greater contact with both ends of Eurasia. But the distance will still be great, and
that will be the “cause of enormous expense.” Though the real effect of the
Panama Canal will be the transformation of the Caribbean from a “terminus” and
“place of local traffic” into “one of the great highways of the world,” as the ships
of not only the United States, but of European nations, transit the canal en route
to the Pacific. With this, he says, “it will not be so easy as heretofore” for the
United States “to stand aloof from international complications.”
10
Geography, which makes the isthmian canal possible in the first place, also
necessitates closer ties between the United States and its Central American and
Caribbean neighbors in order to protect the canal and control the seas nearby. By
making America physically closer to Asia, and more involved with Europe
through shipping, the canal would help effect the eventual enfeeblement of
isolationism and the consequent rise of a muscular liberal internationalism in the
corridors of power in Washington. But it certainly wasn’t destiny, despite the
commanding role of geography. For the Panama Canal was the upshot of several
phenomena all involving human agency: the Spanish-American War, the great
power politics that ultimately denied any European nation a role in the project,
the backroom deal-making that resulted in the choice of Panama over Nicaragua,
the conquest of disease in the Central American tropics, and above all immense
labor and ingenuity. Once again, geography provides the backdrop for what
human choice arranges.
And Mahan clearly seeks to influence human choice. In his thumping book,
propitiously published the same year that the U.S. Army consolidated the
American continent with a virtual final (if hideous) victory in the Indian Wars,
and only a few years before the United States would gain, as a result of war,
Spain’s empire in the Western Pacific as well as dominance in the Caribbean,
Mahan issues a call to arms through global sea power. Mahan is not so much a
geographer as a historian and tactician. He represents an imperialistic sensibility
which carries with it obvious geographical implications. This is the decisive
explanation for Spykman’s high regard for him. Not that Spykman was an
enthusiast of conquest; only that he intuitively grasped, as Mahan did, that
America would have no choice but to engage in worldwide power struggles
because of its own geographically privileged position in the Western
Hemisphere, which gave it influence in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Mahan, as one would expect, had enemies. Sir Norman Angell, in an engaging
and spirited defense of pacifism,
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