His writings and his political ideas were<span> read by many </span>American<span> colonists and founders ... between the</span>legislative<span>, </span>executive<span> and </span>judicial branches<span>, which became the ... </span>Montesquieu based<span> his thinking on the republican </span>government<span> of the ancient ... of many </span>Enlightenment<span> influences on the Constitution</span>
Answer:
Stalin resented the Western Allie's delay in attacking the Germans in Europe and that the United States had tried to keep its development of the atomic bomb a secret.
Explanation:
Stalin always pressed England and the US to open another front during the 1940s as German forces were concentrating to deepen in the Soviet territory.
He believed the Western allies were on purpose to profit from the weakening of the USSR as it fought against Nazi Germany.
The delayed had enabled Nazis to redirect manpower to the Eastern front.
Stalin was annoyed since he believed the US and Britain delayed to open the second front against German troops in the West, and demanded a buffer formed from Baltic nations and Poland after the war.
The development of the atomic bomb was jealously held by the US, as it gave the supremacy on the overall outcome of the war and its unrevealing by alleged "spies" meant that the USSR and the US would start an arms race.
The rivalry in atomic weapons was quickly contested in the 1950s and soon to be followed by the space race.
Answer:
Stalingrad was part of the German front in southern Russia and part of a larger operation that also had as a target the Caucasus. The German front was simply overextended and as the battle raged and went on into the first months of 1943, its flanks - running up to 400 miles to both north and south - were exposed and undermanned. The distances were too long and this posed a major logistic problem for German units.
Explanation: