Master's thesis at the University of Basra discussing (the American occupation of the Dominican Republic in 1916-1924)
I discussed a master's thesis at the College of Education for Human Sciences at the University of Basra (the American occupation of the Dominican Republic).
The letter of the researcher (Rabiah Shahid Muhammad) included the repercussions of the American occupation of the Dominican Republic and the course of its events and an explanation of the role played by the United States of America as an external aggressor who attacked the security of independent societies under apparently flimsy pretexts and arguments despite the fact that they are interventions with motives and justifications of a high degree of importance to American policy. This occupation was part of what is known historically as the Banana Wars, which are wars and interventions by the United States of America in Central America and the Caribbean between the end of the Spanish American War in 1898 and the start of the good-neighborly policy under President Franklin Roosevelt in 1834
The message aims to identify
The hidden political secrets of the United States of America towards the countries of Latin America in general and the Dominicans in particular, and the political intentions of the United States of colonial expansion towards the Central American region, and the ambiguity and contradiction that have long clouded the declared policy of the United States of America and the hidden politics that it is planning behind the scenes, and that the American occupation of the Dominican Republic is nothing but colonialism A military goal aimed at draining the wealth of the Dominicans
