Hey there!
Their goal was to fight and Vietnam and win, as in any other war for the US. This was because of something very important called the Domino Effect, created by Dwight D Eisenhower, which stated that if one country adopted communism, other countries surrounding it and eventually the world would start too.
The US couldn't have communism spread. That's why we were enemies with the Soviets and created a trade embargo on Cuba in 1960. Our goal was to get rid of communism once and for all.
However, on March 29th, 1973, when President Nixon withdrew all remaining troops from Vietnam, leaving America's first defeat, the Domino Effect could have happened and been quite bad. However, it did not spread around Indo-China, and few countries use communism today.
Hope this helps!
Nazis built extermination camps equipped with huge gas chambers that could kill as many as 6000 human beings in a day. Those labeled as weak would die. They were told to undress for a shower and then led into a chamber with fake shower heads. After the doors were closed, cyanide gas poured from the shower heads. All inside were killed in a matter of minutes.
also if you use quizlet website it also has history stuff on there to.
Answer:
Conquerable.
Explanation:
The Doolittle Raid of 1942 was carried out by the U.S. Air Force in the spring of 1942. 16 aircraft were sent to drop bombs over the Japanese Capital: the city of Tokyo, and the attacks caused over 50 Japanese casualties, and some damage to the city.
The Doolittle Raid was an exploratory action, and it only had the goal to see if the Japanese Archipelago was vulnerable to an air attack. While the damage caused by the attack itself was negligible, it raised morale among the American soldiers, and proved that Japan was conquerable.
The correct answer is the presidential branch.
This branch separates these two branches, while other branches deal with other issues such as keeping the federation as a whole or deciding whether the law is upheld or not.
Answer:
Explanation:
Indian religion clashed directly with British Christianity. With Christianity being one of the pillars on which the British Empire was built, the religion of Indians was targeted by colonial missionaries in the similar fashion as had happened across the empire.