Question #705de

1 Answer

It depends which time period you're talking about

Explanation:

Since this is listed under the 20th century, you would then know that Britain and the U.S. had great relations (WW1, WW2, etc.) This all began because of "The Great Rapprochement" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Rapprochement), a movement that brought U.S. U.K. relations to incredible heights, and mended the old feud. So they pretty much all got along very well, they aided each other in wars, and in a lot of other things (the U.K. took loans from the U.S. during WW1 for example, the U.S. sent foodstuffs and men to fight in France under John J. Pershing, they fought in the Second Battle of The Marne for example).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Rapprochement#/media/File:The_Great_Rapprochementjpg

IF for some reason you meant during the 18th century, 19th, or so on, then yes, this is why France aided the U.S.A. during the Revolutionary war (to cripple Britain). During the Civil War, both France and Britain wanted to support the CSA (but didn't after Robert E. Lee lost at Antietam).