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    • Geopolitical and domestic concerns

      • The United States was reluctant to enter World War I primarily due to a combination of geopolitical and domestic concerns. Initially, the U.S. aimed to continue trade with both warring sides and believed geographical isolation provided protection from European conflicts.
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  2. Apr 6, 2017 · When World War I broke out across Europe in 1914, President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed the United States would remain neutral, and many Americans supported this policy of nonintervention.

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  3. Quick answer: The United States was reluctant to enter World War I primarily due to a combination of geopolitical and domestic concerns. Initially, the U.S. aimed to continue trade...

  4. Oct 10, 2024 · The entry of the United States was the turning point of the war, because it made the eventual defeat of Germany possible. It had been foreseen in 1916 that if the United States went to war, the Allies’ military effort against Germany would be upheld by U.S. supplies and by enormous extensions of credit.

  5. Before entering the war, the U.S. had remained neutral, though it had been an important supplier to the United Kingdom, France, and the other powers of the Allies of World War I. The U.S. made its major contributions in terms of supplies, raw material, and money, starting in 1917.

  6. Nov 19, 2014 · Beginning their position with predictable, traditional neutrality when the war broke out in 1914, the United States evaded war in accordance with their long-running central theme in foreign policy, avoiding ‘entangling alliances’.

  7. Oct 29, 2009 · Trained separately and inadequately in the United States, the divisions fared differently in the war. The 92nd faced criticism for their performance in the Meuse-Argonne campaign in September...

  8. Oct 10, 2024 · World War I, international conflict that in 1914–18 embroiled most of the nations of Europe along with Russia, the U.S., the Middle East, and other regions. It led to the fall of four great imperial dynasties and, in its destabilization of European society, laid the groundwork for World War II.

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