Answer:
the British had a better navy than the Germans
Explanation:
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/churchills-greatest-fear-why-didnt-hitler-invade-great-britain-34612
By 1940 Britain had the worlds largest navy. The royal navy was located throughout the world yet it still had a very powerful home fleet. The German navy was unfunded and small. The Germans launched airraids on Britain, at first these where military target they aimed for. Yet the Germans then focused on civilian targets. Which allowed the British air forces to regroup and win the Battle of Britain.
Answer:
Today's Muslim world is beyond the periscope of Muslim majority societies and rather inclusive of the ever growing Muslim communities in the West. The ongoing predicaments in the Muslim societies might though be contemporary but inextricable from the bequeathed European legacies in these societies. Although, European formal administration of the Muslim world is past historical reality, nonetheless, should Europe take responsibility for the happenings in the Muslim world? In the post-Cold War era, how much similarities and dissimilarities can be drawn in the EU and the US foreign policies and actions towards the Muslims. The post 9/11 developments indicate visible signs of approaches and opinions in the EU countries towards some of the issues of the Muslim World – more so in the case of Palestine, Iraq Syria and Iran – ostensibly independent of Washington. Should the European gestures be taken as goodwill and pragmatism or other side of the coin in the US foreign policy? Would there be any degree of correlation between affairs of European Muslims and the larger Muslim societies? The need for greater mutual understanding between the EU and the Muslim countries as well as the OIC, is evident.
Explanation:
D. To unite people of African descent around the world
Pan-Africanism meant to unite all people native to Africa under one cultural banner.
Pan-Africanism is a cultural and historically movement meant to unite people around the world indigenous to Africa. The movements were most popular in the United States and Europe where indigenous blacks had been enslaved and forced to assimilate to western culture. Pan-Africanism encouraged blacks to trace their heritage and connect to African culture. Movements have even gone so far as to encouraging people to change their names and return to native religious and cultural traditions.