There was actually three, United States of America, Soviet Union, and United Kingdom.
In contrast to white settlers, Native Americans viewed nature as C) sacred. Native Americans countered the white settlers view that nature was there to serve them, but that in fact there was a mutual relationship between humans and nature.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached, we can say the following.
Most anthropologists believe that the migration process of the native Americans across the present-day Bering Strait was completed 15,000 years ago.
Historians and anthropologists agreed that migration through the Berin Strait started approximately 30,000 years ago when the first humans from Asia crossed the Berin Strait that was frozen at that time due to the extremely cold temperatures. They came from Siberia to America by crossing what is formally known as the Berin Land Bridge.
Lesotho is the country you are looking for :)
The term "Cold War" refers to a period of conflict between the US and the USSR, that last roughly from the end of World War II until 1991. It was a conflict over two major economic philosophies--capitalism and communism--and is called "cold" because there was never any direct fighting between the US and the USSR.