The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached, we can say the following.
Stalin failed to act quickly on promises to help the U.S., according to the agreements reached during the Yalta Conference and later in the Potsdam Conference. However, the United States also failed to do things agreed upon during the conferences. Of course, both nations have their own sides of the story. The real thing was that these series of disagreements contributed to mistrust between the nations.
During the so-called Cold War years, the Soviet Union remained in control of Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Romania, Bulgaria, Poland, and Hungary. Stalin considered these countries as a buffer in case the western allies tried to invade the Soviet Union.
The Cold War years was a time in which the United States and teh Soviet Union competed in the arms race, the space race, and in spreading/contain Communism in the world. These generated so many conflicts and wars around the world.
It is JSOC who is charged with the responsibility of studying special operations
In my opinion, yes. Farming allowed the people to stay where they were and build, as opposed to traveling with herds.
<span>In Mesopotamia, plant domestication led to population growth; in Mesoamerica, it led to plant extinction. Mesopotamian agriculture depended on seasonal rains, while Mesoamerican agriculture depended on river valleys. The people of Mesopotamia domesticated corn, whereas those in Mesoamerica domesticated rice. Domestication of grains occurred about 5,000 years earlier in Mesopotamia than in Mesoamerica.</span>
Conciliar movementA reform movement in the 14th-, 15th-, and 16th-century Catholic Church that held that supreme authority in the church resided with an Ecumenical council, apart from, or even against, the pope how did rebellions against the roman catholic church affect northern European society Rebellions against the Catholic Church exposed the corruption within the Church and lead to European reformers to develop new religions, such as Lutheranism and Calvinism, that believed in returning to the simplicity of Christianity and turning to the Bible.