Answer:
The southern states at first were comprised of a union who had the same cause to have more power for each state and did not wanted the abolishment of slavery,as it would not benefit the people of south.
- So, then there were civil rights movement for the basic rights cause and after that war came which was also to suppress the opposition forces in the Southern states inside the US.
- So, there can be a number of examples of the law and order situations which the different nations faced, as there is the ongoing war in Syria. There are some opposition forces who are against the President of Syria Bash-rul-Asad, who they recognize as traitor to there own countrymen and a tyrant, which is not confirmed but its all according to the rebels and other oppositions inside the country. As the foreign forces have now invaded the region and holds a strong power in order to suppress the rebels and other opposition parties inside the region.
The city of Jerusalem was important for Judaism and Christianity because it is considered the Holy Land. For Islam, it is important because they conquered the land and took it from the Christians and the Jews, and made it their own religious land.
... because they opposed the United States becoming a member of the League of Nations.
The League of Nations was the signature idea of President Woodrow Wilson, point #14 of his 14 Points, an international peacekeeping association which he recommended for post-war settlements. The Treaty of Versailles adopted that idea, but back home in the United States, there was not support for involving America in any association that could diminish US sovereignty over its own affairs or involve the US again in wars beyond those pertinent to the United States' own national security.
Well there's no simple answer to this; the French and English have had a long history of discord- they weee at war for a hundred years after all!
The United States did not sign the Treaty of Versailles because two groups of U.S. senators opposed some of the treaty's conditions and prevented the Senate from acquiring the two-thirds majority vote needed for its passage. One of their main objections was that the treaty compromised U.S. autonomy.