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President Warren Harding viewed America's role in world affairs as active, but low-key. In his first term, he urged the world to create 'an association' that would keep another WW1 from breaking out, but he urged the United States not to join the League of Nations. In his 2nd term Harding gave his Sect of State Charles Hughes the authority to pay Colombia $ 25 million to atone for precipitate American action in the Panamanian revolution of twenty years prior, and the successful Washington Naval Disarmament Conference of 1921–1922 resulted in a strengthening of the Open Door in the Pacific and a reduction in the navies of the United States, Great Britain, Japan, France, and Italy. He also succeeded in improving strained relations with Mexico, left as a legacy from the acrimonious Mexican-American WW1 years.


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Q: How do you think the Harding administration viewed the role of America in world affairs?
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