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IrinaVladis [17]
3 years ago
7

The state’s vulnerability became evident shortly after Pearl Harbor. In early 1942 German submarines opened an offensive, code n

amed Operation Drumbeat, against the virtually undefended Allied shipping lanes along the East Coast. Before the carnage was over, nearly 400 ships had been sunk, and thousands of lives lost. Dozens of ships were torpedoed just off Florida’s Atlantic coast, and others in the Gulf of Mexico. German submarine skippers used the light of coastal cities to silhouette their targets. Oil, debris, and dead bodies washed up on the beaches, mixing with the driftwood and seashells along Florida’s Atlantic coast.
What is the main idea of this passage?

-Pearl Harbor was one of the worst attacks on American soil in history.

-Germany used submarines to sink ships that sailed from America’s East Coast.

-The United States had one of the strongest shipping fleets in the world in the 1940s.

- The United States used Operation Drumbeat to defeat German submarines.
History
1 answer:
frosja888 [35]3 years ago
3 0

The correct answer is B) Germany used submarines to sink ships that sailed from America’s East Coast.

The main idea of this passage is that Germany used submarines to sink ships that sailed from America’s East Coast.

Operation Drumbeat was the strategies used by the German navy to attack all kinds of Allies ships with their powerful submarines. They sank warships and cargo ships that transported weaponry and supplies to the war front. This kinds of attack using submarines greatly favored the Germans in the war in the Atlantic Ocean.

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what was the political and religious significance of the "bloody coups" for the northern kingdom of Israel?
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xcept for perhaps Moses, there is no greater hero in the Bible than David. He is introduced as the lad who single handedly defeated the mighty Philistine giant Goliath (1 Samuel 17). After a bitter conflict between the supporters of King Saul and of David finally ended, the elders of Israel came to David at Hebron and anointed him king over the entire people (2 Samuel 5-3). David’s long rule—more than 40 years—is seen by the Bible as a golden age.

The crowning of David as king was a threat to the Philistines. They attacked David’s forces twice but were repulsed both times. After that, the Philistines were no longer a major military problem for David.

David next turned to capturing Jerusalem. The city, despite two centuries of Israelite settlement all around it, had remained a Canaanite stronghold. David, however, was able to conquer it when his general Joab climbed the city’s tsinnor, perhaps a watershaft that led into the city, and surprised Jerusalem’s inhabitants. After having ruled from Hebron for seven years, David moved his capital to Jerusalem.

Jerusalem emerged as not only David’s political capital, however; he turned the city into Israel’s religious capital as well. He brought the Ark of the Covenant—which had accompanied the Israelites during their desert wanderings and which had accompanied them into battle–to Jerusalem. David also made plans to build a temple in the city atop the threshing floor he purchased from Araunah the Jebusite (2 Samuel 24-18), but the actual construction of that building would be accomplished by his son and successor.

David had a personal guard that formed the core of his army. In keeping with his initial victory against Goliath, the Bible portrays David as a great military leader. Once the Philistines were no longer a menace, David expanded his state to the east. He defeated the three nations on the other side of the Jordan River—the Moabites, the Edomites and the Ammonites. As a result, David ruled an area from the Red Sea to the Euphrates River. His power over the further reaches of his empire, however, was likely minimal.

The nature of David’s rule is the subject of ongoing debate among historians today. Some see the Biblical description of him and his empire as reasonably reliable (those academics are sometimes called Biblical maximalists). Others, however, see him as a minor local chieftan, if they even accept that he lived (they are called Biblical minimalists). The minimalists had been bolstered until recent years by the fact that there had been no reference to David outside the Bible and by the lack of finds from tenth-century B.C.E. Jerusalem. That is no longer the case, however.

In the early 1990s, excavators discovered a ninth-century inscription that mentions the “House of David,” no doubt a reference to the David’s dynasty. Recent excavations in Jerusalem have also changed our understanding of the city in David’s time. A massive stone retaining wall, called the Stepped-Stone Structure, was repaired during David’s time and certainly supported a very significant building above it. In 2005, archaeologist Eilat Mazar discovered a very large building just upslope from the Stepped-Stone Structure and which dates to the tenth-century B.C.E. She suggests the building was David’s palace.

The question of who would succeed David became a bloody one. His oldest son, Amnon, was killed by Absalom, David’s third son; Absalom, in turn, was killed by Joab, David’s general, for leading a revolt against the king (2 Samuel 15-19). That left David’s fourth son, Adonijah, as the heir apparent. But David promised his wife Bathsheba, with whom he had had his famous affair years earlier, that her son Solomon would inherit the throne. David’s retinue united around David’s choice.

After David’s death, Solomon moved quickly to solidify his rule. At the first sign of revolt by Adonijah, Solomon had his rival and his supporters killed or exiled. As a result, soon after ascending to the throne, “The kingdom was established in the hand of Solomon” (1 Kings 2-46).

Solomon enjoyed an unprecedented period of peace. His only possible threat, Egypt, attacked and captured the city of Gezer. But Egypt was relatively weak at this time, and the pharaoh moved to mend relations with Solomon. Pharaoh gave Solomon his daughter in marriage and gave him Gezer as a dowry (1 Kings 3-1).

Explanation:

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The
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The Act prohibits Federal military personnel from acting as law enforcement officials inside the United States without direct approval from the Constitution or Congress is the Posse Comitatus Act.

<h3>What is the objective of this Act?</h3>

The Posse Comitatus Act forbids federal troops from taking involved in civil law enforcement unless they are specifically authorized by law.

This Act  reflects an American tradition that views military intervention in civil matters as a threat to the country and individual freedoms.

Although the constitution does not restrict the President from using the military to execute civil laws, Congress chose in 1878 to limit the president's ability to do so without  approval from congress.

Learn more about  Posse Comitatus Act, here:

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