They are weird blah blah blah
<span>The answer is US Froze Japan's assets and exports.
Japan was actually angry for the reason that although back then the US hasn't been formally involved in the war, that action actually transport a huge disadvantages from the Japanese in their war.
Consequently, they criticized the US Naval Base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. This bout lead the US to be formally complicated in the World War II.</span>
He reoccupied the Rhineland (demilitarized zone), he also rebuilt his army and his air-force but that was around the time when the disarmament conference failed so he used that as his excuse to rearm (other countries were doing the same).
<span>I think this was in 1939 but he also had a political union with Austria which he wasn't allowed to do. </span>
<span>The allies did not do anything to prevent him from breaking the terms of the treaty as many people saw that it was too harsh on the germans so there was no point in protecting it.
</span>This was not copied from a website or someone else.
Marbury petitioned the Supreme Court to force the new Secretary of State, James Madison, to deliver the documents. The Court, with John Marshall as Chief Justice, found firstly that Madison's refusal to deliver the commission was both illegal and correctible. Nonetheless, the Court stopped short of ordering Madison (by writ of mandamus) to hand over Marbury's commission, instead holding that the provision of the Judiciary Act of 1789 that enabled Marbury to bring his claim to the Supreme Court was itself unconstitutional, since it purported to extend the Court's original jurisdiction beyond that which Article III established. The petition was therefore denied.
I'm not sure if that helped, but good luck :)