![]() ![]() Henry Cabot Lodge, the consummate Washington insider Theodore Roosevelt, who became Assistant Secretary of the Navy and then vice president and the powerful publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst, proprietor of the New York Journal. Was this even constitutional, and had not founder George Washington himself warned against “the mischiefs of foreign intrigue”? Using the excerpts of speeches and editorials, Kinzer skillfully extracts an immediate sense of the heated debate that gripped the country, centering around the jingoist triumvirate of Massachusetts Sen. ![]() During a “ravenous fifty-five day spasm” in the summer of 1898, the United States “asserted control” over these far-flung nations-totaling 11 million people-by handily defeating the Spanish fleet and thus acquiring rather suddenly an overseas empire. ![]() In this engaging, well-focused history, Kinzer ( The Brothers: John Foster Dulles, Allen Dulles, and Their Secret World, 2013, etc.), a former New York Times bureau chief in Turkey, Germany, and Nicaragua and Boston Globe Latin America correspondent, plunges into the heated conversations in Washington and the tabloids over American expansionist designs on Hawaii, Cuba, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Guam at the turn of the 19th century. ![]() A timely work on the vociferous sides taken over the Spanish-American War of 1898-and how that history relates to the ongoing debate regarding American imperialism. ![]()
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