How did the Lend-Lease Act and the Atlantic Charter change U.S. involvement in World War II? The United States agreed to end its policy of isolationism. The United States began to provide military equipment to the Allies. The United States decided to reduce its support of Great Britain. The United States established a military presence in Europe.

Respuesta :

Answer: The United States began to provide military equipment to the Allies.

Explanation:

Answer:

The United States began to provide military equipment to the Allies.

Explanation:

  • An Act to Promote the Defense of the United States was a program under which the United States began supplying food, oil and military equipment to the United Kingdom, the government in exile of Free France, the Republic of China and more. late to the Soviet Union and other allied nations between 1941 and August 1945. Supplies included warships, warplanes and other weapons. It became law on March 11, 1941 and was repealed in September 1945.
  • The Atlantic Charter is a joint declaration signed on August 14, 1941, aboard the USS Augusta, "while sailing somewhere in the Atlantic." The Atlantic Conference was held from August 9 to 12, 1941. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt spoke on behalf of the United States and Winston Churchill on behalf of Great Britain. It states that it has deemed it convenient "to make known certain common principles in the national policy of their respective countries, on which rest their hopes of achieving a better future for the world." This Atlantic Charter was reminiscent of the idealism of Wilson's Fourteen Points. It was later incorporated into the Declaration of the United Nations approved on January 1, 1942.
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