Hiroo Onoda ordered his men to take the hills for protection because they were the only ones left.
<u>Explanation</u>:
- Hiroo Onoda was an Intelligence officer of the Japanese Army deployed with other soldiers in a Lubang Island in the Philippines.
- He was on duty during World War II on the island to hamper the enemy attacks. But after a while, only he and three other soldiers survived.
- To protect themselves from attacks, Lieutenant Onoda ordered these men to "take to the hills."
- Surprisingly, he spent 29 years after World War II in hiding as he was unaware of the ending of the war. Though they received a leaflet, they refused to believe it and his superior officer flew from Japan to officially relieve him from his duty.
All that apply are A and B, But if only one is correct then the best ways to go is B as it was more important in that time
Answer:
Alliances with natives
Explanation:
The Europeans started off colonies because of numerous reasons, with the biggest being the wealth and territory. In order to get to more wealth, the Europeans had to find new routes and markets first, and they did lot of exploration about this, eventually resulting in discovering and colonizing of new territories. The natural resources and raw materials that these places offered gave the Europeans the basis for making lot of wealth out of them, and so they did. The religion was also an important factor, as it was important for the Europeans to spread it out because of bigger influence, but also gaining of new followers. Alliances with the natives were not really a reason for colonization, and considering the manner in which the Europeans treated the natives, it is the total opposite.
One reason for the success of the cities in the hanseatic league and the italian city-states were that both were accessible by water.
Governors have all of the following in common with presidents, EXCEPT <span>they are not the chief lawmakers--they are the executive branch.
They cannot make laws themselves - it comes from above them. They are just the ones who actually execute the laws they were given to abide by.</span>