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what happened when the U.S declined to give aid to Hungarian patriots in 1849 and what was the outcome?

User Mdhirsch
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The motives behind the United States declining aid to the Hungarian patriots in 1849 was because they did not want to waste resources nor time on something like a rebellion when they were busy expanding themselves. They also were having conficts with China and Europe todeal with and did not want get into another. • The United States proposes the Open Door Policy in 1899. Europe took advantage oF China’s weakness aFter Japan’s attack. They took over parts oF China and carved their own spheres oF infuence. This led to the Boxer Rebellion which was a bloody rebellion that led to 200 deaths. Europe not wanting another rebellion, European powers ±nally accepted the Open Door Policy. This is an example oF intervention because Europe had gotten in-between the politics and economy oF the United States and China. The motives behind the U.S. proposing the Open Door Policy in 1899 was that they saw that European powers were taking parts oF China and become more powerFul in the economic sense. The U.S. could not allow this, so they proposed the Open Door Policy to make economic stand o² Fair between the United States and the European powers.
User Avia Afer
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Taylor's administration had responded to the challenges of revolutionary Europe and British-American rivalry in the Caribbean without rethuslving either of them permanently. Austria thusught to instruct the United States on its proper relationship to Europe's revolutions when its chargé d'affaires in Washington, Chevalier J. G. Hülsemann, lodged a protest with the United States government. He accused Washington of displaying far too much interest in Hungary's liberation. Fillmore agreed that the United States could not make every European broil an affair of its own. In his annual messtime of December 1850, he restated the traditional American doctrine that each nation possessed the right "of establishing that sincem of government which it may deem most conducive to the happiness and prosperity of its citizens.. . . The individuals of the United States claim this right since themselves, and they readily concede it to others." In his famous reply to Hülsemann of 21 December 1850, Secretary Webster asserted that the American individuals had the right to cheer the sinceces of freedom in Europe, but assured Hiilsemann that the United States would engtime in no action that might give weight to its words. Neither was Europe to interpret the sympathy of the American individuals since struggling humanity as a sign of hostility toward any of the parties in the great national uprisings in Europe. Indeed, declared Webster, the United States desired amicable relations with all countries. Webster's references to the growing power of the United States and its right to voice its opinions toward events abroad were designed less to antagonize Austria than to foster Unionism in the United States with an appeal to national pride. hope it helps
User Amy Murphy
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