Interwar Foreign Policy
Across
- 4. The opinion that the US should not enter into any firm commitments to secure the security of other nations was called this.
- 6. Japan's invasion of this region was condemned by the League of Nations and the Stimson Doctrine.
- 8. FDR's Latin American policy rejecting Theodore Roosevelt's corollary to the Monroe Doctrine.
- 9. Congress refused to join this international organization following the first world war.
- 10. This was the only nation to repay its war debts in full.
- 11. Treaties to remove them from Nicaragua and Haiti were part of Hoover's aim to pursue friendly relations with Latin America.
- 14. The Platt Amendment, signed after the US won a war against this nation, was nullified by Congress in 1934.
- 16. The US became this kind of nation following the first world war, after having lent more than $10 billion to the Allies
- 17. The Washington Conference in 1921 was successful in this goal to address the militarism that led to the first world war.
- 19. Britain and France were concerned they wouldn't be able to collect these payments from Germany because it was bankrupt.
Down
- 1. The Kellog-Briand Pact can be described in this way because it failed to provide ways to take action against aggressive nations.
- 2. Policy in which the US often acted on its own through military intervention, private investment overseas, and signing occasional treaties.
- 3. The US recognized this communist government in 1933.
- 5. Any gains resulting from the Dawes Plan collapsed after this.
- 7. Harding, ____________, Hoover
- 12. The US agreed to grant independence to this nation by 1946.
- 13. The US resisted intervention in this country following its government's seizure of oil properties in 1938.
- 15. The US raised this by 25%, which had the effect of slowing European recovery from the first world war and weakening international trade.
- 18. Trade agreements in which the US reduced tariffs for nations that did the same for the US.