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jekas [21]
3 years ago
13

The united states involvement in vietnam grew from an earlier policy of

History
1 answer:
murzikaleks [220]3 years ago
6 0
The Truman Doctrine
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I need help with my history test!!!
DerKrebs [107]
D.provide revenue for the government
3 0
3 years ago
How did the nation show a growing sense of national pride and identity?
zubka84 [21]
Wich one if us growing econmy and diversity
4 0
3 years ago
Which action is an example of the United states using economic influence as a tool of foreign policy?
nadezda [96]

Answer:

The correct option is C). Providing funding for another country to establish a clean water program.

Explanation:

Providing funding for another country to establish a clean water program is a correct option because the united state's Global water strategy aims to save lives, reduce poverty and promote peace and security.

The Global Water Strategy is the national policy of the United States whose strategic objective is to

  • Access to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation.
  • Governance and Financing.
  • Water Resources Management.
  • Cooperation on Shared Waters.

7 0
3 years ago
Can anyone do 1-7 or some of them I will do brainless if all
Alexus [3.1K]

Q1: What kind of trouble was America in right before the battle of New Orleans?

A1: Both British and American troops were unaware of the peace treaty that was signed a few weeks prior in Great Belgium.

Q2: Why did the British want to capture New Orleans?

A2: The British wanted to capture New Orleans because it was the gateway to the Mississippi River.

Q3: Who was the leader of American forces at New Orleans?

A3: Brevet Major General Andrew Jackson

Q4: What was the mood like in New Orleans when Jackson arrived in December 1814? Why?

A4: The people were in a panic because it was reported that British troops were spotted near Lake Borgne just east of the city.

Q5: What did Jackson have built to protect New Orleans from an attack by the British?

A5: A weak 12-gun fortification.

Q6: What combination of events led to the British defeat at New Orleans?

A6:

October 24, 1814

Edward Pakenham receives orders to command the expedition against New Orleans

November 6–7, 1814

Seeking to deny the British a fortified harbor, Andrew Jackson’s forces enter and temporarily occupy Pensacola after a short, fierce skirmish against Spanish troops; the British depart after blowing up Fort Barrancas.

November 19–22, 1814

Still not knowing where the British force will strike, Jackson leaves some troops to protect Mobile and proceeds to New Orleans, traveling overland to personally scout possible British landing sites.

December 1, 1814

Andrew Jackson reaches New Orleans, makes a public address to rally the citizens, and establishes his headquarters. Meanwhile, Admiral Cochrane’s advance ships appear off the passes of the Mississippi.

December 14, 1814

Battle of Lake Borgne: The Battle of Lake Borgne ends with the British capture of American gunboats.

December 16, 1814

Jackson declares martial law in New Orleans, while two British officers dressed as local fishermen secretly reconnoiter a route to the city via Bayou Bienvenue to the Villeré and Delaronde Plantations. British troops begin mustering at Isle aux Poix (Pea Island), near the mouth of the Pearl River.

December 20, 1814

Two bodies of Tennessee Militia under Generals Coffee and Carroll reach New Orleans, along with Thomas Hinds’s Mississippi Dragoons.

December 23, 1814

British Landing and Night Battle: Jackson attacks after nightfall, stopping the British advance; the Americans fall back and begin construction of a defensive line behind the Rodriguez Canal.

January 8, 1815

Final Battle of New Orleans: The main British attack on the east bank of the Mississippi is repulsed with heavy British casualties and the deaths of Generals Pakenham and Gibbs; Pakenham’s successor, Major General Lambert, decides that he cannot exploit a successful British attack on the west bank and orders his forces to withdraw.

Q7: How many British and American casualties were there from the battle of New Orleans?

A7: The assault on Jackson’s fortifications was a fiasco, costing the British some 2,000 casualties including three generals and seven colonels—all of it in the span of only 30 minutes. Amazingly, Jackson’s ragtag outfit had lost fewer than 100 men.

7 0
2 years ago
Why does america celebrate cinco de mayo more than mexico?
lianna [129]

The real story of Cinco de Mayo weaves together two concurrent wars—the French intervention in Mexico (also known as The Maximillian Affair) and the American Civil War. On May 5, 1862, defending Mexican forces under Ignacio Zaragoza defeated Napoleon III's French army at Puebla, one of the most important Spanish colonial cities in Mexico. At the time, the French army was considered to be the most powerful fighting force in the world, and the unlikely Mexican victory resulted in a decree by then-Mexican President Benito Juárez that a celebration of the battle be held each year on May 5th. Cinco de Mayo was born, but it was about to be kidnapped.

As the French were making war with Mexico, the American Confederacy was courting Napoleon's help in its conflict with the United States. At the time of the Battle of Puebla, the Confederacy had strung together impressive victories over the Union forces. According to some historians, the French, who made war with Mexico on the pretext of collecting debt, planned to use Mexico as a "base" from which they could help the Confederacy defeat the North, and the Mexican victory at Puebla made the French pause long enough for the Union army to grow stronger and gain momentum. Had the French won at Puebla, some contend, the outcome of the American Civil War could have been much different, as the French and Confederates together could have taken control of the continent from the Mason Dixon line to Guatemela, installing an oligarchical, slave-holding government.

5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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