Their government was mostly consisting of corrupt bureaucrats and ineffective economic policies that mostly helped the rich stay rich and the poor stay poor. In between them was a king who tried to implement some more liberal policies for the people, but Alexander III mostly reversed them all because he didn't want his autocracy to be challenged.<span />
he went after more antitrust
Answer:
Americans and Germans have vastly different opinions of their bilateral relationship, but they tend to agree on issues such as cooperation with other European allies and support for NATO, according to the results of parallel surveys conducted in the United States by Pew Research Center and in Germany by Körber-Stiftung in the fall of 2018.
In the U.S., seven-in-ten say that relations with Germany are good, a sentiment that has not changed much in the past year. Germans, on the other hand, are much more negative: 73% say that relations with the U.S. are bad, a 17-percentage-point increase since 2017.
Nearly three-quarters of Germans are also convinced that a foreign policy path independent from the U.S. is preferable to the two countries remaining as close as they have been in the past. But about two-thirds in the U.S. want to stay close to Germany and America’s European allies. Similarly, while 41% of Germans say they want more cooperation with the U.S., fully seven-in-ten Americans want more cooperation with Germany. And Germans are about twice as likely as Americans to want more cooperation with Russia. All this is happening against a backdrop of previously released research showing a sharply negative turn in America’s image among Germans.
Explanation:
<em><u>HOPE MARK BRAINLIST</u></em>
Answer:
enter into a truce
Explanation:
Truce talks began July 1951. Opposing sides reached agreement on 2 points: location of the cease-fire line at the existing battle line, establishment of demilitarized
Answer: Under its foreign policy of containment, the United States aimed to keep communism from expanding. That meant trying to stop communist takeover of all of Korea and all of Vietnam.
Explanation/context:
The policy of containment focused on keeping communism and the Soviet Union's influence limited. It influenced US foreign policy by prompting intervention in places like Korea and Vietnam to stop the spread of communism.
George F. Kennan recommended the policy of containment which set the tone for US involvement in world relations following World War II. Kennan was an American diplomat in Moscow after World War II. In 1946, he sent what became known as "the long telegram" of his advice about what the USA needed to do about the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and the threat of communism. He recommended not confronting the USSR directly but simply trying to keep communism contained to where it already had taken hold.