That's a pretty complicated question.
<span>The problem is that a vast majority of the Treaty itself (the deconstruction of the German colonial empire, demilitarization of the German state, and the general desire for a peaceful relationship with Germany) were made moot by the rise and fall of the Third Reich. </span>
For small things you can look towards the League of Nations and the works that it did during its short tenure in places like Albania and Liberia. (But WWII pretty much killed that to)
On a technological note:
<span>"Since neither rockets nor glider aircraft were mentioned in the Versailles treaty, Germany spent money on these technologies, including Wernher von Braun's rocket experiments, which in no doubt helped the development of the future space industry. Large glider aircraft designs led to the design of the large Me-321 during World War II which later was motorized and become the Me-323, the largest land-based plane at the time."</span>
The French Revolution had a great and far-reaching impact that probably transformed the world more than any other revolution. Its repercussions include lessening the importance of religion; rise of Modern Nationalism; spread of Liberalism and igniting the Age of Revolutions.
Answer:
It was a mixture of greed and need.
Explanation:
The Americans believed that the expansion was a command from God to them and for that reason, they already had projects to expand in the most varied possible ways. However, there was a need to find more fertile and arable land where they could establish more productive agriculture, which would give the nation more profits. Agriculture in this case became a necessity and a form of ambition, since it could generate a lot of profit.