Topic 5 Notes: Anglo-American Relations from 1921-1945
USA in the 1920s: economically, but not militarily, dominant
- Faces no serious challenges: army only 140,000 strong
- Armaments reduction part of Republican prescription for economic expansion
- Japan and Russia preoccupied with internal issues and regional hegemony
- European empires larger but facing challenges; especially Britain: Iraq, Palestine, India, Ireland
1920s decade of dominant US soft power
- Economic
- Technology
- Culture: Hollywood
- Missionary zeal in Third World
US in dispute with Europe over WW1 debts
Europeans
- their own indebted structure cannot be untangled without cancellation of debts to USA
- Europe paid in blood; US only in money
Americans
- debts must be paid: “they hired the money, didn’t they?”
- Cancellation of European debts will cause higher taxes in USA
US economic and diplomatic involvement with Europe in 1920
1923: US helps force French withdrawal from Ruhr by withholding loan
1924: Dawes Plan scales down reparations payments and provides US loan to Germany
1925: Alanson Houghton (US ambassador to UK) helps bring Locarno Powers together by threatening withdrawal of US loans
1928: Kellogg responds to Briand’s request for bilateral pact by suggesting multilateral agreement to outlaw the use of war as an instrument of national policy
1929: Young Plan reduces reparations and sets terminal date of 1988 for payments
The impact of the Depression
1930 Hawley-Smoot tariff raises rates to 40%, increasing duty on c900 imported products
US policy focused on domestic recovery, not world economic problems
- FDR takes US off Gold and devalues the dollar
- July 1933 torpedoes the World Economic Conference
June 1932 Lausanne Conference: reparations cancelled
July 1932 Ottawa Conference: imperial preference introduced
1934 Johnson Act in USA
- No US loans to governments in default of existing debts to US Treasury
- Token payments no acceptable so Europeans default, June 1934
June 1934 Collapse of Geneva Disarmament Conference
1931 Japanese invasion of Manchuria
Hoover welcomes Japanese intervention in Manchuria: hopes they will get tied down
- US bankers refuse State Department request to lend to China: too risky
- Bankers willing to evade government restrictions and lend to Japan in Manchuria
Jan 1932 Stimson Doctrine: US will refuse to recognise territorial changes brought about by war
- Regards them as violations of Open Door policy and Kellogg-Briand Pact
- Britain lukewarm: takes four months to reply
Roosevelt’s early policies isolationist, or non-interventionist
- Hopes for Wilsonian international co-operation and peace
- Dislikes European empires
- Suspicious of international banking and commercial interests for influencing governments
- Needs support of progressive Republicans for his New Deal policies
- BUT Most progressive Republicans were isolationists
FDR’s early actions isolationist
- Reduces size of US army but expands US navy to Washington/London limits
- Inaugural promises US interests first
- Abandons Gold and devalues dollar
- Torpedoes World Economic Conference in London
Isolationist opinion in the USA
Ideas influencing US isolationism
- European powers preoccupied with their empires
- US preoccupied with its own problems
- European territorial squabbles don’t affect the USA
- US resentful of European failure to repay war debts
- Widespread view that involvement in WWW1 had been a mistake
Divided opinion in the USA
- Oct 1935 Italian invasion of Ethiopia
- Rouses African American opinion in support of Abyssinia
- Italian-Americans supportive of Italy
- July 1936 Outbreak of Spanish Civil War
- American Catholic Church supports the nationalist rebels
- Left-wing Americans volunteer to fight for Republican cause
Jan 1935 Senate rejects US participation in World Court
Feb 1937 opinion poll: 95% of Americans want to stay out of any future war
FDR refuses to join League sanctions against Italy
Dec 1935 Hoare-Laval Pact convinces Americans that Europe is degenerate
Oct 1937 Gallup records 73% approval for Louis Ludlow’s campaign for a constitutional amendment requiring a national referendum for a declaration of war, except in the case of invasion
- Jan 1938 Ludlow defeated in the House 209/188
Neutrality Acts
Aug 1935 provisional Act
- No arms sales to any belligerent nation
- President can warn US nationals not to travel on ships of belligerent nations
- Congress opposed to ban on sales only to aggressors as FDR wants
- FDR needs votes for his Social Security Act
Feb 1936 Act renews 1935 Act for 14 months
- No loans to belligerent nations
Jan 1937 Arms embargo extended to civil wars
May 1937 Act permanent
- Arms sales, loans, credit to belligerents banned
- travel on ships of belligerents banned
- Merchant ships trading with belligerents cannot be armed
- “Cash and carry” of non-embargoed goods permitted: concession to business interests
July 1937 Outbreak of Sino-Japanese war
- Seizure of Shanghai, rape of Nanking
- US media strongly anti-Japan
- FDR wary of Congress after defeat over Supreme Court reform
Dec 1937 FDR rejects Chamberlain’s request for a joint US/GB naval show of force at Singapore to try to deter Japanese expansion
Dec 1937 no US response to Panay incident in which a few Americans killed
- Japanese apologise and pay compensation
Oct 1937 FDR’s ‘Quarantine’ Speech
Nov 1937 Brussels Conference of 9 Power Washington/London naval powers
- GB wants US to take the lead in resisting Japan
- US reluctant to be pushed into war
- FDR can’t afford to be “a tail to the British kite”
Jan 1938 FDR’s international conference initiative
- Chamberlain hostile: thinks it will upset his plans for appeasement of dictators
1938 Munich Crisis: FDR ambivalent
- Dislikes the sacrifice of Czechoslovakia
- Reluctant to get involved, but encourages negotiations to take place
Nov 1938: USA fails to rescue Jews fleeing Germany after Crystal Night pogrom
1924 National Origins Quota Act
- allows in only 2% of a national group already in the USA
- those who will be a burden on the state not admitted: Germans refuse to allow Jews to take their assets abroad
Roosevelt’s attempts to assist the Western allies
FDR fears that
- Western powers might succumb to Germany
- Modern air power makes the USA vulnerable
Jan 1939 Congress grants $500m for expansion of US military
June 1939 successful royal visit to the USA
4 Sept 1939: FDR’s ‘Fireside chat’ promises US neutrality
Nov 1939 embargo on arms sales lifted
Events of 1940 increase US sympathy for Britain
- Heroic resistance in Blitz
- German expansion threatens US: Greenland and Iceland
- 1940 Greenland request US protection to secure its neutrality
- 1941 FDR makes Greenland a de facto US protectorate
- May 1940 Britain invades Iceland
- July 1941 USA takes over the defence of Iceland
Nov 1940 FDR’s election victory gives him more latitude to assist Britain
Nov 1940 Destroyers for Bases deal with Britain
29 Dec 1940 ‘Fireside chat’ promises US will be the “arsenal of democracy” and suggests Lend-Lease
Jan-March 1941 Anglo-American Staff talks in London agree on a joint strategy
March 1941 Congress permits Lend-Lease
August 1941 Placentia Bay meeting between FDR and WSC
- Atlantic Charter
1941 Role of US navy in Atlantic convoys gradually extended
April: can escort to mid-Atlantic; i.e. responsible for western Atlantic
Sept: USS Greer attacked by a German U-boat it was tracking
- US ships protect convoys as far as Iceland
- FDR announces policy of “shoot on sight”
Nov: Congress repeals major aspects of Neutrality Acts
November 1941
- US merchant ships can be armed
- US warships to escort convoys fully across Atlantic
Anglo-American issues of co-operation and discord
- Strategy
Americans want massive troop build-up in Britain for cross-Channel invasion of France
Suspicious of Britain’s insistence on Mediterranean strategy
- Wasteful of men and resources on side-show
- Designed to use American power to prop up Britain empire in Middle East
British convinced that premature invasion of France will be suicidal
British views prevail until 1943
- American troops and materials not fully engaged
- British staff planning better
- Americans divided: some planners want to concentrate on Pacific
- Intelligence and nuclear research
a)Intelligence
Nov 1940 Intelligence agreement signed: US has virtually no Intelligence capability
1943 BRUSA agreement
- ULTRA material from Enigma decripts formally exchanged
- Co-operation in signals and personnel
b)Britain ahead in nuclear research at the start of the war; unwilling to share with US
1942 USA ahead; unwilling to share with Britain
- FDR and WSC agree Britain will participate in Manhattan Project
1943 Quebec Agreement
- GB and USA agree not to use the bomb against each other
- No use against a third party without the consent of the other
- No sharing of atomic secrets with another nation
- Post-war commercial developments to be shared with Britain only with the consent of the President
Sept 1944 Hyde Park agreement between WSC and FDR: co-operation to continue after the war
- Economics and trade
US anxious to use Britain’s wartime dependency to break imperial preference and sterling area
- Wish to create a multilateral liberal world economic order
- Bretton Woods
- fixed exchange rates linked to the dollar as the reserve currency
- creates International Monetary Fund and International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
- 1945 British loan: requires convertibility of sterling within a year
- Post-War world
WSC wants traditional balance of power arrangements
- Britain at the centre of a series of regional pacts
- Maintenance of British Empire and Commonwealth supported by USA
- Anglo-American united front against Stalin
- Oct 1944 Percentages agreement with Stalin to tie him down
FDR wants a Wilsonian internationalist world order
- Creation of the UNO
- Stalin’s security anxieties must be acknowledged
- FDR anxious to avoid alienating Stalin by being too close to WSC at Teheran and Yalta
The Post-War Settlement
Yalta Conference, 4 to 12 Feb 1945
a) The Declaration on Liberated Europe stated
- the intention to create democratic institutions in place of Nazism and Fascism
- pledged ‘free elections’ in each state
- the USA and GB saw such elections as involving a choice of political parties but the Soviet Union was unlikely to allow any such threat near her borders
b) Post-War Germany: Churchill, Stalin and Roosevelt confirmed an earlier agreement
- Germany to be divided up into zones occupied by the USSR, the USA and Britain;
- now accepted a fourth French zone;
- similar divisions would be imposed on Berlin;
- Reparations Commission established in Moscow to discuss reparations payments by Germany
c) Post-War Poland
- Stalin’s demand that the USSR should gain land from Poland accepted
- Poland’s eastern frontier with the USSR would follow the Curzon line
- Poland would gain lands in the west from Germany, probably up to the Rivers Oder and Neisse
- Stalin wanted Poland governed by the Lublin Committee of partisans and communists but the Western leaders insisted that the government should include exiled Polish leaders, known as the London Poles
- free elections based on universal suffrage and a secret ballot to be held in Poland
d) the war against Japan
- Stalin agreed to join within three months of victory in Europe but
- demanded in return certain concessions in Manchuria and southern Sakhalin Island
- These were agreed, but in secret
- Stalin also agreed to join the UNO
San Francisco Conference, 26 Apr to 26 June 1945
- 50 countries launched the UN Charter, establishing the UNO
Potsdam Conference, 17 July to 2 August 1945
- Council of Foreign Ministers established to begin work on peace treaties
- Stalin agreed that the time was near for the USSR to join the war against Japan
a) Germany
- Nazism was to be totally eliminated from Germany as was Germany’s ability to make war
- It was agreed that Germany would be treated as a single economic unit despite its division into zones of occupation
- Germany should make some payment to the Allies for damages suffered
- USSR to receive the most reparations because of the extent of Soviet sufferings
- West insisted that the Soviets should send foodstuffs to western Germany and food shortages in the east made this a point of controversy
- Special arrangements needed to give Western powers access to their zones of Berlin
b) Poland
- The powers confirmed the earlier agreement to hold free elections
- Poland’s final boundaries were left to a future peace settlement
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