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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
Many times, the Dieppe Operation has come under scrutiny as to whether the losses incurred justified the lessons learned, but in order to make a determination of this kind, one always must step back and look at the larger story behind this failed maneuver. Focus on Canada, U.S. and British relations and how they have changed the world stage. Bibliography lists 2 sources. jvDieppe.rtf
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of this kind, one always must step back and look at the larger story behind this failed maneuver. When one makes the exploration, the word "failure" becomes merely a military
term for just the one operation that ended up giving meaning to a much larger purpose. That purpose could be identified in the word "allied," which in 1942 had the
exact meaning as the word "coalition" in 1992. Merely words, descriptions of possible alliances not yet built, leading back to the larger purpose of the Dieppe Operation.
It is easy to forget that, after its brief foray into the world in World War I, by 1941, the United States had set itself apart
from the rest of the world. It had been forged from the "devils spawn" of Europe, was highly disrespected on the world stage, and was, itself, content to remain aloof
and apart. A similar belief can be said of Canada, except that it was not united in this effort. As a conglomeration
within the British Empire, the Canadian states had little to discuss with one another. Their basic reason to maintain their relationships with each other and England at that time was
to keep trade routes open between Canada and the rest of the world, and to put on a united front to the world.
In fact, you could say that most of the nations in the world carried this same self-protectionist attitude and the desire for complete autonomy. Autonomy, in fact, was the reason
behind Nazism. Yet, for other nations, along with the desire for autonomy came the demand for no more power struggles between nations, which is why nations like Canada, Great Britain,
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