The Illusion Of Victory: America In World War IIn this sweeping historical canvas, Thomas Fleming undertakes nothing less than a drastic revision of our experience in World War I. He reveals how the British and French duped Wilson into thinking the war was as good as won, and there would be no need to send an army overseas. He describes a harried president making speech after speech proclaiming America's ideals while supporting espionage and sedition acts that sent critics to federal prisons. And he gives a harrowing account of how the Allies did their utmost to turn the American Expeditionary Force into cannon fodder on the Western Front.Thoroughly researched and dramatically told, The Illusion of Victory offers compelling testimony to the power of a president's visionary ideals-as well as a starkly cautionary tale about the dangers of applying them in a war-maddened world. |
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The illusion of victory: America in World War I
Avis d'utilisateur - Not Available - Book VerdictNoted historian and novelist Fleming (e.g., The New Dealer's War) here presents a revisionist view of President Woodrow Wilson as a war leader, arguing that his promise not to send a large American ... Consulter l'avis complet
