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Americas involvement in World War Two |
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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 French, Russian and
Japanese armies
numbered in millions. Its weapons dated from the first World War and were no
match compared to the
new artillery that Germany and its allies had. “American soldiers were more at
home with the horse than
with the tank” (Overy 273). The air force was just as bad if not worse. In
September 1939 the Air Corps
had only 800 combat aircrafts again compared with Germany’s 3600 and Russia’s
10,000 . American
military Aviation (AMA) in 1938 was able to produce only 1,800, 300 less than
Germany, and 1,400 less
than Japan. Major Eisenhower, who was later Supreme commander of the Allied
forces in the second
World War, complained that America was left with “only a shell of military
establishment” (Chapman
234 ). As was evident to Roosevelt the United states military was in no way
prepared to enter this
European crisis.
Another aspect that we have to consider is the people’s views and thought’s
regarding the
United States going to war. After all let us not forget that the American
government is there “for the
people and by the people” and therefore the people’s view did play a major role
in this declaration of
Neutrality. In one of Roosevelt’s fireside chats he said “We shun political
commitments which might
entangle us In foreign wars...If we face the choice of profits or peace-this
nation must answer, the nation
will answer ‘we choose peace’ ”,in which they did. A poll taken in 1939
revealed that ninety-four per
cent of the citizens did not want the united states to enter the war. The shock
of World War one had still
not left ,and entering a new war, they felt, would be foolish. In the early
stages of the war American
Ambassador to London was quoted saying “It’s the end of the world, the end of
everything” ( Overy 261).
As Richard Overy notes in The Road To War, this growing “estrangement” from
Europe was not mere
selfishness. They were the values expressed by secretary of state, Cordel Hull:
“a primary interest in peace
with justice, in economic well-being with stability, and conditions of order
under the law”. These were
principles here on which most Americans (ninety-four percent as of 1939) agreed
on. To promote these
principles the United States would have to avoid all “foreign entanglements”,
or as Overy puts it “any
kind of alliance or association outside the western hemisphere”. Instead the
United States should act as an
arbitre in world affairs, “encouraging peaceful change where necessary” and
most and for all discouraging
aggression (Overy 263).
Why risk going to war, when it is contrary to American policy which most if not
all Americans
were in agreement with and not mentioning the fact that the American military
was in shambles. Yet
another factor that led to this decision of Neutrality by President Roosevelt
was the American Economy.
The health of the American economy could not be jeopardized, whatever was
happening
elsewhere. It was Roosevelt’s view that the United states would fare well
(economically speaking) whether
Europe went to war or not. “Gold was flowing in from Europe’s capitals; orders
were mounting daily for
equipment and supplies of all kinds; America was building a battleship for
Stalin, aero-engines for
France” (Overy 277). For most of the 1930’s the United states traded as openly
with Germany and Japan,
as it did with any other country. Japan relied on fuel oil and scrap iron until
1941. Germany was one of
the United States’ “most important markets” during the 1930’s. American
investments in Germany
increased by forty per cent between 1936 and 1940 ( Wilson 291). America was
steadily regaining the
prosperity that had diminished during World War 1. The real concern of American
business was not “the
rights or wrongs of trading with fascism” but the fear that commercial rivals
such as Japan and Germany
would exclude American goods from Europe and Asia altogether (273).
It is very easy to point and accuse the united states of being selfish, but one
has to understand that
any negative actions made would have resulted in the United States being almost
if not completely out of
the economic race. Would the United states have been as prosperous as it is
today had they intervened any
earlier? They probably would have not because at that time in history America
needed a boost to return to
its earlier status of being economically stable which Germany and its allies so
adequately provided.
Therefore President Roosevelt was not about to go to war with all axis powers
thereby jeopardizing not
only the safety of the American people but also the American economy which was
so essential to a large
and complex country that the United States was at the time. Unless American
interests were directly
threatened, Roosevelt hesitated to “push the button” ( Churchill 542).
On December 6, 1941 the Japanese Airforce led a surprise attack on Pearl
Harbor, completely
eradicating the port. Finally President Roosevelt could wait no longer. America
was now involved and not
going to war would only endanger the United states more than it already was. On
the following day
Roosevelt argued that the attack “had given us an opportunity”. Congress
approved the declaration of war
with only one dissenting voice. Eleanor Roosevelt noted that the effect of the
Japanese attack was “to
release my husband from months and pent-up tension and anxiety”. Andrew
Wheatcroft says in his book
The Road To War, “ It is tempting to see Pearl Harbor as the crisis that
Roosevelt was waiting for and did
nothing to prevent”. America’s most vital interest, defense of American soil,
had been challenged. At last
America had to go to war and eventually bring an end to the rule of nazi
Germany.
The Americans upon declaring its Neutrality, gave additional encouragement to
Japan and
Germany to in a way “take over the world”, and to Nazify it. Hitler had
convinced himself that America
had declined in the 1930’s because of social crisis. This misconception also
led Japan to confront the
United States in 1941. Had the United States entered the war any earlier or
later the consequences could
have been much worse (If possible). Towards the end of the war Walter Lippmann
reporter for the Herald
Tribune recalled his experience:
When I attempt to compare the America in which I was reared with the America of
today, I am
struck by how unconcerned I was as a young man with the hard questions which
are the subject matter of
history. I did not think about the security of the republic and how to defend
it
(Overy 341).
Franklin Delano Roosevelt did think about the security of the republic and
defended it magnificently.
Leading the United States every step of the way President Roosevelt did a
superior job in bringing
America into war when he did. Evidently America entered World war 2 at the
precise time and moment
to once and for all take down Adolph Hitler and the third Reich.