File No. 711.12/132

The Consul at Vera Cruz ( Stewart) to the Secretary of State

No. 1922

Sir: I have the honor to transmit herewith an editorial, with translation, on President Wilson, published on July 25 in Los Sucesos of Vera Cruz, which is the best appreciation of Mr. Wilson’s policy by a Mexican that I have ever seen published in a Vera Cruz paper.

[Page 599]

I am confidentially informed that “Renato” is the pseudonym of the local postmaster.

I have [etc.]

Francis R. Stewart
[Enclosure—Translation]

Editorial from “Los Sucesos”, Vera Cruz, July 25, 1918

WOODROW WILSON

In a world-wide investigation through the medium of the auxiliary language, Esperanto, a Dutch friend asked us not long ago who, in our opinion, was the greatest contemporary figure, and without any hesitation we answered, “Woodrow Wilson!” And in our judgment this man of rare virtues is one who merits this opinion on our part, since he is one of the most discussed, most admired, and most misunderstood personalities. Wilson is a revolutionist who, without boasting of it, has put into practice many of the theories which are opposed to the routine of the politics of spoliation. With a few strokes of the pen we shall mention some of his best-known deeds which taken together show his exalted views.

In the moments of most importance for our democratic future, Wilson, in an impulse of just indignation caused by the cowardly assassinations of Huerta, and putting aside diplomatic conventionalism and compromises, solemnly promised never to recognize that government born of crime and perfidy. That at first sight does not appear to be a thing of significance, but analyzing it in detail, we see that a large share of civil valor is needed to face the cruel satires of the paid press and appear isolated in the concert of European rulers that almost ipso facto pressed the hand of the cher et grand ami which was still wet with blood. How much abuse Wilson endured on the part of the imperialists of his own country and the European lambs of Panurge! Mad, stupid, and even criminal, they would not say he was less. There was no peace in Mexico because of him. Huerta did not change this into a paradise because of him. Brigandage increased because of him.

At first Huerta made light of the non-recognition on the part of Wilson, but when, for lack of that requisite, his loan in Europe was a failure, his salaried press, that vainglorious press, or, rather, our press without shame, vomited abuse against the American President. He was declared the putative father of the “bandit traitor,” Carranza, who had sold his country—oh, misguided and betrayed country!—and Huerta was declared a Huitzilopoxtli (God of War) with dark glasses who was saving it from the hands of the Gringos.

The revolutionists could not strengthen themselves in towns of importance, because the “30–30’s” were powerless against the artillery. Then Wilson agreed to the raising of the embargo on arms on the frontier and the first cannon, which we might call Liberty cannon, could pass. The two opposing armies were now fighting hand to hand.

Huerta, powerless then to check the pressure of the revolution, in one of his drunken carousals conceived the diabolical idea of provoking war with the United States to arouse an excess of patriotism on our part and of throwing himself into a fraternal embrace with the First Chief. As an immediate result came the occupation of Vera Cruz, which was not with the idea of conquest, as was proven by the fact that the city was delivered to the First Chief without the collection of a single cent and without the exaction even of the famous salute to the flag of the Stars and Stripes.

Then came the Villista schism, and Wilson, in his role as friend of the Mexican people, in order to recognize some one of the factions in the dispute, appealed to a kind of plebiscite, which showed that Constitutionalism was the only one which had cohesion and discipline, and recognized that party as the de facto Government.

Villa, enraged like Huerta, tried in his turn to provoke a conflict. He held up a train in Chihuahua, forced 16 unarmed Americans to alight, and with an inconceivable cannibalism, assassinated them in cold blood. In spite of the terrible excitement of his people, Wilson remained calm, trusted in the First Chief, and was satisfied with asking the punishment of those who were guilty.

This plan having failed. Villa tried another. He went to Columbus to burn, assassinate, and sack. The situation became unbearable for Wilson, who saw himself unavoidably obliged, now that he was the “bandit-protector,” to send [Page 600] the Pershing expedition, not to do what Villa had done, but to pursue the malefactor, their common enemy and ours. New calumnies and stories of conquest. New verbal explosions of exaggerated patriotism. All that Wilson had done for the revolution was forgotten and there remained only the time-worn prejudice of the frontiers which was not even applicable to the case, especially as the peaceful withdrawal of the forces, without taking an inch of territory, proved the good faith of the misunderstood idealist.

They sink the Lusitania to the great admiration of the “Mauserophiles,” and there are new showers of censure against Wilson for the notes in which, as a pacifist at heart, like all men who have reached a certain state of ethic perfection, he protested against the marine-Zapatista attack.

And finally comes the ukase from Potsdam forbidding the United States to have maritime traffic with Europe, and at this imprudent and mad challenge Wilson, the pacifist, takes up the gauntlet. Universal laughter! Our “Mauserophiles” split their sides with laughter. Any of our exaggerated patriots considered himself alone capable of devouring Wilson and his ungainly soldiers. Wilson against William, King and Emperor, was a joke. All the moving quixotism looked with compassion on the poor “schoolmaster.” In Potsdam, as was natural, those Olympic lords of the “super-advance “did not even take the trouble to mark Pershing on the map of the theater of the war.

But to-day the facts, the overwhelming facts, are opening the eyes of those who were accustomed to scorn. The American Army has become formidable and its force, combined with the rest, is making the supreme priests of Mars retreat.

And yet Wilson, the much discussed, the admirable and the misunderstood, will come to figure in the firmament of liberty of the peoples as a star of the first magnitude. And the German people themselves, to-day under the boots of the Prussian Junkers, will be the first to recognize later the honorable influence of Wilson for universal fraternity.

Wilson has been our friend. Let us in our turn be his loyal friends. Away with those fables of absorption, when this war which costs the world so dear is being fought precisely to finish with the delirium of conquest on the part of dangerous lunatics! Let us change our policy of hostility towards the American people and let us broaden a little our purely Apostolic Roman judgment with incrustations of the doctrines of Robespierre. Only thus can we prevent the Phrygian cap from sinking down to our necks.

Renato