Toward an Entangling Alliance: American Isolationism, Internationalism, and Europe, 1901-1950Bloomsbury Academic, 30 mars 1991 - 312 pages Conceived with a dedication to manifest destiny, individual freedom, and opportunity, the United States, from its inception, made an effort to avoid political or military involvement in Europe which could conflict with its pursuit of those goals. Ronald E. Powaski's study analyzes why the United States pursued this isolationist policy, and the factors, events, and personalities which challenged it and finally necessitated its abandonment. |
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... Germany remained disarmed.67 Both Coolidge and Kellogg also were pleased with the Locarno accords . They were certainly ... Germany's western boundary as well as the borders of Belgium and France . Austen Chamberlain , recognizing the ...
... Germany Yet as the Truman administration's interest in Eastern Europe waned , its interest in Germany increased . It ... Germany's future , de Gaulle told U.S. Ambassador Jefferson Caffery , " is a matter of life and death for us . For ...
... Germany's rehabilitation was the key ingredient in that recovery . " Without a revival of German production , " he told Congress , " there can be no revival of Europe's economy . " 3 The French , however , balked at the prospect of ...
Table des matières
The Emergence of American Internationalism 19011921 | 1 |
Republican Isolationism 19211933 338825 | 27 |
Franklin D Roosevelt the Isolationists and the Aggressors | 58 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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