Wilson's Fourteen Points addressed the American's co-operation with other countries.
Step-by-step explanation:
- The Fourteen Points speech was a speech addressed ere a collective conference of Congress on the month of January 8 in the year 1918 by of Woodrow Wilson, through which Wilson described his idea for a solid, long-lasting union in the Americas, Europe and the remainder of the world after the World War I.
- Fourteen Points of Wilson were blended towards open discretion and the maintenance of peace. While some characters of his plan were slightly inserted in the Treaty of Versailles, the opposite allied countries (especially France) required a treaty that charged and dismissed Germany for the war.