In 1839, a group of Africans took control of a Spanish ship called La Amistad that was bound for a port in Cuba where the Africans were to be sold as slaves. After seizing the ship, the Africans demanded to be taken back to their homeland, but were tricked by the ship's navigator who set a course that took them along the coast of North America. La Amistad was eventually captured by the United States Navy, and the Africans were held as pirates. Though they were almost taken to be sold in a U.S. slave market, a court case arose regarding whether they could actually be considered slaves. Abolitio
Carl Vinson was extremely supportive of the US Navy in their roll of defense, however, though this is the case he never favored the financial gain of under US military branches to aggregate the Naval funds at the time. So the first answer, answer A, if false. Though Carl Vinson was pro Navy, this didn't mean that the Navy could start retiring it men, the number stayed roughly the same, because of course we had people actually retiring or enlisting. This makes option B false. Other nations were always a threat, maybe no apparent to the US but seeing how the United States reacts to situations, this is a gross understatement. Option C is false. His efforts DID in fact help naval expansion needed in order to defend Pearl Harbor during attack. Option D is correct.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
The whiskey rebellion showed that the government had the power to enforce tax laws
Answer:
Option C, Arms race, is the right answer.
Explanation:
Throughout the Cold War, the nuclear arms race was a race for producing nuclear products for supremacy in nuclear weapons between the Soviet Union, the United States and their allies.
It was the time during which not only the superpowers (America and the Soviet Union) developed nuclear weapons but other countries also developed such weapons but on a small scale. However, no one engaged in the nuclear war and save the world from a devastating state.
Answer:
The national goverment was not allowed to have a standing army.