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  • 7/26/2019 Source Analysis Document

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    Module 4

    Document Title: Declaration of War against Germany

    Source: Address by the President of the United States, Congressional Record, 65thCong.

    Author: Woodrow Wilson

    Date: 1917

    The outbreak of World War I in Europe created great distress in the minds of the American

    public, however they were under the false conviction that the United States would always

    maintain a safe distance. During early 1917, Germany, embroiled in a bitter war against Britain,

    Russia and France had begun to increase its attacks on neutral shipping vessels in the Atlantic,

    seeking to cut off the pipeline of American shipment to Britain. This led to a chain of events that

    resulted in the loss of hundreds of American lives as five American ships were sunk by German

    submarines. This raised a public outcry and American intervention in the First World War had

    become inevitable.

    This document contains President Wilsons address to a joint session of Congress urging

    Congress to declare war on Germany. This address was delivered shortly after Wilson had been

    re-elected and it marks a profound break from traditional American Foreign policy. According to

    Wilson, retaliation against Germany was necessary not only for self-defense and national

    security but also to make the world safe for democracy.In Wilsons view, national interests

    alone cannot guide American foreign policy: We have no selfish ends to serve. We desire no

    conquestWe seek no compensation for the sacrifices that we shall be freely making. Wilson

    would have the actions of America impact the universal good of mankind and thus viewed the

    war as a crusade to create permanent peace and uphold the rights and liberties of small nations.

    In his address, Wilson also lays emphasis on his belief that the German public was not to be

    blamed for the actions of their government: It was not upon their impulse that theirgovernment

    acted in entering this war.He implies that the German people were alienated from the German

    governments war efforts and it was in somesense his duty to liberate them from autocratic rule.