Thursday, April 23, 2020
The League Of Nations Essays - International Relations,
  The League of Nations    The League of Nations and It's Impact on World Peace                Through my studies and research I have come to the   following conclusion about the League of Nations: despite   all of President Woodrow Wilson's efforts, the League was   doomed to fail. I feel this was so for many reasons, some   of which I hope to convey in the following report. From the   day when Congress voted on the Fourteen Points, it was   obvious that the League had a very slim chance of being   passed in Congress, and without all of the World powers, the   League had little chance of surviving.       On November 11, 1918 an armistice was declared in   Europe. Wilson saw the opportunity to form an international   organization of peace to be formed. He acted quickly. On   January 18, 1919 he released his fourteen points. The   Fourteen Points consisted of many things, but the most   important was the fourteenth-the establishment of a league   of nations to settle international disputes and to keep the   peace. After congress had voted, only three of Wilson's   fourteen points were accepted without compromise. Six of   the others were rejected all together. Fortunately the   League was compromised.       Wilson then went to Europe to discuss the Treaty of   Versailles. Representatives from Italy, France, and Britain   didn't want to work with the nations they had defeated.    They wanted to hurt them. After much fighting and   negotiating, Wilson managed to convince them that a league   of nations was not only feasible, it was necessary.          The Senate supported most of the Treaty of Versailles   but not the League. They thought it would make the U.S.A.   too involved in foreign affairs. Wilson saw that the League   may not make it through Congress, so he went on the road and   gave speeches to sway the public opinion. Unfortunately,   Wilson's health, which was already depleted from the   negotiations in France, continued to recede. Wilson's battle   with his health reached its climax when Wilson had a stroke   on his train between speeches.       After Wison's stroke, support of the League weakened,   both in Congress and in the public's opinion. In 1920 G.   Harding, who opposed the League, was elected as president.   The League formed but the U.S. never joined.       The first meeting of the League was held in Geneva,   Switzerland on November 15, 1920 with fourty two nations   represented. During twenty-six years the League lived, a   total of sixty-three nations were represented at one time or   another. Thirty-one nations were represented all twenty-six   years.       The League had an assembly, a council, and a   secretariat. Before World War II, the assembly convened   regularly at Geneva in September. There were three   representatives for every member state each state having one   vote. The council met at least three times a year to   consider political disputes and reduction of armaments.                 The council had several permanent members, France,   Great Britan, Italy, Japan, and later Germany and the Soviet   Union. It also had several nonpermanent members which were   elected by the assembly. The council's decisions had to be   unanimous.       The secretariat was the administrative branch of the   League and consisted of a secretary, general, and a staff of   five hundred people. Several other organizations were   associated with the League- the Permanent Court of   International Justice, also called the World Court, and the   International Labor Organization.       One important activity of the League was the   disposition of certain territories that had been colonies of   Germany and Turkey before World War I. Territories were   awarded to the League members in the form of mandates. The   mandated territories were given different degrees of   independence in accordance with their geographic situation,   their stage of development, and their economic status.       The League, unfortunately, rarely implemented its   available resources, limited through the were, to achieve   their goal, to end war. The League can be credited with   certain social achievements. these achievements include   settlement of disputes between Finland and Sweden over the   Aland Islands in 1921 and between Greece and Bulgaria over   their mutual border in 1925.        Great powers preferred to handle their affairs on their   own; French occupation of the Ruhr and Italian occupation of   Corfu, both in 1923, went on in spite of the League. The   League failed to end the war between Bolivia and    
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