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AMERICAN RESPONSE (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   134198


Blinking eyes began to open: legacies from America's road to the Great War, 1914-1917 / Neiberg, Michael S   Journal Article
Neiberg, Michael S Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article examines American reactions to the First World War from 1914 to American belligerence in 1917. Despite Woodrow Wilson's plea for Americans to be neutral, they had strong reactions to the war. These reactions led to three important legacies in America's dealings with the rest of the world.
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2
ID:   132032


Carter administration and the promotion of human rights in the / Peterson, Christian Philip   Journal Article
Peterson, Christian Philip Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article will examine the effectiveness of the Carter administration's efforts to promote human rights in the Soviet Union. It will pay particular attention to how human rights promotion fit into a larger approach to transforming Superpower relations in ways favorable to U.S. interests called "reciprocal accommodation [détente]." The use of this framework provides an excellent way to tease out the complexities of how the administration balanced the promotion of human rights in the USSR with other important objectives such as concluding the SALT II treaty. It also helps reveal how executive branch worked to reduce Soviet human rights violations by citing the provisions of the Final Act and working with private citizens to raise international awareness about human rights issues. Without losing sight of his administration's inability to protect Soviet dissenters from arrest and harassment, this article will demonstrate that Carter had every intention of making the issue of human rights an important element of Cold War competition and implementing a new approach to détente that at least in part aimed at transforming Soviet internal behavior.
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3
ID:   132030


Steamed up: domestic politics, congress, and Cuba, 1959-1963 / McKercher, Asa   Journal Article
McKercher, Asa Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Studies examining the initial response of the United States to Cuba's revolution largely ignore the role of Congress, an oversight reflecting both a scholarly trend emphasizing the actions of the presidency in regards to American foreign policy making and the separation of powers in the U.S. constitution. Redressing the balance, this article examines how members of Congress reacted to the course of U.S.-Cuban relations throughout the crisis years of 1959-1963. Illuminating Cuba's place in domestic debates about foreign affairs it also looks at the politics surrounding the American response to the Cuban revolution. Lawmakers quickly emerged at the forefront of those calling for a strong stance toward Cuba. In turn, congressional pressure to confront Fidel Castro both helped and hindered presidents Dwight Eisenhower and John Kennedy. For Kennedy, in particular, domestic politics and actions by Congress were major concerns that tempered his actions in dealing with the Cuban revolution.
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