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Foreign Policies of the 1920s. The way the US interacts with the world post WWI. Learning Target:.
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Foreign Policies of the 1920s The way the US interacts with the world post WWI
Learning Target: • The US foreign policy during the 1920s was the idea of doing the least amount possible in foreign affairs with the purpose of preventing/avoiding future wars. (i.e. not joining the League of Nations, Dawes, Washington Conference, Kellogg Briand Pact). • America changes from interventionist to isolationist policies with the purpose of “returning to “normalcy”, meaning focusing on America’s concerns.
1. The Dawes Plan • influence European economies without direct government intervention • Post WWI – Allies owed the US $10 Billion – could not repay unless Germany repaid their $30 billion debt
1. The Dawes Plan • Germany defaulted on it’s payments in Dec 1922 and Jan 1923, the French marched into Germany’s Ruhr valley. To avoid another war, the US stepped in.
1. The Dawes Plan • US sent Charles G. Dawes (wealthy Chicago banker) to negotiate loans from private American banks to Germany and set up a new payment schedule. These negotiations became known as the Dawes Plan.
1. The Dawes Plan • US banks loaned Germany 2.5 Billion – Germany could pay the Allies, Allies could now pay the US government
1. The Dawes Plan • Outcome = This only helped with a fraction that was owed, but it avoided another war • The US became the most powerful country in the world
2. The Washington Conference • - November 1921, nine nations met at the Washington Naval Conference to discuss disarmament – limitation or reduction of weapons. Led by Hughes – US Secretary of State.
2. The Washington Conference Outcome – three major treaties were signed • 1. the US, GB, Japan, FR, and IT pledged to limit the number of their largest ships and stop constructing new ships
2. The Washington Conference 2. GB and US = keep 500,000 tons of ships each, Japan 300,000 tons, France and Italy = 167,000 tons – Japan not happy – called the 5:5:3 – “Rolls-Royce, Rolls-Royce, Ford.” Only agreed if American and GB would not build new naval bases on the western Pacific islands.
2. The Washington Conference 3. Japan promised to respect China’s sovereignty and independence. • US concerns about Japanese power and ambitions in the Pacific….
3. The Kellogg-Briand Act • Two-nation pact by France’s foreign minister – Aristide Briand – goal was to outlaw war and create a world treaty.
3. Kellogg – Briand Pact • 14 Nations initially signed the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 – the treaty declared war illegal, but did not include punishments for future attackers • Purpose was to end US military entanglements with Europe.
4. Relations with Latin America • US wanted to protect its interests in Latin America • Business firms continued their search for markets and raw materials
4. Relations with Latin America • By 1924, the US controlled 14/20 Latin American countries • US felt that it was their right to extend its civilization south of the border
4. Relations with Latin America • After WWI, US removed some military in Central America, but kept troops where the US had high interest – ex) Nicaragua – US bankers and policy makers essentially controlled the economy • By 1929, American policymakers began to recognize that US troops in Latin America created resentment abroad and criticism at home.