The construction was due to strategic thinking if the canal saved the time traveling of the navy and commercial vessels between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Nevertheless, the project was not free from scandal; people could name some charges of corruption and exploitation of workers from the local area. During this period, American foreign policy was dominated by differential ideas of expansionism, interventionism, and claiming American power on the global stage. Although different motivations were at play, including economic interests and strategic factors, the policies raised dubious moral and ethical questions regarding the concept of American imperialism. American imperialism at that time, from the perspective of a critical observer, may be described as the organized display of the power of coercion on other nations that did not have their right to self-determination. The United States typically depicts its supremacy over the islands of Hawaii, Cuba, or the Philippines as exerting control over local rebellious forces and imposing American values and institutions over local ones. Lastly, American imperialism added environmentalism along with the development of economic interest in these regions, which encompassed labor and resource