I think that we're disagreeing over terminology in areas were there are often lots of grey.The Observer wrote:The surrender of Cornwallis did no such thing, since Great Britain still had over 30,000 soldiers in the American colonies after the surrender. The surrender only led to the fall of the North government and the installation of a peace party.LPC wrote:As jg has already pointed out, declaring that something is true does not make it so. The Declaration of Independence did not make the United States independent. It was the surrender of General Cornwallis at Yorktown that made the United States an independent and sovereign nation, and not a press release by the Continental Congress.
It was the Treaty of Paris, 1783 that brought the war to a close and granted American independence and recognition by Great Britain as an independent nation.
My point was that the Declaration of Independence did not make the United States independent or sovereign. What made the United States independent were the "facts on the ground," the most important of which was Cornwallis's surrender.
You say that it was the Treaty of Paris that "granted American independence," but the Treaty of Paris was only the formal recognition of American independence by Great Britain. The US could have been independent in fact even if Great Britain did not recognize it. (For example, the failure of the US to recognize Red China as a sovereign nation independent of the government of Taiwan did not mean that Red China was not in fact independent of Taiwan.)