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what were the strength and weaknesses of roosevelt's foreign policies, the benefits and drawbacks of his activism?

2006-11-07 18:12:57 · 5 answers · asked by Vienna 3 in Education & Reference Homework Help

5 answers

The U.S. had two Roosevelts as president. Theodore Roosevelt's foreign policy included building a strong navy. By 1907, the U.S. had the world's third largest naval fleet, thanks to his Great White Fleet which circumnavigated the globe in order to demonstrate U.S. military power and navy capability. He also initiated construction on the Panama Canal, which helped expedite world commerce. One of his failed attempts at activism was inviting Booker T. Washington to be the first African American to dine in the White House. Reaction from whites was so negative, Roosevelt never again attempted it. Roosevelt did, however, earn a Nobel Peace Prize for helping negotiate the end of the Russo-Japanese War. He also settled a dispute between France and Germany over the division of Morocco.

As for Franklin Roosevelt's foreign policy, his Good Neighbor Policy helped withdraw troops from Haiti and ended Cuba and Panama's statuses as U.S. protectorates. The Montevideo Convention renounced the right to intervene unilaterally in the affairs of Latin American countries. FDR's foreign policy for his second term included the Neutrality Act in 1935, an act defined as applying a mandatory ban on the shipment of arms from the U.S. to any combatant nation in World War II; Roosevelt initially rejected it, but signed it amidst huge public support. The Lend-Lease Act of 1941 allowed the U.S. to "lend" huge amounts of military equipment in return for "leases" on British naval bases in the Western Hemisphere. His third term was dominated by World War II; he developed the Atlantic Charter along with Winston Churchill in August 1941, which was a negotiation between Allied Powers. He also signed the declaration of war against Japan in 1941 after the attack on Pearl Harbor.

I hope some of this helps.

2006-11-07 19:13:13 · answer #1 · answered by arkguy20 5 · 0 1

White House: Theodore Roosevelt
Profile of the twenty-sixth president.
Category: Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919)
www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/tr26.html - 31k - Cached - More from this site
Presidents of the United States
Brief biographies of all the presidents from the official White House web page.
Category: U.S. Presidential History
www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents

2006-11-07 18:17:15 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

at the start, there is not any evidence for something you're saying notwithstanding if its unfavorable or beneficial approximately FDR. in fact, no one is familiar with something approximately something. there is not any evidence, no statistical archives that shows something have been given us out of the total melancholy. With that suggested, what we DO comprehend is that economies are cyclical, so it somewhat is fullyyt available that the economic equipment might have reversed direction around that comparable time in any case. enable me say that i'm a good Democrat yet i'm a pragmastic first, American 2d, and a Democrat 0.33. Do i think FDR is over-rated? particular. Do i think FDR gets credit for issues the place there is not any evidence for which he merits credit? particular. yet regardless, many human beings enjoyed him and accompanied him blindly because of the fact they did no longer comprehend extra suitable. in fact, I variety of see the comparable factor occurring with Obama. there is basically a great team of human beings in u . s . who do no longer understand the matters and only blindly stick to Obama and have faith he can do no incorrect. And to different Democrats in this communicate board: only on account which you voted for him does not recommend you could no longer criticize him. Obama has completed no longer something on account that being inaugurated.

2016-10-21 11:20:10 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Which Roosevelt, Teddy or Franklin?

2006-11-07 19:11:36 · answer #4 · answered by S E 5 · 0 1

**Biblography of history of president Franklin D. Roosevelt**

Franklin D. Roosevelt was born in Hyde Park, New York on January 30, 1882, the son of James Roosevelt and Sara Delano Roosevelt. His parents and private tutors provided him with almost all his formative education. He attended Groton (1896-1900), a prestigious preparatory school in Massachusetts, and received a BA degree in history from Harvard in only three years (1900-03). Roosevelt next studied law at New York's Columbia University. When he passed the bar examination in 1907, he left school without taking a degree. For the next three years he practiced law with a prominent New York City law firm. He entered politics in 1910 and was elected to the New York State Senate as a Democrat from his traditionally Republican home district.

In the meantime, in 1905, he had married a distant cousin, Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, who was the niece of President Theodore Roosevelt. The couple had six children, five of whom survived infancy: Anna (1906), James (1907), Elliott (1910), Franklin, Jr. (1914) and John (1916).

Roosevelt was reelected to the State Senate in 1912, and supported Woodrow Wilson's candidacy at the Democratic National Convention. As a reward for his support, Wilson appointed him Assistant Secretary of the Navy in 1913, a position he held until 1920. He was an energetic and efficient administrator, specializing in the business side of naval administration. This experience prepared him for his future role as Commander-in-Chief during World War II. Roosevelt's popularity and success in naval affairs resulted in his being nominated for vice-president by the Democratic Party in 1920 on a ticket headed by James M. Cox of Ohio. However, popular sentiment against Wilson's plan for US participation in the League of Nations propelled Republican Warren Harding into the presidency, and Roosevelt returned to private life.

While vacationing at Campobello Island, New Brunswick in the summer of 1921, Roosevelt contracted poliomyelitis (infantile paralysis). Despite courageous efforts to overcome his crippling illness, he never regained the use of his legs. In time, he established a foundation at Warm Springs, Georgia to help other polio victims, and inspired, as well as directed, the March of Dimes program that eventually funded an effective vaccine.

With the encouragement and help of his wife, Eleanor, and political confidant, Louis Howe, Roosevelt resumed his political career. In 1924 he nominated Governor Alfred E. Smith of New York for president at the Democratic National Convention, but Smith lost the nomination to John W. Davis. In 1928 Smith became the Democratic candidate for president and arranged for Roosevelt's nomination to succeed him as governor of New York. Smith lost the election to Herbert Hoover; but Roosevelt was elected governor.

Following his reelection as governor in 1930, Roosevelt began to campaign for the presidency. While the economic depression damaged Hoover and the Republicans, Roosevelt's bold efforts to combat it in New York enhanced his reputation. In Chicago in 1932, Roosevelt won the nomination as the Democratic Party candidate for president. He broke with tradition and flew to Chicago to accept the nomination in person. He then campaigned energetically calling for government intervention in the economy to provide relief, recovery, and reform. His activist approach and personal charm helped to defeat Hoover in November 1932 by seven million votes.

The Depression worsened in the months preceding Roosevelt's inauguration, March 4, 1933. Factory closings, farm foreclosures, and bank failures increased, while unemployment soared. Roosevelt faced the greatest crisis in American history since the Civil War. He undertook immediate actions to initiate his New Deal. To halt depositor panics, he closed the banks temporarily. Then he worked with a special session of Congress during the first "100 days" to pass recovery legislation which set up alphabet agencies such as the AAA (Agricultural Adjustment Administration) to support farm prices and the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps) to employ young men. Other agencies assisted business and labor, insured bank deposits, regulated the stock market, subsidized home and farm mortgage payments, and aided the unemployed. These measures revived confidence in the economy. Banks reopened and direct relief saved millions from starvation. But the New Deal measures also involved government directly in areas of social and economic life as never before and resulted in greatly increased spending and unbalanced budgets which led to criticisms of Roosevelt's programs. However, the nation-at-large supported Roosevelt, elected additional Democrats to state legislatures and governorships in the mid-term elections.

Another flurry of New Deal legislation followed in 1935 including the establishment of the Works Projects Administration (WPA) which provided jobs not only for laborers but also artists, writers, musicians, and authors, and the Social Security act which provided unemployment compensation and a program of old-age and survivors' benefits.

Roosevelt easily defeated Alfred M. Landon in 1936 and went on to defeat by lesser margins, Wendell Willkie in 1940 and Thomas E. Dewey in 1944. He thus became the only American president to serve more than two terms.

After his overwhelming victory in 1936, Roosevelt took on the critics of the New deal, namely, the Supreme Court which had declared various legislation unconstitutional, and members of his own party. In 1937 he proposed to add new justices to the Supreme Court, but critics said he was "packing" the Court and undermining the separation of powers. His proposal was defeated, but the Court began to decide in favor of New Deal legislation. During the 1938 election he campaigned against many Democratic opponents, but this backfired when most were reelected to Congress. These setbacks, coupled with the recession that occurred midway through his second term, represented the low-point in Roosevelt's presidential career.

By 1939 Roosevelt was concentrating increasingly on foreign affairs with the outbreak of war in Europe. New Deal reform legislation diminished, and the ills of the Depression would not fully abate until the nation mobilized for war.

When Hitler attacked Poland in September 1939, Roosevelt stated that, although the nation was neutral, he did not expect America to remain inactive in the face of Nazi aggression. Accordingly, he tried to make American aid available to Britain, France, and China and to obtain an amendment of the Neutrality Acts which rendered such assistance difficult. He also took measures to build up the armed forces in the face of isolationist opposition.

With the fall of France in 1940, the American mood and Roosevelt's policy changed dramatically. Congress enacted a draft for military service and Roosevelt signed a "lend-lease" bill in March 1941 to enable the nation to furnish aid to nations at war with Germany and Italy. America, though a neutral in the war and still at peace, was becoming the "arsenal of democracy", as its factories began producing as they had in the years before the Depression.

The Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941, followed four days later by Germany's and Italy's declarations of war against the United States, brought the nation irrevocably into the war. Roosevelt exercised his powers as Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, a role he actively carried out. He worked with and through his military advisers, overriding them when necessary, and took an active role in choosing the principal field commanders and in making decisions regarding wartime strategy.

He moved to create a "grand alliance" against the Axis powers through "The Declaration of the United Nations," January 1, 1942, in which all nations fighting the Axis agreed not to make a separate peace and pledged themselves to a peacekeeping organization (now the United Nations) on victory.

He gave priority to the western European front and had General George Marshall, Chief of Staff, plan a holding operation in the Pacific and organize an expeditionary force for an invasion of Europe. The United States and its allies invaded North Africa in November 1942 and Sicily and Italy in 1943. The D-Day landings on the Normandy beaches in France, June 6, 1944, were followed by the allied invasion of Germany six months later. By April 1945 victory in Europe was certain.

The unending stress and strain of the war literally wore Roosevelt out. By early 1944 a full medical examination disclosed serious heart and circulatory problems; and although his physicians placed him on a strict regime of diet and medication, the pressures of war and domestic politics weighed heavily on him. During a vacation at Warm Springs, Georgia, on April 12, 1945, he suffered a massive stroke and died two and one-half hours later without regaining consciousness. He was 63 years old. His death came on the eve of complete military victory in Europe and within months of victory over Japan in the Pacific. President Roosevelt was buried in the Rose Garden of his estate at Hyde Park, New York .

I hope u get answer have a nice day

2006-11-07 20:18:32 · answer #5 · answered by Well Wisher 3 · 0 0

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