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The United States Enters The Great War. U.S. Neutrality. Many Americans wanted to remain isolated from European conflicts War not in best interests of America Panama Canal completed in 1914 – one week before war breaks out in Europe The war is in… Europe
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U.S. Neutrality • Many Americans wanted to remain isolated from European conflicts • War not in best interests of America • Panama Canal completed in 1914 – one week before war breaks out in Europe • The war is in… Europe • Atlantic a barrier of protection from Eur. probs.
U.S. Neutrality • Woodrow Wilson – a neutral U.S. could arrange a fair peace agreement in Europe (Washington & Jefferson Tradition) • Campaigned for 1916 election on slogan: “He kept us out of war” (wins, but a close election)
U.S. Neutrality • President Wilson’s beliefs: • U.S. will lead nations toward peaceful world:free trade, capitalism, democracy, open diplomacy, fewer arms, no empires • U.S. “destiny” to save the world
U.S. Reactions to War • Shock – why are “civilized” nations going to war? • Glad Atlantic offered “barrier” of protection (no danger of being drawn in) • Sympathetic – ethnic groups • 1/3 of America = “hyphenated Americans” (recent immigrants still had ties to home) • “Old-Line” Americans supported Allied Power/Triple Entente (British Heritage) • Government leadership definitely supported Allied Powers
Threats to Neutrality • Pre-War Policy • U.S. had right to trade with the warring nations • Warring nations should respect U.S. neutrality • “Freedom of the Seas”
Threats to Neutrality • U.S. continued to trade w/ Europe • Wilson allowed banks (JP Morgan, etc.) to extend credit (loans) to Triple Entente to maintain trade • *WWI transforms US from debtor to creditor nation* • U.S. traded more w/ Britain & France (so not strictly neutral…) • $2 bil in credit to Allied before armistice, only $27 mil to Germany
Threats to Neutrality • Between 1914-1917, trade w/ Allied Powers quadrupled • Trade w/ Allies grows from $825 mil in 1914 to $3.2 bil in 1916 • Trade w/ Central Powers goes from $70 mil in 1914 to $1.3 mil in 1916
Threats to Neutrality • Britain was blockading Ger. • No supplies, no sunken ships • Britain violates U.S. neutrality by seizing U.S. cargo bound for Germany (takes property) • Germany tries to stop U.S. trade w/ Britain via submarines (takes lives) • Wilson demands Germany comply w/ international law
Threats to Neutrality • Jan 1917 – Germany attempts full sub war(wants to defeat Triple Entente before US entry) • Wilson breaks off U.S. diplomatic relations w/ Germany • 1st weeks of March, German U-Boats sink 5 unarmed U.S. merchant ships
Sidebar: Sunken Ships • May 7, 1915 – Br. passenger ship Lusitania sinks (128 Americans die) • Aug 1915 – U-boats sink passenger ship Arabic (2 Americans die) • March 1916 – French merchant ship Sussex sunk, several Americans injured • Wilson threatens to break off diplomatic relations • Sussex Pledge – Germany promises not to attack merchant or passenger ships (w/o warning) • Until 1917
Threats to Neutrality • The Zimmerman Telegram • March 1 1917: Newspapers print telegram • German Foreign Minister Arthur Zimmerman proposed Mexico ally w/ Germany against U.S. • Would get German help reclaiming TX, NM, & AZ
Russian Revolution • 1917 – Bolsheviks overthrow the Russian Tsar • Wilson believed revolution would end monarchy, bring democracy to Russia • w/o Tsar, easier for Wilson to support Allied Powers • “keeping the world safe for democracy”
U.S. Enters the War • April 2nd 1917 – Wilson calls special session of Congress • Speech: • Condemned Germany’s unrestricted sub warfare “warfare against mankind” • Declared “the world must be made safe for democracy” • April 6th 1917 – Congress votes for a declaration of war