382 notes to pages 89‒94
- Clements, “Woodrow Wilson and World War I,” 62–63, 81 ; Clements,
Presidency of Woodrow Wilson , 125. - Clements, “Woodrow Wilson and World War I,” 73.
- Clements, Presidency of Woodrow Wilson , 125–28.
- Clements, “Woodrow Wilson and World War I,” 62–63 ; Th ompson,
“Woodrow Wilson and World War I,” 334, 336. - Clements, Presidency of Woodrow Wilson , 126.
- Clements, Presidency of Woodrow Wilson , 131–32.
- Ferrell, “Woodrow Wilson: Misfi t in Offi ce?” 65–66.
- Clements, Presidency of Woodrow Wilson , 123–24. House’s title was honor-
ifi c. Wilson’s emissaries did not always do his bidding, however. As House
became more pro-Allied, he sought to commit the president to enter the
war on the side of the Entente if Germany refused to negotiate a peace
agreement. See Clements, Presidency of Woodrow Wilson , 129–30. - Clements, Presidency of Woodrow Wilson , 129–31 ; Th ompson, “Woodrow
Wilson and World War I,” 336. - Trask, “American Presidency,” 307.
- Clements, Presidency of Woodrow Wilson , 137.
- Trask, “American Presidency,” 302. Trask adds that because the war repre-
sented a fundamental challenge to stability by German power, the issues
could not be resolved by anything less than complete victory for one side. - Clements, Presidency of Woodrow Wilson , 124.
- Margaret MacMillan, Paris 1919: Six Months that Changed the World (New
York: Random House, 2001, 2003), chap. 22. - Link, Higher Realism of Woodrow Wilson , 97.
- Clements, Presidency of Woodrow Wilson , 136.
- Finnegan, Against the Specter of a Dragon , 25, 28.
- Finnegan, Against the Specter of a Dragon , 56. More recent accounts
suggest the incident may not have happened. Esposito, “Political and
Institutional Constraints on Wilson’s Defense Policy,” 1115. - See Edward Coff man, “American Military and Strategic Policy in World
War I,” in War Aims and Strategic Policy in the Great War, 1914–1918 , ed.
Barry Hunt and Adrian Preston (Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefi eld,
1977), 67–84. - Finnegan, Against the Specter of a Dragon , chap. 7.
- Finnegan, Against the Specter of a Dragon , 38–39, chap. 6.
- Finnegan, Against the Specter of a Dragon , 4.
- Finnegan, Against the Specter of a Dragon , chap. 5, 157–58.
- Finnegan, Against the Specter of a Dragon , chap. 9. Finnegan’s detailed
account makes it clear that Wilson took little active interest in army
modernization in the prewar period, contrary to the claims of some histo-
rians. For an example of that view, see Arthur Link and John W. Cham-
bers, “Woodrow Wilson as Commander-in-Chief,” in Th e United States
Military under the Constitution of the United States, 1789–1989 , ed. Richard