File No. 812.00/4511.

The American Ambassador to the Secretary of State.

No. 1545.]

Sir: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of the Department’s instruction No. 879 of the 28th ultimo, relative to the alleged violation of the neutrality laws of the United States by certain persons supposed to be agents of the Mexican Government, particularly Mr. E. C. Llorente, Mexican Consul at El Paso, Texas, and to transmit herewith copies of my note to the Foreign Office and of its reply thereto, together with a communication1 written by the Military Attaché of this Embassy, all having a bearing on the subject mentioned.

I have [etc.]

Henry Lane Wilson.
[Page 819]
[Inclosure 1.]

The American Ambassador to the Mexican Minister for Foreign Affairs.

Mr. Minister: Through information furnished by the agents of the Department of Justice, my Government has learned that ostensible agents of the Government of Mexico have been and are at the present time engaged in recruiting soldiers for the Mexican Army in American border States. The reports of the agents of the Department of Justice are specific as to the time and place of these illegal enlistments alleged to have been encouraged, aided, and abetted by agents of the Mexican Government, and the name of the Mexican Consul at El Paso, Mr. Enrique G. Llorente, is connected therewith by strong circumstantial evidence, numerous witnesses having testified to having been paid for their services in the Mexican Consulate at El Paso.

The laws of the Government of the United States are peremptory in their provision that no person shall, within the territory or jurisdiction of the United States, enlist or enter himself or hire or retain another person to enlist or enter himself or to go beyond the limits or the jurisdiction of the United States with intent to be enlisted or entered in the service of any foreign State as a soldier, and the unmistakable object of these laws is to prevent every such act. Moreover, these laws are in strict conformity with the law of nations which declares that no State has a right to raise troops for service in another State without its consent, and that whether forbidden by the municipal law or not the mere attempt to raise troops without such consent assails the national sovereignty.

If, then, agents of the Mexican Government have enlisted or attempted to enlist military recruits, their action would appear to be either in evasion of the law or in violation thereof; and in either alternative it is alike injurious, and if the former is the case and these agents have escaped punishment as malefactors, such successful evasion only serves to increase the degree of wrong that has been done to the United States.

I am also directed to say that my Government, while it is loath to believe that the recruiting which the investigations of the Department of Justice seem to show has been taking place is being carried out with the knowledge and under the direction of the Mexican Government, trusts that the Government of Mexico, realizing the injurious character of such activity, will at once take steps to have recruiting for Mexican federal forces, whether authorized or not, cease immediately and will at once give to all persons concerned who may be under the control of the Mexican Government—particularly to the Mexican Consul at El Paso—instructions of such a character that they will desist from any attempt to recruit soldiers on American soil.

I am instructed to say, finally, that the Department of Justice has been requested by the Department of State thoroughly to investigate all apparent infractions of the so-called neutrality statutes of the country, and to proceed in accordance with the law against all who may be found guilty of such infractions, and so to put an end to action infringing the municipal law of the Government of the United States and derogatory to the sovereignty of that Government.

I avail [etc.]

Henry Lane Wilson.
[Inclosure 2.—Translation.]

The Minister for Foreign Affairs to the American Ambassador.

Mr. Ambassador: Having noted the contents of your excellency’s note No. 5379 of the 17th instant,, received yesterday, in which you inform me that, according to reports which have been obtained by the Department of Justice of the Government of the United States, agents of the Government of Mexico have been recruiting soldiers in frontier American States, the Mexican Consul at El Paso, Mr. Enrique C. Llorente, having aided in that recruiting, I have the honor to inform you that my Government has taken especial care to observe [Page 820] strictly the international neutrality laws and has not authorized the recruiting of troops for the Mexican Army on American territory.

Even though I had all confidence that the Mexican Consul, on his part, had not transgressed his duties, yesterday he was asked to report under the strictest responsibility, and has answered in the terms of the following message, which I have the honor to transcribe:

“I beg that you will please assure the American Ambassador at that place that neither I nor agents of this Consulate have ever recruited persons in American territory for the Mexican army, a thing which I can prove to the authorities at this place should they make an investigation, which I invite them to do. If any person has violated the neutrality laws I have ever been the first to become active in punishing him. You may be assured that the asseveration against me or against agents of this Consulate proceeds from enemies who are searching for means of provoking trouble for our Government.”

It is, therefore, a satisfaction for the Mexican Government to answer on this occasion that its international obligations have been complied with, and to respectfully beg your excellency to make known to your Government the content of this note. In the same manner I beg that there may be communicated to my Government, if it is not found inconvenient, the reports which you may have relative to violations which should be suppressed, in order to direct Consul Llorente, once more, to proceed with the necessary activity to impede such recruiting, for the Mexican Government affirms that it proposes to maintain itself within the limits of the strictest legality and avoid all those acts which might bring, even indirectly, as a consequence, a complaint of a nation so friendly as the United States.

It is pleasing to me to reiterate [etc.],

Pedro Lascurain.
  1. Not printed.