Answer:
At least 2/3 the 13 existing states, so 9 or more
B) the world sought payment from Germany for all the damage.
At the conclusion of World War I, the Allied and Associate Powers included in the Treaty of Versailles a plan for reparations to be paid by Germany. Germany was required to pay 20 billion gold marks, as an interim measure, while a final amount was decided upon. In 1921, the London Schedule of Payments established the German reparation figure at 132 billion gold marks (separated into various classes, of which only 50 billion gold marks was required to be paid). Meanwhile, the industrialists of Germany's Ruhr Valley, who had lost their factories in Lorraine (Germany had seized Lorraine in 1870 and it went back to France after WW1), demanded hundreds of millions of marks as compensation from the German government. Despite having large obligations under the Versailles Treaty, the German government paid the Ruhr Valley industrialists for their losses. This contributed significantly to the hyperinflation that followed.
The Declaration of Independence
Appeasement
During the 1930s, Britain and France followed a policy of
appeasement - they gave Hitler what he wanted in order to keep the peace. So
why did Britain and France keep on giving in to Hitler's demands. It was grounded
on the notion that what Hitler wanted was reasonable and, when his reasonable
demands had been fulfilled, he would stop.