Read this article on the American empire. Why do you think the United States became involved in Latin America and other parts of the world? How did the United States exert its power and destabilize the governments it disagreed with?
Conclusion
While American imperialism flared most brightly for a relatively brief
time at the turn of the century, new imperial patterns repeated old
practices and lived on into the twentieth century. But suddenly the
United States had embraced its cultural, economic, and religious
influence in the world, along with a newfound military power, to
exercise varying degrees of control over nations and peoples. Whether as
formal subjects or unwilling partners on the receiving end of
Roosevelt's "big stick," those who experienced U.S. expansionist
policies confronted new American ambitions. At home, debates over
immigration and imperialism drew attention to the interplay of
international and domestic policy and the ways in which imperial
actions, practices, and ideas affected and were affected by domestic
questions. How Americans thought about the conflict in the Philippines,
for example, was affected by how they approached immigration in their
own cities. And at the turn of the century, those thoughts were very
much on the minds of Americans.