The main reason why the first Battle of the Marne was considered so significant was because it came at the conclusion of a massive German advance and ended in a decisive Allied victory.
Of the alternatives, the only one correct about North and South is C. Both sides in their drafts created ways for men to don't go to war which involved paying money.
Both Union and the Confederates in the second year of war, 1862, utilized draft in order to get more men after the initial enthusiasm of the war faded.
Only the Union experienced riots after it's draft law, mainly in New York City. Although on the South draft laws weren't popular either and a large number of Southerners deserted.
The Union issued the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 which brought large numbers of African americans to the war. Confederates did not dare such similar moves for fear of undermining the legitimacy of slavery.
<span>The people practiced religious toleration and the United Provinces was a Republic not a Kingdom</span>
Jefferson reduced the national debt by cutting government spending.
Answer:
In Rwanda the cause of the genocide was “restoration of historical justice,” while in Bosnia it was more of a territorial and interfaith problem.
Explanation:
In the 1994 genocide, 800,000 people were killed in Rwanda. As a result of the three-year conflict in the former Yugoslavia, more than 100 thousand people died, and about two million were forced to leave their homes.
First, German and then Belgian colonists supported the power of the Tutsi. The reason was the origin of the Tutsi: Europeans reasoned that if this tribe used to live in northern Africa, it means that it is genetically closer to the Caucasian race and has superiority over the Hutus. The position of the Hutus was getting worse and more disenfranchised.
Simultaneously with the fall of the Soviet Union, many other communist regimes, including the Yugoslav one, shook. So, by 1991, Slovenia and Croatia withdrew from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. If the first of the republics resolved the issue of independence through a referendum, the second made a unilateral declaration of secession from Yugoslavia. Following the neighbors, Bosnia and Herzegovina decided to become independent, but the population of this republic was so heterogeneous that the proposed option did not suit everyone. The supporters of independent Bosnia and Herzegovina were mostly Bosnian Muslims, who made up almost half of the country's population, as well as Croat Catholics who did not want to follow the Orthodox Serbs, who made up about a third of the republic’s population.