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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... effort begun in 1922 to reduce navies also faltered . Because the U.S. Navy had declined far below the ceilings established by the Washington and London naval treaties , while the Japanese navy remained at the treaties ' limits ...
... effort to appease the dictators , and as a result disassociated himself from the British effort to do so . According to Rock , this was exactly what Chamberlain wanted.70 There were other reasons for Roosevelt's reluctance to proceed ...
... effort to accommodate Soviet desires in order to maintain the Grand Alliance after the war became synonymous with the Western effort to appease Hitler before that conflict . After the Truman administration released the documentation 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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Toward an Entangling Alliance: American Isolationism, Internationalism, and ... Ronald Powaski Aucun aperçu disponible - 1991 |