Woodrow Wilson: Revolution, War, and Peace |
Contents
Wilson and the Problems of Neutrality 19141917 | 21 |
3 | 47 |
4 | 60 |
Copyright | |
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accept achieve aggression all-out Allies Ambassador Ameri American ships approval armed merchantmen armed neutrality armed ships armistice Austro-Hungarian Empire believed belligerents Bernstorff Bethmann blockade Bolshevik Britain British and French British sea power Clemenceau collective security Colonel House Congress cooperation Covenant decision defeat demanded Democratic diplomacy diplomatic diplomatist economic Elihu Root Empire Europe February fighting final force foreign affairs foreign policy Foreign Relations fourteen points France future German government German leaders German military Germany's guarantee hope House-Grey Memorandum important inevitable international law issue January Japanese Lansing lasting peace leadership League of Nations liberal peace Lodge reservations mankind mediation ment merchantmen Monroe Doctrine Moreover naval negotiations objectives Paris Peace Conference peace settlement political President pressure prevent Princeton promise ratification refused reparations reply Republican resolution response Russian seas Senate Sir Edward Grey submarine campaign thought tion U-boats United Versailles Versailles Treaty warned Washington Woodrow Wilson