Advanced Search
Print - Close Window
www.greenwood.com/catalog/C4825.aspx
All Greenwood Products
United States Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period, 1918-1941 The Golden Age of American Diplomatic and Military Complacency
(Click to Enlarge)
Benjamin D. Rhodes
ISBN: 0-275-94825-0
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-94825-2
238 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 7/30/2001
List Price: $110.95 (UK Sterling Price: £76.95)
Availability: Print on demand
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Description: This study presents an in-depth survey of the principal policies and personalities of American diplomacy of the era, together with a discussion of recent historiography in the field. For two decades between the two world wars, America pursued a foreign policy course that was, according to Rhodes, shortsighted and self-centered. Believing World War I had been an aberration, Americans na^Dively signed disarmament treaties and a pact renouncing war, while eschewing such inconveniences as enforcement machinery or participation in international organizations. Smug moral superiority, a penurious desire to save money, and naíveté ultimately led to the neglect of America's armed forces even as potential rivals were arming themselves to the teeth.

In contrast to the dynamic drive of the New Deal in domestic policy, foreign policy under Franklin D. Roosevelt was often characterized by a lack of clarity and, reflecting Roosevelt's fear of isolationists and pacifists, by presidential explanations that were frequently evasive, incomplete, or deliberately misleading. One of the period's few successes was the bipartisan Good Neighbor policy, which proved far-sighted commercially and strategically. Rhodes praises Cordell Hull as the outstanding secretary of state of the time, whose judgment was often more on target than others in the State Department and the executive branch.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
    Introduction
    United States Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period: A Historiographic Essay
    Wilson and Democratic Peacemaking: A Tragic Beginning to the Interwar Era
    Harding, Hughes, and Republican Moral Diplomacy
    Foreign Policy Under Coolidge and Kellogg: A Relative Bed of Roses
    Foreign Policy Under Hoover and Stimson: A Bed of Pain
    Early New Deal Foreign Policy: The Limits of Improvisation
    The Good Neighbor Policy: A Bipartisan Accomplishment
    Congressional Neutrality: Roosevelt, the British, and Bankers as Performing Circus Animals
    The Shifting of the Foreign Policy Momentum
    Aid to Britain Short of War
    Japan and the United States Miscalculate
    Conclusion
    Bibliography
    Index
About the Author: BENJAMIN D. RHODES is Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. Rhodes is the author of The Anglo-American Winter War with Russia, 1918-1919: A Diplomatic and Military Tragicomedy (1988), and James P. Goodrich, Indiana's Governor Strangelove: A Republican's Infatuation with Soviet Russia (1996). Author of numerous articles, he has also been a Fulbright lecturer in Finland and the People's Republic of China.
LCC Class: 327
Tune in to Praeger's Hot Topics! Sign up for our newsletter on today's fast-moving issues.
All rights reserved. Copyright © 1999-2010 ABC-CLIO
130 Cremona Dr., Santa Barbara, CA 93117 805-968-1911