British-American relations, 1917-1918 : the role of Sir William Wiseman
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British-American relations, 1917-1918 : the role of Sir William Wiseman
(Supplementary volumes to The papers of Woodrow Wilson)
Princeton University Press, 1969
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Note
"Annotated bibliography": p. 297-328
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Throughout the First World War Woodrow Wilson considered Britain's ambitions in the war as objectionable as Germany's. He repeatedly expressed distrust of the British government's motives; for their part, the British chafed at Wilson's idealism and despised his aloofness from the Allies. Sir William Wiseman played an extraordinary part as the behind- the-scenes liaison between the two major powers. Acting as a personal friend and confidant of Wilson's adviser, Colonel House, Wiseman is credited with keeping animosities in check between America and Great Britain, and for helping to establish coalition diplomacy, which was new to the U.S. in 1917-1918, though within 25 years it became a permanent characteristic of American foreign policy. British-American Relations, 1917-1918 provides fascinating insights not only into Wiseman's role but into the entire diplomacy of the Wilson period.
Originally published in 1969.
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