Monday, January 20, 2020
Cuba :: essays research papers
 The weeks that have elapsed since that fatal event of  February 15th have been making history in a manner  highly creditable to the American government and to  our citizenship. Captain Sigsbee, the commander of the  Maine, had promptly telegraphed his desire that  judgment should be suspended until investigation had  been made. The investigation was started at once, and  75 million Americans have accordingly suspended  judgment in the face of a great provocation. For it  must be remembered that to suppose the destruction of  the Maine an ordinary accident and not due to any  external agency or hostile intent was, under all the  circumstances, to set completely at defiance the law  of probabilities.   It is not true that battleships are in the habit of  blowing themselves up. When all the environing facts  were taken into consideration, it was just about as  probable that the Maine had been blown up by some  accident where no hostile motive was involved, as that  the reported assassination of President Barrios of  Guatemala, a few days previously, had really been a  suicide. . . .   It has been known perfectly well that Spanish hatred  might at any time manifest itself by attempts upon the  life of the American representative at Havana, Consul  General Fitzhugh Lee. This danger was felt especially  at the time of the Havana riots in January, and it  seems to have had something to do with the sending of  the Maine to Havana Harbor. The Spaniards themselves,  however, looked upon the sending of the Maine as a  further aggravation of the long series of their just  grievances against the United States. They regarded  the presence of the Maine at Havana as a menace to  Spanish sovereignty in the island and as an  encouragement to the insurgents. A powerful American  fleet lay at Key West and the Dry Tortugas, with steam  up ready to follow the Maine to the harbor of Havana  at a few hours' notice. All this was intensely hateful  to the Spaniards, and particularly to the Army  officers at Havana who had sympathized with General  Weyler's policy and who justly regarded General  Weyler's recall to Spain as due to the demand of  President McKinley. The American pretense that the  Maine was making a visit of courtesy seemed to these  Spaniards a further example of Anglo-Saxon hypocrisy.   That this intense bitterness against the presence of  the Maine was felt among the military and official  class in Havana was perfectly well known to Captain  Sigsbee, his staff, and all his crew; and they were  not unaware of the rumors and threats that means would  be found to destroy the American ship. It was,  furthermore, very generally supposed that the Spanish    					  Cuba  ::  essays research papers   The weeks that have elapsed since that fatal event of  February 15th have been making history in a manner  highly creditable to the American government and to  our citizenship. Captain Sigsbee, the commander of the  Maine, had promptly telegraphed his desire that  judgment should be suspended until investigation had  been made. The investigation was started at once, and  75 million Americans have accordingly suspended  judgment in the face of a great provocation. For it  must be remembered that to suppose the destruction of  the Maine an ordinary accident and not due to any  external agency or hostile intent was, under all the  circumstances, to set completely at defiance the law  of probabilities.   It is not true that battleships are in the habit of  blowing themselves up. When all the environing facts  were taken into consideration, it was just about as  probable that the Maine had been blown up by some  accident where no hostile motive was involved, as that  the reported assassination of President Barrios of  Guatemala, a few days previously, had really been a  suicide. . . .   It has been known perfectly well that Spanish hatred  might at any time manifest itself by attempts upon the  life of the American representative at Havana, Consul  General Fitzhugh Lee. This danger was felt especially  at the time of the Havana riots in January, and it  seems to have had something to do with the sending of  the Maine to Havana Harbor. The Spaniards themselves,  however, looked upon the sending of the Maine as a  further aggravation of the long series of their just  grievances against the United States. They regarded  the presence of the Maine at Havana as a menace to  Spanish sovereignty in the island and as an  encouragement to the insurgents. A powerful American  fleet lay at Key West and the Dry Tortugas, with steam  up ready to follow the Maine to the harbor of Havana  at a few hours' notice. All this was intensely hateful  to the Spaniards, and particularly to the Army  officers at Havana who had sympathized with General  Weyler's policy and who justly regarded General  Weyler's recall to Spain as due to the demand of  President McKinley. The American pretense that the  Maine was making a visit of courtesy seemed to these  Spaniards a further example of Anglo-Saxon hypocrisy.   That this intense bitterness against the presence of  the Maine was felt among the military and official  class in Havana was perfectly well known to Captain  Sigsbee, his staff, and all his crew; and they were  not unaware of the rumors and threats that means would  be found to destroy the American ship. It was,  furthermore, very generally supposed that the Spanish    					    
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