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Treaty of Manila (1946)
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Treaty of Manila (1946)
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{{Short description|Treaty establishing Philippines as an independent sovereign state}}{{distinguish|Philippine Declaration of Independence}}{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2019}}- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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name | Treaty of Manila| long_name =| image = 1946-07-15 Philippines Independence Proclaimed.ogv| image_width =| image_alt = Video of transfer of sovereignty for independent republic of Philippines on July 4, Manuel Roxas new president, ambassador McNutt looks on, MacArthur speaks.| caption = July 1946 newsreel| type =| context =| date_drafted =
| Philippines|1936}} Government of the Philippines| depositories = | 61 | Treaties and Other International Acts Series>TIAS 1568, 11 Treaties and Other International Agreements of the United States of America 1776â1949 | 3, 7 United Nations Treaty Series>UNTS 3 | English language>English| languages =| wikisource = Treaty of Manila (1946)| wikisource1 =| footnotes =}}{{History of the Philippines}}The Treaty of Manila of 1946, formally the Treaty of General Relations and Protocol,BOOK, Philippines, Treaty of General Relations and Protocol with the Republic of the Philippines: Message from the President of the United States Transmitting the Treaty of General Relations and Protocol Between the United States of America and the Republic of the Philippines, Signed at Manila on July 4, by General Godwin Hope1946,weblink 1946, U.S. Government Printing Office, is a treaty of general relations signed on July 4, 1946, in Manila, the capital of the Philippines. It relinquished U.S. sovereignty over the Philippines and recognized the independence of the Republic of the Philippines. The treaty was signed by High Commissioner Paul V. McNutt as representative of the United States and President Manuel Roxas as representative of the Philippines.It was signed by US President Harry Truman on August 14, 1946, after the U.S. Senate gave its advice and consent on July 31, 1946, by ratification of the treaty.WEB,weblink International Treaties & Agreements, travel.state.gov, It was ratified by the Philippines on September 30, 1946.11 Bevans 3 The treaty entered into force on October 22, 1946, when ratifications were exchanged. The treaty was accompanied by a "provisional agreement concerning friendly relations and diplomatic and consular representation" (60 Stat. 1800, TIAS 1539, 6 UNTS 335) until the treaty was ratified.BackgroundCommodore Dewey's decisive victory in the Battle of Manila Bay on May 1, 1898, marked the fall of Spanish inshore defenses in the Philippines.WEB,weblink Manila Bay, McSherry, Patrick, www.spanamwar.com, November 11, 2017, Dewey's victory was later followed by an alliance between US forces and Filipino forces commanded by General Emilio Aguinaldo, who declared Philippine independence on June 12, 1898, and went on to form the First Philippine Republic.WEB,weblink The Evolution of Manila, Presidential Museum and Library, Malacañan Palace,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150628171857weblink">weblink June 28, 2015, dead, Aguinaldo's proclamation of independence was recognized by neither Spain nor the US.At the time of Aguinaldo's proclamation, Filipino troops were set on defeating the last of the Spaniards. By the end of July, an estimated total of 12,000 US troops had arrived to join the Filipino forces.WEB,weblink The Sham Battle Of Manila {{!, AMERICAN HERITAGE|website=www.americanheritage.com|language=en|access-date=November 11, 2017}} Tensions in the alliance surfaced during this period. To begin with, the American and Filipino troops were said to have "lacked that camaraderie usually present between military associates."BOOK,weblink Little Brown Brother: How the United States Purchased and Pacified the Philippine Islands at the Century's Turn, Wolff, Leon, 1961, Wolff Productions, 978-1-58288-209-3, 100, In Major Cornelius Gardner's words:Almost without exception, soldiers and also many officers refer to the natives in their presence as "niggers" and natives are beginning to understand what the word "nigger" means.The "painful discrepancy in interests" became increasingly obvious to Aguinaldo, who once declined to attend a Fourth of July ceremony in Cavite after he was addressed "general", instead of "president", in the written invitation. The intentionality behind the alliance was directly addressed in conversations between Aguinaldo, Dewey, and other US generals. In a meeting, Aguinaldo was reported to have bluntly asked, "Does the United States intend to hold the Philippines as dependencies?" Brigadier General Thomas Anderson dismissed Aguinaldo's speculations: "I cannot answer that, but in 122 years we have established no colonies.... I leave you to draw your own inference."Treaty of Paris (1898)The PhilippineâAmerican War culminated in the formal transfer of power over the Philippines. The Philippine Proclamation of Independence on June 12, 1898, was neglected by both Spain and the U.S. Instead, both agreed on a set of terms provided by the Treaty of Paris to which the First Philippine Republic objected, marking the start of the PhilippineâAmerican War.The Treaty of Paris of 1898 was an agreement made in 1898 that involved Spain relinquishing nearly all of the remaining Spanish Empire, especially Cuba, and ceding Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines to the United States. The cession of the Philippines involved a payment of $20 million from the United States to Spain.WEB,weblink Avalon Project â Treaty of Peace Between the United States and Spain; December 10, 1898, avalon.law.yale.edu, November 11, 2017, The treaty was signed on December 10, 1898, and ended the SpanishâAmerican War. The Treaty of Paris came into effect on April 11, 1899, when the documents of ratification were exchanged.BOOK,weblink The Treaty Making Power of the United States, Butler, Charles Henry, 1902, Banks Law Publishing Company, en, The Treaty of Paris marked the end of the Spanish Empire, apart from some small holdings in Africa. It marked the beginning of the age of the United States as a world power.Initial considerations of independenceIn 1899, US President William McKinley appointed the First Philippine Commission to investigate and to make recommendations on the islands.WEB,weblink Philippines â UNITED STATES RULE, countrystudies.us, November 11, 2017, Although it concluded "the Filipinos are wholly unprepared for independence... there being no Philippine nation, but only a collection of different peoples,""The Philippines: As viewed by President McKinley's Special Commissioners". The Daily Star. 7 (2214). Fredericksburg, Va. November 3, 1899.Chapter XI: The First Philippine Commission, in Worcester, Dean Conant (1914). (gutenberg:12077|"The Philippines: Past and Present (vol. 1 of 2)"). Macmillan. Retrieved January 21, 2008. it acknowledged Philippine desires for independence and recommended measures, such as public education and a bicameral legislature, to create an "advancement to a position among the most civilized peoples of the world" and thus to "an enlightened system of government under which the Philippine people may enjoy the largest measure of home rule and the amplest liberty."Golay 1997, pp. 49â50The PhilippineâAmerican War intervened, during which McKinley heeded the commission's recommendations, established the Second Philippine Commission (the Taft Commission), and granted it legislative and limited executive powers. At first, it was the sole legislative body of the Philippines, but after the passage of the Philippine Organic Act in 1902, the Commission functioned as a house of a bicameral legislature.By the end of his term, US President Theodore Roosevelt "came to believe that the United States could not sustain long-term imperialism because of its ideals of self-government and its party system."Furthermore, many Republicans and most Democrats had started to demand for an immediate promise by the US of eventual independence, which contributed to the slow US embrace of eventual Philippine independence.JOURNAL, Wertheim, Stephen, September 1, 2009, Reluctant Liberator: Theodore Roosevelt's Philosophy of Self-Government and Preparation for Philippine Independence, Presidential Studies Quarterly, en, 39, 3, 494â518, 10.1111/j.1741-5705.2009.03688.x, 1741-5705, In 1916, Congress passed the Jones Law, which served as the new organic act, or constitution, for the Philippines. Its preamble stated that the eventual independence of the Philippines would be American policy, subject to the establishment of a stable government. It removed the commission from the upper house of the legislature and replaced it with an elected senate, thus changing the Philippine Legislature into the Philippines' first fully-elected body and making it more autonomous of the US government. However, the executive branch continued to be headed by an appointed Governor-General of the Philippines, who would always be an American.WEB,weblink Philippine Bill of 1902, The Corpus, Juris, July 1, 1902, The Corpus Juris, WEB,weblink The Philippine Organic Act of July 1902, July 1, 1902, July 5, 2007, .{{Harvnb|Zaide|1994|p=285}}In 1934, Congress passed the TydingsâMcDuffie Act to establish the process for the Philippines to become an independent country after a ten-year transition period.Commonwealth of the Philippines (1934â1942, 1945â1946)In 1934, Manuel L. Quezon, the President of the Senate of the Philippines, headed a "Philippine Independence mission" to Washington, DC.{{wikicite|reference=Zaide, Sonia M. (1994). The Philippines: A Unique Nation. All-Nations Publishing Co. pp. 314â315. {{ISBN|971-642-071-4}}.|ref={{harvid|Zaide|1994}}}} It successfully lobbied Congress and led to the passage of the TydingsâMcDuffie Act, officially the Philippine Independence Act, setting into motion the process for the Philippines to become an independent country after a ten-year transition period. Under the act, the 1935 Constitution of the Philippines was written and the Commonwealth of the Philippines was established, with the first directly elected President of the Philippines (direct elections to the Philippine Legislature have been held since 1907).Castro, Christi-Anne, Associate Professor University of Michigan (April 7, 2011). Musical Renderings of the Philippine Nation. U.S.: Oxford University Press. p. 204. {{ISBN|978-0-19-974640-8}}. Retrieved July 3, 2013. The Commonwealth, as established in 1935 featured a very strong executive, a unicameral national assembly, and a supreme court that had entirely Filipinos for the first time since 1901.In 1935, Quezon won the election to fill the newly created office of President, and a government was formed on the basis of principles that were superficially similar to the US Constitution. The new government embarked on an ambitious agenda of establishing the basis for national defense, greater control over the economy, reforms in education, improvement of transport, the colonization of the island of Mindanao, and the promotion of local capital and industrialization. The Commonwealth however, was also faced with agrarian unrest, an uncertain diplomatic and military situation in Southeast Asia, and uncertainty about the level of United States commitment to the future Republic of the Philippines.Brands 1992, pp. 158â81.In 1939 and 1940, the Philippine Constitution was amended to restore a bicameral Congress and to permit the re-election of Quezon, previously restricted to a single, six-year term.During the Commonwealth years, the Philippines sent one elected Resident Commissioner to the US House of Representatives, as Puerto Rico and other U.S. Territories currently do today.Japanese occupation (1942â1945)The Japanese invaded the Philippines in late 1941, gaining full control of the islands by May 1942. The occupation continued for three years until the surrender of Japan, and the Commonwealth government went into exile from 1942 to 1945.MacArthur General Staff (1994). "The Japanese Offensive in the Philippines". Report of General MacArthur: The Campaigns of MacArthur in the Pacific Volume I. GEN Harold Keith Johnson, BG Harold Nelson, Douglas MacArthur. United States Army. p. 6. LCCN 66-60005. Retrieved March 24, 2013.Independence (1946)The Commonwealth ended when the United States recognized Philippine independence on July 4, 1946, as scheduled per the Tyding-McDuffie Act and Article XVIII of the 1935 Constitution.weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20060822045537weblink">"Philippine History". DLSU-Manila. Archived from the original on August 22, 2006. Retrieved 2007-02-11.Weir 1998 In accordance with the TydingsâMcDuffie Act, President Harry S. Truman issued Proclamation 2695 of July 4, 1946 officially recognizing the independence of the Philippines.WEB, Proclamation 2695 of July 4, 1946 "Independence of the Philippines",weblink National Archives, en, 15 August 2016, On the same day, the Treaty of Manila was signed.However, the economy remained dependent on the United States.Dolan 1991. As a precondition for receiving war rehabilitation grants from the United States, the Philippines agreed to the Bell Trade Act, otherwise known as the Philippine Trade Act. This granted preferential tariffs on U.S. trade and pegged the peso to the U.S. dollar."Balitang Beterano: Facts about Philippine Independence". Philippine Headline News Online. Feb 2004. Retrieved February 11, 2007.JOURNAL, Golay, Frank, Economic Consequences of the Philippine Trade Act, Pacific Affairs, 28, 1, 1955, 53â70, 10.2307/2753711, 2753711,ProvisionsThe Treaty of Manila relinquished U.S. possession of the Philippines and recognized the Republic of the Philippines. It contained several provisions that established but also limited full Philippine sovereignty.The treaty contained several key provisions:
Limitations{{See also|History of the Philippines (1946â65)}}On July 4, 1946, representatives of the United States of America and of the Republic of the Philippines signed the Treaty of General Relations between the two governments. The treaty provided for the recognition of the independence of the Republic of the Philippines as of July 4, 1946, and the relinquishment of American sovereignty over the Philippine Islands.WEB,weblink July 23, 2011, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and PHILIPPINES, November 11, 2017, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20110723021900weblink">weblink July 23, 2011, However, before the 1946 treaty was authorized, a secret agreement was signed between Philippine President Osmena and US President Truman. President Osmena "supported U.S. rights to bases in his country by backing them publicly and by signing a secret agreement."JOURNAL, Shalom, Stephen, 1990, Securing the U.S.âPhilippine Military Bases Agreement of 1947, Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, 22, 4, 3â12, 10.1080/14672715.1990.10413097, free, That culminated in the Military Bases Agreement, which was signed and submitted for Philippine Senate approval by Osmena's successor, President Manuel Roxas.For that reason, the U.S. retained dozens of military bases, including a few major ones. In addition, independence was qualified by legislation passed by the US Congress. For example, the Bell Trade Act provided a mechanism by which US import quotas might be established on Philippine articles that "are coming, or are likely to come, into substantial competition with like articles the product of the United States." It also required US citizens and corporations be granted equal access to Philippine minerals, forests, and other natural resources.WEB,weblink Philippine Laws, Statutes and Codes, Firm, Joselito Guianan Chan, Managing Partner, Chan Robles and Associates Law, www.chanrobles.com, en, November 11, 2017, In hearings before the Senate Committee on Finance, Assistant Secretary of State for Economic Affairs William L. Clayton described the law as "clearly inconsistent with the basic foreign economic policy of this country" and "clearly inconsistent with our promise to grant the Philippines genuine independence."BOOK,weblink American Economic Policy Toward the Philippines, Jenkins, Shirley, 1954, Stanford University Press, 978-0-8047-1139-5, en,USâPhilippines Military Bases Agreement of 1947Despite these inconsistencies, Roxas did not have objections to most of the US-proposed military bases agreement in 1947. Roxas made the following demands.
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