many counrtys didn't want or didn't help Germany recover. The treaty of Versailles limited germanys army, took all of germanys empire and made Germany pay a massive amount of money to France and belguim. This is why Germany was the hardest hit during the great despression. This economic loss is a big reason for the start of ww2.
The United States and Germany's economies were the slowest to recover from the depression. (Name it.)
The Marshall Plan , or the ERP : European Recovery Program , was a plan authored by General George Marshall to help European nations recover from the devastating consequences of WW2 : a recovery plan designed to thwart Communist expansion . ~ see related link below .
Wilson was not in the best of health at the time of the negotiations.The European Allies all wanted to severely punish Germany for starting the war.The European Allies all wanted to recover the costs of fighting the war from Germany.etc.
The were weakened, tired, and demoralized. A vigorous pursuit might have caused them to collapse. Once back in Virginia, they began to recover.
The USSR (Russia, Soviet Union) was communist. England and the United States were democratic republics and monarchies. Stalin of the USSR kept the nations he took from Germany. The Democracies were furious with him doing that. Stalin's failure to release the Eastern European nations sparked the Cold War of the next forty years. The French had to feel their way back to being a democracy with a strong leader. They had been leaderless when Hitler had invaded their nation. England had colonized many nations and eventually gave many of them up after the War. Australia was able to become their own nation after the war. During the War they were still a satellite nation of England. They became their own democracy. They tried to help the Germans recover and supply food for them too. The US helped the ravished nations of Europe. They developed the Marshall Plan to assist the European nations. The US did a lot of work during the years of the occupation and carried out the Berlin Airlift for several years so the Germans there would not starve.
After the earthquake the bridge was unstable, it could collapse at any moment.
The Eastern European Nations were controlled by the Soviet Union, a communist government, and they did not have self-rule nor could they have free trade with the rest of the world as the Western European nations did. The USSR also refused help from the democratic western nations so they did not have all that help to fix up and grow the economies of the Eastern Nations.
The United States and Germany's economies were the slowest to recover from the depression. (Name it.)
The Marshall Plan , or the ERP : European Recovery Program , was a plan authored by General George Marshall to help European nations recover from the devastating consequences of WW2 : a recovery plan designed to thwart Communist expansion . ~ see related link below .
The Marshall Plan made in 1948 by the USA, helped the European nations to recover. It vas an aid programme which distributed about 14 billion dollars in 3 years. The Soviet Union and the "forced" socialist countries refused to accept it.
The nations of Western Europe saw that they had to work together and become more united in order to obtain peace. They created many successful organizations which eventually lead to the most important: the European Union.
Wilson was not in the best of health at the time of the negotiations.The European Allies all wanted to severely punish Germany for starting the war.The European Allies all wanted to recover the costs of fighting the war from Germany.etc.
The Truman Doctrine promised captalist nations in Europe (e.g. France, West Germany, the Netherlands, the UK, Italy, etc.) economic contributions to repair the damages of WWII, such as large sums of money. This was to recover the Allied nations of Europe, in the hope of making it impossible to be suvert to the Warsaw Pact.
400 years
helping foreign nations recover from war ;)
yes they did
After World War I, the U.S. helped Europe recover economically primarily through loans and financial support. The Dawes Plan of 1924 restructured Germany's reparations payments and facilitated loans from American banks to stabilize the German economy. Additionally, the U.S. provided significant investments and trade opportunities, which contributed to economic revitalization in various European nations. However, the recovery efforts were ultimately hampered by the onset of the Great Depression in the 1930s.