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On March 1, 1917, the American public learned about a German proposal to ally with Mexico if the United States entered the war. Months earlier, British intelligence had intercepted a secret message from German Foreign Minister Arthur Zimmermann to the Mexican government, inviting an alliance (along with Japan) that would recover the southwestern states Mexico lost to the U.S. during the Mexican War of 1846-47.
The secret to the British interception began years earlier. In 1914, with war imminent, the British had quickly dispatched a ship to cut Germany’s five trans-Atlantic cables and six underwater cables running between Britain and Germany. Soon after the war began, the British successfully tapped into overseas cable lines Germany borrowed from neutral countries to send communications. Britain began capturing large volumes of intelligence communications.
British code breakers worked to decrypt communication codes. In October of 1914, the Russian admiralty gave British Naval Intelligence (known as Room 40) a copy of the German naval codebook removed from a drowned German sailor’s body from the cruiser SMS Magdeburg. Room 40 also received a copy of the German diplomatic code, stolen from a German diplomat’s luggage in the Near East. By 1917, British Intelligence could decipher most German messages.
Answer:
Option: C. Stated if Vietnam fell to the Communists, then the rest of Asia would become Communist.
Explanation:
Before the Vietnam war, the United States was very much concern about the spread of Communism in Asia, as they gave it a term of Domino theory. The domino theory was a theory raised extensively in the 1960s. The plan stated if one nation came under communism, then the surrounding countries would become communist. The Domino effect came as a foreign policy during the Presidency of Kennedy and Johnson to support America's military involvement in the Vietnam War.
The U.S government set out to dispossess the Native Americans of their remaining rich lands and drive them westward.
Answer:
Explanation: During Prohibition, the primary source of drinking alcohol was industrial alcohol – the kind used for making ink, perfumes and campstove fuel. The next most common source of alcohol in Prohibition was alcohol cooked up in illegal stills, producing what came to be called moonshine.