No.
He wanted a piece without victory.
Look up his "Fourteen Points"
enjoy :)
No
Woodrow Wilson said he believed that Germany should be punished for the War but in a way that would lead to reconciliation in Europe instead of revenge.
Woodrow Wilson was dissatisfied with the Treaty of Versailles. He was an idealist and wanted to build a better and more powerful world from the ruins of the first world war. He agreed with the fact that Germany should be punished for what they did, but to an extent. He was worried that if they treated Germany too harshly, then Germany would someday get revenge. Woodrow Wilson believed that all nations should agree and cooperate to achieven world peace, which is why he set the league of nations up and wrote the 14 points.
Woodrow's Wilson's threat to Germany was that he was going to declare war on Germany as a bit of revenge.
woodrow wilson thought that germany had to pay for its destructive part in ww1
Woodrow Wilson Woodrow Wilson
Germany
He didn't think Germany should be punished so harshly, otherwise they would retaliate and there would be a war again very soon.
Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924). Wilson died before Adolph Hitler came to power in Germany (1933).
6 April 1917
They believed Wilson would not allow the Allies to treat Germany harshly after the war.
In June 1919 he and Germany signed it.