In Memoriam
Between the War for Independence and Operation Iraqi Freedom, the armed
forces of the United States have participated in twenty-one principal wars and in numerous
smaller conflicts and operations. In each of these American men and women have paid a high
price for the nation's freedom, selflessly sacrificing life or limb for an honorable cause.
Principal sources of information for the figures, explanatory text and
illustrations appearing below include the National Archives and Records Administration; U.S.
Navy Historical Center; Department of Defense; Department of Veterans Affairs; and The Oxford
Companion to American Military History, from which all quotations are taken.
World War I, 1917 - 1918
When war broke out in Europe in the summer of 1914, few Americans--if any--believed the United
States would ever have a direct role to play in the conflict. Although the U.S. had participated
actively in the international naval arms race since the 1880s and had seen fit on numerous
occasions in recent years to employ its military resources as an instrument of national policy,
the causes of the European war seemed remote and incomprehensible. Thus it may have appeared
sensible for President Woodrow Wilson to order the nation to remain neutral in spirit as well
as deed--a condition that lasted only a short time as Americans began to favor one side or
the other, whether for the sake of business or personal reasons.
The war between the Triple Entente (Imperial Russia, France and Great Britain)
and the Triple Alliance (Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy) unfolded on a main eastern and
western front as well as along several smaller ones, and soon ground down into an immensely
destructive stalemate all around. Thanks to recent advancements in military technology,
including "magazine-loading rifles, belt-fed machine guns, and improved artillery,"
to say nothing of effective submarine
warfare and military aviation, the Great War as it was called at the time proved more destructive
to life, limb and property than anyone had imagined.
The dynamic American economy benefited from a lively trade with the
belligerents, but the nation's military assets seemed far too small and distant from the
conflict to be of any particular use (in 1916, the U.S. Army ranked 17th in the world and
the Navy still had far to go before it could claim a status "second to none").
Nevertheless, President Wilson had been eager since early in the war to serve as an impartial
mediator to bring the conflict to a definitive end, and he came to the realization as the war
dragged on that American participation in the combat would be his only sure entrée to peace
negotiations. American neutrality had become a legal fiction as the U.S. had allowed the
Allies--Britain and France in particular--to become increasingly dependent credit and supplies
of goods from the United States. Political sentiment remained sharply divided over the war,
with some of the country's top leaders preaching antimilitarism and non-intervention while
others believed it was high time for the U.S. to become directly involved.
According to David Woodward in The Oxford Companion to American Military
History,
Caught between the effective Allied naval blockade and Germany's submarine
warfare campaign, America's right to overseas trade was jeopardized....Wilson's mediation
efforts implied that he was prepared to accept a global role for the United States to obtain
a compromise peace, but he certainly never imagined any circumstances that would involve
American forces in what he referred to as "the mechanical game of slaughter" in
France. Nor apparently could he identify any strategic interest for the total defeat of
Germany....His formula for a satisfactory end to the fighting as he announced in January
1917 was "peace without victory."
In response to Wilson's request, Congress declared war on the Central Powers
in April 1917. Not since the War for Independence had the U.S. joined with another country
as part of a military alliance. Although the General Staff of the War Department thought
American forces should join in a collective military enterprise with the British and French
on the western front, American combatants served as an "associate power" with freedom
to conduct independent goals. Public opinion remained as sharply divided after the declaration
as it had been before, so the Wilson administration worked hard to squelch dissent and convince
Americans to pull together for the sake of the war effort, ultimately promoting "a frenzy
of anti-German and anti-German American feelings in parts of the nation."
Thanks to a flurry of legislation the economy all but entirely converted to
a war footing and society in general mobilized to an extraordinary extent. The federal
government took control production, procurement and distribution of most goods, giving those
companies that chose to cooperate with the largely voluntary system opportunities to earn
enormous profits. The Selective Service Act of
1917 established a system of conscription run mainly by volunteers working in more than 4,000
local draft boards across the country. Before war's end, the Selective Service System
registered 23.9 million men, and drafted 2.8 million of them into an army that totaled 3.5
million soldiers.
In command of the American Expeditionary Force was General John J. Pershing,
lately returned from the unsuccessful Punitive Expedition in Mexico. Pershing was able to
preserve the independence of his army, complete "with its own front, supply lines, and
strategic goals." Entering combat under the American flag in May and June of 1918, the
AEFproved effective in offensive as well as defensive operations in the Allied cause:
"Although only involved in heavy fighting for 110 days, the AEF made vital contributions
to Germany's defeat. With tens of thousands of 'doughboys' crossing the Atlantic to reinforce
the Allies, and with the AEF emerging as a superior fighting force, the exhausted and depleted
Germans had no hope of avoiding total defeat if the war continued into 1919."
By the time the Allies accepted Germany's call for an armistice on November 11, 1918, more than
65 million troops had been mobilized for the Great War. Millions of British, French, Russian
and German troops were sacrificed to a cause that even today is not well understood. Rather
than the permanent peace that should have provided a fitting legacy to the "war to end
all wars," Woodrow Wilson's ambitious and idealistic plan to shape the postwar world
yielded a deeply flawed peace that lasted less than twenty years before the world was engulfed
by war once again.
American Casualties, World War I, 1917 - 1918
| Branch of Service |
Number Serving |
Killed in Action |
Other Deaths |
Non-mortal Wounds |
| Army |
4,057,101 |
50,510 |
55,868 |
193,663 |
| Navy |
599,051 |
431 |
6,856 |
819 |
| Marines |
78,839 |
2,461 |
390 |
9,520 |
| Total |
4,734,991 |
53,402 |
63,114 |
204,002 |