
Woodrow Wilson and the Great War
By focusing on the years leading up to America’s involvement in the Great War, Tucker reveals that Wilson’s internationalism was always highly qualified, dependent from the start upon the advent of an international order that would forever remove the specter of another major war. World War I was the last conflict in which the law of neutrality played an important role in the calculations of belligerents and neutrals, and it is scarcely an exaggeration to say that this law?or rather Woodrow Wilson’s version of it?constituted almost the whole of his foreign policy with regard to the war. Wilson’s refusal to find any significance, moral or otherwise, in the conflict beyond the law and its violation led him to see the war as meaningless, save for the immense suffering and sense of utter futility it fostered.
Treating issues of enduring interest, such as the advisability and effectiveness of U.S. interventions in, or initiation of, conflicts beyond its borders, Woodrow Wilson and the Great War will appeal to anyone interested in the president’s power to determine foreign policy, and in constitutional history in general.
- Undertitel
- Reconsidering America's Neutrality, 1914–1917
- Författare
- Robert W. Tucker
- ISBN
- 9780813937847
- Språk
- Engelska
- Vikt
- 333 gram
- Utgivningsdatum
- 2015-04-30
- Sidor
- 256
