Title: The Diplomacy of the New Era
1The Diplomacy of the New Era
- Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes secured
legislation from Congress in 1921 declaring the
war with Germany to be at an end, negotiated with
separate peace treaties with the former Central
Powers, these separate treaties the lawmakers
believed gave the US all the advantages of the
Versailles Treaty with none of the burdensome
responsibilities, Hughes then embarked on a
series of efforts to build safeguards against
future wars
2The Diplomacy of the New Era
- The Washington Conference of 1921 was an attempt
to prevent a naval arms race between America,
Japan and Britain, proposed reductions in the
fleets of all 3 nations, 10-year moratorium on
construction of large warships, called for the
actual scrapping of 2 million tons of existing
shipping, the conference ultimately agreed to
accept most of the terms
3The Diplomacy of the New Era
- The Five- Power Pact (1922) established both
limits for total naval tonnage and a ratio of
armaments among the signatories, for every 5 tons
of American and British warships, Japan would
maintain 3 tons, and France and Italy 1.75 tons
each, this in fact confirmed Japanese superiority
in East Asia, Britain and the US had to spread
their fleets around the globe while Japan was
only concerned with the Pacific
4The Diplomacy of the New Era
- The Nine-Power Pact pledged a continuation of the
Open Door policy in China, and in the Four-Power
Pact the US, Britain, France, and Japan promised
to respect one anothers Pacific territories and
cooperate to prevent aggression
5The Diplomacy of the New Era
- The Kellog-Briand Pact (1928) was a multilateral
treaty outlawing war as an instrument of national
policy, 14 nations signed the agreement,
eventually 48 other nations would join the pact,
it contained no instruments of enforcement but
rested on the moral force of world opinion
6The Diplomacy of the New Era
- The first responsibility of American diplomacy
was to ensure that American overseas trade faced
no obstacles to expansion, and that, once
established, it would remain free of
interference, preventing a dangerous armaments
race and reducing the possibility of war were
steps to that end
7The Diplomacy of the New Era
- The US was most concerned about Europe on whose
economic health American prosperity in large part
depended on, Allied powers were struggling to
repay 11 billion in loans they had contracted
with the US during and shortly after the war,
loans that the Republican administrations were
unwilling to reduce or forgive, They hired the
money, didnt they?, with Germany also
struggling to pay its reparations, the financial
structure of Europe was on the brink of collapse
8The Diplomacy of the New Era
- Charles G. Dawes an American banker and diplomat,
negotiated an agreement among France, Britain,
Germany and the United States under which
American banks would provide enormous loans to
the Germans, enabling them to meet their
reparations payments, in return, Britain and
France would agree to reduce the amount of those
payments, Dawes won the Nobel Peace Prize for his
efforts
9The Diplomacy of the New Era
- The Dawes Plan was responsible for the growing
American economic presence in Germany, created
circular pattern America would lend money to
Germany, which Germany would use to pay
reparations to France and England, who would in
turn use those funds to repay war debts to the US
10The Diplomacy of the New Era
- American automobile manufacturers were opening
European factories, capturing a large share of
the overseas market, other industries were
establishing subsidiaries worth more than 10
billion throughout the Continent, taking
advantage of the devastation of European industry
and the inability of domestic corporations to
recover
11The Diplomacy of the New Era
- Some in the American government warned that the
reckless expansion of overseas loans and
investments threatened disaster that the US was
becoming too dependent on unstable European
economies, the high Republican tariffs of the
1920s made it difficult for European nations to
export their goods to the US making it difficult
to find the money necessary to repay their loans,
these warnings fell on deaf ears and US economic
expansion in Europe continued until 1931
12The Diplomacy of the New Era
- During the 1920s the American military maintained
a presence in many Latin American countries, US
investments in Latin America more than doubled
between 1924 and 1929, American corporations
built roads and other facilities in many areas,
American banks offered loans to Latin American
governments who were also having difficultly
earning the money to repay them in the face of
American high tariffs, resentment of Yankee
Imperialism was rapidly growing in the late
1920s
13The Diplomacy of the New Era
- The world financial crisis that began in 1929 and
greatly intensified after 1931 was not only
creating economic distress, it was producing a
dangerous nationalism that threatened the weak
international agreements established during the
previous decade, the Depression was toppling some
existing political leaders and replacing them
with powerful, belligerent governments bent on
expansion as a solution to their economic
problems
14The Diplomacy of the New Era
- In Latin America, Hoover worked diligently to
repair some of the damage created by earlier
American policies, he made a 10-week goodwill
tour of the region before his inauguration, he
tried to abstain from intervening in the internal
affairs of Latin American countries, and moved to
withdraw troops from Haiti.
15The Diplomacy of the New Era
- America would grant diplomatic recognition to any
sitting government without questioning the means
it had used to obtain power, Hoover even
repudiated the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe
Doctrine by refusing to permit American
intervention when several Latin American
countries defaulted on their debt obligations to
the US in 1931
16The Diplomacy of the New Era
- Hoover proposed a moratorium on debts in Europe
in 1931, but this failed to attract broad support
or produce financial stability, many economists
and political leaders appealed to Hoover to
cancel all war debts owed to the US, but Hoover
refused to cancel war debts in Europe, and
several European nations promptly went into
default
17The Diplomacy of the New Era
- At the World Disarmament Conference (1932) France
rejected idea of disarmament, called for the
creation of an international army to counter the
growing power of Germany, Hoover continued to
urge major reductions in armaments including an
immediate abolition of all offensive weapons and
a 30 reduction in all land and naval forces, the
conference ended in failure
18The Diplomacy of the New Era
- Benito Mussolini and his Fascist Party had been
in power in Italy since the early 1920s and by
the 1930s it was increasingly nationalistic and
militaristic, its leaders were threatening an
active campaign of imperial expansion
19The Diplomacy of the New Era
- Hitler and the National Socialist Party (Nazis)
would be in power in Germany by 1933, led by a
belief in the racial superiority of the Aryan
people, his commitment to providing Lebensraum
(living space) for his master race, his
pathological anti-Semitism and his passionate
militarism all threatened European peace in the
1930s
20The Diplomacy of the New Era
- The Japanese, reeling from an economic depression
of their own, were concerned about the increasing
strength of the Soviet Union and of Chiang
Kai-Sheks nationalist China, the were alarmed at
Chiangs insistence on expanding his governments
power in Manchuria, Japan had maintained
effective economic control of Manchuria since
1905.
21The Diplomacy of the New Era
- Japans military leaders staged a coup in 1931,
seized control of foreign policy from the
weakened liberals and launched a major invasion
of northern Manchuria and by early 1932 the
conquest of Manchuria was complete
22The Diplomacy of the New Era
- Secretary of State Henry Stimson issued stern
warnings to Japan and tried to use moral suasion
to end the crisis, Hoover forbade him from
cooperating with the League of Nations in
imposing economic sanctions against the Japanese,
the US refused to grant diplomatic recognition of
new Japanese territories, Japan was unconcerned
and in early 1932 expanded its aggression farther
into China, attacking the city of Shanghai and
killing thousands of civilians
23The Diplomacy of the New Era
- By the time Hoover left office in early 1933 it
was clear that the international system that the
US had attempted to create in the 1920s, a system
based on voluntary cooperation among nations and
on an American refusal to commit itself to the
interests of other countries, had collapsed
24Isolationism and Internationalism
- Hoover had argued that only by resolving the
question of war debt and reinforcing the gold
standard could the American economy hope to
recover, Roosevelt agreed to participate in the
World Economic Conference (1933) in order to
resolve these issues, FDR allowed the gold value
of the dollar to fall in order to enable American
goods to compete in the world markets, at the
conference FDRs Bombshell was announced in which
he rejected any agreement on currency
stabilization
25Isolationism and Internationalism
- FDR singed a bill in 1934 forbidding American
banks from making loans to any nation in default
on its debts, the result was to stop the old,
circular system by which debt payments continued
only by virtue of increasing American loans,
within months war-debt payments from every nation
except Finland stopped for good
26Isolationism and Internationalism
- The Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act (1934)
authorized administration to negotiate treaties
lowering tariffs by as much as 50 for reciprocal
reduction by other nations, Secretary of State
Cordell Hull negotiated new treaties with 21
countries resulting in an increase in American
exports of nearly 40.
27Isolationism and Internationalism
- Most of the agreements admitted only products not
competitive with American industry and
agriculture, so imports into the US continued to
lag, therefore other countries were not obtaining
the US currency needed to buy American products
or pay off debts to US banks
28Isolationism and Internationalism
- America was eager for a new relationship with the
Soviet Union as a possible source of trade, the
Soviets also wanted a new relationship with the
US in order to help contain the growing influence
of Japan who were viewed as a threat, in 1933 the
US and Soviet Union reached an agreement in which
the Soviets would cease their propaganda efforts
in the US and protect American citizens in
Russia, in return the US would recognize the
communist regime, both countries still viewed
each other with considerable mistrust
29Isolationism and Internationalism
- During the 1930s the US increased imports/exports
with the other nations in the Western Hemisphere
by 100, at the Inter-American Conference (1933)
Secretary of State Hull signed a policy statement
stating no state has the right to intervene in
the internal or external affairs of another.
30Isolationism and Internationalism
- The Good Neighbor Policy did not mean that the US
had abandoned its influence in Latin America, it
meant that instead of military force the US would
use economic influence in Latin America, it did
nothing to stem the growing American domination
of Latin American economies
31Isolationism and Internationalism
- Support for isolationism emerged after
disarmament failures at conferences in Geneva and
London (Germany, Italy, and Japan walked out of
them) Americans were faced with a choice between
more active efforts to stabilize the world or
more energetic attempts to isolate the nation
from it, most Americans unhesitatingly chose the
later
32Isolationism and Internationalism
- Internationalists (old Wilsonians) were
disillusioned with the League of Nations and its
inability to stop Japan in East Asia, Populists
were arguing that powerful business interests
(Wall Street, munitions manufacturers, and
others) had tricked the US into entering WWI.
33Isolationism and Internationalism
- An investigation by Senator Gerald Nye (ND)
revealed exorbitant profiteering and blatant tax
evasion by many corporations during the war, and
it suggested that bankers had pressured Wilson to
intervene in the war in order to protect their
loans abroad
34Isolationism and Internationalism
- In 1935 FDR asked the Senate to ratify a treaty
to make the US a member of the World Court,
isolationists (led by Hearst newspapers and
Father Charles Coughlin) opposed the treaty,
which resulted in the defeat of the treaty, this
was political blow to FDR and he did not
challenge the isolationist tide any time soon
35Isolationism and Internationalism
- The Neutrality Act of 1935 was designed to
prevent a recurrence of the events many Americans
now believed had pressured the US into WWI, this
law established a mandatory arms embargo against
both victim and aggressor.
36Isolationism and Internationalism
- Empowered the President to warn American citizens
that they might travel on the ships of warring
nations only at their own risk, thus protection
of neutral rights could not be used as an excuse
for American intervention in a European war,
these provisions were easily renewed in 1936
37Isolationism and Internationalism
- The Neutrality Act of 1937 established a
cash-and-carry policy in which belligerents could
purchase only nonmilitary goods from the US, had
to pay cash, and had to carry the goods away on
their own vessels
38Isolationism and Internationalism
- Mussolini launched attack on Ethiopia in October
1935, the League of Nations protested, Italy
simply resigned from the organization, completed
its conquest of Ethiopia and formed an alliance
with Nazi Germany (the Axis), this action on the
part of Italy renewed American determination to
isolate themselves
39Isolationism and Internationalism
- General Francisco Franco (1937), leader of the
Falangists (similar to the Fascists in Italy),
fought the Spanish Civil War supported militarily
and economically by Hitler and Mussolini, some
individual Americans traveled to Spain to fight
the fascists (Abraham Lincoln Brigade) but the US
government joined with France and Britain in an
agreement to offer no assistance to either side
40Isolationism and Internationalism
- In 1937 Tokyo attacked Chinas five northern
provinces, in response FDR gave the Quarantine
Speech, aggressors should be quarantined by the
international community to prevent the contagion
of war from spreading, American public response
to the speech was hostile and FDR drew back from
taking a stand
41Isolationism and Internationalism
- On December 12, 1937 the US gunboat Panay was
bombed and sunk by Japanese aviators on the
Yangtze Rover in China, the attack occurred in
broad daylight with clear visibility, a large
American flag had been painted on the deck of the
Panay, isolationists argued bombing had been an
accident and pressured FDR to accept Japans
apology
42Isolationism and Internationalism
- In 1936 Hitler marched the German army into the
Rhineland violating the Treaty of Versailles, in
March 1938 German forces marched into Austria to
complete the Anschluss making a union of all
German-speaking people under one flag, in
September 1938 Hitler demanded that
Czechoslovakia cede to him the Sudetenland.
43Isolationism and Internationalism
- Most Western nations were appalled at the
prospect of another war and were willing to pay
almost any price to settle the crisis peacefully
(it was in October 1937 that the famous War of
the Worlds radio broadcast was made setting off a
panic)
44Isolationism and Internationalism
- Munich Conference on September 29, 1937 Hitler
met with the leaders of Britain and France in an
effort to resolve crisis, the French and the
British agreed to accept the German demands in
Czechoslovakia in return for Hitler s promise to
expand no further This is the last territorial
claim I have to make in Europe.
45Isolationism and Internationalism
- Chamberlain returned to Britain a hero assuring
the British that the agreement meant peace on
our time, this policy became known as
appeasement, Hitler occupied Czechoslovakia in
March of 1939 and in April Hitler began making
threats against Poland, Britain and France
assured Poland that they would come to its
defense in the event of an invasion
46Isolationism and Internationalism
- The British and French attempted to draw the
Soviet Union into a mutual defense agreement, but
Stalin had already decided that he could expect
no protection from the West, Stalin had not even
been invited to the Munich Conference, Stalin
signed a non-aggression pact with Hitler in
August 1939
47Isolationism and Internationalism
- September 1, 1939 Poland was invaded by Germany,
Britain and France declared war on Germany, and
WWII had begun
48From Neutrality to Intervention
- This nation will remain a neutral nation, but I
cannot ask that every American remain neutral in
thought as well FDR 1939, there was never any
question that FDR and the majority of the
American people favored Britain, France, and the
other Allied nations in WWII
49From Neutrality to Intervention
- At the very least Roosevelt believed the US
should make armaments available to the Allied
armies to help them counter the highly productive
German munitions industry, in September 1939 FDR
asked Congress for a revision of the Neutrality
Acts, specifically the provisions prohibiting the
sale of US weapons to any nation engaged in war.
50From Neutrality to Intervention
- FDR wanted the arms embargo lifted, powerful
isolationist opposition forced him to accept a
weaker revision that still prohibited American
ships from sailing into war zones but did allow
the belligerents to buy arms on the same
cash-and-carry basis as nonmilitary materials
51From Neutrality to Intervention
- After the occupation of Poland the war settled
into a quiet lull (the phony war) that lasted
through the winter and spring of 1939 and 1940,
the only real fighting occurred as the Soviets
advanced on their neighbors and occupied Latvia,
Estonia, Lithuania, and Finland, most Americans
were outraged but neither FDR nor Congress were
willing to do more than impose a moral embargo
on the shipment of armaments to the Soviet Union
52From Neutrality to Intervention
- In the spring of 1940 Germany attacked Denmark,
Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium, and into
France, the blitzkrieg was revolutionary in the
history of warfare, on June 22, 1940 France fell
to the Germans
53From Neutrality to Intervention
- On May 16, 1940 FDR asked Congress for 1 billion
for defense purposes, most of this was spent on
the new fleet of warplanes, Churchill quickly
sent a lengthy list of requests for ships and
armaments without which England could not long
survive.
54From Neutrality to Intervention
- Many Americans thought that the British plight
was already hopeless (including the US ambassador
to London Joseph P. Kennedy) and that any aid to
the British was wasted effort, FDR made the
politically dangerous decision to scrape the
bottom of the barrel to make war materials
available to Churchill
55From Neutrality to Intervention
- FDR traded 50 US destroyers left over from WWI to
England in return for the right to build American
bases on British territory in the Western
Hemisphere, FDR also returned to the factories a
number of new airplanes purchased by the American
government so that the British could buy them
instead, FDR could do this because of a major
change in American public opinion, after the
invasion of France 66 of the American people
believed Germany posed a direct threat to the US
56From Neutrality to Intervention
- Congress was aware of the change and was becoming
more willing to permit expanded American
assistance to the Allies, the Burke-Wadsworth Act
created the first peacetime draft in American
history in September 1940
57From Neutrality to Intervention
- A spirited and vicious debate broke out in the US
in the Spring of 1940 between the
Interventionists who advocated expanded American
involvement in the war and the Isolationists who
continued to insist on neutrality, the Committee
To Defend America (William Al1en White) advocated
increased American assistance to the Allies but
opposed actual intervention, the Fight for
Freedom Committee urged an immediate declaration
of war
58From Neutrality to Intervention
- The America First Committee (Robert E. Wood,
Charles Lindbergh, Gerald Nye, Hearst newspapers,
most of the Republican Party) were opposed to any
American intervention in Europe
59From Neutrality to Intervention
- In the middle of this debate was the Presidential
Election of 1940, the Democrats re-nominated
Roosevelt and Harry Wal1ace for vice-president,
the Republicans nominated political1y
inexperienced Wendell Willkie, Roosevelt won
decisively 55 to 45 in the popular vote and 449
to 82 in the Electoral College
60From Neutrality to Intervention
- In December 1940, FDR announced a new policy,
Lend-Lease would al1ow the government not only
to sel1 but to lend or lease armaments to any
nation deemed vital to the defense of the United
States, this allowed FDR to funnel weapons to
Britain on the basis of no more than Britains
promise to return or pay for them after the war,
isolationists attacked this bill but it passed
Congress easily
61From Neutrality to Intervention
- German submarines were sinking 500,000 tons of
shipping each month and Britain was losing ships
more rapidly than they could replace them, it was
getting very difficult for the British to get the
vital supplies they needed from the US, FDR
decided that the US would practice hemispheric
defense which would allow the US navy to defend
ships in the western Atlantic.
62From Neutrality to Intervention
- By July 1941 US navy ships were patrolling as far
east as Iceland escorting convoys of merchant
ships and radioing information to British vessels
about the location of German submarines
63From Neutrality to Intervention
- In June of 1941 Hitler broke the Nazi-Soviet pact
and attacked the Soviet Union , FDR persuaded
Congress to America extended its lend lease
policy to the Soviet Union.
64From Neutrality to Intervention
- In September of 1941 a German submarine fired on
the American destroyer Greer (which was radioing
the position of the sub at the time), FDR
responded by ordering American ships to fire on
German submarines on sight, in October of 1941
the Reuben James was sunk by a German submarine
and Congress voted approval of a measure allowing
the US to arm its merchant vessels and to sail
all the way into belligerent ports, the US had in
effect launched a naval war against Germany
65From Neutrality to Intervention
- In August 1941, FDR and Churchill met onboard a
British vessel off the coast of Newfoundland and
released the Atlantic Charter which set out
certain common principles on which to base a
better future for the world, it was basically a
statement of war that cal1ed for the final
destruction of the Nazi tyranny, FDR remained
convinced that public opinion would support a
declaration of war only in the event of an actual
enemy attack
66From Neutrality to Intervention
- In September 1940 Japan signed the Tripartite
Pact with Germany and Italy which was a loose
defensive alliance that seemed to extended the
Axis into Asia
67From Neutrality to Intervention
- In July 1941 Japan moved into Indochina and
seized the capital of Vietnam, the US had broken
all of Japans codes and knew that the next
target of Japan was the Dutch East Indies, when
Japan failed to heed FDRs stern warnings the
president froze all Japanese assets in the US and
established a complete trade embargo that
severely limited Japans ability to purchase
essential supplies (especially oil)
68From Neutrality to Intervention
- Japan now faced a choice, either repair relations
with the US to restore the flow of supplies or it
would have find those supplies elsewhere (British
and Dutch possessions in the Pacific), the
Japanese Prime Minister requested a personal
meeting with FDR but the US rebuffed the overture
saying they would only meet if Japan would give
guarantees in advance that it would respect the
territorial integrity of China, negotiations
broke off and the situation quickly deteriorated
69From Neutrality to Intervention
- On November 27, 1941 Secretary of State Hull
cabled Secretary of War Stimson I have washed my
hands of the Japanese situation, and now it is in
the hands of you and Knox (the Secretary of the
Navy), the Army and the Navy, US intelligence
had already decoded Japanese messages which made
clear that war was imminent, that after November
29 an attack would only be a matter of days
70From Neutrality to Intervention
- Most US officials assumed that an attack would
not be against American territory but rather
British or Dutch territory in the South Pacific,
a large Japanese convoy was moving southward
through the China Sea while a smaller Japanese
fleet moved east from the Kurile Islands in the
general direction of Hawaii
71From Neutrality to Intervention
- 755 AM on Sunday, December 7, 1941 a wave of
Japanese bombers taking off from aircraft
carriers attacked the US naval base at Pearl
Harbor, within 2 hours the US lost 8 battleships,
3 cruisers, 4 other vessels, 188 airplanes, and
other shore installations, more than 2,000 US
soldiers and sailors died in the attack, none of
the American aircraft carriers had been at Pearl
Harbor at the time of the attack.
72From Neutrality to Intervention
- Yesterday, December 7, 1941 a day which will
live in infamy the United States of America was
suddenly and deliberately attacked by the naval
and air forces of the Empire of Japan with 4
hours the Senate had voted unanimously and House
388 to 1 (the lone dissenter was Jeannette Rankin
of Montana who had voted against WWI as well) to
approve a declaration of war against Japan