Full Question:
Why did the United States develop the island-hopping strategy?
The strategy avoided needless slaughter of the Japanese
The strategy sped up the war
The United States wanted to avoid fighting Japan.
The strategy saved the lives of US soldiers.
Most of the islands were barren and uninhabited.
Answer:
The strategy sped up the war
The strategy saved the lives of US soldiers.
Explanation:
<u>The strategy sped up the war
</u>
The island-hopping strategy Deployed the troops to skip the heavily fortified islands and start by conquering the weaker one. The time to conquer less fortified islands tend to be lesser compared to the heavily fortified one while still effectively diminishing Enemy's power at the same time.
<u>The strategy saved the lives of US soldiers.
</u>
The less fortified islands tend to killed less amount of US soldiers during the occupation process. It is implemented to gradually increase the pressure for the Japanese government to surrender while minimizing the casualties in our army at the same time.
There is a couple of goals he set in mind.
<span>1: maintain his power and get reelected
2: keep peace between the northern and southern states
3: establish respect for the office of the presidency
4: set up a court similar to that of European monarchs</span>
Hihi!
Hieroglyphs, hieroglyphs (pictures carved into rocks), and cuneiform (a writing system using hash marks on clay tablets) were all early forms of written communication. All of them were precursors to alphabets, which use letters to represent sounds. Grunts are an early (and present-day) form of communication, but they aren't written.
I hope I helped!
-Jailbaitasmr<span />
In general, the native Indian languages in Latin America were able to survive. This was because the colonial governments were not forbidding the native languages and were not punishing the people for using them. Instead, the politics was, that the language of the colonists is a must-known language for everyday communication between the different people, but they can use their own languages in the communication between themselves and at home. This is why the countries in Latin America nowadays have multiple official languages, most of which are native Indian languages.