Answer:
Option B.
Explanation:
The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, is the right answer.
Delivered on 8th December 1941 by the then U.S. President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Infamy Speech was an address to a Joint Session of the Congress of the United States. It was delivered on the very next day of the attack of Japan on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii and the announcement of Japanese for the combat on the U.S. and Britain. Accordingly, the speech is popularly regarded as the "Pearl Harbor Speech".
Domestic Policy. Washington supported Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton's Federalist financial plans, including a national bank and a tax on whiskey. The latter led to a minor revolt in Pennsylvania, the Whiskey Rebellion, and Washington mobilized troops from neighboring states to quell the uprising.
<span>Washington considered it important to put down the Whiskey Rebellion, because if he didn't, it might undermine the new government and weaken its authority.</span>