The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Unfortunately, you did not attach the quote from Colonel Wolfgang Samuel. That is why we do not know Colonel Samuel's statement revelation about one aspect of U.S. Foreign policy during the Cold War.
However, in order to help you, we can comment on the following.
Wolfgang. W. E. Samuel had 10 years old when he and his mother tried to survive the occupation of Berlin by the Soviet Union troops, at the beginning of the Cold War. He was a witness of the airlift period in which the allies sent food and supplies to West Germany.
He later became a military official, serving the US Airforce from 1960 to 1985. After serving in the military, Samuel started a career as an author In his books he referred to the importance of the airlift and how the US Air Force and the UK Airforce helped West Berlin to survive. He comments on the policy of the United States during the Cold War, trying to apply the policy of containment to stop Communism, meanwhile, the Soviet Union was trying to spread it all over the world.
Spanish conquistadors in the New World sought almost exclusively gold. This was the primary reason they were endorsed in their ventures by the kings/queens, who paid them handsomely.
Reaper and steel plow were the machines invented by Cyrus McCormick and John Deere that made large-scale agriculture possible, especially on Midwestern prairies.
B) Reaper and steel plow
<u>Explanation:</u>
In the 1800's people used to do all the chores with their hands hence, it made farming a tough job and a lot of time consuming activity. During the industrial revolution, Cyrus McCormick invented a mechanical reaper, which would help reap big farms in very less time.
The steel plow played a very important role in the industrial revolution as the wooden plow used to be weak but John Deere's invented steel plow was strong and broke soil easily.
The best answers are:
-<span>making it almost impossible for them to vote
-segregating blacks from whites in most states
Jim Crow laws sought to scale back the rights and equality that African Americans were receiving in the Reconstruction Era following the Civil War. To this end, Jim Crow states in the South made it virtually impossible for blacks to vote, and often tampered with black votes.
They also made segregation a formal written law in the Southern states, outlawing the shared use of almost all facilities, public or private, by black and white people.
Jim Crow could not, however, repeal the 14th Amendment and did the opposite of desegregating public facilities. </span>
D : Germany invasion of France