what measures should the league of nation have taken to avoid the second world war
Answers
Answer:
The League should have persuaded USA to join it. It should have also invited USSR to become its members. The League followed a policy of appeasement. It did not take adequate measures when Hitler breached the terms of the treaty of Versailles and in the case of conquest of Ethiopia by Italy.
Answer:
The League of Nations was a international organization founded after the Paris Peace Conference, 1919. The League's goals included disarmament, preventing war through collective security, settling disputes between countries through negotiation diplomacy and improving global welfare. The diplomatic philosophy behind the League represented a fundamental shift in thought from the preceding hundred years. The League lacked an armed force of its own and so depended on the Great Powers to enforce its resolutions, keep to economic sanctions which the League ordered, or provide an Army, when needed, for the League to use. However, it was often very reluctant to do so.
After a number of notable successes and some early failures in the 1920s, the League ultimately proved incapable of preventing aggression by the Axis Powers in the 1930s. The onset of the Second World War made it clear that the League had failed in its primary purpose—to avoid any future world war. The United Nations Organization replaced it after World War II and inherited a number of agencies and organizations founded by the League.
Origins