Answer:
Thats impossible
Explanation:
Thanks for points though bro!
i believe true because it identify the optimistic tone the author feels which is hopeless
Passini's long pieces of dialogue in<em> A Farewell to Arms </em>(1929) indicate that Passini feels passionately about his beliefs.
In this excerpt from Ernest Hemingway's novel, Passini is fully convinced that a war never finishes and that victory is only an illusion. He believes that victory does not mean the end of a war since enemies will keep fighting. He also argues that the real victory, which is the end of the war, could only be achieved if one side stops fighting. Passini defends his truth fiercely in his dialogue with the tenant by presenting a strong argument and using rhetorical questions.
Answer:
B. They can't tell who is a civilian and who is an enemy combatant.
Explanation:
In the book <em>Sunrise Over Fallujah </em>by Walter Dean Myers, the book is centered about an 18 year old US soldier named Robin but called Birdy in Kuwait where he is waiting for orders on where next to go. Eventually, he is sent to Iraq after going through confusing Rules of Engagement about who to shoot and who not to shoot.
<u>The Civil Affairs unit which happens to be Birdy's unit is tasked with the responsibility of gaining the trust of the local Iraqis to trust the American soldiers.</u>
Their confusion about who is a friend or foe in Iraq is characterized when they start getting remote IED attacks and do not know where it is coming from or who to trust.