One hundred years ago today, Congress voted to enter what was then the largest and bloodiest war in history. Four days earlier, President Woodrow Wilson had sought to unite a sharply divided populace with a stirring claim
 that the nation “is privileged to spend her blood and her might for the
 principles that gave her birth and happiness and the peace which she 
has treasured.” The war lasted only another year and a half, but in that
 time, an astounding 117,000 American soldiers were killed and 202,000 
wounded.
Still,
 most Americans know little about why the United States fought in World 
War I, or why it mattered. The “Great War” that tore apart Europe and 
the Middle East and took the lives of over 17 million people worldwide 
lacks the high drama and moral gravity of the Civil War and World War II, in which the very survival of the nation seemed at stake.
World
 War I is less easy to explain. America intervened nearly three years 
after it began, and the “doughboys,” as our troops were called, engaged 
in serious combat for only a few months. More Americans in uniform died 
away from the battlefield — thousands from the Spanish flu — than with 
weapons in hand. After victory was achieved, Wilson’s audacious hope of 
making a peace that would advance democracy and national 
self-determination blew up in his face when the Senate refused to ratify
 the treaty he had signed at the Palace of Versailles.
But
 attention should be paid. America’s decision to join the Allies was a 
turning point in world history. It altered the fortunes of the war and 
the course of the 20th century — and not necessarily for the better. Its
 entry most likely foreclosed the possibility of a negotiated peace 
among belligerent powers that were exhausted from years mired in trench 
warfare.
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