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provide examples

2007-04-17 15:00:09 · 2 answers · asked by aefhskjrfhskjghskjrghw289utghwsr 2 in Arts & Humanities History

2 answers

Actually the attitude was a lot different. After WW I the general idea was that we were going to try and stay as far away from European issues as possible. We didn't want to get involved with them, we wanted to be isolationists, on our own, and to handle things on our own.

After WW II we were fairly sure that isolationism didn't work at all. Instead of punishing the losers, Germany and Japan, we put out a plan to help not only them but also every other country that was suffering. Also, after WW II it was perfectly clear that the USA was going to be one pole in a dual access world, the other pole was the USSR. Such a bi-polar world did not exist after World War I.

2007-04-17 15:39:46 · answer #1 · answered by John B 7 · 0 0

ooh surrouding smells bullets and slogs

2007-04-17 22:08:17 · answer #2 · answered by pinkbullet 5 · 0 1

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