KaiBear said:FLBear5630 said:We did stay out of WW2, see the Neutrality Acts. We waited until Germany invaded and occupied pretty much ALL of Europe before entering the war. The 500k loss of lives AND Russia's move west could have been prevented or at least minimized IF we were engaged from the beginning.KaiBear said:whiterock said:Good grief your head is full of mush. I mean, really. We are obligated to let an imperial rival power have as much of Asia as it wants and it is of no importance to us? Like we raw materials & export markets are inconsequential to us.....or that Japan & Germany would never consolidate their positions in Europe and Asia then move on to build empire in the Americas? Every war we've ever fought is OUR fault?KaiBear said:historian said:
He refused to support a barbaric war machine. The U.S. was under no obligation to help them with that. FDR did what was in America's interest and the decision to attack Pearl Harbor rests completely on Japan's leaders. It's similar to blaming Israel for the terror attacks on October 7 or the U.S. for September 11, 2001. Blaming the victim is almost always an exercise in propaganda & nothing more.
Roosevelt basically put the interests of the Chinese against the lives of American servicemen.
The war between Japan and China had absolutely nothing to do with the United States .
Cutting off US oil exports to Japan brought on the attack on Pearl Harbor resulting in WW 2.
And over 500,000 Americans died as a result.
When the war was over….China was not conquered by Japan.
But soon became COMMUNIST.
Americans died for nothing.
You're waaay too smart for such crackpottery.
Facts don't lie.
The end results of WW2 simply replaced Hitler and Tojo
with Mao and Stalin.
Not remotely worth the lives of half a million Americans.
Even now Biden seems determined to bring on WW3 despite the unwillingness of Americans to potentially fight and die for a country most couldn't find on a map.
Same in the Pacific, we stayed out until Pearl Harbor. We made economic decisions not to support Japan through oil sales, but hardly entered the war. We stayed out, which cost greatly.
Not being at the table is NEVER a good thing. We can argue levels of support, whose side, and how to deal with it. All valid points. The one NOT valid strategy is to take your ball and go home to let others decide what is going to happen.
Let's see if Trump comes up with a different tact after he gets all the information. Last time, he didn't. We were still in Afghanistan when he left office. We were supplying weapons, granted much lower scale systems, to Ukraine. We were still in Syria. Still in Korea. Still in Iraq. Supported Israel mightily. So, let's see if we really pull out.
LOL
Roosevelt's 'Neutrality Act' was a complete lie. A political necessity to calm the fears of an American people determined NOT to be coerced into another European war as they had in WW1.
However Roosevelt openly abused the intent of the Neutrality Act by supplying vast amounts of weapons and munitions to Great Britain. Even to the point of giving FIFTY US destroyers to the British Royal Nsvy.
Quietly Roosevelt ordered the US Navy to escort British merchant ships from American harbors and protect them from German submarines. Even authorized US warships to attack German submarines.
In the process 2 US destroyers were torpedoed, one was sunk and hundreds of American sailors were drowned.
All without a declaration of war.
Neutrality my ass.
And when the war finally ended in Europe……Hitler had merely been replaced by Stalin. A sociopath at least as murderous as any nazi.
The U.S. was not coerced or tricked into WWI. We entered with our eyes open & for very good reasons, particularly the Zimmerman Telegram. Wilson made many mistakes before, during, & after the war but the declaration of war was sound. Curiously, we did NOT have any formal alliances during the war. We cooperated with the allies because of common enemies and the US was the primary reason for allied victory: millions of fresh soldiers that had not spent 3 years in the trenches & the largest economy in human history.
FDR signed the Neutrality Acts (plural) into law for political reasons. He might have had second thoughts but he understood the popular attitude while the Great depression was still devastating many people. That didn't change significantly until the war in Europe began. FDR then provided various forms of aid, stretching & even violating the Neutrality Acts out of necessity.
Lend Lease was a recognition of geopolitical realities in the North Atlantic: the US was already in an undeclared naval war with Germany and it was definitely in our interest to help the British (& later the Soviets) defeat Germany. Britain still had the largest navy on the planet and we absolutely did not want to see that under Hitler's control.
True, Stalin replaced Hitler as the bogeyman after the war but that was not clear to everyone until 1948-49. In the immediate aftermath of the war, we managed to work with the Soviets reasonably well, at least in postwar policies in Europe. We had more difficulties with France then!
By the way, Stalin was much worse than Hitler but he was our ally. We really fight have much choice in that. It was a decision made by Hitler. Done historians thinking his deviating war on the US after Pearl Harbor was his biggest mistake. That is arguably true but Hitler made lots of huge mistakes and the world is better off for it. Dictators tend to do that.