Episode Details
Back to EpisodesSixteen Weeks That Built the American Empire
Episode 5537
Published 3 weeks, 1 day ago
Description
In this episode, we explore sixteen weeks that built the american empire. Welcome in everyone. I am so glad you're joining us for today's deep dive. Today's Monday, March 23. 2026, and we have a really wild story for you today. Yeah, we absolutely do. It's one of those historical moments that sounds almost like fiction. Right. I mean, we are talking about how in 1898, the United States basically accidentally conquered an entire empire just because someone brought a map of the Pacific to a meeting about the Caribbean. Exactly. It's wild. So for you listening, we're unpacking a massive stack of sources today. We've got this comprehensive Wikipedia historical archive. And we're exploring a conflict that lasted just 16 weeks. I mean, 16 weeks total. But it completely detonated the existing global world order. We are, of course, talking about the Spanish -American War. Yeah, and our goal today is really cut through the noise of what is an incredibly How did we end up fighting in the Philippines? That brings us to the Kimball Plan. The Kimball Plan. Yeah. The Navy's pivot to the Pacific wasn't improvised at all. It was a deeply calculated mechanism. Two years before the war, in 1896, a guy named Lieutenant Commander William W. Kimball drafted this contingency plan for a hypothetical war with Spain. Just in case. Just in case. And the strategic logic was actually brilliant. Spain's wealth came from Cuba, but its strategic vulnerability was its outdated fleet guarding the Philippines. So the Assistant Secretary of the Navy, who happens to be Theodore Roosevelt, he basically pulls this plan off the shelf and acts on it before the war is even officially declared. He does. He sends preemptive orders to Commodore George Dewey, who is commanding the U .S. Asiatic Squadron over in Hong Kong. And the directive was crystal clear.