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Originally Posted by Jim O
There's no question about what you say, but Hitler's declaration was what brought the US into a declared war in Europe.
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Hitler's declaration of war was just the final formality. Britain was already bankrupted and was able to fight on with US financing. The last negotiable British asset was $142 Million in gold that the USS Louisville picked up from Simontown, South Africa in 1939. From that moment on, Britain fought on with finance from the United States.
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Would U-Boat activity alone have aroused enough feeling in the US so as to abandon its policy of staying out of the war?
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U-boat activity paved the way for American entry into the war in 1917, IMO there is no reason to think that it would not have escalated the same way in 1942. At what point would the Germans tire of ships being escorted by US warships? Or being shadowed by American planes? Or fight against equipment and weapons built and paid for by America?
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If so, when US would have joined the war directly?
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Yes. It was a matter of time. and when Hitler declared war, Roosevelt and Winnie probably did backflips.
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Do you believe Hitler's unilateral December 11, 1941 declaration of war was planned and would have happened anyway?
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It was not quite unilateral, as Italy also declared war against the US on the same day. And the next day, Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia also declared war against the United States. 14 December Croatia declared war against the US, and 17 December Albania did the same.
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If the former, how long would the delay have been and what would the effect have been?
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If not for Pearl Harbor and the declaration of war by Hitler, 1942 would have been a challenge year for America to remain "neutral". It is no surprise that America chose a "Europe first" attitude even thought it was Japan that woke up the sleeping giant.