On January 8, 1918, Woodrow Wilson went to Congress to announce his view on the American war case. He has created what is called a 14 point, and this plan will determine American diplomacy after World War I (Broll). When looking at these points it is easy to identify how similar they are in nature, so that they can be grouped. The first group is related to the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th points. These points are related to ways to maintain peace between nations and reduce opportunities for imperialism and war.
In the decades before World War I started, nationalism has grown in Europe, but the outcome of the war has brought about a significant increase in new nations and independence movements. Part of the reason is Woodrow Wilson's commitment to isolationism called "self-determination". But part of the reason is also the response to the instability of the old empire and the rise of nationalists who use this to announce new countries. Important areas of European nationalism are Eastern Europe and the Balkans, Poland, Baltic countries, Czechoslovakia, Serbia, Croatia and Slovenia. But nationalism has a big contradiction with the ethnic composition of this region of Europe. There, various countries and races are incredibly integrated. After all, the internal dispute caused by the new self-determination of the majority of the country is generated by a minority of preferred ethnicities who prefer neighborhood domination.
This particular group of empire countries has a large European population, has a long-term form and practical experience in the UK, and is often called the Commonwealth. The demands and pressures and consequences of the First World War led to a more formal understanding of the special status of Orthodox rule. When Britain declared a war with Germany in 1914, it represented the entire empire, control and colony. However, after the end of the First World War in 1918, the territory signed a peace treaty for themselves and joined the newly formed international alliance to become an independent country equivalent to the UK. In 1931, Westminster regulation admitted them as an independent country "in the British Empire, with the same status as Britain." This regulation, in particular, refers to the 'Commonwealth countries'. When the Second World War broke out in 1939, these rulers started their own war declaration.