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The Hay-Herran Treaty was a treaty proposed in 1903 between the United States and Colombia. Had it been passed, it would have allowed the United States to acquire a renewable 99-year lease on a 6-mile wide strip across Panama (which was then part of Colombia) for $10,000,000 and an annual payment. * It was ratified by the United States Senate on March 14, but it was not passed by the Colombian Senate, and was defeated.

It has been considered by later observers that this happened mainly because Herran had negotiated the treaty with little government or legislative oversight, and it has also been mentioned that many of the politicians and congressmen found the amount offered to fall short, considering that the United States was willing to pay $40,000,000 for the New Panama Canal Company [http://www.mssu.edu/international/Latinam/canal.htm.

The United States government was not willing to renegotiate the treaty with Colombia or alter the amounts involved and soon gave its support, both political and military, to a planned uprising in Panama, which led to its independence and to the eventual construction of the Panama Canal.

See also


United States treaties | Tratado Hay-Herran | The Banana Wars

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Hay-Herran Treaty".

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