Diplomacy and the Road to Another War
December 19, 2012
By the late 1930s, the United States continued its efforts to stay out of the
wars in Europe and Asia. As the failure of disarmament, the peace movement, and
the doctrine of appeasement became clear, Congress passed a series of neutrality
acts designed to prevent the United States from being drawn into the widespread
international conflict that the U.S. Government believed to be inevitable.
Aerial View of Pearl Harbor
In 1940, U.S. policy slowly began to shift from neutrality to non-belligerency by
providing aid to the nations at war with the Axis Powers--Germany, Italy and
Japan. In response to the growing emergency, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt called upon the American people to prepare for war. On
December 7, 1941, the Japanese attacked the
U.S. naval installation at Pearl Harbor, and the United States formally entered
the Second World War. Meetings between those powers allied in the war against
the Axis powers provided the framework for the postwar world. Two major issues
would become of major importance to postwar foreign policy, the prevention of
another global conflict and the influence of nuclear weapons on the
international balance of power.
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