Grover Cleveland's primary agenda in foreign policy was to resist territorial expansion and entangling alliances. With these reasons in brain, he determined to remove the Frelinghuysen-Zavala Treaty from senatorial consideration. This treaty provided the United States the right to assemble a canal in Nicaragua that was to be belongs to together by the two nations.
Cleveland's first period furthermore discovered him enmeshed in the convoluted topic of U.S. angling privileges in the North Atlantic off Canada and Newfoundland. He furthermore worked on the argued boundary between Alaska and British Colombia and the difficulty of the ...