Drag each important event of the United States’ development as a superpower to arrange them from earliest to most recent. Traditional powers like Great Britain were incapable of policing the globe. The United States and the Soviet Union were left to compete for global influence. The United States changed its policy of isolation to active engagement during World War II. World War II left industrialized countries in Europe and Asia devastated.
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The United States changed its policy of isolation to active engagement during World War II
World War II left industrialized countries in Europe and Asia devastated.
Traditional powers like Great Britain were incapable of policing the globe.
The United States and the Soviet Union were left to compete for global influence.
Explanation:
- The combination of the Great Depression and the the devastating losses during World War I led in the 1930s to the by America of the policy of isolationism. Isolationists advocated non-engagament/involvement in Asian and European conflicts and non-involvement in international politics. However, The Japanese surprise attack on America's Navy at Pearl Harbour, in December 1941 was used as a way to convince America to fight on the Allies' side and partake in the WW
- With years of occupation, war & attack, it physically ravaged and financially destroyed the developed nations of Europe and Asia. The United States and the Soviet Union became the last two superpowers and soon engaged in a battle for political, cultural, social, technical and ideological dominance with Britain, France, German, Italy, Japan, and China reduced to the shadows of their former self.
- The interplay of cultural, political and economic factors influenced the relations between the Soviet Union and the United States, resulting in changes over the years between cautious cooperation and sometimes bitter competition between super-powers. The distinct gaps between the two countries ' political systems also prevented mutual understanding in key policy issues
- USA had for several years avoided international alliances that might demand their troops ' contribution abroad. But, by recognizing the realities of the world after the Second World War, where conventional forces, including Great Britain and France, started losing their power to police the globe, the United States recognized that its foreign policy would have to continuously shift from relative isolation to active involvement.
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