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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
28 pages in length. During the 1930s, relations between the United States and Germany traveled on the path to war. Examining the underlying causes and effects of American-German foreign policy leading to the German declaration of war in 1941 lends itself to a significantly better understanding of why this course could not be diverted given the growing tensions between the two superpowers. Bibliography lists 30 sources.
Page Count:
28 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCRoosHitl.rtf
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of American-German foreign policy leading to the German declaration of war in 1941 lends itself to a significantly better understanding of why this course could not be diverted given the
growing tensions between the two superpowers. "They realize that in thirty-four months we have built up new instruments of public power. In the hands of a peoples Government this
power is wholesome and proper. But in the hands of political puppets of an economic autocracy such power would provide shackles for the liberties of the people."1 II. BACKGROUND
Progressive democracy was well on its way, thanks to the New Nationalism promoted by President Roosevelt, inasmuch as he became "the spokesman for the expansionist belief in global trade, modern
navies, and American imperialism."2 In spite of the fact that elitism and chauvinism still ran rampant within governmental departments, the New Nationalism served to become a "hardheaded attempt to
come to terms with the modern corporate age."3 Along with the great many technological changes occurring at that time, such as new methods of transportation, the assembly line and
electrification, there also existed a "stubborn faith"4 that historian Samuel Eliot Morison claims was "in the perfectibility of man, and in an open society where mankind was neither chained to
the past nor condemned to a deterministic future."5 On the other side of the world, Hitler sought to create a global community where
only a certain populace was allowed to live and flourish. He and his men believed that all nations were as devious as they were, instilling within themselves a sense
of betrayal even before it ever was to occur. Indeed, Hitlers paranoia knew no bounds. With the overwhelming influence of anti-Semitism, power worship, morality disdain and quest for
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