Answer:
WASHINGTON -- One hundred years after the U.S. entry into World War I, many of the logistics and strategies developed during that era still have an impact on Army operations today -- including the use of the division as a stand-alone unit, the employment of tactical armored vehicles, and the use of aircraft on the
Explanation:
Xenophobia: a hatred of those groups thought to threaten or oppress that ideal heritage.
Militarism and authoritarianism: an insistence that people of the correct heritage must band together and reassert their dominance through any and every means; a glorification of violence as a demonstration of commitment.
Expansionism: a constant urge to reach out and claim what ‘rightfully’ belongs to the fascist group, through conquest, military excursions, internal pogroms, economic exploitation, or social oppression.
Masculinism: a pseudo-genetic insistence on spreading and preserving that cultural/racial heritage through the control of women (to prevent miscegenation) and an insistence on greater sexual freedom for men in the fascist group.
The collapse of Western Europe and the Mediterranean world led initiated the formation of the modern world. The collapse of both these regions led to times like the Renaissance, Enlightenment, Industrial Revolution, and eventually the development of liberal democracy. So the collapse sort of started a chain of events that has led to the world-shaping itself to what it is today.
One problems soldiers faced while traveling to Russia were the freezing temperatures, where only 10,000 Frenchmen out of an initial half a million made it out of Russia alive.