(A) to enter on the side of the Allied Powers
(B) the enter on the side of the Central Powers
(C) ** to remain militarily and politically neutral
(D) to support the Central Powers by providing war materials
EXPLANATIONS BELOW
Concept note-1: -When WWI began in Europe in 1914, many Americans wanted the United States to stay out of the conflict, supporting President Woodrow Wilson’s policy of strict and impartial neutrality. “The United States must be neutral in fact as well as in name during these days that are to try men’s souls.
Concept note-2: -Terms in this set (27) When World War I began, the official United States policy was to remain militarily and politically neutrality. The war was seen as a purely European conflict, though this view would obviously change.-Laid responsibility for The First World War on Germany.
Concept note-3: -Put simply the United States did not concern itself with events and alliances in Europe and thus stayed out of the war. Wilson was firmly opposed to war, and believed that the key aim was to ensure peace, not only for the United States but across the world.
Concept note-4: -Wilson protested what he considered to be British interference with the right of a neutral nation to trade with either side. Nevertheless, by 1915, while still officially neutral, the U.S. began to provide cash-strapped Britain and France with enormous loans to pay for the materials they ordered.
Concept note-5: -By August, Germany, Russia, and France were all involved in the conflict. Responding to the American public who had elected him, Wilson thought it was important to retain “neutrality, ” because almost one out of every seven Americans had been born in one of the warring countries.