When his brother Henry died, Richard I became heir to the throne of England, and King Henry II asked Richard to yield <em><u>Aquitaine</u></em> to his brother <em>John.</em> Unwilling to surrender Aquitaine, Richard joined forces with King Philip II of France in 1189 and drove Henry into abject submission. They forced him to acknowledge Richard as his heir and harried him to his death.
<span>The cost of fighting off these invasions drained the Gupta treasury, and the government had difficulty refilling the coffers for the internal reasons noted above. Among the most troublesome of the invaders were the White Huns, who had conquered much of the northwestern section of Gupta territory by 500 CE.</span>It grew weak from a number of secession disputes. As the emperors lost power regional lords gained increasing autonomy. In a sprawling empire with weak leadership, it was easy for a rebellion in Gujarat or Bengal to break out, and difficult for the Gupta emperors to put such uprisings down.
Number 2: A safe harbor is a provision of a statute or a regulation that specifies that certain conduct will be deemed not to violate a given rule. It is usually found in connection with a more-vague, overall standard. By contrast, "unsafe harbors" describe conduct that will be deemed to violate the rule.
It would be that "(B) Only Congress has the power to declare war" was not part of the 1973 War Powers <span>Act, since this had already been established in the Constitution. </span>
I think it’s B but I’m not quite sure
(Sorry if I’m wrong)