Mr. Koerner to Mr. Seward.

No. 97.]

Sir:A few days after sending my last despatch, No. 96, of May 15, news was received here by the government, and published in The Journal, which made it highly probable that hostilities between Spain and Peru were on the point of breaking out. I lost no time in addressing a note to Mr. Pacheco, in which I again offered, as I had done in my previous conversation with him, reported to you in my despatch 89, the services of our government to prevent a rupture, and to reconcile conflicting claims. I have the honor of enclosing you a copy of my note to the minister, dated May 20, 1864.

[Page 26]

On yesterday I received Mr. Pacheco’s reply, of which I send you a translated copy.

It will be perceived that the minister, on the strength of the events which have come to his knowledge since my interview with him, the refusal on the part of the Peruvian government to receive Mr. Salazar, the Spanish envoy, and to negotiate with him, now declines the interposition or mediation of the United States or any other friendly power. I do not exactly see the force of his reasoning, If it was consistent with Spanish honor for our government to use its endeavors to make Peru listen to reasonable demands on the part of Spain, it must be equally so if our government would try to make Peru treat with Mr. Salazar, or to give satisfactory explanations for not having done so. Our good offices, it strikes me, might have been exercised in the one case as well as in the other.

I do not intend, however, to press the matter any further for the present, for several reasons, one of which is that I consider our government still perfectly free to use its influence with Peru, in making that country do what may be considered right and proper.

I have the honor to be, most respectfully, your obedient servant,

GUSTAVUS KOERNER.

Hon. William H. Seward, Secretary of State, &c., &c., &c.

Mr. Koerner to Mr. Pacheco.

Sir:Some time ago I had the honor of communicating to your excellency, in an informal and confidential manner, the apprehension felt by the government of the United States of possible difficulties of a serious character between the government of her Catholic Majesty and the republic of Peru, and the great desire entertained on the part of the United States to prevent hostilities from breaking out between two nations, towards both of which they have none but the most friendly and disinterested feeling.

I informed your excellency that the government of the United States would be happy if it could make itself instrumental in smoothing down these difficulties unhappily existing between the two powers.

Your excellency expressed yourself pleased with the remarks which I had offered, and intimated that if the circumstances should permit of an exercise of our good offices in this complication they would not be refused. Inasmuch, however, as you were at the time without information as regarded the success of the mission of Señor Salazar, her Majesty’s special envoy to Peru, and the steps which had been taken by Admiral Pinzon, you were not, at the period of our interview, in a position to express yourself definitively on the proposition which I had been instructed to mention to you informally. I have received no additional despatches on the subject from my government since that interview; but having learned from the public journals that the arrival of Señor Salazar at Peru, and his proceedings, whatever they were, have failed to lead to negotiations promising a peaceful settlement of the existing controversies, and that, on the contrary, hostilities are imminent, if they have not already broken out, I deem it consonant with my former instructions to again repeat, in a confidential manner, the offer of the government which I represent to use its best exertions for a satisfactory settlement of the questions in dispute.

The government of the United States will cheerfully, I believe, support any demand on the part of her Catholic Majesty’s government founded on the [Page 27] principles of justice, equity, and international law, and will use its best efforts to persuade and induce the Peruvian government to comply with all such demands.

I have no doubt the influence of the United States would be very great with the Peruvian government, and that its exercise might be beneficial to both countries which are now at disagreement.

I embrace this opportunity of repeating to your excellency the assurance of my highest consideration, &c., &c.

GUSTAVUS KOERNER.

His Excellency the Minister of State Of her Catholic Majesty.

[Translation.]

Mr. Pacheco to Mr. Koerner.

Sir: I have had the honor to receive the confidential note which you were pleased to address me on the 20th instant, in which, referring to a private interview which you had with me, you have been pleased to renew the indications which you then addressed to me in the name of your government in respect to the good dispositions which animate the cabinet of Washington to contribute, by their mediation, to the arrangement of the difficulties pending with the republic of Peru, lending their support with pleasure to any reclamation of Spain founded on principles of justice and equity, and endeavoring to persuade the government of Peru to satisfy all such as may have this character.

The report you make of what occurred in the interview referred to is exact, and on that occasion, having in view the circumstances of the affair—the subject of our conversation—and considering also the state of it at that time, I could not do less than reply to the friendly and loyal offer which you made me in the name of your government, stating in that confidential way in which we were proceeding that the government of her Majesty was disposed to accept, if not the mediation, at least the good offices of the government of Washington, so as to arrive at an end which corresponded completely to the views of the government of her Majesty, always desirous to avoid conflicts with the Spanish American States.

The same disposition which I then made known to you would continue to exist to-day if the conditions and the situation of the affair were the same, and I should have taken pleasure in fixing in writing the statements which on that occasion I had the honor to address to you; but, unfortunately, it has not thus happened, and the government of her Majesty deeply laments it. Things have advanced, and the affair has taken a different aspect from what it then had.

Before the question of the reclamations against the Peruvian government, there has arisen another, which must be considered as independent and preliminary; so much the more grave, inasmuch as it affects more the decorum and dignity of Spain. I refer to the non-reception of the envoy Señor Salazar y Mozarredo, with whom the government of Peru has refused to treat.

It cannot be hidden from your good judgment that by this act, whose nature you will know how to appreciate, a state of things has been created whose solution is no longer susceptible of being moulded to the same conditions which appeared, and which we both considered attainable at our said interview. The question is not now upon principles of justice ignored, nor of material interests wounded, but upon an act which, as it may be interpreted to signify a purpose not to lend an ear to reason, involves an offence to Spain such as makes it incumbent [Page 28] upon the government which rules her destinies alone to demand satisfaction. If, in order to obtain this, the mediation of another friendly government should be accepted, that of her Majesty would furnish a motive for attributing to impotence what in any case would be only a desire to avoid extreme measures, and persuaded on my part that you will recognize the force of this observation, I do not doubt you will know how to explain to your government the special causes which place that of her Majesty in the situation of not being able to accept the mediation nor the good offices of any friendly power in the question pending between Spain and Peru.

The government of the Queen feels grateful beyond measure for the good desires of the cabinet of Washington, and certainly it would have been most pleasing if those circumstances had not intervened which now impede their contributing with their prudence and recognized wisdom to the termination of the affair which is the subject of this writing.

I avail myself of this opportunity to renew to you the assurance of my most distinguished consideration.

J. F. PACHECO.

The Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States.