Answer:
The correct answer is: The League of Nations
Explanation:
The League of Nations, or Society of Nations, was an international organization founded on the proposal of the U.S. president Thomas Woodrow Wilson after World War I (1919).
Its fundamental goals were to maintain peace in the World, to prevent war through collective security, resolve disputes between countries through negotiated diplomacy, and improving global well-being. The League had three main branches: the secretariat (based in Geneva), the Council and the Assembly, and a certain number of commissions and agencies.
With the onset of World War II, it became clear that the League had failed in its fundamental mission – preventing future world wars. During the War, the League Council did not hold meetings, and the secretariat was relocated to North America. After failing to prevent the war, the League of Nations was replaced with a new body – United Nations.
Answer:
D. It showed that the Vietcong could mount a successful attack on South Vietnamese and were not close to defeat despite what the US government told the American people.
Explanation:
Despite the gigantic military U.S. deployment and buildup in Vietnam, the Vietnamese communist forces managed to surprise American and allied South Vietnamese troops by launching an offensive in 100 cities in January/February 1968, the Tet Offensive; that was what America´s and the world´s eyes could see.
The offensive was a military setback for the Communists (they weren´t able to take and hold in one city), but it was a huge PR and image success that influenced the mood of the American public opinion. It showed the chaos and brutality of the war, its uncertainty; it was not clear the U.S. was winning the war, as American leaders wanted people to believe. It reinforced opposition to war and the pacifist movement in American cities.
Tet is the Vietnamese Lunar New Year.
Answer:
A,C are your answers have a fun day
Explanation:
<span>Bataan Death March. Bataan Death March, march in the Philippines of some 66 miles (106 km) that 76,000 prisoners of war (66,000 Filipinos, 10,000 Americans) were forced by the Japanese military to endure in April 1942, during the early stages of World War II.</span><span>Mar 6, 2017</span>