preview

Isolationism During World War 1

Decent Essays

raw research notes.
Pre-WW1 to Aftermath: Staunch Isolationism, A Bloody War, The League of Nations, Woodrow Wilson’s Dream Falls Apart.

- Prior to WW1, the USA had a policy of international isolationism.

- When WW1 broke out in 1914, the US did their best to stay out of it, at least initially.

- Democrat President Woodrow Wilson was instrumental in this policy of impartiality and neutrality. This policy of isolationism ended in 1917, when Germany introduced a new policy of sinking all ships carrying supplies to the Allies. This of course included American ships.

- Germany had also secretly promised to Mexico that it would assist it in reclaiming former Mexican territories, such as California, which had been lost to the US in 1846-1848.

- This attempt to …show more content…

- President Wilson came up with, and was a fervent proponent of the idea that some kind of international political body should be created in order to resolve disputes between countries.

- The purpose of such a body would be to prevent wars like WW1 from ever again occurring.

- In his mind, the establishment of this “League of Nations” as it would come to be called, would be an essential part of the post-war peace treaties. In Wilson’s opinion, the USA would have to play a major role in this League of Nations. In Wilson’s eyes, that was the only way to guarantee a lasting peace.

- Wrench thrown into President Wilson’s ambitious plan for America by domestic political upsets. In the elections of November 1918, the Republican Party gained a majority in the Senate, and in the House of Representatives.

- President Wilson had upset some of his Republican opponents by breaking the agreement that party politics should be suspended during the war. This was a bad decision by Wilson, because under the US Constitution, the peace treaties, and therefore the entry of the US into the League of Nations, needed the approval of the

Get Access