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U.S Foreign Policy Toward Jewish Refugees During 1933-1939

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 17.84
  Total Words: 4459
  Total Characters: 24796
  Number of Sentences: 291


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 15.32
  Characters per Words: 5.56


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 49.9
  Fog Scale Level: 13.38
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 10.11  

U.S Foreign Policy Toward Jewish Refugees During 1933-1939


     PART  I   HISTORICAL  REVIEW  AND  ANALYSIS

     In reviewing the events which gave rise to the U.S.'s foreign policy
toward Jewish refugees, we must identify the relevant factors upon which such
decisions were made.  Factors including the U.S. government's policy mechanisms,
it's bureaucracy and public opinion, coupled with the narrow domestic political
mindedness of President Roosevelt, lead us to ask;  Why was the American
government apathetic to the point of culpability, and isolationist to the point
of irresponsibility, with respect to the systematic persecution and annihilation
of the Jewish people of Europe during the period between 1938-1945?
     Throughout the years of 1933-1939, led by Neville Chamberlain and the
British, the United States was pursuing a policy of appeasement toward Hitler.
They had tolerated his military build-up and occupation of the Rhineland, both
violations of the Treaty of Versailles, as well as the annexing of Austria and
the take-over of the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia.  Hitler realized early on in
his expansionist campaign that Western leaders were too busy dealing with their
own domestic problems to pose any real opposition.  In the United States,
Americans were wrestling with the ravages of the Great Depression.  With the
lingering memory of the more than 300,000 U.S. troops either killed or injured
in World War I, isolationism was the dominant sentiment in most political
circles. Americans were not going to be "dragged" into another war by the
British.  The Depression had bred increased xenophobia and anti-Semitism, and
with upward of 30% unemployment in some industrial areas1, many Americans wanted
to see immigration halted completely.  It was in this context that the
democratic world, led by the United States, was faced with a refugee problem
that it was morally bound to deal with.  The question then became; what would
they do?
          Persecuti...

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