For nearly two centuries interaction between Spain and the
United States was characterized by cultural and political
differences, mutually perceived conflicts of national interest, and
an asymmetry of power. Botero identifies the period from 1945 to
1953 as a watershed in relations, as the two countries moved from a
hostile posture towards a friendly rapprochement. He shows why, in
spite of political differences, mutual distrust, and reciprocal
grievances, both governments found it in their best interest to
reach an agreement on the issue of European defense. This study
documents, for the first time, the extraordinary lengths to which
the Franco regime was prepared to go to improve its relations with
the United States.
Beginning with the Spanish monarchy's decision to assist the
thirteen colonies in their struggle for independence, Botero
examines treaty negotiations in 1795 and 1821 that involved Spain's
territorial possessions in North America. He then looks at how
friction over events in Cuba culminated in the Spanish-American War
of 1898. Several decades of mutual disengagement followed until the
two nations again clashed over the early pro-Axis sympathy of the
Franco regime. The fear of Soviet aggression would finally unite
the two in the post-World War II era with a bilateral agreement to
establish military bases in Spain as part of strategic arrangements
to defend Western Europe.
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