Answer:
Among the options given on the question, the answer is option D.
The countries of the communist bloc had separated from the Soviet Union,so they no longer took part in the pact.
Explanation: The Warsaw Pact was signed on 1955 by Soviet Union and the eastern European communist allies as a response to the NATO formed by United States, Canada and their Western European allies. NATO was formed on 1949. The countries who signed on Warsaw pact were USSR, East Germany,Hungary, Albania, Poland,Romania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia. However this pact was dissolved on 1991 because of the countries from Communist bloc started to separate them from the Soviet ally. East Germany took off their name from the pact as they got unite with west Germany. Poland and Czechoslovakia also showed their strong indication to leave the pact.
On the other hand Soviet Union was also becoming politically and economically week. So on 1991 the the Soviet commanders announced their relinquishment from the pact. After a few months later a formal meeting was arranged and the Warsaw Pact was dissolved.
Answer:
On April 21, 1898, the United States declared war against Spain. ... The reasons for war were many, but there were two immediate ones: America's support the ongoing struggle by Cubans and Filipinos against Spanish rule, and the mysterious explosion of the battleship U.S.S. Maine in Havana Harbor
Explanation:
I think this is it. Checked it in Google too. :)
Exploit them fully to achieve maximum profit for the parent country.
The Supremacy Clause establishes that the federal government has more power than state governments.
When asked about her work, poet Gwendolyn Brooks once said: "I wrote about what I saw and heard in the street … There was my material."
What she saw and heard, as a black woman living on Chicago's South Side in the mid-20th century, were the myriad struggles — and joys — of urban black life, which she explored in more than 20 books of poetry, a novella, autobiography and other works.
It has been 100 years since Brooks was born, and events are planned this year across Illinois and Chicago to celebrate the centenary. Though she died in 2000, she remains one of the 20th century's most-read and honored poets, both for how deftly she put forward the issues of the day and for the grace of her craft and style. She was the first African American to receive the Pulitzer Prize, as well as the first to hold the role of poetry consultant to the Library of Congress, a position now known as Poet Laureate. In that role, and as a teacher, she worked to educate a generation of young black writers.
And yet, in 2017, some worry that Brooks is in danger of being set aside. "The Golden Shovel Anthology," a new book of poems honoring Brooks, seeks to make sure that doesn't happen. In the book's foreword, poet Terrance Hayes writes: "I have been, since her passing, returning to her work again and again with the feeling not enough of it has been made of it or her … Perhaps we can never say enough."