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Americas Involvement in World War Two

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Essay title: Americas Involvement in World War Two

Americas involvement in World War Two

When war broke out , there was no way the world could possibly know the severity of this guerre.

Fortunately one country saw and understood that Germany and its allies would have to be stopped.

America's Involvement in World War two not only contributed in the eventual downfall of the insane

Adolph Hitler and his Third Reich, but also came at the precise time and moment. Had the united states

entered the war any earlier the consequences might have been worse.

Over the years it has been an often heated and debated issue on whether the united states could

have entered the war sooner and thus have saved many lives. To try to understand this we must look both

at the people's and government's point of view.

Just after war broke out in Europe, President Roosevelt hurriedly called his cabinet and military

advisors together. There it was agreed that the United states stay neutral in these affairs. One of the

reasons given was that unless America was directly threatened they had no reason to be involved. This

reason was a valid one because it was the American policy to stay neutral in any affairs not having to with

them unless American soil was threatened directly. Thus the provisional neutrality act passed the senate

by seventy-nine votes to two in 1935. On August 31, Roosevelt signed it into law. In 1936 the law was

renewed, and in 1937 a "comprehensive and permanent" neutrality act was passed (Overy 259).

The desire to avoid "foreign entanglements" of all kinds had been an American foreign policy for

more than a century. A very real "geographical Isolation" permitted the United States to "fill up the empty

lands of North America free from the threat of foreign conflict"(Churchill 563).

Even if Roosevelt had wanted to do more in this European crisis (which he did not), there was a

factor too often ignored by critics of American policy-American military weakness. When asked to

evaluate how many troops were available if and when the United States would get involved, the army

could only gather a mere one hundred thousand, when the

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