<span>1. How will you get these non-aligned (uncommitted) nations on your side????
This can be done many ways, my favorite is by using trade and economic ties. This is done by trading resources that the non-aligned nations might want or need.
2. How might actions affect your country? The other superpower?
These trade actions would increase trade within my country and the other nations. This would create an increase in jobs, money, and overall wellbeing.
3. How might being caught in a struggle between superpowers affect a developing nation?
Joining one specific side could result in benefits from that superpower, but the other superpower might cut off all diplomatic relationships. This could result in a cut of needed or wanted resources, or even war.
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The fifth alternative is correct (E).
The US has troops to patrol the demilitarized zone between South Korea and the North. According to Reuters news agency, the American military contingent in South Coere is about 28500 military personnel, who play a mediating role in military confrontations not only between the Koreas, but among the countries in the region, such as China and Japan. In this context, the US military position in Seoul is strategic and must remain even if the Koreas sign a peace treaty.
The worked at a crop farm like tobacco or Cotten
Because of inequality, discrimination, and the laws that promoted these existences. African Americans, minorities, and even women were seeking to make big change through many ways by fighting for justice ( some violent, some nonviolent).
The main goal of the Berlin Conference of 1885 was to partition Africa. This occurred as Germany became a European superpower under Otto Von Bismarck and the conference held under the ideas of regulating European colonization and trade in Africa during the New Imperialism Era. This was part of the larger Scramble for Africa.