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The Germans thought Calais was the likely landing site for an Allied invasion because the Allies made them think that's what they were planning.
The Allies employed various strategies, code named "Operation Fortitude," which were intended to deceive the Germans in advance of the planned Normandy invasion. They built up phony infrastructure for possible invasions, on at Calais just across the English Channel, another as a northern incursion via Norway. They also leaked phony intelligence reports that would find their way into German hands. So Calais seemed logistically sound not only because it was directly across the Channel from Allied positions in Britain, but because the Allies were wanting the Germans to think that was a possible plan they were making. The deception was meant to give the actual invasion at Normandy a better chance for success.
Answer: C: residents have limited varieties of food available to them
Explanation
If the people who live in the town of Madisonville have to shop at ONE out of five shops there will not be enough available foods
Answer:
direct conflict
Explanation:
The United States and the Soviet Union were the two superpowers that were in a constant race to prove to each other and to the world who is stronger. This has led to lot of tensions between them, and both countries were developing their military technology at an alarming rate. Luckily for the world, a direct military conflict between the two never occurred, thus a nuclear war, which was going to be a World War III, was avoided. That didn't stopped them from having indirect battles on neutral soil, which heavily affected the destiny of millions of people, such as in Korea, Vietnam, and Afghanistan.
John Calvin and Martin Luther were two Christian religious leaders that broke with the Catholic Church and were leaders in the movement known as the Reformation. During this movement the Christian community split from the Catholic Church into other new denominations commonly known as protestantism.