Analysis: Address Delivered by the Secretary of State
The address delivered by Secretary of State Cordell Hull at the National Press Club outlines the American government's stance on international affairs during a period of rising global tensions in the late 1930s. Hull emphasized the United States' commitment to peace and expressed strong opposition to territorial expansion through force, highlighting concerns over a wave of international lawlessness that threatened to destabilize the post-World War I order. He articulated a vision of an international community governed by law, contrasting it with the "international anarchy" that could lead to another catastrophic conflict.
Hull addressed the escalating situation in East Asia, particularly focusing on Japan's aggressive actions against China, which had already sparked a conflict in 1937. His remarks captured the broader context of militaristic and fascist expansion in Europe and Asia, yet he refrained from explicitly naming the aggressor nations, opting instead for a more diplomatic approach. He also discussed the failures of international institutions like the League of Nations and underscored the need for economic cooperation among nations to promote peace. Ultimately, Hull advocated for a balanced foreign policy that would prepare the United States for potential military conflict while maintaining a strong commitment to international law and order.
Analysis: Address Delivered by the Secretary of State
Date: March 12, 1938
Author: Cordell Hull
Genre: address
Summary Overview
In an address delivered to the National Press Club, Secretary of State Cordell Hull stated the position of the American government on international affairs, stressing the United States' support of peace and opposition to territorial expansion by force. He portrayed the world as being threatened by a rising tide of international lawlessness, avoiding naming the specific powers involved. Hull set forth a vision of an international community governed by law as an alternative to the “international anarchy” that would inevitably lead to the outbreak of World War II, less than twenty years after World War I.
Defining Moment
By the late 1930s, the post–World War I international order was breaking up, as rising powers—from minor members of the victorious coalition, such as Italy and Japan, to defeated powers, such as Germany—were increasingly taking an aggressive role on the international stage. For many Americans, the most worrisome international situation was in East Asia. Years of Japanese aggression against China had culminated in the outbreak of war between the two countries in 1937. American sympathies were with the Chinese, and it was the policy of the American government to oppose Japanese expansionism. Friction between the two countries was on the rise. The Japanese even attacked an American vessel in China, the Panay, late in 1937, although they claimed the attack had been a mistake and paid the United States an indemnity.
By 1938, Japanese aggression also fit into a larger global picture of the aggression of militaristic and fascist powers, including Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy. Under dictator Benito Mussolini, Italy had invaded and conquered Ethiopia in 1935 and 1936, and Germany and Italy together had intervened in the Spanish Civil War to support fascist leader Francisco Franco, while Western democracies had done little or nothing to support the legitimate government of the Spanish Republic. By the time of Hull's speech, the war had clearly tilted toward Franco's Nationalist forces, while the German Anschluss, or annexation of Austria, occurred on the same day as Hull's address. The liberal democratic order established at the end of World War I seemed under threat in both Asia and Europe. However, many Americans were still wary of involvement in “foreign quarrels,” where aggressors did not pose a direct threat to the United States.
Author Biography
Cordell Hull holds the record as the longest-serving US secretary of state, having held the position for eleven years, from 1933 to 1944. Originally from Tennessee, he was active in Democratic politics from his late teens. As a congressman, he was an early ally of Franklin Roosevelt. As president, Roosevelt repaid Hull by appointing him secretary of state, though Hull had continual difficulties with Roosevelt's habit of entrusting foreign relations to White House agents, bypassing the secretary. In East Asia, Hull supported opposition to Japanese imperialism, but not at the risk of war. The ambitious Hull hoped to run for president in 1940, but lost the Democratic nomination to Roosevelt when Roosevelt made the unprecedented decision to run for a third term. He was a leading figure in the creation of the United Nations after the war and received the Nobel Peace Prize as a reward for his efforts. However, he has also been criticized for the State Department's reluctance to help Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe.
Document Analysis
Hull gives a major overview of American foreign policy, focusing on the situation in East Asia but dealing with the rise of aggressor powers in general. To avoid a diplomatic incident, Hull does not name the nations threatening the international order. Germany and Italy are not specifically mentioned at all, and Japan is only mentioned paired with China, with no explicit statement that one power is more to blame than the other. However, given the context, Hull's listeners would have had no doubt as to which countries were to blame for the rise of international chaos.
Hull places the American response to the conflict in China in the context of building an international society based on peace, the rule of law, and the carrying out of treaty obligations. He points out that many nations responded positively to a statement to that effect, which Hull had issued the previous year. By the time of Hull's address, the League of Nations, which the United States had never joined, had been discredited by its failures to effectively oppose fascist powers and could not credibly serve as the foundation for a global order based on law and treaty obligations. Hull does not even mention it. Hull does mention the dissolution of economic barriers to trade between nations, which many countries had raised to protect their economies during the Great Depression. As was common among “free trade” economists in the Anglo-American tradition, Hull believed that the lowering of trade barriers would contribute to peace. He also hints that the lack of an international order contributed to the outbreak of World War I. At the same time, he does not wish to alarm Americans who regret American involvement in World War I and fear involvement in another war. Following a common rhetorical strategy, he positions his recommended course of action as midway between the extremes of “internationalism” (too much involvement in foreign affairs) and “isolationism” (none at all).
Hull somewhat mythologizes American history, showing the United States as a disinterested power, working solely to advance peace and harmony between nations, a picture congenial to many patriotic Americans. He emphasizes the American tradition of honoring treaties. He justifies American actions in China as based not on imperialistic designs on Chinese territory or resources, but solely on the desire to protect American nationals and American interests.
Nonetheless, despite his belief in international law and the fear of the outbreak of another great war, Hull was not a pacifist. Part of the address is devoted to advocating for increased spending on the military so that the United States would be ready in the event of war.
Bibliography and Further Reading
Fairbank, John K. The United States and China. 4th ed. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1983. Print.
Hull, Cordell. The Memoirs of Cordell Hull. New York: Macmillan, 1948. Print.
Macdonald, C. A. The United States, Britain, and Appeasement, 1936–1939. New York: St. Martin's, 1981. Print.