Greenland and Denmark,
Prepare Your Defenses!
August 19, 2019
Both Denmark and Greenland are reacting negatively to
President Trump’s expressed interest in purchasing Greenland, an autonomous
country within the Kingdom of Denmark. Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederikson
called Trump’s idea “absurd.” A spokesman for Greenland’s premier Kim Kielson,
stated, “Greenland is not for sale.”
Is that the end of the controversy? Not
necessarily. Just ask the Mexican people. After their government rejected an
offer by U.S. officials to purchase the northern half of their country, they
ended up losing it anyway through U.S. military force.
In 1845, newly elected U.S. President
James Polk made an offer to Mexico to purchase what amounted to the states of
California, New Mexico, Arizona, and Texas. The previous year Texas had been
annexed by the United States as the nation’s 28th state, but the annexation had
not been agreed to by Mexico, which continued to claim Texas as part of Mexico.
Mexico turned down Polk’s offer, but
Polk would not be dissuaded. Instead, he began looking for an opportunity to go
to war with Mexico, which, if the U.S. was victorious, would permit the U.S.
government to simply steal the land it was trying to purchase.
Polk’s challenge was to find a way to
make it look like it was Mexico, rather than the United States, that started
the war. That way, Polk could claim that the United States was simply defending
itself against an aggressive power and then claim his booty as part of a treaty
that would end the war.
In 1836, Texas had declared its
independence from Mexico. Following the defeat of a Texas force at the Alamo in
San Antonio to Mexican dictator Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana, Gen. Sam Houston’s
forces defeated Santa Ana’s forces at San Jacinto. However, Mexico never agreed
to Texas independence, instead of contending that Texas remained part of Mexico.
Moreover, at the time of the U.S.
annexation of Texas there was still a dispute over the southern border of
Texas. The U.S. government claimed that it was the Rio Grande. Mexico claimed
that it was the Nueces River, which was much further north.
Seizing upon the disputed claims, Polk
sent U.S. military forces into the disputed territory in the hope that they
would be attacked by Mexican forces. It was a reasonable hope, given that the
Polk’s forces would be on territory that Mexico was claiming was Mexico.
Polk’s strategy worked brilliantly. In
1846, Mexican forces attacked a U.S. army outpost in the disputed territory,
killing 12 American soldiers and capturing 52. Polk declared that Mexico had
invaded the United States and secured a congressional declaration of war
against Mexico. (This was when U.S. presidents were still complying with the
requirement in the U.S. Constitution that prohibits the president from waging
war without a congressional declaration of war.)
The outcome of the war was never in
doubt. Mexico was an impoverished nation that was being ruled by a
crisis-ridden dictatorial regime. The United States, by contrast, was a wealthy
and powerful nation with a stable government and a professional army.
In 1848 the war came to an end with the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which provided that Mexico would cede what
amounted to about the entire northern half of its country. That’s how the
United States ended up absorbing the lands encompassed by the states of
California, New Mexico, Arizona, and Texas.
At least Polk was generous. Even though
his army had won the war, he was still willing to pay Mexico some money for the
land that he was seizing from them. The U.S. government agreed to pay Mexico
the sum of $15 million ($434 million today), which was somewhat less than half
of what Polk was offering before his war. The U.S. also agreed to assume $3.25
million ($94 million today) in debts that the Mexican government owed the U.S.
citizens.
The U.S. takeover of the northern half
of Mexico meant absorbing centuries of Mexican law, history, customs, and city
and street names. Moreover, it included immediately making all Mexican citizens
in the newly acquired land, whose language was Spanish, American citizens. It
was an action that would continue to impact Americans into the 21st century,
given the modern-day American concern about Mexicans illegally crossing the
U.S.-Mexico border to enter lands that once belonged to their country as well
as concerns that Hispanics are taking over America.
Would President Trump do the same thing
to acquire Greenland that Polk did to acquire the northern half of Mexico? Who
knows? But Greenland and Denmark would be wise to prepare their defenses, just
in case.
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