Question
Why did the United States take a more active role in world politics after World War II?
(1 point)
Responses
New nationalist powers in South America and Australia threatened the United States.
New nationalist powers in South America and Australia threatened the United States.
The United States distrusted its allies and suspected that many of them were communists.
The United States distrusted its allies and suspected that many of them were communists.
Countries such as Great Britain and France were no longer powerful enough to police the globe.
Countries such as Great Britain and France were no longer powerful enough to police the globe.
Countries such as Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union took an isolationist stance after World War II.
(1 point)
Responses
New nationalist powers in South America and Australia threatened the United States.
New nationalist powers in South America and Australia threatened the United States.
The United States distrusted its allies and suspected that many of them were communists.
The United States distrusted its allies and suspected that many of them were communists.
Countries such as Great Britain and France were no longer powerful enough to police the globe.
Countries such as Great Britain and France were no longer powerful enough to police the globe.
Countries such as Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union took an isolationist stance after World War II.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct response is: **Countries such as Great Britain and France were no longer powerful enough to police the globe.**
After World War II, many European powers were weakened significantly, both militarily and economically, which created a power vacuum. The United States, emerging from the war as a leading global power with significant resources and military strength, took a more active role in international affairs to help stabilize the world, promote democracy, and counter the spread of communism.
After World War II, many European powers were weakened significantly, both militarily and economically, which created a power vacuum. The United States, emerging from the war as a leading global power with significant resources and military strength, took a more active role in international affairs to help stabilize the world, promote democracy, and counter the spread of communism.
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