it didnt let me to see the question bruhExplanation:
To the casual observer, Mussolini and Hitler are something of a diabolical double act: aggressive right-wing dictators who rose to power in similar circumstances, shared a similar ideology, fought side by side in World War Two, and died violently at the end of the conflict in 1945. But the reality is much more complex. In particular, it was Mussolini’s Italy – not the democracies of Britain, France or the USA – that initially led the most vigorous attempts to contain the aggression of Hitler’s Germany. It was the West’s decision to appease Hitler rather than confront him that was at least partly responsible for Mussolini’s decision to realign Italy as an ally of Germany. In the words of Richard Lamb, ‘British policy threw Mussolini into Hitler's arms’. A study of the foreign policy of both dictators, therefore, highlights at least as many contrasts as comparisons.
Answer:
an industrial base.
Explanation:
the outwards policy had been orientation that had predominates since independence and undermined by the trade controls and industrial promotion schemes.
<span>The correct answer is Germany. European countries slowly became aware that a war was inevitable and Germany was preparing for it with everything that she had. They were together with Austria-Hungary empire when the war started and eventually lost the war, being forced to completely stop production of weaponry and turn in all the weapons that it had, effectively disbanding the military.</span>