The main ideas of Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points were:=1)No secret treaties==2)Free navigation on high seas==3)Free trade should be encouraged==4)Reduce Armaments!(self-defense shouls be enough)==5)When making Colonial claims, the interests of the people living in that colony should be taken into account==*National Self-Determination!=
The five most important points in Wilson's 14 Points were:
The most important outcome of the 14 points was the establishment of the League of Nations. Wilson essentially gave up all of his other points to establish this one. The other people involved in the treaty wanted to punish Germany very harshly so they did not agree to wilson's other points.
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the 14 things are what you sday they are
they just do because
Woodrow Wilsonâ??s plan for peace was called the 14 Points or the 14 Points Plan. He believed that this plan would help to create world peace.
Because then it flys out the rainbow
Woodrow Wilsonâ??s plan for peace was called the 14 Points or the 14 Points Plan. He believed that this plan would help to create world peace.
The Fourteen Points Plan did not work because many of the points were deemed unreasonable to the other countries like Britain and France. They also did not want the U.S. to control any peace treaties since they entered World War I late.
It means countries need to be less imperialistic... Hence the I for imperialism In The 4 M.A.I.N reasons World War I Started Militarism Alliances Imperialism Nationalism
14 point plan
Most of Wilson's '14 Points' were never accepted. They were conciliatory toward Germany and remarkably progressive. His suggestion for a 'League of Nations', a predecessor to the United Nations, was adopted by many nations, but not by his own country, the US, which did not join. Had Wilson's ideas been implemented, the Nazi party would probably never have been formed, and the Second World War might have been avoided.
The 14 Points were Woodrow Wilson's plan for peace after World War I. They were important because they aimed to prevent future conflict by promoting ideas such as self-determination, open diplomacy, and the reduction of armaments. The points laid the foundation for the Treaty of Versailles and the establishment of the League of Nations.