The treaty gave the United States permission to travel through the Lenape territory and called Lenape to afford American troops whatever aid they might require in their war against Great Britain, including participation of Lenape warriors. The United States was planning to attack the British fort at Detroit, and Lenape assistance was essential for success. In exchange, the United States promised "articles of clothing, utensils and implements of war" and to build a fort in Delaware country "for the better security of the old men, women and children... whilst their warriors are engaged against the common enemy." Although not part of the signed treaty, the commissioners pointed out the American alliance with France and intended that the Lenape would become active allies in the war against the British. The possibility of creation of a new Native American state was discussed. The treaty also recognized the Lenapes as a sovereign nation, guaranteed their territorial rights, and even encouraged the other
Ohio Country Indian tribes friendly to the United States to form a state headed by the Lenapes with representation in the
Continental Congress. The treaty extended membership to "any other tribes who have been friends to the interest of the United States, to join the present confederation, and to form a state whereof the Delaware nation shall be the head, and have a representation in Congress." The treaty was buried in committee in Congress and never fulfilled. The lead Lenape negotiator, White Eyes, was murdered by a white militiaman in November 1778. According to historian Jessica Choppin Rooney, the treaty highlights that there was a possibility for an American state that was not purely governed by Anglo-American white settlers:in the earliest years of nation building, some people in the United States imagined a union that included polities distinct from those of Anglo-America and instead rooted in their own local precedent, history, and culture, making space for diverse communities, including Indigenous polities and Catholic Quebec. This form of union was brief—tragically so—but that it existed at all bears examination. It disrupts a narrative that settler colonialism was an unthinking or inevitable force. U.S. policy makers did not fail to conceive of political union with Indigenous nations; they deliberately rejected it. ==Implementation==