[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1056 Introduced in House (IH)]

<DOC>






119th CONGRESS
  2d Session
H. RES. 1056

Calling for the annulment of the Monroe Doctrine and the development of 
 a ``New Good Neighbor'' policy in order to foster improved relations 
 and deeper, more effective cooperation between the United States and 
              its Latin American and Caribbean neighbors.


_______________________________________________________________________


                    IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                           February 10, 2026

 Ms. Velazquez (for herself, Mrs. Ramirez, Mr. Johnson of Georgia, Ms. 
     Tlaib, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, Ms. Clarke of New York, Ms. Lee of 
   Pennsylvania, Ms. Norton, Mr. Casar, Mrs. Grijalva, Mr. Garcia of 
Illinois, Ms. Schakowsky, Ms. Garcia of Texas, Ms. Jayapal, Mr. Jackson 
    of Illinois, Mr. Pocan, Ms. Omar, and Ms. Simon) submitted the 
 following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Foreign 
 Affairs, and in addition to the Committees on Financial Services, and 
   Ways and Means, for a period to be subsequently determined by the 
  Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall 
           within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned

_______________________________________________________________________

                               RESOLUTION


 
Calling for the annulment of the Monroe Doctrine and the development of 
 a ``New Good Neighbor'' policy in order to foster improved relations 
 and deeper, more effective cooperation between the United States and 
              its Latin American and Caribbean neighbors.

Whereas, over two centuries ago, President James Monroe announced that the 
        United States Government would actively oppose any interference by 
        European powers in the affairs of independent Latin American and 
        Caribbean countries ``for the purpose of oppressing them or controlling 
        in any other manner their destiny'';
Whereas, over time, this policy, referred to as the ``Monroe Doctrine'', came to 
        be interpreted by many United States policymakers as a mandate for 
        United States interference in the sovereign affairs of Latin American 
        and Caribbean countries in order to protect and promote perceived 
        powerful economic and political interests in the United States, 
        irrespective of genuine external tangible threats to countries in the 
        region posed by foreign powers;
Whereas, following a period of western expansion of the United States, resulting 
        in the massive, forced displacement and genocide of Native peoples who 
        originally inhabited much of North America, United States political and 
        business leaders took an increasingly active interest in the acquisition 
        of raw materials and in investment opportunities in other parts of the 
        Western Hemisphere;
Whereas, after annexing the territory of Texas, the United States invaded Mexico 
        militarily in 1846 and, after defeating the Mexican Army and occupying 
        Mexico City, acquired 55 percent of Mexico's territory through the 
        Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, signed in 1848;
Whereas, in 1856, President Franklin Pierce recognized the dictatorial regime in 
        Nicaragua established by United States colonialist William Walker, whose 
        regime's measures included the legalization of slavery in Nicaragua;
Whereas, in 1898, the United States invaded Puerto Rico and Cuba during the 
        Spanish-American War and continues to maintain control of Puerto Rico, 
        as well as a piece of territory in Guantanamo, Cuba, to this day;
Whereas, from 1898 to 1934, the United States conducted military interventions 
        in Cuba, Panama, Honduras, Nicaragua, Mexico, Haiti, and the Dominican 
        Republic, known as the ``Banana Wars'', in order to advance powerful 
        corporate American financial interests, that often came at the expense 
        of United States support for dictatorships and flagrant human rights 
        violations across the region;
Whereas, in 1904, President Teddy Roosevelt established the Roosevelt Corollary 
        to the Monroe Doctrine, whereby the United States could intervene to 
        ensure the protection of United States interests and those of foreign 
        creditors in the region, and declared that the United States could 
        exercise ``international police power'' in ``flagrant cases of such 
        wrongdoing and impotence'';
Whereas, in 1909, President William Howard Taft sent United States warships to 
        Nicaragua as part of an effort to overthrow the Government of Nicaraguan 
        President Jose Santos Zelaya, before launching an invasion of the 
        country in 1912, setting off a period of sustained United States-led 
        intervention, occupation, and repression that would ultimately give rise 
        to the brutal, multigenerational Somoza family dictatorship;
Whereas, in 1915, and against the background of the United States Government's 
        longstanding hostility toward the precedent set by Haiti's successful 
        revolution in 1804, President Woodrow Wilson led a United States 
        invasion and occupation of Haiti that would last until 1934;
Whereas the United States invasion, occupation, and continued interference in 
        Haiti, combined with the massive economic impact of the payments that 
        the country was forced to make to the former colonial power, France, 
        under threat of military aggression, until 1947, impeded the country's 
        efforts to build robust democratic institutions and enabled the rise of 
        the United States-supported dictatorship of Francois Duvalier and his 
        son Jean-Claude Duvalier, which brutally ruled the country from 1957 to 
        1986;
Whereas, in 1933, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt announced the 
        establishment of a ``Good Neighbor'' policy toward the region that 
        sought to emphasize nonintervention, noninterference, and shared 
        prosperity trade in contrast with the previous policy of using military 
        force to advance United States interests;
Whereas, in 1947, President Harry S. Truman signed the National Security Act 
        which created the Central Intelligence Agency (hereafter in this 
        preamble referred to as the ``CIA'') and authorized the agency to begin 
        covert action in the region;
Whereas, in 1953, after democratically elected Guatemalan President Jacobo 
        Arbenz instituted proworker policies that threatened the profit margins 
        of United States corporation United Fruit Company, President Dwight D. 
        Eisenhower authorized the CIA to begin Operation PBSuccess, a 
        multimillion-dollar project involving investing in ``psychological 
        warfare and political action'' that led to the coup against President 
        Arbenz in 1954;
Whereas, in 1961, the United States covertly financed opposition leaders and 
        began seeking military leaders to support the eventual 1964 coup against 
        Brazilian President Joao Goulart which resulted in a 21-year military 
        dictatorship in Brazil;
Whereas the Organization of American States (hereafter in this preamble referred 
        to as the ``OAS''), headquartered in the District of Columbia, and 
        funded in large part by the United States Government, remained largely 
        silent and inactive with regard to the many egregious abuses perpetrated 
        by United States-backed military rightwing dictatorships during the 
        decades of the Cold War;
Whereas, in 1962, the United States imposed a full embargo on Cuba, still in 
        place today, which has led to tens of billions of dollars in capital 
        losses for the island country, and has contributed significantly to the 
        immiseration of the Cuban people;
Whereas, following the election of Chilean President Salvador Allende in 1970, 
        United States President Richard Nixon directed the CIA to spread 
        propaganda aimed at preventing Allende from taking power, and later, 
        actively worked with and supported Chilean military leaders that carried 
        out the 1973 coup of President Allende resulting in a 15-year-long 
        military dictatorship in which at least 40,000 people were tortured and 
        more than 3,000 killed;
Whereas, from 1975 to 1980, the United States actively supported Operation 
        Condor, a coordinated campaign of political repression and state 
        terrorism that saw the United States work closely with military 
        governments in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Paraguay, 
        Peru, and Uruguay to help kidnap, torture, and kill people who had left 
        their home countries in exile;
Whereas, following a regional debt crisis sparked in part by historic Federal 
        Reserve interest rate hikes, the International Monetary Fund (hereafter 
        in this preamble referred to as the ``IMF'') vastly expanded its lending 
        portfolio in Latin America;
Whereas the IMF, whose largest shareholder is the United States, promoted 
        austerity, deregulation, and other structural reforms that resulted in 
        stagnant economic growth in much of Latin America in the 1980s and 
        1990s, following two decades of strong economic growth;
Whereas, in 1983, under the false pretense that the safety of 600 United States 
        medical students in Grenada was under threat, President Ronald Reagan 
        authorized the military invasion of the island country, a move condemned 
        as a ``flagrant violation of international law'' by the United Nations 
        General Assembly;
Whereas, in the 1980s, the Reagan administration--

    (1) supported security forces in Guatemala that perpetrated a genocide 
against Mayan Indigenous peoples, according to the Commission of Historical 
Clarification;

    (2) supported death squads in El Salvador;

    (3) supported rightwing paramilitary militias (Contras) in Nicaragua; 
and

    (4) participated in efforts to coverup egregious crimes perpetrated by 
Central American security forces, such as the massacre of 6 Jesuit priests 
and 2 other unarmed civilians by an elite United States-backed battalion in 
El Salvador;

Whereas the United States-backed ``dirty wars'' of Central America triggered a 
        major wave of migration from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua to 
        the United States in the 1980s and early 1990s;
Whereas, in 1989, President George H.W. Bush launched ``Operation Just Cause'', 
        a unilateral United States invasion of Panama conducted in violation of 
        international law, leading to mass civilian casualties, including in the 
        bombing of low-income, civilian population centers such as El Chorillo, 
        where casualties are credibly estimated to have been in the hundreds;
Whereas the CIA covertly financed units of the Haitian military, whose officers 
        led a violent coup d'etat in 1991 that overthrew the country's first 
        democratically elected President, and then continued to support 
        individuals involved in death squads that targeted supporters of the 
        ousted President;
Whereas, beginning in 2000, the Bush administration blocked development and 
        humanitarian assistance to the Haitian Government and provided financial 
        support to opposition groups culminating in another coup against the 
        elected President in 2004;
Whereas, starting in 2000, the United States provided billions of dollars of 
        funding to Plan Colombia, a joint counter narcotics and counter 
        insurgency initiative which resulted in thousands of civilian 
        casualties, massive human rights abuses perpetrated by military and 
        paramilitary forces, and the forced displacement of millions of mostly 
        Afro-Colombian and Indigenous civilians, while failing to reduce the 
        production and trafficking of cocaine;
Whereas the United States-backed drug war, along with economic displacement 
        attributable in part to United States-sponsored free trade agreements, 
        resulted in another major wave of migration from Central America and 
        Mexico during the first two decades of the 2000s;
Whereas, from 1941 to 2003, United States Navy operations in Vieques, Puerto 
        Rico, caused the death of civilians and high rates of lethal illnesses 
        to the population;
Whereas, in 2002, the United States Government provided funding and other 
        support to political actors that carried out a short-lived coup against 
        the democratically elected Government of Venezuela, and subsequently 
        expressed support for the coup;
Whereas, following the 2009 coup in Honduras, the United States continued to 
        support the country's illegitimate government by providing, between 2009 
        and 2016, an estimated $200,000,000 in military and police aid to 
        Honduran security forces engaged in violent extrajudicial killings and 
        other human rights crimes targeting protesters, activists, land rights 
        advocates, and other civilians opposed to the regime;
Whereas, in a 2013 address to the OAS, Secretary of State John Kerry declared 
        that the ``Monroe Doctrine era is over . . . The relationship that we 
        seek and that we have worked hard to foster is not about a United States 
        declaration about how and when it will intervene in the affairs of other 
        American states. It's about all of our countries viewing one another as 
        equals, sharing responsibilities, cooperating on security issues, and 
        adhering not to doctrine, but to the decisions that we make as partners 
        to advance the values and the interests that we share.'';
Whereas, in 2014, Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro announce the thawing 
        of and eventual normalization of relations between the United States and 
        Cuba;
Whereas, beginning in 2015, the Department of Justice played an active role in 
        Operation Car Wash, or Lava Jato, a sprawling anticorruption probe which 
        was used to advance a partisan political agenda in Brazil, resulting in 
        the politically motivated conviction and imprisonment, and barring from 
        the 2018 Presidential election, of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva;
Whereas credible media reporting has exposed the extensive involvement of 
        Department of Justice officials in Lava Jato, including actively 
        advising Brazilian prosecutors outside of proper channels and acting in 
        violation of Brazilian law and bilateral treaty procedures;
Whereas, in 2017, President Donald Trump threatened to invade Venezuela 
        militarily and imposed broad unilateral sanctions against the country 
        that have significantly harmed the country's civilian population;
Whereas, in 2019, United States National Security Advisor John Bolton announced, 
        ``Today we proudly proclaim for all to hear: the Monroe Doctrine is 
        alive and well.'';
Whereas the migration of Cubans and Venezuelans to the United States has 
        increased dramatically in the years following the imposition (and 
        reimposition) of broad economic sanctions against these countries;
Whereas, in late 2019, a military coup was staged against the elected Government 
        of Bolivia following unfounded claims of electoral fraud made by an OAS 
        Electoral Observation Mission, while the subsequent coup government 
        received support from the Trump administration and OAS Secretary General 
        Luis Almagro;
Whereas President Trump reversed the Obama administration's policy of 
        normalization with Cuba, imposed new sanctions, and, as one of his last 
        acts in office, put Cuba back on the State Sponsors of Terrorism list 
        without justification;
Whereas the international community has resoundingly condemned the United States 
        embargo on Cuba, most recently during the 2025 United Nations General 
        Assembly, with the resolution condemning the embargo passing by 165 
        votes in favor, with only 7 against;
Whereas, in 2025, the Trump administration began sanctioning foreign officials 
        involved with Cuba's international medical missions, which for decades 
        have been deployed around Latin America, Africa, and Europe and have 
        been lauded by the World Health Organization and governments around the 
        world for providing crucial health care services to underserved 
        communities;
Whereas the United States Government has failed to apologize for its past 
        support for military coups in the region;
Whereas Investor State Dispute Settlement (hereafter in this preamble referred 
        to as the ``ISDS'') provisions found in United States-backed free trade 
        agreements allow multinational corporations to sue governments before 
        panels of corporate lawyers based on claims that regulatory frameworks, 
        including those designed to protect workers and the environment, will 
        lead to future losses, and thus far Latin American and Caribbean 
        countries have been sued a total of 346 times under ISDS provisions, 
        more than any other region of the world;
Whereas a United States-based company has filed an ISDS claim against the State 
        of Honduras for nearly $11,000,000,000 in alleged future losses, more 
        than a third of the country's yearly economic output, as a result of the 
        Honduran Government's announcement that the company can no longer 
        continue to operate as a Zona de Empleo y Desarrollo Economico, a 
        territorial area largely governed and controlled by private investors 
        that has been declared unconstitutional by the country's Supreme Court 
        and developed under former President Juan Orlando Hernandez;
Whereas President Trump interfered in Honduras' 2025 election, threatening to 
        cut off United States economic support to the country if voters did not 
        elect National Party candidate Nasry Asfura, and then issued a full 
        pardon of former Honduran president and National Party politician Juan 
        Orlando Hernandez who had been convicted in a United States Federal 
        court and sentenced to 45 years in prison for charges related to 
        narcotics trafficking and weapons;
Whereas the second Trump administration has pursued an aggressive policy of 
        individual sanctions targeting officials of countries across the region 
        that benefit from Cuban medical missions, which have made a well-
        documented positive impact on health care systems facing challenges in 
        the region, across the Global South, and around the world;
Whereas President Trump has made multiple threats against Panama regarding 
        control of the Panama Canal, including pledging to ``take back'' the 
        Panama Canal, in violation of the Torrijos-Carter treaties;
Whereas President Trump signed a January 20, 2025, Executive order designating 
        drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations and has, according to 
        credible media reporting, directed the Pentagon to target cartels 
        through military action, in potential violation of the sovereignty of 
        Mexico and other countries;
Whereas the Trump administration has enacted a policy of overt interference in 
        the judiciary and democratic institutions of Brazil in retaliation 
        against the Brazilian Supreme Court's trial of former Brazilian 
        President Jair Bolsonaro on multiple charges, including attempting to 
        foment a military-backed coup in order to stay in office after losing 
        Brazil's 2022 Presidential election;
Whereas the Trump administration has misused authorities under the International 
        Emergency Economic Powers Act (Public Law 95-223), section 301 of the 
        Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2411), and the Global Magnitsky Human 
        Rights Accountability Act (22 U.S.C. 10101 et seq.) in a politically 
        motivated effort to exert improper influence on judicial proceedings 
        held in accordance with Brazilian law and constitutional norms;
Whereas the Trump administration's policy toward Brazil risks producing 
        incalculable damage to the alliance between the United States and 
        Brazil, the two largest democracies in the Western Hemisphere;
Whereas the Trump administration has conducted a similar policy of overt 
        interference with regard to Colombia's judiciary in an effort to support 
        a political ally facing charges of witness tampering and fraud, 
        demonstrating an alarming pattern;
Whereas President Trump has established a partnership with the President of El 
        Salvador, Nayib Bukele, to wrongfully deport hundreds of people from the 
        United States without due process to face notoriously dangerous prison 
        conditions in El Salvador;
Whereas these individuals have been, in effect, forcibly disappeared, in a 
        manner reminiscent of what has taken place under dictatorships across 
        the region, often by regimes supported by the United States Government;
Whereas, in his second term, President Trump has ordered a series of 
        unauthorized military strikes in international waters targeting 
        Venezuelan nationals and other individuals allegedly involved in 
        narcotics trafficking, strikes that have led to over 100 casualties and 
        that were conducted in violation of the United States Constitution, 
        United States law, and international law, and which risk stoking a wider 
        military conflict with Venezuela and other countries;
Whereas, on January 3, 2026, the Trump administration, citing the Monroe 
        Doctrine, launched an unauthorized military attack against Venezuela in 
        violation of the United States Constitution and international law, 
        killing dozens and abducting the President and first lady of the 
        country;
Whereas President Trump publicly admitted that these actions were taken with the 
        intent of the United States ``running'' Venezuela and taking control of 
        its oil reserves;
Whereas President Maduro is being held in a New York prison and awaiting trial 
        on counts of ``narco-terrorism'';
Whereas, on January 5, 2026, following the abduction of Maduro and his detention 
        by United States judicial authorities, the Department of Justice dropped 
        its claim that the Cartel de los Soles is a distinct hierarchical 
        organization headed by Nicolas Maduro, although that claim had served to 
        justify targeting him and his government;
Whereas, since the beginning of his second term, President Trump has made 
        multiple statements referring to potential United States military action 
        and annexation, in violation of international law, targeting Cuba, 
        Colombia, Mexico, Panama, Canada, and other sovereign countries 
        throughout the Americas; and
Whereas the Trump administration's 2025 National Security Strategy establishes a 
        ``Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine'' that prioritizes ``American 
        preeminence in the Western Hemisphere, . . . access to key geographies 
        throughout the region'' and the use of United States ``military 
        presence'' in the hemisphere for ``establishing or expanding access in 
        strategically important locations'': Now, therefore, be it
    Resolved, That it is the sense of the House of Representatives 
that--
            (1) in order to send a strong signal to the region that the 
        United States Government wishes to turn the page on a long era 
        of political and military interference in the region, the 
        Department of State should formally confirm that the Monroe 
        Doctrine is no longer a part of United States policy toward 
        Latin American and the Caribbean;
            (2) in place of the Monroe Doctrine, the Federal Government 
        should develop a ``New Good Neighbor'' policy, designed to 
        foster improved relations and deepen more effective cooperation 
        with all the countries of the Western Hemisphere, with measures 
        that include--
                    (A) developing, jointly with the Department of the 
                Treasury, the United States Trade Representative, the 
                Department of State, and the United States Agency for 
                International Development, a new approach to promoting 
                development based on a respect for the integrity of 
                sovereign economic development plans of the region's 
                governments, support for equitable and sustainable 
                economic transitions through technology transfers and 
                new forms of climate and development financing that 
                prioritize grantmaking and concessional lending;
                    (B) terminating all unilateral economic sanctions 
                imposed through Executive orders, and working with 
                Congress to terminate all unilateral sanctions, such as 
                the Cuba embargo, mandated by law;
                    (C) working with Congress to amend the 
                International Emergency Economic Powers Act (Public Law 
                95-223) and the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 
                1601 et seq.) to ensure robust congressional oversight 
                over the imposition of unilateral sanctions through 
                Executive orders, as per the original intent of the 
                authors of those pieces of legislation;
                    (D) working with Congress to develop legislation 
                that triggers an automatic review of bilateral 
                assistance to a government whenever there is an 
                extraconstitutional transfer of power, until the United 
                States and a majority of regional governments determine 
                that the new leadership is legitimate under that 
                country's constitution;
                    (E) establishing a policy of respect and 
                recognition of decisions made by sovereign countries 
                across the region with regard to matters such as 
                membership in international organizations and 
                institutions, support for specific regional groupings 
                and intergovernmental organizations, and decisions 
                regarding diplomatic recognition;
                    (F) proceeding with the prompt declassification of 
                all United States Government archives that relate to 
                past coups d'etat, dictatorships, and periods in the 
                history of Latin American and Caribbean countries that 
                are characterized by a high rate of human rights crimes 
                perpetrated by security forces and paramilitary 
                organizations that received United States support;
                    (G) working with Latin American and Caribbean 
                governments on a far-reaching reform of the 
                Organization of American States to--
                            (i) ensure accountability surrounding any 
                        potentially unethical or criminal activities in 
                        which the Secretary General or other senior 
                        officials have been involved;
                            (ii) ensure full transparency surrounding 
                        the financial and personnel decisions taken by 
                        the Secretary General;
                            (iii) establish an ombudsman's office that 
                        is fully independent from the Secretary 
                        General;
                            (iv) ensure that the electoral observation 
                        division of the Department of Electoral 
                        Cooperation and Observation of the Organization 
                        of American States is independent from the 
                        Office of the Secretary General and is 
                        appointed by a majority of Organization of 
                        American States members; and
                            (v) ensure that the Inter-American 
                        Commission on Human Rights and its rapporteurs 
                        are financially independent from the Secretary 
                        General's Office;
                    (H) working with Congress to secure major, 
                recurrent contributions to the Amazon Fund;
                    (I) supporting democratic reforms to the 
                International Monetary Fund, World Bank, Inter-American 
                Development Bank, and other international financial 
                institutions to ensure that the developing countries of 
                the region are able to play an equitable role in 
                shaping the lending and grantmaking policies of those 
                institutions;
                    (J) supporting regular issuances of International 
                Monetary Fund Special Drawing Rights to help avert 
                balance of payments difficulties and to promote greater 
                fiscal space for regional governments, thereby allowing 
                them to expand investments in health care, education, 
                economic development, and in climate adaptation and 
                mitigation programs;
                    (K) advocating for the International Monetary Fund 
                and other relevant institutions to undertake a shift 
                away from fiscal consolidation, loan conditionality, 
                and other regressive policies, and instead embrace an 
                agenda focused on--
                            (i) robust and sustained economic growth;
                            (ii) expanded access to health care and 
                        education to all;
                            (iii) achieving universal social 
                        protection;
                            (iv) supporting progressive tax reforms 
                        that benefit low-income communities, workers, 
                        women, and historically marginalized 
                        communities; and
                            (v) actively supporting the advancement of 
                        workers' rights, decent work, and 
                        sustainability; and
                    (L) supporting the creation of a Loss and Damage 
                Trust, under the auspices of the United Nations, to 
                support climate action in developing countries, and 
                working with Congress to secure major, recurrent 
                contributions to this fund;
            (3) the United States should work with regional bodies, 
        such as the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, 
        the Caribbean Community, the Union of South American Nations, 
        the Southern Common Market, and other regional groups, to 
        increase cooperation around the major challenges of the present 
        time, including the response to climate change, inequality, 
        arms trafficking, tax evasion, illicit financial flows 
        (particularly those derived from drug trafficking), the 
        protection of workers' rights, and promoting the rights of 
        Indigenous peoples and Afro-descendent communities; and
            (4) the United States should, in every instance, respect 
        international law and the sovereignty and territorial integrity 
        of countries in the Western Hemisphere and throughout the 
        world, and should respect international human rights law, which 
        prohibits extrajudicial killings, including in international 
        waters.
                                 <all>