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Home » History » Nothing Less Than War: A New History of America's Entry into World War I

Nothing Less Than War: A New History of America's Entry into World War I

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Saturday, September 1, 2012

Nothing Less Than War: A New History of America's Entry into World War I

Author: Visit Amazon's Justus D. Doenecke Page | Language: English | ISBN: 0813130026 | Format: PDF

Nothing Less Than War: A New History of America's Entry into World War I Description

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. This splendidly perceptive history is also an exercise in nostalgia for an era when Americans debated a war before the president launched one rather than afterward. A University of South Florida emeritus history professor, Doenecke (Storm on the Horizon: The Challenge to American Intervention, 1939–1941) writes that Americans greeted Germany's 1914 invasion of Belgium with horrified fascination, but with little sense of foreboding. Most citizens and President Woodrow Wilson favored the Allies, but wanted to remain neutral. Doenecke recounts how this feeling gradually changed over two and a half years in response to Germany's self-defeating actions, the foremost being the new submarine warfare, which, raising fears for the safety of passenger ships, was viewed by many as no less ghastly than terrorism is today. Doenecke paints intriguing portraits of leading figures, many now obscure, including Franklin Delano and Theodore Roosevelt and William Jennings Bryan, plus the rich stew of newspapers, magazines, organizations, diplomats, and propagandists who fought (occasionally literally) over this issue. 35 photos. (Apr.)
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Review

"Nothing Less Than War combines careful attention to diplomacy with an excellent consideration of politics and public opinion. It is superb in detail, and even scholars well versed in the field will learn things they didn't know before." -- John Milton Cooper Jr., author of Woodrow Wilson: A Biography



"Doenecke untangles and clarifies the national debate in great detail in this dense, well-documented study. It will be of great use to serious students and researchers of the Great War." -- Library Journal



"Justus Doenecke's impressive new study of President Woodrow Wilson's attempt to keep the United States out of the Great War by maintaining American neutrality from 1914 to 1917 is a substantial contribution to historical scholarship. It offers three majorcontributions: first, an excellent depiction of public opinion during these years as expressed by the press and by leaders in Congress and various national organizations; second, a comprehensive review of historical scholarship, which is integrated into the narrative throughout the chapters; and third, a clear assessment of Wilson's leadership within this framework." -- Lloyd Ambrosius, author of Wilsonianism: Woodrow Wilson and His Legacy in American Foreign Relations



"Nothing Less Than War is a thoughtful look at America's entry into World War I. Based on impressive research, it carries the reader back to a very different time, reassesses the wide-ranging debate over the war in Europe, and provides a stimulating re-examination of the strengths and weaknesses of Woodrow Wilson's leadership." -- Charles Neu



"Justus Doenecke has written a model of judicious scholarship. Historians and nonhistorians alike will profit from reading his informed and insightful account of a pivotal period in American diplomatic history." -- George Nash, author of of the The Life of Herbert Hoover: The Humanitarian, 1914-1917.



"Justus Doenecke has written a fine, authoritative study of America's flawed struggle for neutrality in the First World War -- and the first comprehensive re-examination of the subject in more than a generation." -- Thomas Knock, author of To End All Wars: Woodrow Wilson and the Quest for a New World Order



"Thorough, thoughtful, pointed, and wise, this sprightly, sometimes wry account covers familiar material with fresh insight and commendably a sense of irony. A splendid read for anyone with an interest in Wilson and the war." -- Mark Gilderhus, author of Pan American Visions: Woodrow Wilson and the Western Hemisphere, 1913-1921, Mark Gilderhus, author of Pan American Visions: Woodrow Wilson and the Western Hemisphere, 1913-1921



"The entry of the United States into World War I is a very complicated event because of its extraordinarily multiple origins, because of the enormous and overwhelming mass of propaganda enveloping it, and because of the strange character of President Wilson. Professor Doenecke's acquaintance and understanding of these difficult events and circumstances is long-standing, and his present reconstruction and narrative of what led to April 1917 is very valuable." -- John Lukacs, author of The Legacy of the Second World War



"Long a highly influential author on Americans' entry into the Second World War, Doenecke has now produced a superb, beautifully researched, and carefully argued account that should become a standard on the United States entering into World War I--a historical dividing line marking the transformation of America from a great continental power into the greatest of world powers. There is here a galaxy of fascinating characters, but at the center is President Woodrow Wilson, who has now become perhaps the most controversial leader in the nation's history. Quoting often from the leading writers of the past eighty years who have shaped our views of 1914-1917, Doenecke has simply subsumed them in an inclusive account that deserves a wide audience, including college classes." -- Walter LaFeber, author of The American Age: U.S. Foreign Policy at Home and Abroad since 1750



"Doenecke paints intriguing portraits of leading figures, many now obscure, including Franklin Delano and Theodore Roosevelt and William Jennings Bryan, plus the rich stew of newspapers, magazines, organizations, diplomats, and propagandists who fought over this issue." -- Publisher Weekly (starred review)



"Doenecke delivers a vivid, opinionated and surprisingly recognizable account of American public affairs a century ago.... This is an excellent history." -- Military History



"Doenecke leads readers through the pitfalls of the political landscape--the pros and cons of intervention, the Wilsonian effort at neutrality, and the issues that ultimately led to the US entry into WWI." -- Choice



"This book is an excellent history of how America enters WWI on the side of England & France." -- Those that Can't Write



"Doenecke has produced what should become the standard on the United States' entry into World War I, transforming her from a great continetal power into a greater world power. This is a highly readable account filled with fascinating portraits of the luminaries of the day." -- The Past in Review



"Skillyfully traces the intricate policy decisions and machinations of Wilson and his inner cadre." -- Military Review



"Doenecke doubtless portrays accurately how the American public regarded the European conflict before 1917." -- Journal of American History

See all Editorial Reviews
  • Product Details
  • Table of Contents
  • Reviews
  • Series: Studies in Conflict, Diplomacy and Peace
  • Hardcover: 436 pages
  • Publisher: The University Press of Kentucky (March 8, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0813130026
  • ISBN-13: 978-0813130026
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
UPDATE: First, Amazon, thank you for letting us adjust our starring levels. I've knocked this down to a four-star, and am not 100 percent sure about even that.

Reading Walter Karp's The Politics of War (the author was recommended by a commenter to this review), it now seems clear that, at least 18 months before we declared war on Germany, Woodrow Wilson was already doing everything he could to get us into that war, and to violate our civil liberties in the process. Given that Karp's book was written decades ago, Justus Doenecke must be scolded, at least, for failure to engage with the more vociferous of Wilson's critics.

That said, back to the initial review.

====

First, the very good.

Justus Doenecke gives the reader a tour de force of President Woodrow Wilson's political position vis-a-vis Congress, his Cabinet, etc. at Aug. 4, 1914, so we know just what he "brought to the table" when World War I not only started, but included Britain.

From there, he looks at Wilson's diplomatic actions and comments toward both the UK and Germany, namely on Britain's extended blockade and Germany's submarine warfare. He details how Wilson worked hard to carefully maintain not only the letter of neutrality, but the spirit of it -- or, at least, Wilson's interpretation of the spirit. (I'll be getting to that caveat later.)

At the same time, he shows how Wilson was ill-served by three advisers, including two secretaries of state. The first of those was William Jennings Bryan, a naive idealist who got the role as a political favor. The second was Bryan's No. 2, moved up when the Great Commoner resigned over Wilson's seeming hardcore stance on Germany after the Lusitania.
Woodrow Wilson is president, Europe is embroiled in WWI and America is a very different nation, almost a foreign land unrecognizable to us. For any book about WWI, capturing that America is difficult but required. If they fail, the book creates more questions than providing answers. This book captures that America and effortlessly explains its' ideals, attitudes, fears and needs. While America is the focus, we get a good view of England, France and Germany too.
As we follow the progression from Peace to War, the author tells us about the forces pulling America in each direction. At the center is Woodrow Wilson, grieving over the death of his first wife, finding his second wife, working on reelection even as his health starts to fail. Wilson is an odd mix of idealism and real politics. Much of the time, he reacts to events without trying to control them. The majority of Americans do not want war. If America were forced into the war, a large part of the population would rather fight England. America watches Japan, Germany and England with a mix of fear and anger. Germany is the most provocative. England, fighting for her life, is more than willing to bend the law. The English blockade is starving Germans and forcing unrestricted submarine warfare as their only real option. Japan is both feared and loathed. Orientals challenging whites for control of the Pacific is not acceptable given the racism of the times. America is not a military power. The system that has worked for 140 years is falling apart in the modern world. Oceans are no longer real protection, national army's approach a million men, modern ships and airplanes are among the things America lacks.
America has factories. America has raw materials to feed the factories.

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