His latest plans involve the more private spaces of the #WhiteHouse, in the second-floor presidential residence. The #TreatyRoom —which is separate from the Indian Treaty Room in the Eisenhower Executive Office Bldg—is one of the most #historic rooms in the White House. Presidents Ulysses S. Grant & William McKinley used it as a Cabinet room, & it was where the #SpanishAmericanWar peace protocol of 1898, & the #NuclearTestBan treaty of 1963, were signed.

#law #landmark #preservation #UShistory

History lesson for y'all (MAGA) cheering on an overthrow of the Cuban government. The "independence" we promised was always wrapped in our own interests.

1854: The Ostend Manifesto. A secret document suggesting that if Spain wouldn't sell Cuba, the US should take it by force. Why? Southern expansionists wanted to turn Cuba into a new slave state.

1868–1878: The Ten Years War. Cubans fought for independence from Spain. The US refused to recognize them, preferring "stability" and trade over Cuban freedom.

1896–1897: The Reconcentración Horror. Spanish General Valeriano "The Butcher" Weyler forced the rural population into concentration camps. ~400,000 Cubans died of starvation and disease. The US used this tragedy as the moral "in" for the Spanish-American War.

April 1898: The Teller Amendment. To prove we weren't just land grabbing, Congress passed a pinky swear claiming the US had no intention of exercising sovereignty over Cuba and would leave once it was "pacified."

December 1898: The Treaty of Paris. Spain officially gave up Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines. The U.S. began a military occupation of Cuba that lasted almost four years.

1901: The Platt Amendment. This is the betrayal. The US forced Cuba to write it into their own Constitution as a condition for the US military leaving. It gave the US the legal right to intervene in Cuban affairs at will and established the naval base at Guantanamo Bay.

May 20, 1902: "Independence." The US withdrew its troops, but Cuba was left as a "protectorate," independent on paper, but tethered to U.S. policy until 1934.

1934: The Good Neighbor Policy. Under FDR, the US repealed the Platt Amendment, giving up its "legal" right to invade. The Catch? We kept the lease on Guantanamo Bay indefinitely and shifted from military control to economic dominance, backing "stable" dictators like Batista to protect U.S. sugar interests.

1952–1958: The US backed the brutal Batista dictatorship because he kept Cuba open for business for the Mafia and US sugar companies.

1960–Present: The Longest Embargo in History. After the 1959 Revolution nationalized US property, the U.S. shifted to "economic warfare."

2026: We are currently seeing an energy blockade so severe it has paralyzed the island's hospitals and schools. 120+ years after we "promised" independence, we are still using the island as a geopolitical chessboard.

When we talk about "independence" in this region, we have to look at the strings we've been pulling for 170 years.

#AntiWar #OffTheList #CubaBlockade #NoMasBloqueo #Cuba2026 #CubanHistory #USHistory #USImperialism #History #USPol #USA #Cuba #SpanishAmericanWar #ForeignPolicy

Today in Labor History February 15, 1898: The battleship USS Maine exploded in Havana harbor, Cuba. 274 crew members died. Some US Navy officers believed that the explosion was caused by a fire in the coal bunker, not by a Spanish mine. However, spurred on by propaganda in the Yellow Press, the U.S. used the incident to justify declaring war on Spain. 385 U.S. soldiers and nearly 800 Spanish soldiers died in the Spanish-American war. And the U.S. gained Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines as de facto colonies from Spain. The war also precipitated U.S. involvement in the Philippine Revolution and the Philippine-American War. Up to 6,000 Americans and 12,000-20,000 Filipinos died in that war. However, as many as 1 million Filipino civilians died from famine and disease during the genocidal U.S. occupation.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #colonialism #imperialism #SpanishAmericanWar #Revolution #cuba #havana #propaganda #journalism #genocide #philippines #puertorico #guam

The cruiser #USSMaine, which was obsolete by the time it was launched in 1890, exploded in #Havana harbour on #ThisDayInHistory in 1898. The explosion was internal, from its own coal bunkers, but the US blamed Spain & launched a war of colonial expansion, the #SpanishAmericanWar.

#NelsonDenis talks about his 2015 classic, #WarAgainstAllPuertoRicans.

The book focuses on the 1950 #JayuyaUprising, the product of a half-century of the United States' spoliation of the island and its people following the #SpanishAmericanWar.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdx-v-HwMgk
#PuertoRico #PortoRico #PedroAlbizuCampos #UShistory #LatinAmericanHistory #historyOfTheAmericas #colonialViolence #books @bookstodon

The Radical Imagination Imagining War Against All Puerto Ricans

YouTube
US troops left #Cuba on #ThisDayInHistory in 1909, having occupied it since the 1898 conclusion of the #SpanishAmericanWar. It kept the #GuantanamoBayNavalBase, 'leased' since 1903 for a pittance. Cuba has demanded its return since 1959, correctly noting it was taken by force.
American Prestige | E227 - A New History of the Americas, Pt. 2 w/ Greg Grandin

To the people of Greenland who are considering selling their land to Trump —- read this and think very hard…

“Sold Like Slaves, $2 Per Head”

https://opinion.inquirer.net/137553/sold-like-slaves-2-per-head

#philippines #Spain #USA #imperialism #spanishamericanwar

Sold like slaves, $2 per head

The month of February 1899 was a critical period in the history of our nation. It was on Feb. 6 of that year that the Treaty of Paris ending the Spanish-American War was ratified by the US Senate. It

INQUIRER.net

Today in Labor History February 15, 1898: The battleship USS Maine exploded in Havana harbor, Cuba. 274 crew members died. Some US Navy officers believed that the explosion was caused by a fire in the coal bunker, not by a Spanish mine. However, spurred on by propaganda in the Yellow Press, the U.S. used the incident to justify declaring war on Spain. 385 U.S. soldiers and nearly 800 Spanish soldiers died in the Spanish-American war. And the U.S. gained Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines as de facto colonies from Spain. The war also precipitated U.S. involvement in the Philippine Revolution and the Philippine-American War. Up to 6,000 Americans and 12,000-20,000 Filipinos died in that war. However, as many as 1 million Filipino civilians died from famine and disease during the genocidal U.S. occupation.

#WorkingClass #LaborHistory #colonialism #imperialism #SpanishAmericanWar #PhilippineRevolution #cuba #havana #propaganda #journalism #genocide #philippines #puertorico #guam