Peter H. Buckingham - International normalcy: the open door peace with the former central powers, 1921-29
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International normalcy: the open door peace with the former central powers, 1921-29
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International Normalcy : The Open Door Peace With the Former Central Powers, 1921-29
author
:
Buckingham, Peter H.
publisher
:
Scholarly Resources, Inc.
isbn10 | asin
:
0842022155
print isbn13
:
9780842022156
ebook isbn13
:
9780585120041
language
:
English
subject
World War, 1914-1918--Peace, World War, 1914-1918--Reparations, Europe--Foreign relations--United States, United States--Foreign relations--Europe, United States--Foreign relations--Turkey, Turkey--Foreign relations--United States.
publication date
:
1983
lcc
:
D816.B85 1983eb
ddc
:
940.53/12
subject
:
World War, 1914-1918--Peace, World War, 1914-1918--Reparations, Europe--Foreign relations--United States, United States--Foreign relations--Europe, United States--Foreign relations--Turkey, Turkey--Foreign relations--United States.
Page iii
International Normalcy
The Open Door Peace with the Former Central Powers, 192129
by Peter H. Buckingham
Scholarly Resources Inc. Wilmington, Delaware
Page iv
1983 by Peter H. Buckingham All rights reserved First published 1983 Printed and bound in the United States of America
Scholarly Resources Inc. 104 Greenhill Avenue Wilmington, Delaware 19805
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Buckingham, Peter H., 1948 International normalcy.
Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. World War, 19141918Peace. 2. World War, 19141918Reparations. 3. EuropeForeign relations United States. 4. United StatesForeign Relations Europe. 5. United StatesForeign relationsTurkey. 6. TurkeyForeign relationsUnited States. I. Title. D644.B85 1983 327.7304 83-18935 ISBN 0-8420-2215-5
Page v
Acknowledgments
In the process of researching and writing this book, I have accumulated debts that cannot be repaid and friendships which will last a lifetime. A grant from the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library in West Branch, Iowa, provided the funds which allowed me to complete the research. In addition to the most excellent staff at the Hoover Library, I wish to thank the librarians and archivists at the Bancroft Library, University of California at Berkeley; the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace, Stanford University; the Library of Congress; the National Archives; and the Houghton Library, Harvard University.
I would also like to express my deep appreciation to several outstanding educators for giving me the benefit of their wise and spirited counsel through the years: Norman O. Forness and Charles H. Glatfelter of Gettysburg College; LeRoy Ashby, Patrick Morgan, Howard Payne, and David Stratton of Washington State University; and Richard Dean Burns of California State University, Los Angeles. Most of all, my thanks go to Edward M. Bennett, who believed in this project when it was just an idea and helped to shape it from the beginning. This book is dedicated to my parents, Jean and Henry Buckingham, for all their love and support.
Page vii
Contents
Introduction
1
1. Peacemaking, 1921: The Separate American Peace with Germany, Austria, and Hungary
13
The Politics of Peace
14
The Knox-Porter Resolution
17
Hughes's Dilemma
22
The Treaty of Berlin
24
One-Sided Negotiations with Austria
29
Instability and Stalling in Hungary
31
New Treaties, New Times
33
2. Wilson's Last Stand: Advice and Consent of the Senate on the Separate Peace
35
The Senate Foreign Relations Committeeand Senator Borah
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