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date: 23 April 2025

The 1930s and the Road to World War IIlocked

The 1930s and the Road to World War IIlocked

  • Steven CaseySteven CaseyDepartment of International History, London School of Economics

Summary

The United States was extremely reluctant to get drawn into the wars that erupted in Asia in 1937 and Europe in 1939. Deeply disillusioned with the experience of World War I, when the large number of trench warfare casualties had resulted in a peace that many American believed betrayed the aims they had fought for, the United States sought to avoid all forms of entangling alliances. Deeply embittered by the Depression, which was widely blamed on international bankers and businessmen, Congress enacted legislation that sought to prevent these actors from drawing the country into another war. The American aim was neutrality, but the underlying strength of the United States made it too big to be impartial—a problem that Roosevelt had to grapple with as Germany, Italy, and Japan began to challenge international order in the second half of the 1930s.

Subjects

  • 20th Century: Pre-1945
  • Foreign Relations and Foreign Policy

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