For cover mostly and they used them for their housing and everything really but it wasn’t a good environment with all the diseases they had but it was used for cover
Answer:
Mostly exaggerated.
Explanation:
A study by the BDM Coporation asserts that the actual Soviet Threat was vastly over exaggerated by the U.S. The majority of the report comes from declassified NSA report released in 2009. To quote the report
"the defense industrial complex, not the Soviet high command, played a key role in driving the quantitative arms buildup" and thereby "led U.S. analysts to...exaggerate the aggressive intentions of the Soviets"
There were of course monetary benifits to overstating the danger. Weapons, early warning systems, flash duck and cover films, sirens and so forth all bought at great expense. Another part of the report states;
"The Soviet military high command understood the devestating consequences of nuclear war and believed that nuclear weapons use had to be avoided at all costs."
It is possible to dismiss the report or slander it as revisionist propoganda, but the truth is that new finds and uncovered documents constantly update our view of history.
Answer: In finance and accounting, capital generally refers to financial wealth, especially that used to start or maintain a business. In classical economics, capital is one of the four factors of production. ... Goods that can be used in the production of other goods (this is what makes it a factor of production).
Its mission was to take all people of Japanese descent into custody, surround them with troops, prevent them from buying land, and return them to their former homes at the close of the war.