Answer:
WWI:
The sinking of the Lusitania by a German U-boat in 1915 and the Zimmerman Telegram that attempted to incite a Mexican invasion of the USA. These two things convinced the American public of the need to enter the war and allowed president W.Wilson to do it.
WWII:
The USA remained neutral for two years, but the surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor of December 7, 1941, outraged the public. Congress authorized president FDR to declare war on Japan.
Korea:
It was already the Cold War. Washington thought that the invasion of South Korea by North Korea in 1950 was an elaborated plan to expand communist and it reacted to oppose and impede it. It was the rationale of containment.
Vietnam:
Same reason as in Korea: to stop communist aggression and expansion in Asia, following the containment doctrine.
Explanation:
Answer:
The answer is below
Explanation:
With the major Europeans Countries going bankrupt, and inflation rises in their economy, the realities of the postwar dawned on Europe. This disillusionment showed that, despite the wars fought, the problems before the war still persist, and in the end, the war achieves nothing.
For many European countries, with increase in inflation, they regretted going into war, and the fact that, despite a lot of lives and industrial properties that were wasted, they sill go back to even a poorer condition before the war. Therefore, for many European countries, postwar disillusionment creates changing of political system, which eventually led to political instability, and even gave rise to dictatorship in some cases.
Answer: The Japanese want to do the tiling because it was strategically important location in Asia to have control of. Japan badly needed to capture Malaya because it had half of the worlds tin and a third of its natural rubber initially the decision to attack was made based on intelligence gathered by Japanese officers Who had been secretly dispatched to Thailand and Malaysia disguised as a commercial travelers.
Explanation:
The answer is A! Lincoln often referred to God in his speech.