Analysis Of Franklin D. Roosevelt's Declaration Of War Speech

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Wars are not only be fought for the purpose of peace but also for the preservation of the country and its people by protecting a nation’s citizen’s rights, freedoms, as well as themselves. On December 8, 1941, the United States president Franklin D. Roosevelt would recite a speech known as the “Address to Congress Requesting a Declaration of War,” due to Japanese aggression in the Pacific Ocean. In this speech, Roosevelt claims that “[the United States] will not only defend [themselves] to the uttermost but will make it very certain that this form of treachery shall never endanger [the United States] again” (Roosevelt 2). President Roosevelt explains that this war is based on the defense of the United States and its people. He wants to allow …show more content…

Similarly, in “Wilson’s War Message to Congress,” Wilson expresses his concerns about German aggression and attacks on American boats in the Atlantic Ocean. After constant u-boat attacks on unarmed American vessels, Wilson states that the once Neutral United States would join the war because “the peace of the world is involved and the freedom of its peoples and the menace to that peace and freedom lies in the existence of autocratic governments” (Wilson 4). In this declaration, Wilson states that the American would enter the war due to the disturbance of the American’s as well as the European’s peace and freedoms threatened by the growing German Reich. The German forces would threaten the Americans by taking down their boats which prompted the Americans to join the war, to protect the country and rights of its people.This shows that wars are used to protect a nation from threatening powers which provoke them. A war can stop this provocation from the menace country allowing for the people of a country to be safe once again. In President Barack Obama's Nobel Prize Speech “A Just and Lasting Peace,” he expresses that all nations have the right to defend themselves if being