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Enclosure: Jefferson’s Opinion of American Conduct in an Anglo-Spanish War, 12 July 1790

Enclosure

Jefferson’s Opinion of American Conduct in an Anglo-Spanish War

July. 12. 1790.

Heads of consideration on the conduct we are to observe
in the war between Spain & Gr. Britain and particularly
should the latter attempt the conquest of Louisiana & the Floridas.

The dangers to us, should Great Britain possess herself of those countries.

she will possess a territory equal to half ours, beyond the Missisipi

she will seduce that half of ours which is on this side the Missisipi

by  her language, laws, religion, manners, government, commerce, capital.

by  the possession of N. Orleans, which draws to it the dependance of all the waters of Mississippi

by  the markets she can offer them in the gulph of Mexico & elsewhere.

she will take from the remaining part of our States the markets they now have for their produce by furnishing those markets cheaper, with the same articles, tobacco. rice. indigo. bread. lumber. naval stores. furs.

she will have then possessions double the size of ours, as good in soil & climate.

she will encircle us compleatly, by these possessions on our land-board, & her fleets on our sea-board.

instead of two neighbors balancing each other, we shall have one, with more than the strength of both.

Would the prevention of this be worth a war?

consider our abilities to take part in a war.

our operations would be by land only.

how many men should we need to employ? their cost?

our resources of taxation & credit equal to this.

weigh the evil of this new accumulation of debt against the loss of markets, & eternal expence & danger from so overgrown a neighbor.

But this is on supposition that France as well as Spain shall be engaged in the war.

for with Spain alone, the war would be unsuccessful, & our situation rendered worse.

No need to take a part in the war as yet. we may chuse our own time.

Delay gives us many chances to avoid it altogether.

In such a choice of objects, Gr. Britain may not single out, Louisiana & the Floridas.

she may fail in her attempt on them.

France and Spain may recover them.

if all these chances fail, we should have to re-take them.

the difference between retaking, & preventing, overbalanced by the benefits of delay.

Delay enables us to be better prepared:

to obtain from the allies a price for our assistance.

Suppose these our ultimate views, What is to be done at this time?

1. as to Spain?

if she be as sensible as we are that she cannot save Louisiana & the Floridas,

might she not prefer their Independance to their Subjection to Grt Britain?

does not the proposition of the Ct d’Estaing1 furnish us an opening to communicate our ideas on this subject to the court of France, & thro them to that of Madrid? and our readiness to join them in guaranteeing the independance of those countries?

this might save us from a war, if Gr. Britain respects our weight in a war.

and if she does not. the object would place the war on popular ground with us.

2. as to England? say to Beckwith 2

that as to a Treaty of commerce, we would prefer amicable, to adversary arrangements, tho the latter would be infallible, and in our own power:

that our ideas are that such a treaty should be founded in perfect reciprocity; & wd therefore be it’s own price:

that as to an Alliance, we can say nothing till it’s object be shewn, & that it is not to be inconsistent with existing engagements:

that in the event of a war between Gr. Brit. & Spain we are disposed to be strictly neutral:

that however we should view with extreme uneasiness any attempts of either power to seize the possessions of the other on our frontier, as we consider our own safety interested in a due balance between our neighbors? [it might be advantageous to express this latter sentiment, because if there be any difference of opinion in their councils, whether to bend their force against North or South America, or the islands, (and certainly there is room for difference) and if these opinions be nearly balanced, that balance might be determined by the prospect of having an enemy the more, or less, according to the object they should select.]3

AD, in Jefferson’s hand, DNA: RG 59, Miscellaneous Letters; ADf, in Jefferson’s hand, DLC: Papers of Thomas Jefferson. Only minor differences exist between the original and the draft.

1For the comte d’Estaing’s proposal to create a free Louisiana colony under the joint protection of France and Spain, see d’Estaing to GW, 20 Mar. 1790 and notes. See also Jefferson to GW, 8 Aug., n.6.

2For the administration’s response delivered to George Beckwith, see Hamilton to GW, c.15–22 July 1790.

3These brackets appear in Jefferson’s original.

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