The Americans had little to no training and very limited supplies.
This is correct because, well, this is how it went down in history lol.
Good luck!
-RxL
On March 19, 1920, the United States Senate rejected for the second time the Treaty of Versailles, by a vote of 49-35, falling seven votes short of a two-thirds majority needed for approval.
The Treaty of Versailles was a formal peace treaty between the World War I Allies and Germany. The leaders of the “Big Four” Allies (Britain, France, Italy and the United States) met in Paris in early 1919 to draft the treaty. President Woodrow Wilson presented his Fourteen Points, a series of measures intended to ensure future peace. The points included the formation of an international organization known as the League of Nations (similar to the modern United Nations), which was adopted in the treaty.
Cited but hope it helps.
I think Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette should have been killed in the French Revolution. The royal couple had to move out of the castle because of a mob that marched Versailles. In August 1792 they were arrested by the sans-culottes. In September the monarchy was abolished by the national convention. In November evidence of Louis XVI counter revolutionary intrigues with Austria and other foreign nations. Marie Antoinette was later found guilty of treason and was put to death
George Washington had warned the American people against “the insidious wiles of foreign influence.” President Monroe, writes Arnold Whitridge, further developed “the thesis of non-entanglement.