This group was C. Federalists
Answer:
The scandal of the second Reagan administration involving sales of arms to Iran in partial exchange for release of hostages in Lebanon and use of the arms money to aid the Contras in Nicaragua, which had been expressly forbidden by Congress was the Iran-Contra Affair.
Explanation:
The Iran-Contra scandal (also known as "Irangate") was based on the secret arms trade of President Ronald Reagan administration to Iran during the bloody war with his neighbor Saddam Hussein in Iraq between 1980 and 1988. Proceeds from the arms trade were channeled to the Contra guerrillas in Nicaragua. The stores were supposed to influence in two ways:
-Affects Iran, which had influence over Hezbollah, which held several US hostages in Lebanon.
-Support the anti-communist guerrilla war in Nicaragua.
The deals were made in contravention of congressional decisions banning the financing of Contra-guerrillas and the sale of weapons to Iran. In addition, both arms sales and support for guerrillas were at odds with UN sanctions.
Answer: B. He hails the USSR as a peace-loving country but depicts Hitler as a treacherous fiend.
Explanation:
The answer is indeed B because on July 3, 1941, less than a month after Hitler launched Operation Babarossa against the Soviet Union, Josef Stalin spoke to the Russian people on radio. He spoke on how Germany had captured much territory and was still pushing forward but tried to motivate the nation by referring to instances when armies met their doom in Russia such as when Napoleon suffered a heavy loss in Russia, a century earlier and promised that the same would happen to Germany.
He then stated that Hitler was a treacherous fiend who broke the Non-Aggression pact he had signed with the Soviet Union in 1939 who were a peace loving nation.
Answer:
These modest taxes were levied against land, homes and other real estate, slaves, animals, personal items and monetary wealth.
Explanation:
Answer:
See Below:
Explanation:
- The British troops acknowledged George Washington as the leader of the revolutionaries.
- The British troops will attack the revolutionaries at night. (I'm thinking this because if they attack at night then saying they wouldn't be there the next morning would probably mean they killed them. Or would try to.)