Yes, it did.
It ended a century of isolationist policy, and introduced America properly to Europe and vice-versa.
Apartheid was a national policy of the central government of South Africa. No policy is a war.
are you looking for Zouave? It is a French term that was adopted to denote volunteer units in the United States Civil War.
containment.
The prevailing thought was that the US adopted the policy of Isolationism. However, it's more likely they adopted instead the policy of non-intervention, where it chose not to take a side, but actively mediate for peace. That did not last as the war went on, and they entered the war on 1917, taking the side of the Allies.
The original foreign policy of the United States following the Revolutionary War, was isolationist.
The US stopped pursuing an isolationist foreign policy after it was dragged into World War 2 and found itself a major power.
non-interventionism
If not for the isolationist policy held by America, World War One might have been over more quickly.In the late 1920s, British politicians wanted to be isolationist.
The United States proclaimed its neutrality and isolationist policies while Europe was being split up and fighting.
Why do you think soldiers early in the Civil War adopted uniforms patterned after the French???
At the beginning of World War I, the US assumed an isolationist policy which basically means that we refused to get involved. While remaining isolationist, the US tried to get the other countries involved to declare peace.
The US adopted a policy called 'containment'
During the Civil War, General Sherman held strong to a total war policy.
The US adopted the policy of "Containment" in the hopes of curbing the spread of Communism .
It ended a century of isolationist policy, and introduced America properly to Europe and vice-versa.
The United States became isolationist in its diplomatic and political relations.