A. a peace treaty between Egypt and Israel
The Camp David Accord was a peace treaty signed between the Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and the Egyptian President Anwar Al Sadat. The US President Jimmy Carter was also present when the treaty was signed. The treaty was preceded by twelve days of secret negotiaitions between the three at Camp David which is where the treat borrowed its name from. This took place on 17 September 1978.
The American soldiers are seen applauding suggests that the artist of the painting is most likely an American
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Answer: Option B
<u>Explanation:
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The picture suggests that it was painted by an American because there are American soldiers and people in the background who are applauding when the flag is being hoisted. This means that the picture is taken from the American War of Independence.
The picture might symbolize victory over a particular war or celebration of the independence of the thirteen colonies which were occupied by the British as below the American flag there is the Union Jack i.e., the flag of the United Kingdom
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Answer:defect- to leave a country or political organization and go to a competitor.
Revise- make changes to improve something.
Secret police- a group that identifies and prosecutes those who oppose the government.
Slavs- groups of eastern and Central Europe who speak similar languages.
Tsar- the ruler of the Russian empire.
Explanation:
I just answered them right
Answer:
Both Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis had to deal with contentious congresses with often clashing interests and agendas. In Davis’ case the discord was intrinsic in the very “States’ Rights” concept behind the Confederacy, though in practice Lincoln had plenty of cat herding of his own to do. Lincoln was arguably the more successful president in having better political instincts, which became more evident as he grew into his presidency—a talent for knowing when and how to cajole, horse-trade, bribe outright or ruthlessly assert his power, depending on who he was dealing with. For all the thinking on his feet that he did, however, Lincoln never lost sight of his principal goal, and in 1864 he ultimately found generals who shared the Commander-in-Chief’s intent. Davis was less adept at this, often letting his generals do the strategizing for him (after Robert E. Lee’s stunning success in the Seven Days Campaign, it was hard for Davis to argue when Marse Robert proposed taking the fight north into Yankee territory). Davis’ judgment in picking senior generals in the critical Western theater of operations (Braxton Bragg, then Joseph E. Johnston, followed by John Bell Hood) also speaks for itself; Lincoln’s worst choices in the East were finally behind him by the time he turned to Ulysses S. Grant in March 1864.