During the Cold War, the US DID NOT:
-Reduce its military efforts. With the recent clash of ww2 and military rivalry with the Soviet Union, the US had one of the largest military spending during the Cold War.
-Withdrew from alliances. The US was the mastermind behind NATO: an alliance made to defend Europe from communist/Soviet influences that still exists to this day. The US also allied with several countries in conflict with communism to reduce the spread of the ideology.
-Continued partnership with the Soviet Union. During ww2, the two had mural relations to combat the Nazi regime. But due to different influences and ideologies, the relationship between the US and the USSR drifted apart, both economically and militarily.
The correct answer would be the last option: the US engaged in an arms race with the Soviet Union. Since both superpowers shared contrasting political efforts, distrust remained stern between the two sides.
Mondrian’s belief in an underlying spiritual order mirrored the Greek’s desire to learn the laws of<span>math and nature</span>
Answer:
200years
Explanation:
During the period of the Crusades, warfare between Christians and Muslims lasted nearly 200 years.
The Crusades were a series of military campaigns promoted by the Pope and carried out by a large part of Christian Latin Europe, mainly by the France of the Capetians and the Holy Roman Empire. The Crusades, with the initial specific objective of restoring Catholic control over the Holy Land, were fought over a period of almost two hundred years, between 1096 and 1291. Later, other campaigns in Spain and Eastern Europe, some of which they did not see its end until the fifteenth century, received the same denomination. The Crusades were held mainly against the Muslims, but also against the pagan Slavs, Jews, Greek and Russian Orthodox Christians, Mongols, Cathars, Hussites, Waldenses, Prussians (or Prussians), Lithuanians (in general against the Baltic peoples) and against enemies politicians of the Popes.