Wilson's Commitment to Peace
War does not always have the simple goal of killing as many of the enemy as you can. The motives behind war are often complex and not always vicious attempts to gain power. Often times a nation must enter a war to secure peace in the future. This was the case when Woodrow Wilson asked Congress for a declaration of war. Since the early days of the war when Wilson asked the nation to be impartial in their thoughts about the war, he fought to maintain the United State's neutrality. By sending his close friend, Colonel House and other envoys, Wilson diplomatically delayed war until the last possible moment. However, Wilso
Wilson realized that the victory would be wasted if the winners permitted themselves the luxury of revenge. He worked for peace before the war by trying to stay neutral, he worked for peace during the war by trying to end it quickly, and he worked for peace after the war by trying to ensure that an atrocity of this magnitude would never occur again. Although the peace talks did not stop keep WWII from happening, that was Wilson's goal. Had the United States not entered the war, neither the Allies nor the Central Powers would let the U. It was imperative for the United States to enter the war because it had become a threat to humanity and unless the United States intervened, Western civilization itself might be destroyed. He avoided war as much as he could but when he had could no longer put it off he involved the United States for all the right reasons. The majority of statesmen thought that a victory on the battlefield was triumph enough but Wilson knew better than that.
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