America's major foreign-policy problem in the 1920s was addressed by the Dawes Plan, which

a. ended the big-stick policy of armed intervention in Central America and the Caribbean.
b. established a ratio of allowable naval strength between the United States, Britain, and Japan.
c. condemned the Japanese aggression against Manchuria.
d. aimed to prevent German rearmament and Germany's imperial desire to recapture the Alsace-Lorraine region from France.
e. offered a solution to the tangle of war-debt and war-reparations payments that relied on the continual flow of loose or "easy" American credit through the 1920s and early 1930s in order to succeed.


e

History

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