The Blitskrieg was the mobile motorized warfare that allowed Germany to overwhelm Poland quickly in world war II
Answer:
the Vietnam war and Tet offensive are major cause of loosing faith in political system
Explanation:
During the time between 1960s and 1970s, there were many factor involved due to which people lose faith in the political system. The Vietnam war is one of them. Ii is because there is large difference in information given by government agencies and what people observe from ground zero and this lead to widened the gap between the government and people.
Moreover, when the Tet Offensive (SERIES OF ATTACKS ) was introduced in 1968 by North Vietnam, the masses started to question the government authenticity.
Answer: ENGLAND
The "privateers" were privately owned ships and ship captains. But they had the approval and support of the English government under Queen Elizabeth I (who ruled England from 1558-1603). If they were operating without a government's support, we'd simply call them pirates. But their acts of piracy against the Spanish were part of an overall campaign of England against rival Spain. But since they were "privateers" and not technically in the government's employ, Elizabeth's government could always maintain some denial of responsibility for their actions. Some famous names among the English privateers were Sir Francis Drake and Sir Walter Raleigh.
I would say that President Thomas Jefferson would have desired the revolution to fail. On the one had, Saint Domingue independence from France was good news, for it debilitated the French. But on the other hand, the triumph of a slave revolution in the West Indies would set a dangerous precedent and could influence further slave revolts in the USA.
Jefferson - who was a slave owner himself - refused to recognize the negro government, rejecting diplomatic relations and even imposed an economic embargo on Saint Domingue in order to make the negro nation fail. Also, he had to face southern slave-holders reaction against the Saint Domingue in fear of similar outbreaks. Previous incidents like the Gabriel slave conspiracy in 1802 fueled this fear.