Answer:
In August 1939, as Europe slid towards another world war, Germany and the Soviet Union signed a non-aggression treaty. The Nazi-Soviet Pact came as a complete surprise to other nations, given the ideological differences between the two countries. It ushered in a period of military co-operation which allowed Hitler to ignore western diplomatic moves and invade Poland. Stalin's forces then attacked from the west and completed the subjugation and partition of the Polish state. For the next year and a half Germany also benefitted economically from the arrangement, with Russia exporting grain and oil in return for manufactured goods.
Soviet cooperation allowed Hitler to expand his plans for European domination. In May 1940 the Blitzkrieg rolled westwards and France was conquered in six weeks. But peace with Russia would not last. Hitler had always wanted to see Germany expand eastwards to gain Lebensraum or 'living space' for its people.
After the fall of France Hitler ordered plans to be drawn up for an invasion of the Soviet Union. He intended to destroy what he saw as Stalin's 'Jewish Bolshevist' regime and establish Nazi hegemony. The conquest and enslavement of the Soviet Union's racially 'inferior' Slavic populations would be part of a grand plan of 'Germanisation' and economic exploitation lasting well beyond the expected military victory. Regardless of recent economic and political co-operation, the Soviet Union was regarded as the natural enemy of Nazi Germany and a key strategic objective.
Answer:i'm not sure but I think it's:an African-American Majority
Answer: The history of Egypt has been long and wealthy, due to the flow of the Nile River with its fertile ... Ancient Egyptian civilization coalesced around 3150 BC with the political unification of Upper and Lower Egypt .... Coptic managed to last as a spoken language until the 17th century and remains a liturgical language today).
Explanation:
Industrial actions such as strikes and go slows.
<span>When South Carolina seceded
from the Union in 1860, the main justification of secession was that
southerners believed secession was the only way they could preserve
their institution of slavery. Not all southerners supported
secession, however, but those who did argued that because the southern
states were a part of the Union, their rights should be respected by the
federal government.</span>