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Thursday, March 21, 2019

The Great Departure :: Great Departure Essays

The Great breathing out   Daniel Smiths, The Great Departure illustrates very well the United States evolution from a traditionally isolationist nation to an interventionist nation. WWI literally dragged the U.S. out of its isolationist font and placed the U.S. at the forefront of international politics. The pressure to join WWI was resisted greatly by the Wilson administration and the country as a whole. Smith does an smooth job at presenting the factors that influenced the U.S. to enter the war and at conveying the thought set of American leaders during this time and the issues they faced pertaining to the war. The author illustrates the factors of sideline or the eventual causes involvement in WWI in chapters II, III, IV. He offers vertical points to the issues and now I would like to discuss some of the issues he has mentioned. Propaganda was a tool used by Germany and the allies to influence the U.S., whether that propaganda was used to clutches the U.S. out of the war or to try and draw the U.S. into the war makes no real difference. The extent of propaganda in the U.S. is shown by the Dr. Alberts briefcase affair and the German execution of Nurse Edith Cavell and other atrocities of war carried out by all side. The author, while recognizing the importance of these propaganda stories and the heterogeneous culture of the U.S., underestimates the actual impact on public sentiment it actually had I feel. The U.S., "the great melting butt" had an enormous immigrant population, to underestimate the effect of propaganda on a population that had adjacent personal ties to their homeland, and their ability to influence the actions of government in a elected republic is a mistake. President Wilson was operating under this assumption that the batch would influence the government when he neglected to accept any of the Senator parliamentary procedures changes to the peace treaty. While I agree with Smith that this is non the reason the U.S. joined the allies in WWI, I feel the diversified makeup of the U.S. population is possibly the major influence the U.S. had to move past from an isolationist state. Balance of Powers was another great factor that influenced the U.S. in its views of WWI. The U.S. and the instauration had come to rely on the principle of fit of power to break peace, security and trade throughout the world, and it was no doubt that a supremacy by the Central Powers would catapult Germany to superpower status and upset the balance of power in Europe and thus the rest of the world.

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