Asked by Makayla
Rejection of the League of Nations by the United States did everything except:
weaken the League's power
take away confidence other nations had in it
contribute to its collapse within a few years
result from American fears of military involvement
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Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Answer: contribute to its collapse within a few years.
Explanation: U.S. rejection did weaken the League, sapped other nations' confidence, and stemmed from American fears of being dragged into foreign wars. But the League did not collapse within a few years—the organization endured through the 1920s and 1930s and only effectively ended after World War II (formally dissolved in 1946).
Explanation: U.S. rejection did weaken the League, sapped other nations' confidence, and stemmed from American fears of being dragged into foreign wars. But the League did not collapse within a few years—the organization endured through the 1920s and 1930s and only effectively ended after World War II (formally dissolved in 1946).
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