At base, there is an ethical justification for the dropping of the bomb on Hiroshima as the United States was ready to mount a full scale invasion of Japan from China.
However, the Japanese were not given adequate time to surrender and so the dropping of the bomb on Nagasaki was inexcusable.
In commit to<span> break the blockade, </span>US<span> and British </span>officers<span> started the </span>lift<span> to fly food and </span>provides<span> into </span>city district<span>. This happened </span>as a result of Stalin<span> closed all highways and rail routes into </span>city district, so<span> no food or fuel </span>may<span> reach that</span> part of town<span>. 2.1 million Residents of that </span>town<span> had </span>barely enough<span> food to last </span>for five<span> weeks </span>that the U.S.<span> felt </span>the requirement to assist<span> out. This conflict </span>terminated<span> as Berlin survived </span>entirely attributable to<span> the airlift. This </span>conjointly<span> boosted </span>yank status round the<span> world. A</span>ttributable to <span>this, the </span>Soviet Union raised<span> the blockade in</span><span> 1949.</span>
ANSWER!
Enlightenment philosophy and Great Awakening Christianity were very different, but both influenced the American colonies and American Revolution and both frame our thinking today. The Enlightenment — so named by its own practitioners, who didn’t lack self-esteem — is best thought of as a continuation of the Renaissance we read about in Chapter 2, with a strong emphasis on the Scientific Revolution, reason, and progress. Its practitioners adhered to the scientific method of testing hypotheses through rigorous, repeatable experimentation. Ancient Greeks, inventors of the first organized sporting events (the Olympics), also promoted hard-nosed, constructive debate and organized competition in law, politics, philosophy, and science.
Answer:
Scandinavia
Explanation:
In August 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union signed a non-aggression pact, which included a secret protocol that relegated Finland to the Soviet sphere of interests. Faced with Finland's refusal to allow the Soviet Union to establish military bases in its territory, the latter revoked the 1932 non-aggression pact and attacked Finland on 30 November 1939. The “Winter War” ended with a treaty of peace signed in Moscow on March 13, 1940, which established the annexation of southwestern Finland by the Soviet Union.
Answer:
where is the actual question? i cant answer it if i don't know what it is
Explanation: