
In President Truman's address to Congress, he starts right off in stating that in order for Greece to survive on its own, it will need our help and guidance. He points out that Greece's wealth isn't as extensive as ours and they don't have the same opportunities that we take for granted. They have been continually taken advantage of and invaded by countless nations, unable to find their own voice in the matter. The Germans, despite being removed from Greek land, had destroyed everything. Villages were burned, railroads were ruined--the end result was the equivalent to Sherman's march to the sea. Truman continues to push on and states that Greece is unable to handle the situation and that we are the only ones willing to help them. America was their last hope, and Truman strived to make sure Congress understood that. He also points out that Turkey too needs their assistance and by helping them we can secure a stable environment in the Middle East. As a fellow independent nation who had fought tooth and claw to gain freedom, we should help others who desire that same goal. Truman stated that allowing these nations to lose their independence would be a crime. Finally, he asks Congress to allow military troops and personal to be sent to Greece and Turkey in order for them to give all the help they require. Failing now would mean putting the safety and peace of the world at risk, and Truman knows Congress would never allow that to happen. He concludes by putting his faith in them.
FDR states in the Executive Order 9066 that there were to be various areas of land under complete governmental supervision where anyone who lives and/or is moved to those areas would be provided with food, shelter, and military protection. Those, however, who were not intended to be placed in said land were to be kept out of the area by the military. FDR gave the military authorization to rush people, specifically the Japanese-Americans, into camps in order to keep them separated from the full blooded American people. America had just declared war on Japan and was still reeling from the impact of the Pearl Harbor massacre and a panic was beginning to set in. In order to help solve it, FDR allowed Executive Order 9066 to be set into place to help lessen the chaos. The Secretary of War along with the military was given free reign to do whatever they felt was necessary to keep the rules enforced and to make sure the Japanese-Americans remained within the camps.


The Kellogg Briand Peace Pact was signed in 1928. It was created as a treaty to reestablish stability between the nations. Powers such as Great Britain, Italy, Germany, France, Poland, Belgium, and Japan in the coming year. The treaty called for war to no longer be used as part of the national policy. Those who agreed to the terms and signed the document were therefore agreeing to no longer use war, weapons, and militarism as it had been previously used and instead accept the change the pact projected. If any nation that had signed the agreement were to break that pact and use war as means of benefiting their nation, they would be denied all the positive things the treaty had to offer to them. The treaty was created as a means to slowly wane countries off of using war for their own self benefit and one day live in a world where people would no longer need that sense of violence. The document, having been written by S. of State Frank Kellogg and signed by President Coolidge, gave America the complete control to allow as many nations into the pact as they pleased.