Captain Kudo's response to his experience with the men on the motorcycles in Afghanistan is <em>D. He quickly accepted what happened and moved on because doing so helped save his troops lives.</em>
- Though it was a war situation, where the enemy could be the next civilian, whenever a civilian is killed by mistake, it is always regrettable. The experience leaves a trauma in the minds of the soldiers.
- Sometimes, such ugly outcomes cannot be eliminated. However, soldiers should always seek more <em>information</em> about the status of military targets.
- Captain Kudo's response is not to feel guilt over the two civilians killed or regret not taking action to protect his men. Captain Kudo's reaction is not that he does not think about killing civilians in Afghanistan. He thinks about this and does not want to do that because it is not justified.
Thus, Captain Kudo's response was to accept the incident to safeguard and not demoralize his troops.
Read more: brainly.com/question/23430773 and brainly.com/question/24969483
Lyddie went downstairs into the living room and saw Charlie standing there. She couldn't believe it. She just stood and looked at him and then he said "Sister". Lyddie said "Yes, so you've come".
Charlie told her, "I took the railroad car".
Charlie seemed proud of himself and excited that he had taken the railroad. He smiled, but Lyddie didn't recgonize his smile. He was the same boy, but somehow she felt like she didn't even know him anymore because it had been so long.
Answer:
idk and i wish i could but i tride
Explanation:
It iuses imagery to express a desire for the melding of the natural world (mammals, pure water, clear sky) with the artificial (cybernetic, computers, programming) in "harmony".
Answer: Upon reading the Title "Abuelito who?" it makes me wonder, who's Abuelito? and who is the who referring too? Was it saying Abuelito who..... did something? It might be about an Abuelito who felt something or did something, it raises many questions.
Hope this helps :)