Throughout its history, the United States has used its military and covert operations to overthrow or prop up foreign governments—actions historians say were often driven by perceived strategic or economic interests.
In its first century, inspired by the idea of Manifest Destiny, the U.S. pursued policies that displaced sovereign tribal nations in North America—policies that, historians note, at times resulted in the killing of Indigenous leaders through massacres, warfare or targeted violence. In the 1890s, American expansionism extended overseas, most notably when the U.S. overthrew the Hawaiian Kingdom and annexed its islands. After the United States absorbed more overseas territories as a result of the Spanish-American War, it began to intervene more frequently in other countries’ governments—particularly in the Western Hemisphere.