts and Eugene Pryor Hale of Maine. [edit] Treaty provisionsThe Treaty of Paris provided that Cuba would become independent from Spain but the U.S. Congress made sure it would be under U.S. control through the Platt Amendment. Specifically, Spain relinquished all claim of sovereignty over and title to Cuba. Upon Cuba's evacuation by Spain, it was to be occupied by the United States, and the United States would assume and discharge any obligations that under international law could result from the fact of its occupation. The Treaty also assured that Spain would cede to the United States the island of Puerto Rico and other islands then under Spanish sovereignty in the West Indies, as well as the island of Guam in the Marianas or Ladrones. The Treaty specified that Spain would cede to the United States the archipelago known as the Philippine Islands, and comprehending the islands lying within a specified line. In accordance with the treaty, Spain:
The defeat put an end to the Spanish Empire in America and, one year later in the Pacific Ocean (after the German–Spanish Treaty (1899)), and marked the beginning of an age of United States colonial power. [edit] See also
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