| State |
Entry |
Exit |
Combat Forces |
Population |
Casualties |
| Tripoli |
1801 |
1805 |
10000 |
200000 |
2000 |
| USA |
1801 |
1805 |
25000 |
6000000 |
5000 |
In 1801 the United States sent a punitive expedition to Tripoli after it
raised the tribute that Western Powers paid to them to protect commerce. A
two-year US blockade was ineffective.
*****
[A] conflict between the
United States and Tripoli (now in Libya), incited by American refusal to
continue payment of tribute to the piratical rulers of the North African Barbary
States of Algiers, Tunis, Morocco, and Tripoli; this practice had been customary
among European nations and the nascent United States in exchange for immunity
from attack on merchant vessels in the Mediterranean.
A demand from the pasha of Tripoli for greater tribute
and his dramatic declaration of war on the United States (May 14, 1801)
coincided with a decision by President Thomas Jefferson's administration to
demonstrate American resolve. Despite his opposition to the expense of
maintaining a navy, Jefferson dispatched an American naval squadron to
Tripolitan waters. By means of a special "Mediterranean Fund," the
navy--which had been partially dismantled and was perhaps nearing
extinction--actually increased in size.
During the following years, American warships fought
in the waters around Tripoli, and, in 1803, when Commodore Edward Preble became
commander of the Mediterranean squadron, greater successes ensued. The intrepid
Preble sailed into Tangiers to rescue a number of American prisoners, and, on
Feb. 16, 1804, he ordered his young lieutenant, Stephen Decatur, to undertake
the spectacular raid in which the captured U.S. frigate Philadelphia was
destroyed in
the harbour of Tripoli.
The combination of a strong American naval blockade
and an overland expedition from Egypt finally brought the war
to a close, with a treaty of peace (June 4, 1805) favourable to the United
States. The other Barbary rulers, though considerably chastened, continued to
receive some tribute until 1816.
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