Answer:
- Conflict Name: Cold War.
- Conflict Start: 1946 (U.S. Policy of Soviet Containment)
- Conflict End: 1991 (The Collapse of the USSR)
- Conflict Belligerents: United States (NATO) and the Soviet Union (Warsaw Pact)
- Conflict Winner: United States.
- It’s estimated that more than 11 million people were killed throughout all the various proxy wars fought by the United States of America and the Soviet Union.
- The term Cold War was coined by English writer George Orwell in his essay “You and the Atomic Bomb”, which he published on October 19th, 1945.
- The deadliest proxy war during the Cold War was the Vietnam War, over 3.5 million people were killed.
- The nuclear arms race during the Cold War saw a peak in nuclear weapon stockpiles in 1985, where both countries combined had over 50,000 nuclear weapons.
- The internet was born out of the Cold War. The United States government funded a project called ARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency), which was to develop a method for military computers to share information with one another very quickly.
I hope this is enough facts. If not just tell me and I can tell you some more.
Answer:
During the Mexican–American War, Frémont was a major in the U.S. Army. He took control of California from the California Republic in 1846.
Explanation:
John C. Frémont, in full John Charles Frémont, (born January 21, 1813, Savannah, Georgia, U.S.—died July 13, 1890, New York, New York), American military officer and an early explorer and mapmaker of the American West, who was one of the principal figures in opening up that region to settlement and was instrumental in the U.S. conquest and development of California. He was also a politician who ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. presidency in 1856 as the first candidate of the newly formed Republican Party.
Answer:
By using metaphors similies and repetition
Explanation:
Retroactive interference<span> occurs when newly acquired information inhibits our ability to recall previously acquired information. </span>Interference<span> theory attempts to </span>explain why<span> we have trouble remembering things. Learning new material can sometimes interfere with our ability to recall previously learned the material. </span>