I think it's called a merit system after the spoils system but I'm not 100% sure
Answer:
im sorry i cant see the question all i can see it a blocked icture let me show you
Explanation:
Answer:
"Back in school, before Camp, I was shorter and smaller than the rest of the kids. I was always the last to be picked for any team when we played games."
"‘…America is at war with Japan, and the government thinks that Japanese Americans can’t be trusted.’"
Explanation:
Although you did not present the excerpts to which the question refers, we can consider the two options selected above to be the correct answers. This is because cause and effect relationships are those where one element causes another element to occur. In this case, in the first option, we can see that the narrator was always the last one to be chosen for the teams (effect) because he was the smallest child in the camp (cause). In the second option, we can see that no one trusted Japanese-American citizens (effect) because the American government was at war with Japan (cause).
<span>Hitler
violated the Versailles Treaty in 1936 when h</span>e
commanded his troops to enter into Rhineland which was a demilitarized zone.
Under the Versailles Treaty, Rhineland was an excluded zone and Hitler’s
invasion constituted a flagrant violation of the pact.
Answer:
Initially, Department of State officials and Bush’s foreign policy team were reluctant to speak publicly about German “reunification” due to fear that hard-liners in both the German Democratic Republic (GDR) and the Soviet Union would stymie reform. Although changes in the GDR leadership and encouraging speeches by Gorbachev about nonintervention in Eastern Europe boded well for reunification, the world was taken by surprise when, during the night of November 9, 1989, crowds of Germans began dismantling the Berlin Wall—a barrier that for almost 30 years had symbolized the Cold War division of Europe. By October 1990, Germany was reunified, triggering the swift collapse of the other East European regimes.
Thirteen months later, on December 25, 1991, Gorbachev resigned and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics dissolved. President Bush and his chief foreign policy advisers were more pro-active toward Russia and the former Soviet republics after the collapse of the Communist monolith than while it was teetering. In a series of summits during the next year with the new Russian President Boris Yeltsin, Bush pledged $4.5-billion to support economic reform in Russia, as well as additional credit guarantees and technical assistance.
The two former Cold War adversaries lifted restrictions on the numbers and movement of diplomatic, consular, and official personnel. They also agreed to continue the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty negotiations (START), begun before the collapse of the Soviet Union, which set a goal of reducing their strategic nuclear arsenals from approximately 12,000 warheads to 3,000-3,500 warheads by 2003. In January 1993, three weeks before leaving office, Bush traveled to Moscow to sign the START II Treaty that codified those nuclear reductions.