
TheCongress of Panama (also referred to as theAmphictyonic Congress, in homage to theAmphictyonic League ofAncient Greece) was a congress organized bySimón Bolívar in 1826 with the goal of bringing together the new republics of Latin America to develop a unified policy towards the repudiated mother country Spain. Held inPanama City from 22 June to 15 July, it proposed creating a league ofAmerican republics, with a common military, a mutual defense pact, and a supranational parliamentary assembly.[1]
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The congress of Panama was called by Simon Bolivar from Lima on December 7, 1824, andJosé Faustino Sánchez Carrión, Minister of Government and Foreign Relations of Peru, who fully shared with Bolívarian ideal of Hispanic-American unity, sent the invitation to the American governments.
It was attended by representatives ofGran Colombia (comprising the modern-day nations ofColombia,Ecuador,Panama, andVenezuela),Peru, theUnited Provinces of Central America (Guatemala,El Salvador,Honduras,Nicaragua, andCosta Rica), andMexico.Chile and theUnited Provinces of South America (Argentina) declined to attend, out of mistrust of Bolívar's enormous influence. TheEmpire of Brazil did not send delegates, because it expected a hostile reception from its Hispanic neighbours due to its ongoingwar with Argentina over modern Uruguay. The isolationistParaguay (which refused previous delegates from Bolívar) was not invited.
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Simón Bolívar also agreed to invite two European countries as observers, because of the commercial interests they had in Latin America: the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. The invitation to theBritish government sought to stimulate assistance from Argentina and Chile, which had their main trading partner in that country. The United Kingdom accepted the proposal and sent an observer, Edward James Dawkins, but with precise orders from MinisterGeorge Canning: limit themselves to seeking trade agreements and dissuade Greater Colombia and Mexico from supporting expeditions to the islands of Cuba or Puerto Rico to make them independent of Spain.
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The observer for the Netherlands, Jan van Veer, was sent to propose Dutch mediation between the Spanish American republics and Spain, but he did not have the necessary accreditation. Added to this was that the Dutch monarchy had not recognized the independence of any Spanish-American republic, which is why the Dutch delegate was received only as an individual.
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The grandly titled "Treaty of Union, League, and Perpetual Confederation" that emerged from the congress was ultimately ratified only by Gran Colombia, and Bolívar's dream soon foundered irretrievably with civil war in that nation, the disintegration of Central America, and the emergence of nationalism. The Congress of Panama also had political ramifications in the United States. PresidentJohn Quincy Adams and Secretary of StateHenry Clay wanted the US to attend the congress, to which they had only been invited due to pressure on Bolívar. Since Hispanic America had mostly outlawed slavery, politicians from theSouthern United States held up the mission by not approving funds or confirming the delegates. Despite their eventual departure, one of the two US delegates,Richard Clough Anderson Jr., died en route to Panama; and the other,John Sergeant, arrived only after the Congress had concluded its discussions.
The United Kingdom managed to acquire many favorable trade deals with Latin American countries at the Congress.[citation needed]
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