Saturday, April 6, 2019

USA Enters WW1 WWI 101 years ago

When the US joined the fight against Germany in World War One in 1917, the temperance movement for prohibition of alcohol gained high profile support from people who capitalized on the anti-German sentiment to stop the political power of German Americans. The movement which was initially targeted toward hard liquor shifted to include the beer industry for two reasons: one was that there was a huge amount of German money and influence in the beer industry, and the other was the beer industry controlled so many taverns that they could not be shut down without attacking the beer industry.

http://www.rochester.edu/newscenter/looking-back-100-years-u-s-enters-world-war-i-on-april-6-1917/

Woodrow Wilson did not want war.

When World War I erupted in Europe in 1914, the 28th U.S. president pledged neutrality, in sync with prevailing American public opinion.

But while Wilson tried to avoid war for the next three years, favoring instead a negotiated collective approach to international stability, he was rapidly running out of options. Tensions heightened as Germany tried to isolate Britain in 1915 and announced unrestricted attacks against all ships that entered the war zone around the British Isles.

In early April 1917, with the toll in sunken U.S. merchant ships and civilian casualties rising, Wilson asked Congress for “a war to end all wars” that would “make the world safe for democracy.” A hundred years ago, on April 6, 1917, Congress thus voted to declare war on Germany, joining the bloody battle—then optimistically called the “Great War.”

“The U.S. declaration of war, in essence, was a recognition of the fact that Germany had chosen to impose a very risky gamble on the U.S.—risky for Germany, but the only way they thought they could obtain the victory they needed at home,” says University of Rochester associate professor of political science Hein Goemans.

A specialist in international relations and conflict, Goemans is the author of War and Punishment: The Causes of War Termination and the First World War (Princeton University Press, 2000). Since then, he has also coauthored a book on leaders and war initiation, Leaders and International Conflict (Cambridge University Press, 2011).

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