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America Enters the War

From Isolation to Arsenal of Democracy

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America Enters the War

Auteur(s): Korey Blathewick
Narrateur(s): Anne Charlotte
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From Reluctant Bystander to Global Superpower — How the United States Transformed a Nation and a War

Before the United States became the industrial juggernaut that helped defeat the Axis powers, it stood at a crossroads. Scarred by the trauma of World War I and crushed by the Great Depression, America spent the 1930s looking inward—avoiding foreign entanglements and passing neutrality laws to ensure it stayed out of Europe's next war. America Enters the War: From Isolation to Arsenal of Democracy is the gripping, insightful story of how a hesitant republic transformed into the most powerful engine of victory in modern history.

Korey Blaithewick, former U.S. military strategist and renowned expert on wartime geopolitics, brings clarity and depth to a moment in history that redefined America’s global role. Through ten compelling chapters, Blaithewick traces the country’s progression from passive observer to decisive actor, weaving together political maneuvering, military preparation, economic revolution, and the dramatic events that finally shattered American isolation.

It begins with a nation weary of war. In the 1920s and 1930s, American public sentiment overwhelmingly rejected the idea of foreign involvement. Isolationism wasn’t just a policy — it was a philosophy rooted in disillusionment and fear. Blaithewick expertly explains the cultural, economic, and political forces that shaped this view and the legislative measures, such as the Neutrality Acts, that codified it.

But not everyone shared the belief that America could stay out of global conflict. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, always a step ahead, saw the rising tide of fascism for what it was — a direct threat to freedom everywhere. Blaithewick paints a vivid portrait of Roosevelt’s careful navigation between public opinion and looming crisis.

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