@Poitier
Your sources gives no indications that it was a world power like British Empire. And it only hints that it was pushed to world statues.
Again America was really a world power after WW2. It depends how you define "world power". I must be thinking superpower to be honest. But it doesn't deflate my argument because the British Empire was a Superpower and not America and thus during that time the British Empire was more powerful.
IIRC China is a world power but its not a superpower like the USA.
Hypocrite aren't we? Calls me out for using Wikipedia and you use it...?
Yeah listen to idiots breh...
The young John Maynard Keynes, a member of the British negotiating delegation, wrote: "In addition to this moral influence the realities of power were in [Wilson's] hands." This is how the economist defined the new world order: "The American armies were at the height of their numbers, discipline, and equipment. Europe was in complete dependence on the food supplies of the United States; and financially she was even more absolutely at their mercy. Europe … already owed the United States more than she could pay."













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