Woodrow Wilson and Harry Truman

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A01=Anne Pierce
Allied Side
American Foreign Policy Tradition
Anne R. Pierce
Author_Anne Pierce
Category=JPS
Central Administrative Agencies
Cold War origins
comparative foreign policy analysis
containment strategy
Coop Eration
Czechoslovakian Coup
democratic peace theory
Dollar Diplomacy
East Central Europe
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eq_society-politics
Free Nations
German Government
House Grey Memorandum
International Monetary Fund
international relations theory
moral foundations of US diplomacy
Moral Religious Tradition
presidential decision making
Separate West German State
Single Ethnic Categories
Taiwan Security Enhancement Act
Truman Doctrine
Truman's Foreign Policy
United States
Vice Versa
Wilson's Foreign Policy
Wilson's Mind
Wilson's Response
Wilson's Words
Wilsonian Internationalism
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412806633
  • Weight: 544g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Mar 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The modern world derives part of its meaning and definition from the foreign policy formulations of Woodrow Wilson and Harry Truman. These presidents viewed the enhancement of American power and the invigoration of American principles as the only response to modem problems such as imperialism, bolshevism, fascism and "total war." The fact that Europe and Asia had submitted to the disastrous consequences of their ideas meant that we had to project and promote our democratic alternative. If we were to live up to our mission and our character, we had to accept radically new responsibilities. This work reveals the important relationship between these presidents and explores the reverential, yet revolutionary relationship each had with broader American traditions.

Wilson came to power at a time when both need and the means for change were apparent. In the face of looming war and global turmoil, Wilson took full advantage of America's emerging world-power status. While he held to the traditional American ideal of setting a democratic example, he reconceived it as an obligation to actively promote democracy and self-determination abroad. Indeed, he construed our increased involvement in the world as the logical fulfillment of our democratic purpose. In the heated aftermath of World War II, Truman echoed Wilson's assertion that only the fortification of democracy and the "influence" of America could ease European tensions and prevent future wars.

While Truman's early foreign policy is often said to exhibit Wilsonian internationalism, his later "power politics," Pierce shows that all of his foreign policy was underlain by his determination never to let what had happened during and between two world wars happen again. Pierce demonstrates that even Truman's most avid departure from Wilsonianism, his plunge into geopolitics and his build-up of the military power of the free world, was saturated with Wilsonian ideals. "Containment" was underlain by the conviction that, even though it faced fascism and bolshevism, freedom was on the march, and by the surety that democracy is lasting, peaceful and beneficial.

As Pierce studies these presidents within the synergistic interplay of ideas and policies, she compels us toward a fruitful dialogue with the American past. Truman's brilliantly construed version of Wilsonianism, this book argues, holds great promise for us today.

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