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This innovative, well-written book provides a very different perspective on American foreign policy in the 1910s and 1920s, by highlighting the work of the "peace progressives" in the US Senate. Largely Republicans from the West and Midwest (in those long-ago days when the Republican party had a progressive wing), this loose coalition of senators challenged Woodrow Wilson's efforts to put America in the League of Nations (which they viewed as mostly a front for European imperialism) and later offered the only consistent Congressional opposition to the business-oriented foreign policies of the Republican administrations of Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover (the Senate Democrats were severely fragmented on foreign policy issues).

In the 1920s, the peace progressives championed anti-imperalist and anti-militarist positions, calling for support for weaker nations, bans on international arms sales, and the outlawing of war. Though they won few victories, their causes were not as hopelessly idealistic and utopian as they might sound today. The Kellogg-Briand Pact, for example, which outlawed war, was co-sponsored by Coolidge's secretary of state, Frank Kellogg, and ratified by the Senate 85-1 in 1928. Never a strong bloc in terms of votes, the peace progressive coalition weakened in the 1930s as the Depression deepened. Some members lost their Senate seats, while others traded in their anti-imperialism for economic nationalism, in the hope that protectionism and similar measures might help their suffering constituents. The rise of liberal, Democratic New Deal leaders during the Roosevelt Administration effectively changed the face and direction of progressive reform, and the old peace progressives faded away.

This is not a book for general readers. It assumes basic familiarity with US politics and foreign policy in the 1910s and 1920s, and is quite narrowly focused on the views and legislative efforts of this relatively small group of senators. Several chapters do consider the role other groups played in the Senate during this period, and there is a useful discussion of the wider US peace movement of the time. Still, it reminds us (unlike most studies of the foreign policy of this period) that there was, once, a sizeable constituency in Washington and in the nation as a whole for foreign policies that reflected American ideals, not just American business interests.
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walbat | Sep 24, 2010 |