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قراءة كتاب Problems of the Pacific

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Problems of the Pacific

Problems of the Pacific

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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PROBLEMS OF THE PACIFIC

BY
FRANK FOX

AUTHOR OF "RAMPARTS OF EMPIRE"

 

LONDON
WILLIAMS & NORGATE
14 HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN
1912

CONTENTS

CHAP. PAGE
1. THE OCEAN OF THE FUTURE 1
2. RUSSIA IN THE PACIFIC 16
3. THE RISE OF JAPAN 31
4. CHINA AND THE TEEMING MILLIONS OF ASIA 47
5. THE UNITED STATES—AN IMPERIAL POWER 66
6. GREAT BRITAIN'S ENTRY INTO THE PACIFIC 85
7. THE BRITISH CONTINENT IN THE PACIFIC 100
8. NEW ZEALAND AND THE SMALLER BRITISH
PACIFIC COLONIES 120
9. THE NATIVE RACES 136
10. LATIN AMERICA 147
11. CANADA AND THE PACIFIC 165
12. THE NAVIES OF THE PACIFIC 176
13. THE ARMIES OF THE PACIFIC 186
14. TREATIES IN THE PACIFIC 199
15. THE PANAMA CANAL 216
16. THE INDUSTRIAL POSITION IN THE PACIFIC 228
17. SOME STRATEGICAL CONSIDERATIONS 245
18. THE RIVALS 263

Map of the Pacific

PROBLEMS OF THE PACIFIC

CHAPTER I

THE OCEAN OF THE FUTURE

The Pacific is the ocean of the future. As civilisation grows and distances dwindle, man demands a larger and yet larger stage for the fighting-out of the ambitions of races. The Mediterranean sufficed for the settlement of the issues between the Turks and the Christians, between the Romans and the Carthaginians, between the Greeks and the Persians, and who knows what other remote and unrecorded struggles of the older peoples of its littoral. Then the world became too great to be kept in by the Pillars of Hercules, and Fleets—in the service alike of peace and war—ranged over the Atlantic. The Mediterranean lost its paramount importance, and dominance of the Atlantic became the test of world supremacy.

Now greater issues and greater peoples demand an even greater stage. On the bosom of the Pacific will be decided, in peace or in war, the next great struggle of civilisation, which will give as its prize the supremacy of the world. Shall it go to the White Race or the Yellow Race? If to the White Race, will it be under the British Flag, or the flag of the United States, or of some other nation? That is the problem of the Pacific.

Since Cortes first looked on the waters of the ocean from a peak in Darien, since Balboa of Castile waded into its waters and claimed them for the dominion of the King of Castile, events have rushed forward with bewildering haste to transfer the centre of the world's interest to the Pacific. Cortes in his day looked to a North Pacific coast inhabited by a few wandering Indians. (The powerful national organisation of Mexico had not extended its influence as far as the Pacific coast.) Now there stretch along that coast the Latin-American Power of Mexico, doomed, probably, to be absorbed before the great issue of Pacific dominance is decided, but having proved under Diaz some capacity for organisation; the gigantic Power of the United States with the greatest resources of wealth and material force ever possessed by a single nation of the world; and the sturdy young Power of Canada.

To the South, Cortes looked to a collection of Indian States, of which Peru was the chief, boasting a gracious but unwarlike civilisation, doomed to utter destruction at the hands of Spain. Now that stretch of Pacific littoral is held by a group of Latin-American nations, the possibilities of which it is difficult accurately to forecast, but which are in some measure formidable if Chili is accepted as a standard by which to judge, though,

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