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Neutrality act
During World War II, but the point remains true in many other war-time contexts, neutral countries participated in the affairs of formal belligerents in a number of ways. Diplomatically, 'neutrals' sometimes offered to serve as mediators or were asked to mediate between nations at war. On humanitarian grounds, neutral nations sometimes sent aid-teams or inspectors into warring nations. Further, trade and financial transactions were sometimes the basis for interaction between 'neutrals' and nations-at-war.
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the US to send arms and other aid to Britain and France
The warring nations in WW1 limited trade volume with their enemies in order to weaken them. In the advanced stages of the war, naval blockades were used to prevent essential items from reaching some nations.
A Treaty
Generally a peace treaty, armistice or surrender document ends a war between any two warring factions. However sometimes a "ceasefire" agreement can extend into s longer peace with no formal end to the war.
Peace is the normal, nonwarring condition of a nation, group of nations, or the world. It is also an agreement or treaty between warring or antagonistic nations, groups, etc., to end hostilities and abstain from further or antagonism.
A piece agreement, or peace treaty. A step further would be an alliance; which is if these 2 warring groups will cooperate together.
An armed conflict between warring nations; yes.
An Armistice is an agreement between warring countries to a truce (to stop fighting for a certain length of time).
William P. Rogers, the sitting United States Secretary of State in 1970, played a great role towards achieving peace in the Middle East. He proposed a 90-day ceasefire to allow the UN to intervene and resolve issues between the warring nations.
An armistice is an agreement between warring parties to halt fighting temporarily in order to seek a peace agreement. It does not necessarily lead to a permanent cessation of hostilities.
belligerents
You mean "warring," as in, "The two warring nations finally found peace?"Or "worrying," as in, "I've been worrying about him for awhile?"
neutral
Neutrality act