Answer:
The U.S. justification for the Iraq War has been widely criticized both within and outside the United States by a range of common and official sources.[Putting this debate aside, the prosecution of the war effort along a number of lines has often been criticized by both supporters and critics of the invasion.
Most notably, the U.S. and its allies have been criticized by opponents for not devoting enough forces to the mission, not preparing sufficiently for post-invasion Iraq, and for encouraging and perpetrating systematic violations of human rights. Critics have also railed against the increased human and financial costs as the battle has continued.
Nobody is sure how it ended but it ended between the years 1900 and 1800 BCE
They hated them they wanted them to leave Britain
It should be C or d I believe it should be d.
I am just making sure
Hope this helps good luck
Here are at least two ways the colonists protested against the british and their response to the acts and taxes that the british set. hope this is helpful.
sugar act - protests and boycotts. colonists believe it is a violation of the right to trial by jury
stamp act - boycotts become widespread, "No Taxation without Representation", protest groups (sons and daughters of liberty) use violence against tax collectors.