The answer would be Senate Majority Leader.
Answer:
Germany handed over its fleet of U-boats
Explanation:
The World War I ended with a win of the Allied forces. Germany did not surrendered though, but instead an armistice was signed. The same was the case with Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, and Bulgaria. There were multiple limiting things in the armistice for Germany, but it did not affected its military power, nor did the Germans had to give up on any of their weapons, thus they kept everything they had, including their fleet of U-boats. That didn't turned out to be the best move, as Germany was left with a basis to be able to upgrade and start a new war, which happened soon after.
Answer:
Roosevelt believed in projecting American power. He sent the Great White Fleet on a worldwide tour to show off the modernized American navy and to state American interests in the Pacific. Roosevelt supported Panamanian independence in order to create the Panama canal. He signed the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine which gave the United States the right to intervene in Latin America. Roosevelt also arbitrated in the Russo-Japanese War, an act which won a Nobel Peace Prize. At the onset of WWI, Roosevelt argued for immediate American intervention on the side of the Allies and even offered to lead a division of American soldiers in the conflict. Roosevelt believed that the United States had a duty to project power and its way of life abroad in order to cultivate both manly virtue at home and American values abroad.
The
stock market crash in the waning days of October 1929 heralded the beginning of the worst economic depression in U.S. history. The Great Depression hit the South, including Georgia, harder than some other regions of the country, and in fact only worsened an economic downturn that had begun in the state a decade earlier. U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt's programs for economic relief and recovery, known collectively as the New Deal, arrived late in Georgia and were only sporadically effective, yet they did lay the foundation for far-reaching changes. Not until the United States' entry into World War II (1941-45) did the depression in Georgia fully recede.