The correct answer to this
question is:
This research alone
demonstrates that <u>“</u><span><u>there is a
relationship between smoking and lung cancer".</u></span>
<span>The
word “more likely” implies that there is only a relationship linking smoking
and lung cancer. It is not conclusive that smoking alone causes lung cancer
since people who do not smoke also
contracts lung cancer. Therefore it is only “relationship” and not “causational”
.</span>
During World War 1 the soldiers tried to gather much information from the enemy sidelines as much as they could they would hide in plain site to create a map that would help them with their next attack.
I believe your answer is <span>C)
Sequoyah. I hope I could help!! :D
Have a great rest of the day.
</span>
Gallium and arsenic can be used
to predict the properties of eka-silicon. This is because on the periodic
table, these two elements are the closest neighbors of eka-silicon, and as a
result, would have good number of similar properties with eka-silicon.
Answer:yes
Explanation:
Canada's role in the Afghanistan War began in late 2001. Canada sent its first element of soldiers secretly in October 2001 from Joint Task Force 2,[1] and the first contingents of regular Canadian troops arrived in Afghanistan in January–February 2002. Canada took on a larger role starting in 2006 after the Canadian troops were redeployed to Kandahar province. 2,500 Canadian Forces (CF) personnel were in Afghanistan and 1,200 made up the combat battle group.[2] At the 2012 NATO Summit in Chicago, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced that an undisclosed number of Canadian soldiers would remain in the country to help train and mentor the Afghan National Army until 12 March 2014 (though Canadian troops ended their combat role there in 2011).
In September 2001 after the September 11 terrorist attacks, Minister of National Defence Art Eggleton advised Governor General Adrienne Clarkson to authorize more than 100 Canadian Forces members serving on military exchange programs in the United States and other countries to participate in U.S. operations in Afghanistan. Eggleton summed up the dominant thinking in the government at the time when he said, "Any Canadian military deployment to Afghanistan may well be similar to a situation in Eritrea and Ethiopia where we went in on the first wave, we helped establish the stabilization, the basis for ongoing peace support operations that would come after ... but then turned it over to somebody else."[3] The operations were aimed at identifying and neutralizing al-Qaeda members in that country, as well as toppling the Taliban regime, which was supporting international terrorism.