When in a statement to the Congress of the United States, the January 8, 1918, the Democratic president W. Wilson presented his peace plan for the world fourteen points. Soon the program comes up against the Wilsonian national self-interest of the great powers European and the refusal of Congress to a Republican majority to agree that the United States become a member of the League of Nations. At the end of World War II, the desire to avoid another disaster is so great that it allows Democratic President ...